1988–89 season | ||
---|---|---|
Owner | Gianmarco Calleri | |
Chairman | Gianmarco Calleri | |
Manager | Giuseppe Materazzi | |
Serie A | 10th | |
Coppa Italia | Quarter-finals | |
Top goalscorer | Rubén Sosa (8) | |
S.S. Lazio returned to Serie A this season, finishing 10th and reaching the quarter-final of the Coppa Italia.
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Roma | 34 | 11 | 12 | 11 | 33 | 40 | −7 | 34 |
9 | Lecce | 34 | 8 | 15 | 11 | 25 | 35 | −10 | 31 |
10 | Lazio | 34 | 5 | 19 | 10 | 23 | 32 | −9 | 29 |
11 | Hellas Verona | 34 | 5 | 19 | 10 | 18 | 27 | −9 | 29 |
12 | Ascoli | 34 | 9 | 11 | 14 | 30 | 41 | −11 | 29 |
9 October 19881 | Cesena | 0-0 | Lazio | Cesena |
Report | Stadium: Dino Manuzzi |
16 October 19882 | Lazio | 1-1 | Torino | Roma |
Gregucci 45' | Report | Pin 45' (o.g.) | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Mauro Felicani |
30 October 19884 | Lazio | 1-1 | Como | Roma |
Dezotti 42' (pen.) | Report | Giunta 68' | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Werter Cornieti |
6 November 19885 | Napoli | 1-1 | Lazio | Napoli |
Carnevale 28' | Report | Rizzolo 66' | Stadium: San Paolo Referee: Moreno Frigerio |
20 November 19886 | Lazio | 3-1 | Hellas Verona | Roma |
Rizzolo 1' Rizzolo 52' Pin 79' | Report | Caniggia 31' | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Bruno Di Cola |
27 November 19887 | Bologna | 0-0 | Lazio | Bologna |
Report | Stadium: Renato Dall'Ara |
11 December 19889 | Lecce | 1-0 | Lazio | Lecce |
Baroni 60' | Report | Stadium: Via del Mare |
18 December 198810 | Lazio | 2-2 | Pescara | Roma |
Gregucci 5' Sosa 25' Gregucci 73' | Report | Tita 53' Tita 65' | Stadium: Olimpico |
31 December 198811 | Pisa | 1-1 | Lazio | Pisa |
Incociatti 36' | Report | Sosa 86' | Stadium: Arena Garibaldi Referee: Bruno Di Cola |
8 January 198912 | Fiorentina | 3-0 | Lazio | Firenze |
Borgonovo 18' Salvatori 57' Baggio 87' | Report | Stadium: Comunale Referee: Pierluigi Magni |
15 January 198913 | Lazio | 1–0 | Roma | Roma |
14:30 | Di Canio 25' | Report | Stadium: Stadio Olimpico di Roma Attendance: 45 000 Referee: D'Elia |
22 January 198914 | Inter | 1–0 | Lazio | Milan |
Mandorlini 40' | Report | Stadium: Giuseppe Meazza |
26 February 198919 | Torino | 4-3 | Lazio | Torino |
Rossi 19' Cravero 25' (pen) Skoro 46' Müller 75' | Report | Pin 13' Sosa 50' Skoro 54' | Stadium: Comunale Referee: Bruno di Cola |
5 March 198920 | Lazio | 1-1 | Milan | Roma |
Sosa 35' (pen.) | Report | van Basten 24' | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Agnolin |
12 March 198921 | Como | 2-1 | Lazio | Como |
Giunta 5' Maccoppi 90' | Report | Gutierrez | Stadium: Giuseppe Sinigaglia Referee: Pierluigi Pairetto |
2 April 198923 | Hellas Verona | 0-0 | Lazio | Verona |
Report | Stadium: Marcantonio Bentegodi |
16 April 198925 | Atalanta | 3-1 | Lazio | Bergamo |
Piscedda 28' Barcella 40' Pasciullo 68' | Report | Sosa 61' | Stadium: Comunale Referee: Luciano Luci |
14 May 198928 | Lazio | 1-0 | Pisa | Roma |
Gregucci 72' | Report | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Arcangello Pezzella |
21 May 198929 | Lazio | 1-0 | Fiorentina | Roma |
Sosa 57' (pen.) | Report | Stadium: Olimpico Referee: Moreno Frigerio |
11 June 198932 | Juventus | 4–2 | Lazio | Torino |
17:00 CET | Buso 21, 79' Piscedda 58' (o.g.) De Agostini 66' | Report | Gregucci 17' Sosa 42' | Stadium: Comunale |
25 June 198934 | Ascoli | 0-0 | Lazio | Ascoli Piceno |
Report | Stadium: Cino e Lillo Del Duca |
First round- Group 3
24 August 19882 | Lazio | 3-0 | Licata |
30 August 19884 | A.C.R. Messina | 3-4 | Lazio | Messina |
Stadium: Stadio Giovanni Celeste |
3 September 19885 | Milan | 2-1 | Lazio | Monza |
Mannari 11' Cappellini 28' | 42' Rizzolo | Stadium: Brianteo Attendance: 15 000 Referee: D'Elia |
Second round - Group 5
14 September 1988 | Lazio | 1–0 | Fiorentina | Roma |
