Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Competition format  



2.1  Competition  





2.2  Promotion and relegation  







3 Clubs  



3.1  Seasons in Serie B  





3.2  The Serie BC Alta Italia post-war championship  







4 Champions and promotions  





5 Club performances  



5.1  Performance by club  





5.2  Titles by region  





5.3  Titles by city  





5.4  Promotions by region  







6 Top scorers (2000)  





7 See also  





8 Footnotes  





9 References  





10 External links  














Serie B






العربية
Azərbaycanca
Беларуская
Български
Bosanski
Català
Čeština
Dansk
Deutsch
Eesti
Ελληνικά
Español
Esperanto
فارسی
Français
Furlan
Galego

Հայերեն
Hrvatski
Bahasa Indonesia
IsiXhosa
Italiano
עברית

Latina
Latviešu
Lietuvių
Ligure
Magyar
Македонски
Malti
Bahasa Melayu
Nederlands

Napulitano
Norsk bokmål
Polski
Português
Română
Русский
Scots
Shqip
Sicilianu
Simple English
Slovenčina
Slovenščina
Српски / srpski
Suomi
Svenska

Türkçe
Українська
Vèneto
Tiếng Vit

 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Serie B
Organising bodyLega B
Founded1929; 95 years ago (1929)
(pilot in 1922)
CountryItaly
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams20
Level on pyramid2
PromotiontoSerie A
RelegationtoSerie C
Domestic cup(s)Coppa Italia
International cup(s)UEFA Europa League
(via winning Coppa Italia)
Current championsParma (1st title)
(2023–24)
Most championshipsGenoa (6 titles)
Most appearancesLuigi Cagni (483)
Top goalscorerStefan Schwoch (135)
TV partnersSky Sport
DAZN
Websitelegab.it
Current: 2023–24 Serie B

The Serie B (Italian pronunciation: [ˈsɛːrje ˈbi][1]), officially known as Serie BKT for sponsorship reasons,[2] is the second-highest division in the Italian football league system after the Serie A. It has been operating for over ninety years since the 1929–30 season. It had been organized by Lega Calcio until 2010 and the Lega Serie B ever since. Common nicknames for the league are campionato cadetto and cadetteria, since cadetto is the Italian name for junior or cadet.

History

[edit]

A junior football championship was created in Italy in 1904; after seven editions of the major tournament of FIGC. It was called Second Category, and was composed of senior squads of town clubs and by youth teams of city clubs. If the first ones won the championship, they would be promoted to First Category, which consequently improved in size: the first team to reach the honour, was Pro Vercelli in 1907, which even won the scudetto in 1908. FIGC attempted many times to introduce relegations on the contrary, but the reform was really adopted only in 1921 by the secessionist CCI in its Northern League, which consisted of a First Division and a Second Division: the first teams to be relegated were AC Vicenza and FC Inter even if, after the reunion with FIGC, the regulations were changed, and Venezia was demoted instead of the Milanese club. Even if part of the same league, differently from First Division, Second Division was based on local group with proximity criteria.

Only in 1928 was the big reform conceived by FIGC president Leandro Arpinati: after a year, a new second division based on the same national format of the major tournament would be born. Serie B began in 1929 with 18 clubs and continued until World War II, after which it was divided again between the northern and the southern part of the country in the aftermath of the war. The championship became national again in 1948, and for many years in the second half of the 20th century, it was played by 20 clubs. In 2003–04, a single group of 24 teams was formed, the largest in the history of all levels of the Italian championship. After 2004, a 22-team format was introduced together with playoffs.

After Serie A split with Serie B to form Lega Serie A, Lega Serie B was reformed on 7 July 2010. The league signed a new sponsor bwin for 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons; changed the league name from Serie B TIM to Serie Bwin.[3] The League changed again its name in Serie B ConTe.it due to sponsorship reasons.[4]

Serie B is the lowest division in which five clubs have ever played: Torino, Juventus, Milan, Roma and Lazio.

Competition format

[edit]

Competition

[edit]

During the regular season each club plays the others twice (a double round-robin system), once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for 38 games. The games of the first leg (andata) and of the second leg (ritorno) are played in the same order. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss.

From the 2006–07 seasonto2019–20, the Serie B champion was awarded the Ali della Vittoria (Wings of Victory) cup. The trophy was 63 cm high and weighed 5 kg. Its design represented the wings of Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, holding a cup similar to an Olympic flame. From the 2021–22 season, the Coppa Nexus replaced the previous trophy.[5]

Serie B was composed of 20 teams until the 2002–03 season. It was enlarged to 24 teams for the 2003–04 season due to legal problems relating to Calcio Catania relegation. The league reverted to 22 teams for the 2004–05 season, while Serie A expanded from 18 to 20 teams.

