1964–65 Coppa Italia

The 1964–65 Coppa Italia was the 18th edition of the Coppa Italia, a domestic football cup organised by the Italian Football Federation. It was won by Juventus, who defeated Internazionale 1–0 in the final.[1]

1964–65 Coppa Italia
Juventus poses with the trophy
Tournament details
Country Italy
Dates6 September 1964 –
29 August 1965
Teams38
Final positions
ChampionsJuventus (5th title)
Runner-upInternazionale
Tournament statistics
Matches played37
Goals scored106 (2.86 per match)
Top goal scorer(s)Gigi Riva
Renzo Cappellaro
Francesco Rizzo
Cané
Giampaolo Menichelli
Bruno Petroni
(3 goals each)

First round edit

Home team Score Away team
Alessandria 1–2 Juventus
Bari 1–4 (a.e.t.) Foggia
Brescia 2–0 Mantova
Hellas Verona 0–2 Venezia
Lecco 2–0 Padova
Livorno 3–4 Cagliari
Modena 2–1 Vicenza
Parma 1–3 Sampdoria
Potenza 0–4 Catania
Pro Patria 1–0 Varese
Reggiana 0–2 (a.e.t.) Genoa
Monza 2–1 (a.e.t.) Milan
SPAL 3–0 Fiorentina
Napoli 2–1 (a.e.t.) Messina
Palermo 4–3 (a.e.t.) Catanzaro
Vigor Trani 0–3 Lazio
Triestina 1–3 Atalanta

Intermediate round edit

Home team Score Away team
Napoli 0–0 (a.e.t.) * Lazio

* Napoli qualified after drawing of lots.

Second round edit

Home team Score Away team
Juventus 1–0 Brescia
Lecco 3–0 Sampdoria
Modena 1–1 (4–5 pen.) Atalanta
Pro Patria 1–2 (a.e.t.) Genoa
Napoli 2–1 (a.e.t.) Foggia
Palermo 1–0 Catania
Cagliari 1–0 SPAL
Monza 2–1 (a.e.t.) Venezia

Third round edit

Home team Score Away team
Genoa 3–0 Monza
Lecco 0–2 (a.e.t.) Juventus
Napoli 1–0 Palermo
Cagliari 5–0 Atalanta

Quarter-finals edit

Torino, Bologna, Internazionale and Roma joined the competition in this round.

Home team Score Away team
Torino 2–0 Genoa
Bologna 0–0 (4–5 pen.) Juventus
Internazionale 6–3 (a.e.t.) Cagliari
Napoli 1–2 Roma

Semi-finals edit

Home team Score Away team
Roma 2–2 (4–6 pen.) Internazionale
Juventus 1–0 Torino

Final edit

Juventus1–0Internazionale
Menichelli   15'
Referee: Alessandro D'Agostini

Top goalscorers edit

Rank Player Club Goals
1   Gigi Riva Cagliari 3
  Renzo Cappellaro Cagliari
  Francesco Rizzo Cagliari
  Cané Napoli
  Giampaolo Menichelli Juventus
  Bruno Petroni Atalanta
2   Jair da Costa Internazionale 2
  Sergio Gori Internazionale
  Dario Cavallito SPAL
  Dino Panzanato Napoli
  Mariano Melonari Monza

References edit

  1. ^ "Italy - Coppa Italia History". www.rsssf.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.