1964–65 Coppa Italia
The 1964–65 Coppa Italia, the 18th Coppa Italia was an Italian Football Federation domestic cup competition won by Juventus.
![]() Juventus poses with the trophy | |
Country | ![]() |
---|---|
Dates | 6 Sept 1964 – 29 August 1965 |
Teams | 38 |
Champions | Juventus (5th title) |
Runners-up | Internazionale |
Matches played | 37 |
Goals scored | 106 (2.86 per match) |
Top goal scorer(s) | Gigi Riva Renzo Cappellaro Francesco Rizzo Cané Giampaolo Menichelli Bruno Petroni (3 goals each) |
← 1963–64 1965–66 → |
First round
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Alessandria | 1–2 | Juventus |
Bari | 1–4 (aet) | 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 (aet) | Genoa |
Monza | 2–1 (aet) | Milan |
SPAL | 3–0 | Fiorentina |
Napoli | 2–1 (aet) | Messina |
Palermo | 4–3 (aet) | Catanzaro |
Vigor Trani | 0–3 | Lazio |
Triestina | 1–3 | Atalanta |
Intermediate round
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Napoli | 0–0 (aet) * | Lazio |
* Napoli qualified after drawing of lots.
Second round
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Juventus | 1–0 | Brescia |
Lecco | 3–0 | Sampdoria |
Modena | 1–1 (p:4–5) | Atalanta |
Pro Patria | 1–2 (aet) | Genoa |
Napoli | 2–1 (aet) | Foggia |
Palermo | 1–0 | Catania |
Cagliari | 1–0 | SPAL |
Monza | 2–1 (aet) | Venezia |
p=after penalty shoot–out
Third round
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Genoa | 3–0 | Monza |
Lecco | 0–2 (aet) | Juventus |
Napoli | 1–0 | Palermo |
Cagliari | 5–0 | Atalanta |
Quarter–finals
Torino, Bologna, Internazionale and Roma are added.
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Torino | 2–0 | Genoa |
Bologna | 0–0 (p: 4–5) | Juventus |
Internazionale | 6–3 (aet) | Cagliari |
Napoli | 1–2 | Roma |
p=after penalty shoot–out
Semi–finals
Home team | Score | Away team |
---|---|---|
Roma | 2–2 (p: 6–8) | Internazionale |
Juventus | 1–0 | Torino |
p=after penalty shoot–out
Final
Juventus | 1–0 | Internazionale |
---|---|---|
Menichelli ![]() |
Referee: Alessandro D'Agostini
Top goalscorers
Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
Cagliari | 3 |
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Cagliari | ||
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Cagliari | ||
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Napoli | ||
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Juventus | ||
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Atalanta | ||
2 | ![]() |
Internazionale | 2 |
![]() |
Internazionale | ||
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SPAL | ||
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Napoli | ||
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Monza |
References
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