The Italian Women's Cup (Italian: Coppa Italia di calcio femminile) is the national women's football cup competition in Italy and was first held in 1971.

Coppa Italia di calcio femminile
Founded1971
Region Italy
Number of teams26
Current championsRoma (2nd title)
Most successful club(s)Torres
(8 titles)
2024–25 Coppa Italia

Format

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Coppa Italia is open to teams competing in Serie A (10 teams) and Serie B (16 teams) for a total of 26 participants. The teams are ordered based on their final league position in the previous season, with Serie A teams first followed by Serie B, and the team(s) promoted to Serie A above the team(s) relegated to Serie B. The order is used to arrange the teams into three pools of unequal sizes: 8, 14 and 4.

The tournament itself consists of five rounds plus a preliminary round. The last four teams participate in the preliminary round to compete in a single-leg knock-out with a predetermined match-up (23rd vs 26th and 24th vs 25th) for two spots in round 1. The middle 14 teams and the two winners of the preliminary round compete in round 1, consisting again of single-leg matches. In round 2, the 8 winners of round 1 meet the first 8 teams in single-leg matches to determine the quarter-finalists. The quarter- and semi-finals use a two-leg system, with home and away rounds, while the final is once again a single-leg match held on neutral ground.[1]

List of finals

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Year[2] Winners Result Runners-up
1971[3][note 1] Roma 1–0 Fiorentina
1972[4] Falchi Crescentinese 4–1 Lazio Lubiam
1973[5] Falchi Astro 2–1 Lazio Lubiam
1974[note 2] Gamma 3 Padova 0–0 aet (6–5 pen.) Lazio Lubiam
1975[6] Milan 2–0 Sisal Moquettes Piacenza
1976 G.B.C. Milan 3–1 Valdobbiadene
1977 Lazio 1975 Lubiam 1–1 aet (4–3 pen.) G.B.C. Milan
1978 Conegliano 4–1 Lazio 1975 Lubiam
1979 Conegliano 1–0 Lazio 1975 Lubiam
1980 Gorgonzola 1–0 Alaska Gelati Lecce
1981 Alaska Gelati Lecce 2–0 Verona
1982 Alaska Gelati Lecce 4–0 Giolli Gelati Roma
1983 Marmi Trani 80 1–1 aet (6–5 pen.) Tigullio 72
1984 Not played
1985 R.O.I. Lazio 1–0 Sanitas Trani 80
1985–86 Modena Euromobil 0–0 aet (5–4 pen.) R.O.I. Lazio
1986–87 Not played[note 3]
1987–88 Modena Euromobil 2–1 Trani 80 B.K.V.
1988–89[note 4] G.B. Campania 2–2 aet (6–5 pen.) Reggiana Zambelli
1989–90 G.B. Campania 2–1 Milan 82
1990–91 Woman Sassari 0–0 aet (5–4 pen.) Fiammamonza
1991–92 Reggiana Zambelli 5–1 Fiammamonza
1992–93 Reggiana Zambelli 3–0 Napoli[7]
1993–94 G.E.A.S. Sesto San Giovanni 0–0 aet (4-2 pen.) Agliana Imbalpaper
1994–95 Torres Fo.S. 1–1 home
2–1 away
Agliana
1995–96 Lugo 5–0 home
3–1 away
Fiammamonza
1996–97 Agliana 1–0 home
1–2 away
Univer Torino
1997–98 ACF Milan 3–1 Lugo
1998–99 Lazio 4–2 ACF Milan
1999–2000 Torres Fo.S. 2–0 ACF Milan
2000–01[8] Torres Fo.S. 1–0 Bardolino
2001–02 Foroni Verona 1–0 Ruco Line Lazio
2002–03[9] Enterprise Lazio 5–0 Fiammamonza
2003–04 Torres Terra Sarda 6–0 Foroni Verona
2004–05 Torres Terra Sarda 2–0 Vigor Senigallia
2005–06 Bardolino Verona 4–1 Aircargo Agliana
2006–07 Bardolino Verona 3–1 home
1–3 away aet (2-3 pen.)
Torino
2007–08 Torres 2–3 away
1–0 home
Centropose Bardolino
2008–09 Bardolino Verona 2–0 Eurospin Torres
2009–10 Reggiana 1–1 aet (6–5 pen.) Torres
2010–11 Torres 3–0 Graphistudio Tavagnacco
2011–12 Brescia 3–2 (a.e.t.) Napoli
2012–13 Graphistudio Tavagnacco 2–0 Bardolino Verona
2013–14 Graphistudio Tavagnacco 3–2 Torres
2014–15 Brescia 4–0 Tavagnacco
2015–16 Brescia 2–1 Verona
2016–17 Fiorentina 2–1 Brescia
2017–18 Fiorentina 3–1 Brescia
2018–19 Juventus 2–1 Fiorentina
2019–20 Not concluded due the COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21 Roma 0–0 aet (3–1 pen.) Milan
2021–22 Juventus 2–1 Roma
2022–23 Juventus 1–0 Roma
2023–24 Roma 3–3 aet (4–3 pen.) Fiorentina

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Match played 9 January 1972 in Rome. Austrian Monika Karner scored the goal from Sue Lopez's pass.
  2. ^ All data (1974 to date) stored in paper reports at Fiammamonza's club headquarter.
  3. ^ When previous FIGCF federation merged into FIGC, the 1986–87 edition was expected to start on 14 September 1986 with just 7 groups of 4 teams due to several withdrawals. Later on the cup was suspended because seasonal fixtures were plenty and the previous season's Serie A (ended on 7 July 1986) was unable to grant playable dates.
  4. ^ Editions 1988/89 to 1998/99 had been published by "Annuario del calcio femminile 1999-2000" - Mariposa Editrice in Fornacette (Pisa), compiled by Luca Barboni and Gabriele Cecchi, November 1999.

References

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  1. ^ "Coppa Italia" (in Italian). FIGC]. Retrieved 3 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Italy - List of Women's Cup Winners". RSSSF. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  3. ^ Lopez 1997, p. 53
  4. ^ "Newspaper Archive". La Stampa (in Italian). 13 January 1973. p. 15. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  5. ^ "Newspaper Archive". La Stampa (in Italian). 3 January 1974. p. 14. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  6. ^ Missing data, stored up to semi-finals.
  7. ^ Winner of Serie B's Cup.
  8. ^ "News June 2001". calciodonna.it. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  9. ^ "News June 2003". calciodonna.it. Retrieved 9 July 2011. Lazio swept through the Fiammamonza for 5-0
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  • Cup at soccerway.com

Bibliography

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