Campionato Italiano di Football , 1903 runners-up The first official national football tournament was organised in 1898 by the
Italian Football Federation (Italian:
Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio,
FIGC). In the
Italian football league system, the Federazione Italiana del Football (FIF), began organising football in Italy in 1898. Its first competition, the
1898 Italian Football Championship, was held at the
Velodrome Humbert I in Turin on 8 May 1898.
Genoa CFC won the tournament against three Turin based teams, defeating
Internazionale F.C. Torino 3–1 after extra time in the final. •
Italian Championship, the main tournament where only Italian players were allowed to play; the winners would be proclaimed ''Campioni d'Italia
(Italian Champions) and would be awarded the Coppa Buni'' •
Federal Championship, a secondary tournament where foreign players (if they lived in Italy) were also allowed to play; the winners would be proclaimed
Campioni Federali (Federal Champions) and would be awarded the
Coppa Spensley The FIF wanted to organize two championships in order to allow weaker clubs composed only of Italian players ("squadre pure italiane", "pure Italian teams") to win the national title, and to relegate simultaneously the big clubs composed mostly of stronger foreign players ("squadre spurie internazionali", "spurious international teams") in a minor competition for a "consolation prize". The majority of big clubs (Genoa, Torino and Milan) withdrew from both the championships in order to protest against the
autarchical policy of the FIF. The Federal Championship was won by Juventus against Doria, while The Italian Championship 1908 and Coppa Buni were won by Pro Vercelli, beating Juventus, Doria and US Milanese. However, the Federal Championship won by Juventus was later forgotten by FIGC, due to the boycott made by the dissident clubs. In the 1909 season, the two championships were organised again, with
Coppa Oberti in lieu of
Coppa Spensley for the Federal Championship. This time, the majority of big clubs decided to only withdraw from the Italian Championship in order to make the Federal competition the most relevant tournament, and to diminish the Italian one. The Federal Championship was won by Pro Vercelli, beating US Milanese in the Final, while the Italian Championship was won by Juventus, again beating US Milanese in the Final. However, the dissenters' strategy worked out: the failure of the Italian Championship won by Juventus forced the FIGC to later recognize the Federal Champions of Pro Vercelli as "Campioni d'Italia 1909", disavowing the other tournament. The format was modified for the
1909–10 season which was played in a league format. Nine clubs participated, playing each other both home and away. The split between Federal and Italian championship was not completely abolished, because, while unifying these tournaments, it was decided for the last time to assign two titles at the end of the season, In fact, the FIGC established that the first placed club in the general classification would be proclaimed Federal Champions (now turned into the main title), while the best placed club among the four "pure Italian teams" would be recognized as Italian Champions (now the secondary title), depending on the head-to-head matches. At the end of the season, Pro Vercelli and Inter finished equal first, so a playoff was needed to assign the Federal title (the Italian one was won by Pro Vercelli). This season was the first victory for
Internazionale, who defeated
Pro Vercelli 10–3 in the final. Even the Italian title won by Pro Vercelli was later forgotten. In the
1910–11 season, teams from Veneto and Emilia were admitted for the first time. The championship was divided into two groups:
Liguria-Piemonte-Lombardia group, the most important, and the
Veneto-Emilia group. The winners of each group qualified to the Final for the title. The
1912–13 season saw the competition nationalised with North and South divisions. The 1914–1915 Championship was suspended because of World War I while Genoa was first in the Northern Italy Finals and only when the war ended, in 1919, did the FIGC decide to award the 1915 title to Genoa. In 1916,
Milan won the
Coppa Federale, which for that season was a substitute for the championship, which had been suspended because of
World War I. The tournament that year was limited to clubs from the north, with the exception of Pro Vercelli, but was not treated as an official trophy or recognised by the FIGC as an Italian title.
Prima Divisione Controversy hit the Championship in the 1921–22 season which saw the major clubs (including Pro Vercelli,
Bologna and Juventus) in dispute with the FIGC. The best 24 teams had asked for a reduction in clubs in the top division in accordance with a plan drawn up by
Vittorio Pozzo, the
Italy national team coach. Pozzo's plan was dismissed and the
CCI (Italian:
Confederazione Calcistica Italiana) was founded and organised a
1921–22 CCI league (
Prima Divisione) to run concurrently with the
1921–22 season (
Prima Categoria) organised by the FIGC. Therefore, that season saw two champions: Novese (FIGC) and Pro Vercelli (CCI). The schism ended when FIGC agreed to reduce the Northern Championship of 1922–23 to only 36 clubs ("Compromesso Colombo/Colombo compromise"); from the 1923–24 season the Northern Championship was reduced to 24 clubs divided into two groups.
Divisione Nazionale The
Carta di Viareggio/Viareggio charter (1926) was drawn up to legalise professionalism, ban foreign players, and rationalise the championship creating a new national top league where Northern and Southern teams would play in the same championship:
Divisione Nazionale. 17 teams from
Lega Nord (
Northern League) were admitted to the new Championship along with 3 teams from
Lega Sud (
Southern League) for 20 teams, divided into two national groups of 10 teams each. Further scandal followed in the
1926–27 season when title-winners
Torino Football Club were stripped of their
Scudetto following an FIGC investigation. A Torino official was found to
have attempted to bribe opposing defender
Luigi Allemandi in Torino's match against Juventus on 5 June 1927, and thus the season finished with no declared champions.
Serie A In 1929 Divisione Nazionale (two groups of 16 teams each) split into two Championships:
Divisione Nazionale Serie A (the new Top Division) and
Divisione Nazionale Serie B (the new second level of Italian Football). The
1929–30 season was the inaugural Serie A season and was won by
Internazionale (called
Ambrosiana at the time). The next 11 years were also dominated by
Juventus and
Bologna, when all of the
Scudetti were won between the three of them, Juventus winning five times in a row, a record equalled by
Grande Torino in 1949, by Internazionale in 2010, and Juventus itself in 2016, until they won again the next season in 2017 to overtake the record at six league titles in a row. The competition was truncated as the Championship was suspended in 1943 due to
World War II. The title was officially recognised as a decoration by FIGC in 2002. Spezia is authorized by the Italian Federation to exhibit a tricolour badge on the official jerseys which is unique, being the only permanent one in Italy. The post-war years were dominated by a
Torino side known as
Il Grande Torino ("The Great Torino"), a team which found a dramatic end in the
Superga air disaster in 1949. The FIGC ruled Juventus be demoted in the last place, relegated to
Serie B, and start the following season with a nine-point deduction. The other clubs involved suffered similarly with points deduction. ==Editions==