1959–60 Coppa Italia
The 1959–60 Coppa Italia was the 13th Coppa Italia, the major Italian domestic cup. The competition was won by Juventus.
Juventus captain Giampiero Boniperti (right) receives and raises the trophy of the 1959-60 Italian Cup. | |
| Tournament details | |
|---|---|
| Country | Italy |
| Dates | 6 Sept 1959 – 18 Sept 1960 |
| Teams | 38 |
| Final positions | |
| Champions | Juventus (4th title) |
| Runner-up | Fiorentina |
| Tournament statistics | |
| Matches played | 38 |
| Goals scored | 126 (3.32 per match) |
| Top goal scorer(s) | Mario Pistacchi (5 goals) |
First round
| Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Como | 2-1 (aet) | Lecco |
| Messina | 1-0 | Catanzaro |
| Udinese | 3-2 (aet) | Triestina |
| Brescia | 2-2 (p: 4–6) | Modena |
| Vicenza | 1-0 | Marzotto |
| Parma | 1-5 | SPAL |
| Bari | 3-1 | Taranto |
| Napoli | 4-0 | Sambenedettese |
| Roma | 4-0 | Cagliari |
| Padova | 3-2 (aet) | Hellas Verona |
| Sampdoria | 1-0 | Novara |
| Reggiana | 3-2 (aet) | Mantova |
| Monza | 0-1 | Alessandria |
| Palermo | 2-0 | Catania |
p=after penalty shoot-out
Second round
Milan and Atalanta are added.
| Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Padova | 3-2 | Udinese |
| SPAL | 1-0 | Vicenza |
| Reggiana | 2-1 | Modena |
| Atalanta | 5-0 | Alessandria |
| Roma | 0-2 | Sampdoria |
| Napoli | 1-0 | Bari |
| Palermo | 1-0 | Messina |
| Milan | 0-1 (aet) | Como |
Round of 16
Genoa, Torino, Venezia, Fiorentina, Juventus, Bologna, Lazio, Internazionale are added.
| Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Atalanta | 2-0 | Genoa |
| Padova | 0-2 | Torino |
| Venezia | 2-1 | SPAL |
| Fiorentina | 2-0 | Como |
| Juventus | 5-4 (aet) | Sampdoria |
| Bologna | 1-0 | Napoli |
| Lazio | 2-1 (aet) | Palermo |
| Internazionale | 5-2 | Reggiana |
Quarter-finals
| Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Atalanta | 2-2 (p: 6-6) * | Juventus |
| Fiorentina | 2-1 | Internazionale |
| Torino | 1-0 | Venezia |
| Bologna | 2-3 (aet) | Lazio |
* Juventus qualify after drawing of lots.
Semi-finals
| Home team | Score | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Juventus | 3-0 | Lazio |
| Fiorentina | 5-3 | Torino |
Final
Top goalscorers
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mario Pistacchi | Reggiana | 5 |
| 2 | Gianfranco Petris | Fiorentina | 4 |
| 3 | Mario Corso | Internazionale | 3 |
| Alessandro Vitali | Napoli | ||
| Lennart Skoglund | Sampdoria | ||
| Orlando Rozzoni | Lazio | ||
| John Charles | Juventus | ||
| Angelo Ogliari | Reggiana |
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.