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Supercoppa di Serie C
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| founded | 2000 |
| number of teams | 2 (2000–14) |
| 3 (2015–present) | |
| region | Italy |
| current champions | Virtus Entella (1st title) |
| most successful club | Modena, Novara, Spezia |
| (2 titles each) |
3 (2015–present) (2 titles each)
The Supercoppa di Serie C, formerly named Supercoppa di Lega Pro, is an Italian football competition played by the three group winners of Serie C. The competition was inaugurated in 2000.
Forerunners
The FIGC introduced a third-level national football championship for the first time following the reforms of 1926. The Direttorio Divisioni Inferiori Nord, the fascist authority ruling the second division in Northern Italy, introduced a national cup for the group winners.
In 1928 the fascists decided to allow the fully national Direttorio Divisioni Superiori to organize the third-level championship instead. A cup for the group winners, and promotion to newly-born Serie B was maintained.
However, Italian tifosi showed very little interest for this honorific cup, so it was discontinued for seventy years.
Winners
| Season | Home team | Score | Away team | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Crotone | 1–1 | Siena | Stadio Ezio Scida, Crotone |
| Siena | 1–0 | Crotone | Stadio Artemio Franchi, Siena | |
| Siena (group A) won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||
| 2001 | Palermo | 0–2 | ||
| (judge decision) | Modena | Stadio Renzo Barbera, Palermo | ||
| Modena | 3–0 | Palermo | Stadio Alberto Braglia, Modena | |
| Modena (group A) won 5–0 on aggregate | ||||
| 2002 | Ascoli | 1–0 | Livorno | Stadio Del Duca, Ascoli Piceno |
| Livorno | 2–1 | Ascoli | Stadio Armando Picchi, Livorno | |
| Ascoli (group B) won on away goals rule, aggregate tied 2–2 | ||||
| 2003 | Treviso | 0–2 | Avellino | Stadio Omobono Tenni, Treviso |
| Avellino | 0–2 | Treviso | Stadio Partenio, Avellino | |
| Treviso (group A) won 9–8 on penalties, aggregate tied 2–2 | ||||
| 2004 | Arezzo | 3–0 | Catanzaro | Stadio Comunale, Arezzo |
| Catanzaro | 0–1 | Arezzo | Stadio Nicola Ceravolo, Catanzaro | |
| Arezzo (group A) won 4–0 on aggregate | ||||
| 2005 | Rimini | 5–2 | Cremonese | Stadio Romeo Neri, Rimini |
| Cremonese | 2–4 | Rimini | Stadio Giovanni Zini, Cremona | |
| Rimini (group B) won 9–4 on aggregate | ||||
| 2006 | Spezia | 0–0 | Napoli | Stadio Alberto Picco, La Spezia |
| Napoli | 1–1 | Spezia | Stadio San Paolo, Napoli | |
| Spezia (group A) won on away goals rule, aggregate tied 1–1 | ||||
| 2007 | Ravenna | 1–1 | Grosseto | Stadio Bruno Benelli, Ravenna |
| Grosseto | 1–0 | Ravenna | Stadio Carlo Zecchini, Grosseto | |
| Grosseto (group A) won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||
| 2008 | Sassuolo | 0–1 | Salernitana | Stadio Enzo Ricci, Sassuolo |
| Salernitana | 0–1 | Sassuolo | Stadio Arechi, Salerno | |
| Sassuolo (group A) won 5-4 on penalties, aggregate tied 1–1 | ||||
| 2009 | Gallipoli | 0–0 | Cesena | Stadio Antonio Bianco, Gallipoli |
| Cesena | 1–2 | Gallipoli | Dino Manuzzi, Cesena | |
| Gallipoli (group B) won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||
| 2010 | Portogruaro | 1–3 | Novara | Piergiovanni Mecchia, Portogruaro |
| Novara | 2–3 | Portogruaro | Silvio Piola, Novara | |
| Novara (group A) won 5–4 on aggregate | ||||
| 2011 | Gubbio | 1–1 | Nocerina | Stadio Pietro Barbetti, Gubbio |
| Nocerina | 1–0 | Gubbio | Stadio San Francesco, Nocera Inferiore | |
| Nocerina (group B) won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||
| 2012 | Ternana | 0–0 | Spezia | Stadio Libero Liberati, Terni |
