Derby d'Italia

Last updated
Derby d'Italia
Other namesDerby of Italy
Location Northwest Italy
First meeting14 November 1909
Italian Football Championship
Juventus 2–0 Inter Milan
Latest meeting14 February 2026
Serie A
Inter Milan 3–2 Juventus
Stadiums San Siro (Inter Milan)
Allianz Stadium (Juventus)
Statistics
Meetings totalOfficial matches: 255
Unofficial matches: 14
Total matches: 269
Most winsOfficial matches: Juventus (114)
Unofficial matches: Inter Milan (6)
Total matches: Juventus (118)
Top scorer Roberto Boninsegna
Giuseppe Meazza
Omar Sívori
(12 each)
Largest victoryJuventus 9–1 Inter Milan
Serie A
(10 June 1961)

The Derby d'Italia (English: Derby of Italy) is the name of the football derby between Internazionale of Milan and Juventus of Turin. The term was coined in 1967 by Italian sports journalist Gianni Brera. [1] [2]

Contents

The teams are from the two biggest cities in Northern Italy. Both teams have fans across Italy, and there are numerous fan clubs of Juventus in Piedmont and Inter in Lombardy (including in the two cities). [3] [4]

Both clubs are among the most successful football clubs in the world.

History

The matchup between Juventus and Inter is perhaps the most intense match in Italy between two teams from different cities, historically since the 1950s and 60s, and especially after the Calciopoli which saw Juventus stripped of their league title from 2005–06 and given to Inter. [5]

After a field invasion due to the overflowing stands [6] during a derby fixture in the 1960–61 season, Lega Calcio awarded the match to Inter but later FIGC overturned the decision and ordered a replay, much to the fury of Inter president Angelo Moratti and club supporters. Moratti accused the Italian football association of favouritism due to the Agnelli family's influence, as Umberto Agnelli was FIGC president at that time. In protest, Inter fielded their youth players for the replay and were thrashed 9–1. Juventus striker Omar Sívori scored six goals in the match and went on to win the Ballon d'Or that year, [1] Inter only goal was scored by a young Sandro Mazzola.

Roberto Boninsegna tackled by Francesco Morini during a derby d'Italia in 1974. Morini Boninsegna 1973-74.jpg
Roberto Boninsegna tackled by Francesco Morini during a derby d'Italia in 1974.

During the 1997–98 fixture at the Stadio delle Alpi there was controversy over referee Piero Ceccarini's decisions, in particular not to award a penalty for Mark Iuliano's foul on Inter forward Ronaldo in the direct clash between the two teams decisive for the title with Inter behind only 1 point with 4 games left. Juventus, up 1–0 at the time of the incident, were after few seconds awarded a penalty which was missed by Alessandro Del Piero; Juventus won the game 1–0 and with this secured the scudetto with five points ahead. The incident caused heated arguments in the Italian parliament during a publicly broadcast "question time" session in April 1998. [1] [7] Domenico Gramazio of the National Alliance reportedly shouted "They are all thieves!" at fellow politician and former Juventus player Massimo Mauro of the ruling Democrats of the Left, prompting Chamber of Deputies member and then-Deputy Prime Minister Walter Veltroni to comment, "We are not at a stadium. This is a spectacle that is unworthy, embarrassing and grotesque...". The session had to be suspended and several politicians were later penalised as a result. [8]

During the days leading up to the derby on 5 December 2009 in Turin, there were fears about the Juventus ultras abusing Inter's Italian striker Mario Balotelli (who is of Ghanaian descent) due to a history of racial abuse from fans. Juventus chairman Jean-Claude Blanc and Mirella Scirea, widow of Juventus legend Gaetano Scirea, wrote to the ultra groups and publicly urged fans to refrain from using racist chants. [9] When Inter's players arrived in Turin, the team bus was pelted with eggs by some Juventus fans. The match itself was marred by seven bookings, a red card and a number of heated on-pitch altercations, in particular between Juve goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon and Inter midfielder Thiago Motta. Inter manager José Mourinho was dismissed in the first half for arguing with the referee. [10] [11] A second-half winner from Claudio Marchisio re-opened the Scudetto race as Inter's lead was cut to five points.