Below is a complete record of how many teams played in each season throughout the league's history;

Promotion and relegation

[edit]

At the end of the season, three teams are promoted to Serie A and four teams are relegatedtoSerie C.

The top two teams are automatically promoted and the third place team is only automatically promoted if they are more than 14 points clear of the fourth placed team.

If the third place team is not more than 14 points clear of the fourth place team then the teams from third place to eighth place enter a play-off to decide the final promotion spot.

The play-off system has three rounds and the rules are as follows.[6]


The preliminary round between fifth and eighth and between sixth and seventh are a single match on the ground of the best placed in the regular season . In the event of a tie at the end of normal time, extra time will be played. If the game is still tied at the end of extra time, the highest ranked team goes through, without taking a penalty shootout.

The semi-finals are a two-legged competition with a first leg at home for the teams that played in the preliminary round and a second leg at home for the third and fourth placed teams in the regular season. In the event of a tie in the aggregate result, the best-ranked team in the regular season progresses to the final, without extra time and penalties.

The final is played between the winners of the semi-finals over two legs, the latter at the home of the best-placed team in the league. In the event of a tie, the best-placed team in the regular season is promoted to Serie A, without the need for extra time or penalties. In the event that the two finalists have finished the regular season on equal points, the second leg includes extra time and penalties if required.



In the relegation zone, the three last-placed teams (18th, 19th and 20th) are automatically demoted to Serie C. If the 16th-placed team is 5 or more points ahead of the 17th-placed team, then the 17th-placed team becomes the 4th and final team to be demoted, otherwise, the conditions for a playoff more commonly called playout exist.

If the playout is necessary, the 16th and 17th-placed teams are paired in a two-legged series with home-field advantage in the 2nd leg going to the 16th-placed team. The team with the higher aggregate score remains in Serie B while the loser becomes the fourth team relegated to Serie C. If an aggregate tie exists at the end of regulation play of the 2nd leg, the 16th-placed team is saved, and the 17th-placed team is demoted, unless the two teams ended the season with equal points, in which case there will be extra-time and a penalty shoot-out if still tied.

Clubs

[edit]
Bari
Brescia
Catanzaro
Cittadella
Como
Cosenza
Cremonese
Feralpisalò
Lecco
Modena
Palermo
Parma
Pisa
Reggiana
Sampdoria
Spezia
Südtirol
Ternana
Venezia
Location of teams in 2023–24 Serie B
Team Home city Stadium Capacity 2022–23 season
Ascoli Ascoli Piceno Stadio Cino e Lillo Del Duca 11,326 12th in Serie B
Bari Bari Stadio San Nicola 58,270 3rd in Serie B
Brescia Brescia Stadio Mario Rigamonti 19,500 16th in Serie B
Catanzaro Catanzaro Stadio Nicola Ceravolo 14,650 Serie C Group C champions
Cittadella Cittadella Stadio Pier Cesare Tombolato 7,623 15th in Serie B
Como Como Stadio Giuseppe Sinigaglia 13,602 13th in Serie B
Cosenza Cosenza Stadio San Vito-Gigi Marulla 20,987 17th in Serie B
Cremonese Cremona Stadio Giovanni Zini 15,191 19th in Serie A
Feralpisalò Salò and Lonato del Garda Stadio Leonardo Garilli[a] 21,668 Serie C Group A champions
Lecco Lecco Stadio Rigamonti-Ceppi
Stadio Euganeo[b]
4,995
18,060
Serie C Play-off winners
Modena Modena Stadio Alberto Braglia 21,151 10th in Serie B
Palermo Palermo Stadio Renzo Barbera 36,365 9th in Serie B
Parma Parma Stadio Ennio Tardini 22,352 4th in Serie B
Pisa Pisa Arena Garibaldi – Stadio Romeo Anconetani 14,000 11th in Serie B
Reggiana Reggio Emilia Mapei Stadium – Città del Tricolore 21,525 Serie C Group B champions
Sampdoria Genoa Stadio Luigi Ferraris 33,205 20th in Serie A
Spezia La Spezia Stadio Alberto Picco 11,968 18th in Serie A
Südtirol Bolzano Stadio Druso 5,539 6th in Serie B
Ternana Terni Stadio Libero Liberati 22,000 14th in Serie B
Venezia Venice Stadio Pier Luigi Penzo 11,150 8th in Serie B
  1. ^ Feralpisalò temporarily relocated to Stadio Leonardo Garilli (home stadium of Piacenza) after Stadio Lino Turina did not meet Serie B requirements.
  • ^ Lecco played in Stadio Euganeo (home stadium of Padova) the first home game of the season because Stadio Rigamonti-Ceppi initially did not meet Serie B requirements.
  • Seasons in Serie B

    [edit]

    This is the complete list of the 142 clubs that have taken part in the 91 Serie B seasons played from the 1929–30 season until the 2024–25 season.[7][a]

    The teams in bold compete in Serie B in the 2024–25 season. The teams in italics represent defunct teams. The year in parentheses represents the most recent year of participation at this level.

