Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/italy

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Supercoppa Italiana

Italian football competition

Supercoppa Italiana

Italian football competition

FieldValue
nameSupercoppa Italiana
imageLogo EA SPORTS FC SuperCup 2024-2025.jpg
imagesize140px
founded
organiserLega Serie A
regionItaly
number of teams2 (until 2022)
4 (2023–present)
current championsNapoli (3rd title)
most successful clubJuventus (9 titles)
website
current2025–26 Supercoppa Italiana
broadcastersMediaset
Note

the men's Italian association football tournament

4 (2023–present) The Supercoppa Italiana, also known as the Italian Super Cup, is an annual super cup tournament in Italian football. Founded in 1988 as a two-team competition, it has featured four teams since 2023 (the winners and runners-up of the previous season's Serie A and Coppa Italia). Before the format change, the match was exclusively contested between the winners of the Serie A and Coppa Italia titles. Under the new rules, if a team were to be occupying more than one of the four spots, that spot would then be filled by the third and/or fourth teams in the Serie A standings.

It was originally the opening match of the new season, played at the home stadium of the previous season's Serie A champions. Since 2018, the competition has been held during the winter months, and is mainly hosted internationally. Juventus is the most successful club with nine titles. They have met Lazio on five occasions, making it the most frequent matchup in tournament history.

History

When the tournament first began, it was primarily held in Italy. It went abroad for the first time in 1993, when Washington, D.C. hosted a match between AC Milan and Torino. There would not be another international contest until 2002, when the Supercoppa was held in Tripoli. The following year, East Rutherford, a suburb of New York City, hosted the tournament. The next five contests would be held in Italy, and in 2009, a new era of international travel would begin for the Supercoppa. Beijing hosted a match between Lazio and Inter Milan that year, while China would go on to host three more tournaments by 2015. Qatar hosted the tournament twice in this time as well, in 2014 and 2016.

The Supercoppa Italiana trophy on display in Doha, Qatar.

In 2018, the Lega Serie A and the General Sports Authority signed an agreement that would see Saudi Arabia host three of the next five tournaments. This decision sparked controversy, as Italians were concerned about women in Saudi Arabia being unable to attend the match unless they were within the stadium's family sections and were accompanied by men. Then-Serie A president Gaetano Miccichè told those concerned that these sections were a sign of progress, saying "The Supercoppa will go down in history as the first official international football competition which Saudi women were permitted to watch live." The cup did return to Italy in 2020 for two years, but only due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It has since gone back to Saudi Arabia, where it is set to remain until 2029 under a new six-year agreement.

Notable occurrences

The Serie A title and Coppa Italia have been won by the same team eight times since the Supercoppa was introduced. As a result, Coppa Italia runners-up instead competed in the subsequent Supercoppa, per Lega Serie A rules. This occurred five times with Juventus (1995, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018), twice with Inter Milan (2006 and 2010), and once with Lazio (2000). Since 2023, Serie A and Coppa Italia runners-up automatically qualify for the tournament.

The only Supercoppa to ever be held without spectators was on 20 January 2021, at the Mapei Stadium – Città del Tricolore.

AC Milan became the first Coppa Italia runners-up to win the Supercoppa Italiana after defeating Juventus on penalties in 2016. They later made history again in 2025, becoming the first Serie A runners-up to win the competition by defeating Inter Milan, in just the second year of the tournament's new four-team format.