Juventus and Inter were matched up for the semi-final of the 2015–16 Coppa Italia, where Juventus won the opening leg 3–0 at home in Turin on 27 January 2016. [12] In the return leg on 3 March 2016, Inter won 3–0 in Milan at home to tie 3–3 on aggregate and force a penalty shoot-out, which Juventus ultimately won 5–3 to move on to the final. [13]

Official match results

Dates are in dd/mm/yyyy form. [14]

  Juventus win  Draw  Inter win

  1. Juventus won 2–1 in extra time after both teams tied 1–1 on aggregate.
  2. Juventus won 7–6 on penalties after both teams tied 4–4 on aggregate.
  3. 1 2 3 Inter won after extra time.
  4. Juventus won 5–3 on penalties after both teams tied 3–3 on aggregate.

Statistics

As of 14 February 2026
CompetitionMatchesJuventus
wins
DrawsInter
wins
Juventus
goals
Inter
goals
Prima Categoria113261525
Prima Divisione211042
Divisione Nazionale144461719
Serie A186894750270219
Total league matches213975462306265
1944 Campionato Alta Italia210122
Coppa Italia36159125345
Supercoppa Italiana200213
Mitropa Cup (play-off)110010
Trofeo Picchi100113
Total official matches2551146378364318
Coppa Pagani100101
Palla d'oro Moët et Chandon110021
Trofeo Radice100103
Trofeo Ansbacher100128
Trofeo Caimi5122813
Torneo Città di Torino110031
Torneo Città di Milano100113
Coppa Super Clubs110010
International Champions Cup 202022
Total matches2691186784383350

Records

Most goals in a match

  • 10 goals on 10 June 1961, Juventus 9–1 Inter
  • 9 goals on 14 December 1913, Juventus 7–2 Inter
  • 8 goals on 17 January 1932, Juventus 6–2 Inter
  • 8 goals on 19 June 1975, Inter 2–6 Juventus
  • 8 goals on 27 October 2024, Inter 4–4 Juventus
  • 7 goals on 26 November 1911, Inter 6–1 Juventus
  • 7 goals on 4 January 1914, Inter 6–1 Juventus
  • 7 goals on 13 September 2025, Juventus 4–3 Inter

Inter biggest wins

*Four or more goals difference, OR Inter scored five or above

  • Inter 6–1 Juventus on 26 November 1911
  • Juventus 0–4 Inter on 11 February 1912
  • Inter 6–1 Juventus on 4 January 1914
  • Inter 4–0 Juventus on 17 November 1935
  • Inter 5–0 Juventus on 16 October 1938
  • Inter 4–0 Juventus on 17 September 1939
  • Inter 6–0 Juventus on 4 April 1954
  • Inter 4–0 Juventus on 11 November 1979
  • Inter 4–0 Juventus on 11 November 1984

Juventus biggest wins

*Four or more goals difference, OR Juventus scored five or above

  • Juventus 7–2 Inter on 14 December 1913
  • Juventus 6–2 Inter on 17 January 1932
  • Juventus 4–0 Inter on 17 May 1942
  • Juventus 5–1 Inter on 3 March 1957
  • Juventus 9–1 Inter on 10 June 1961
  • Inter 2–6 Juventus on 19 June 1975

Top scorers

Below is the list of players with the most goals scored in official games. As of 14 February 2026.

RankPlayerTeam(s) (goals)Goals
1 Flag of Argentina.svg Flag of Italy.svg Omar Sívori Juventus13
2 Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Boninsegna Inter (9)
Juventus (3)
12
Flag of Italy.svg Giuseppe Meazza Inter (10)
Juventus (2)
4 Flag of Italy.svg Pietro Anastasi Juventus9
Flag of Italy.svg Alessandro Del Piero Juventus
6 Flag of Italy.svg Luigi Cevenini Inter8
Flag of Italy.svg Benito Lorenzi Inter
8 Flag of Italy.svg Alessandro Altobelli Inter7
Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Baggio Juventus
Flag of Italy.svg Giampiero Boniperti Juventus
Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg John Charles Juventus
Flag of Argentina.svg Julio Cruz Inter
Flag of Italy.svg Giovanni Ferrari Juventus (5)
Inter (2)

Most appearances

Below is the list of players with the most appearances in official games. As of 14 February 2026.