| Spezia | 2–1 | Ternana | Stadio Alberto Picco, La Spezia | |
| Spezia (group B) won 2–1 on aggregate | ||||
| 2013 | Avellino | 1–1 | Trapani | Stadio Partenio-Adriano Lombardi, Avellino |
| Trapani | 2–2 | Avellino | Stadio Polisportivo Provinciale, Erice | |
| Avellino (group B) won on away goals rule, aggregate tied 3–3 | ||||
| 2014 | Virtus Entella | 1–1 | Perugia | Stadio Comunale, Chiavari |
| Perugia | 3–1 | Virtus Entella | Stadio Renato Curi, Perugia | |
| Perugia (group B) won 4–2 on aggregate | ||||
| 2015 | Novara | 3–2 | Salernitana | Stadio Silvio Piola, Novara |
| Salernitana | 1–1 | Teramo | Stadio Arechi, Salerno | |
| Novara | 1–1 | Teramo | Stadio Gaetano Bonolis, Teramo | |
| Novara (group A) won with 4 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2016 | SPAL | 4–1 | Benevento | Stadio Paolo Mazza, Ferrara |
| Benevento | 2–4 | Cittadella | Stadio Ciro Vigorito, Benevento | |
| Cittadella | 1–3 | SPAL | Stadio Pier Cesare Tombolato, Cittadella | |
| SPAL (group B) won with 6 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2017 | Cremonese | 1–2 | Venezia | Stadio Giovanni Zini, Cremona |
| Foggia | 3–1 | Cremonese | Stadio Pino Zaccheria, Foggia | |
| Venezia | 2–4 | Foggia | Stadio Pier Luigi Penzo, Venice | |
| Foggia (group B) won with 6 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2018 | Padova | 5–1 | Livorno | Stadio Euganeo, Padua |
| Lecce | 3–1 | Livorno | Stadio Armando Picchi, Livorno | |
| Lecce | 0–1 | Padova | Stadio Via del Mare, Lecce | |
| Padova (group B) won with 6 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2019 | Virtus Entella | 0–0 | Pordenone | Stadio Comunale, Chiavari |
| Juve Stabia | 2–2 | Virtus Entella | Stadio Romeo Menti, Castellammare di Stabia | |
| Pordenone | 3–0 | Juve Stabia | Stadio Ottavio Bottecchia, Pordenone | |
| Pordenone (group B) won with 4 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2020 | Monza (group A) | |||
| Vicenza (group B) | ||||
| Reggina (group C) | ||||
| Cancelled due to the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic in Italy | ||||
| 2021 | Perugia | 2–1 | Como | Stadio Renato Curi, Perugia |
| Como | 0–3 | Ternana | Stadio Giuseppe Sinigaglia, Como | |
| Ternana | 1–0 | Perugia | Stadio Libero Liberati, Terni | |
| Ternana (group C) won with 6 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2022 | Bari | 1–2 | Südtirol | Stadio San Nicola, Bari |
| Modena | 3–3 | Bari | Stadio Alberto Braglia, Modena | |
| Südtirol | 0–2 | Modena | Stadio Druso, Bolzano | |
| Modena (group B) won with 4 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2023 | Catanzaro | 2–1 | Feralpisalò | Stadio Nicola Ceravolo, Catanzaro |
| Feralpisalò | 3–1 | Reggiana | Stadio Lino Turina, Salò | |
| Reggiana | 2–2 | Catanzaro | Mapei Stadium – Città del Tricolore, Reggio Emilia | |
| Catanzaro (group C) won with 4 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2024 | Mantova | 1–2 | Cesena | Stadio Danilo Martelli, Mantua |
| Juve Stabia | 1–4 | Mantova | Stadio Romeo Menti, Castellammare di Stabia | |
| Cesena | 2–2 | Juve Stabia | Stadio Dino Manuzzi, Cesena | |
| Cesena (group B) won with 4 points at the top of the group | ||||
| 2025 | Avellino | 0–1 | Padova | Stadio Partenio, Avellino |
| Virtus Entella | 1–1 | Avellino | Stadio Sannazzari, Chiavari | |
| Padova | 0–1 | Virtus Entella | Stadio Euganeo, Padua | |
| Entella (group B) won with 4 points at the top of the group |
References
References
- [http://www.lega-pro.com/it/Comunic2009/Campionato/158DIV.pdf Comunicato ufficiale edizione 2009]
- rsssf.com
- [[La Gazzetta dello Sport]] historical archive
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