Dezotti 26' | Stadium: Olimpico |
Quarterfinals
The 1988–89 Serie A was won by Internazionale, who won the title comfortably by an 11-point margin over runners-up Napoli. Milan's triumph in the European Cup meant Italy would be entering two teams – both the two giant Milan sides – into the European Cup for the 1989–90 season. Relegated to Serie B were Torino, Pescara, Pisa and Como.
The term oriundo is an Italian and Portuguese noun describing an immigrant in a country, whose ancestry is from that same country. It comes from the Latin verb oriri (orior), "be born", and is etymologically related to Orient.
U.C. Sampdoria won its second cup trophy in just three years, defeating Torino in the final, thanks to a 3-2 aggregate victory. Gianluca Vialli scored ten goals to become club top scorer, as Sampdoria finished fourth in the domestic league.
U.C. Sampdoria had its most successful season ever, winning the Coppa Italia and reaching the final of the Cup Winners' Cup, where it came up short to Barcelona with 2–0. It finished fifth in Serie A with 14 goals from Gianluca Vialli marking the international breakthrough for the striker.
S.S.C. Napoli won an international trophy for the first time, defeating Stuttgart 2-1 and drawing 3-3 in the two-legged final. Napoli did not match Inter in the domestic league, but recorded a second place, its fourth consecutive podium finish in the final standings.
Juventus F.C. finished in 4th place in Serie A and participated in the Coppa Italia.
AC Milan won the European Cup thanks to a 4–0 victory against Steaua București, with Dutch duo Ruud Gullit and Marco van Basten scoring twice each. It did not defend its Serie A title however, finishing 3rd in the standings. Milan also won the first Supercoppa Italiana, beating Sampdoria in the inaugural contest.
S.S. Lazio finished 9th in Serie A this season.
A.C. Fiorentina finished in the midfield of Serie A, beating Roma 1-0 in a playoff match due to a goal by ex-Roma player Roberto Pruzzo. The season also marked the international breakthrough of Roberto Baggio, the striker scoring 15 league goals, also setting up several of Stefano Borgonovo's 14.
Associazione Sportiva Roma finished 7th in Serie A, dropping four places from the season before, even firing coach Nils Liedholm for just a few weeks. It also crashed out of the UEFA Cup against comparatively minnows Dynamo Dresden in the Last 16.
Associazione Sportiva Roma had a rather average season, but finished solidly inside the top half of Serie A with a sixth place. German striker Rudi Völler had his best season at Roma, scoring 14 league goals, whilst Stefano Desideri hit 10 goals. The greatest success of Roma's season was the Primavera team winning the national championship.
The 2014–15 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 68th edition of the national cup in Italian football. Napoli were the defending champions, having won the previous year's final, but were eliminated in the semi-finals by Lazio. Juventus emerged victorious with a 2–1 win in extra time, achieving a record tenth title.
The 2016–17 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 70th edition of the national cup in Italian football. Juventus successfully defended its title by defeating Lazio 2–0 in the final, becoming the first team to win the trophy in three consecutive years.
The 2017–18 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 71st edition of the national cup in Italian football. As a minimum, the winners of the Coppa Italia earn a place in the 2018–19 Europa League and would begin play in the group stage unless they qualify for a more favourable UEFA placing based on league play. Seventy-eight clubs participated in this season's cup competition.
The 2018–19 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 72nd edition of the national cup in Italian football.