RankPlayerTeam(s) (apps)Apps
1 Flag of Italy.svg Giacinto Facchetti Inter39
Flag of Argentina.svg Javier Zanetti Inter
3 Flag of Italy.svg Sandro Mazzola Inter38
4 Flag of Italy.svg Giuseppe Bergomi Inter37
5 Flag of Italy.svg Franco Causio Juventus (35)
Inter (1)
36
Flag of Italy.svg Giuseppe Furino Juventus
7 Flag of Italy.svg Giuseppe Baresi Inter35
Flag of Italy.svg Gaetano Scirea Juventus
9 Flag of Italy.svg Giorgio Chiellini Juventus33
Flag of Italy.svg Mario Corso Inter

Managers

Below is the list of managers with the most appearances in official games. As of 14 February 2026.

Appearances

RankManagerTeam(s) (apps)Apps
1 Flag of Italy.svg Giovanni Trapattoni Juventus (36)
Inter (10)
46
2 Flag of Italy.svg Massimiliano Allegri Juventus22
3 Flag of Italy.svg Marcello Lippi Juventus (19)
Inter (2)
21
4 Flag of Argentina.svg Helenio Herrera Inter18
5 Flag of Hungary.svg Árpád Weisz Inter16
6 Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Mancini Inter15
7 Flag of Italy.svg Eugenio Bersellini Inter14
Flag of Italy.svg Carlo Carcano Juventus (9)
Inter (5)
9 Flag of Italy.svg Carlo Parola Juventus13
Flag of Paraguay.svg Heriberto Herrera Juventus (11)
Inter (2)

Head-to-head ranking in Serie A (1930–2025)

P. 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
22222222222222222222222222222222222
33333333333333333333333333
444444444444444444444444444
5555555555555555
66666666
7777777777
888888
999999
1010
11
12121212
1313
14
15
16
17
18
19
2020

Total: Juventus with 54 higher finishes, Inter with 38 higher finishes (as of the end of the 2024–25 season). No head-to-head in 2007, since Juventus was in Serie B.

Notes:

Trophies

As of 15 May 2024
JuventusCompetitionInter
Domestic
36 Serie A 20
15 Coppa Italia 9
9 Supercoppa Italiana 8
60Domestic total37
International
2 UEFA Champions League 3
1 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (defunct)
3 UEFA Europa League/UEFA Cup 3
2 UEFA Super Cup
1 UEFA Intertoto Cup (defunct)
2 Intercontinental Cup (defunct)2
FIFA Club World Cup 1
11International total9
71Grand total46

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Juventus make their point in engrossing Derby D'Italia". The Guardian . 5 November 2007.
  2. "Derby d'Italia: Historical look-back". footballitaliano.co.uk. 20 November 2008. Archived from the original on 5 August 2018. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  3. "OFFICIAL FAN CLUB" (in Italian). Juventus FC.
  4. "Trova un Inter Club". inter.it (in Italian). Inter Milan.
  5. Luigi Ceccarini (24 August 2007). "Calcio, va di moda tifare contro" (in Italian). repubblica.it. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  6. storiedicalcio.altervista.org. "Juventus-Inter 9-1, gloria effimera" (in Italian).
  7. Agnew, Paddy (2007). Forza Italia: The Fall and Rise of Italian Football. Ebury Publishing. p. 295. ISBN   9781448117642.
  8. "Political football, Italian style". BBC News . 28 April 1998.
  9. "Derby weekend lights up with fireworks on and off the field". The Guardian . 7 December 2009.
  10. "Juve slam brakes on Inter". uefa.com. 5 December 2009. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011.
  11. "Report: Juventus vs Internazionale". espn.com . 6 December 2009. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
  12. Francesco Carci (27 January 2016). "Juventus-Inter 3-0: si risveglia Morata, i bianconeri ipotecano la finale" (in Italian). repubblica.it.
  13. Jacopo Manfredi (3 March 2016). "Coppa Italia, Inter a un soffio dall'impresa: Juventus in finale solo ai rigori" (in Italian). repubblica.it.
  14. "Inter: Matches Played - Overall with Minor Tournaments". myjuve.it. Archived from the original on 28 August 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.