List of matches

All-time attendance record

Two-team format

YearSerie A winnersResultCoppa representativesStadiumAttendance
1988AC Milan3–1SampdoriaSan Siro, Milan19,412
1989Inter Milan2–0SampdoriaSan Siro, Milan7,221
1990Napoli5–1JuventusStadio San Paolo, Naples62,404
1991Sampdoria1–0RomaStadio Luigi Ferraris, Genoa21,120
1992AC Milan2–1ParmaSan Siro, Milan30,102
1993AC Milan1–0TorinoRobert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, Washington, D.C., United States25,268
1994AC Milan1–1SampdoriaSan Siro, Milan26,767
1995Juventus1–0ParmaQualified as Coppa Italia runners-up.Stadio delle Alpi, Turin5,289
1996AC Milan1–2FiorentinaSan Siro, Milan29,582
1997Juventus3–0VicenzaStadio delle Alpi, Turin16,157
1998Juventus1–2LazioStadio delle Alpi, Turin16,500
1999AC Milan1–2ParmaSan Siro, Milan25,001
2000Lazio4–3Inter MilanStadio Olimpico, Rome61,446
2001Roma3–0FiorentinaStadio Olimpico, Rome61,050
2002Juventus2–1Parma11 June Stadium, Tripoli, Libya40,000
2003Juventus1–1AC MilanGiants Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, United States54,128
2004AC Milan3–0LazioSan Siro, Milan33,274
2005JuventusJuventus was subsequently stripped of the Serie A title due to the Calciopoli scandal.0–1Inter MilanStadio delle Alpi, Turin35,246
2006Inter Milan4–3RomaSan Siro, Milan45,528
2007Inter Milan0–1RomaSan Siro, Milan34,898
2008Inter Milan2–2RomaSan Siro, Milan43,400
2009Inter Milan1–2LazioBeijing National Stadium, Beijing, China68,961
2010Inter Milan3–1RomaSan Siro, Milan65,860
2011AC Milan2–1Inter MilanBeijing National Stadium, Beijing, China66,161
2012Juventus4–2NapoliBeijing National Stadium, Beijing, China75,000
2013Juventus4–0LazioStadio Olimpico, Rome57,000
2014Juventus2–2NapoliJassim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha, Qatar14,000
2015Juventus2–0LazioShanghai Stadium, Shanghai, China20,000
2016Juventus1–1AC MilanJassim bin Hamad Stadium, Doha, Qatar11,356
2017Juventus2–3LazioStadio Olimpico, Rome52,000
2018Juventus1–0AC MilanKing Abdullah Sports City, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia61,235
2019Juventus1–3LazioKing Saud University Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia23,361
2020Juventus2–0NapoliMapei Stadium – Città del Tricolore, Reggio Emilia0
2021Inter Milan2–1JuventusSan Siro, Milan29,696
2022AC Milan0–3Inter MilanKing Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia51,357

Four-team format

YearWinnersResultRunners-upSemi-finalistsStadiumAttendanceFinal match attendance only.
2023Inter Milan1–0NapoliFiorentina and LazioKing Saud University Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia24,900
2024–25AC Milan3–2Inter MilanAtalanta and JuventusKing Saud University Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia24,841
2025–26Napoli2–0BolognaAC Milan and Inter MilanKing Saud University Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia17,869

;Notes

Performance by club

ClubWinnersRunners-upSemi-finalistsYears wonYears runner-upYears semi-finalist
Juventus1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2018, 20201990, 1998, 2005, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2019, 20212024–25
AC Milan1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2004, 2011, 2016, 2024–251996, 1999, 2003, 2018, 20222025–26
Inter Milan1989, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2021, 2022, 20232000, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2024–252025–26
Lazio1998, 2000, 2009, 2017, 20192004, 2013, 20152023
Napoli1990, 2014, 2025–262012, 2020, 2023
Roma2001, 20071991, 2006, 2008, 2010
Sampdoria19911988, 1989, 1994
Parma19991992, 1995, 2002
Fiorentina199620012023
Torino1993
Vicenza1997
Bologna2025–26
Atalanta2024–25

Performance by representative

Method of qualificationWinnersRunners-upSemi-finalists
Serie A winners
Coppa Italia winners
Coppa Italia runners-up
Serie A runners-up

All-time top goalscorers

References

References

  1. (13 March 2023). "Lega Serie A agree new format for Supercoppa from 2024".
  2. "Formula and rules".
  3. "1993 Italian Super Cup: all details".
  4. "Supercoppa 2002 - Stadiums".
  5. "Juve in USA {{!}} Super Cup 2003".
  6. (2021-08-08). "Video: 12 Years Ago Today, Lazio Beat Inter 2–1 to Win Their 3rd Supercoppa Italiana".
  7. (7 June 2018). "Saudi Arabia set to host three of next five Italian Super Cups".
  8. Burnton, Simon. (2019-01-13). "Supercoppa controversy rages over Saudi Arabia’s treatment of women". The Guardian.
  9. Pennington, Adrian. (31 January 2025). "Kingdom come: Alamiya Media on bringing the Supercoppa Italiana and Supercopa de España to Saudi Arabia".
  10. (23 December 2016). "Milan win Supercoppa Italiana in shootout triumph over Juventus". The Guardian.
  11. (10 January 2025). "Milan told to stay grounded after Supercoppa win".
  12. "All-time top goalscorers".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Supercoppa Italiana — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report