  • 53 seasons: Verona (2019), Modena (2025)
  • 49 seasons: Bari (2025)
  • 47 seasons: Palermo (2025)
  • 40 seasons: Monza (2022)
  • 39 seasons: Pescara (2021), Venezia (2024)
  • 38 seasons: Padova (2019), Pisa (2025)
  • 37 seasons: Vicenza (2022), Como (2024)
  • 36 seasons: Reggiana (2025)
  • 34 seasons: Catania (2015), Novara (2018), Genoa (2023)
  • 33 seasons: Cesena (2025), Cremonese (2025)
  • 32 seasons: Messina (2008)
  • 31 seasons: Taranto (1993), Salernitana (2025)
  • 30 seasons: Cagliari (2023), Parma (2024), Ternana (2024), Catanzaro (2025)
  • 29 seasons: Lecce (2022), Perugia (2023), Spezia (2025)
  • 28 seasons: Atalanta (2011)
  • 27 seasons: Livorno (2020), Ascoli (2024)
  • 26 seasons: Cosenza (2025)
  • 25 seasons: Foggia (2019), Reggina (2023)
  • 24 seasons: SPAL (2023)
  • 22 seasons: Triestina (2011), Empoli (2021)
  • 21 seasons: Sambenedettese (1989), Ancona (2010), Varese (2015), Alessandria (2022)
  • 19 seasons: Lucchese (1999), Pistoiese (2002), Avellino (2018)
  • 18 seasons: Udinese (1995), Piacenza (2011), Cittadella (2025), Sampdoria (2025),[8]
  • 16 seasons: Arezzo (2007) Treviso (2009)
  • 15 seasons: Crotone (2022), Mantova (2025)
  • 14 seasons: Legnano (1957)
  • 13 seasons: Pro Patria (1966), Siena (2014), Pro Vercelli (2018), Frosinone (2025)
  • 12 seasons: Fanfulla (1954), Napoli (2007), Torino (2012), Bologna (2015), Lecco (2024)
  • 11 seasons: Vigevano (1948), Lazio (1988),
  • 10 seasons: Marzotto (1961), Prato (1964), Chievo (2021)
  • 9 seasons: Rimini (2009), AlbinoLeffe (2012)
  • 7 seasons: Siracusa (1953), Ravenna (2001)
  • 6 seasons: Seregno (1935), Viareggio (1948), Brindisi (1976), Fidelis Andria (1999), Grosseto (2013), Virtus Entella (2021), Sassuolo (2025), Juve Stabia (2025)
  • 5 seasons: Savona (1967), Campobasso (1987), Fiorentina (2004), Potenza (1968), Carpi (2019), Trapani (2020), Benevento (2023)
  • 4 seasons: Monfalcone (1933), Casale (1947), Pro Sesto (1950), Pavia (1955), Barletta (1991), Virtus Lanciano (2016), Latina (2017)
  • 3 seasons: Derthona (1935), Grion Pola (1935), L'Aquila (1937), Sanremese (1940), Piombino (1954), Cavese (1984), Savoia (2000), Nocerina (2012), Pordenone (2022), Carrarese (2025), Südtirol (2025)
  • 2 seasons: Fiumana (1942), Biellese (1947), Crema (1948), Gallaratese (1948), Pro Gorizia (1948), Rieti (1948), Scafatese (1948), Suzzara (1948), Vogherese (1948), Trani (1965), Milan (1983),Casertana (1992), Licata (1990), Casertana (1991), Acireale (1995), Castel di Sangro (1998), Gubbio (2012)
  • 1 season: Molinella (1940), Maceratese (1941), M.A.T.E.R. (1943), Alba Trastevere (1947), Arsenale Taranto (1947), Forlì (1947), Mestrina (1947), Sestrese (1947), Bolzano (1948), Centese (1948), Magenta (1948), Vita Nova (1948), Roma (1952), Massese (1971), Sorrento (1972), Matera (1980), Alzano Virescit (2000), Fermana (2000), Juventus (2007), Gallipoli (2010), Portogruaro (2011), Feralpisalò (2024)
  • The Serie B–C Alta Italia post-war championship

    [edit]

    This championship was organized by geographical criteria with only Northern Italy Serie B and the best Northern Italy Serie C teams taking part. Southern Italy Serie B teams took part to 1945–46 Serie A. For this reason, this championship is not included in the statistics.

  • Ausonia SpeziaLa Spezia
  • BielleseBiella
  • CasaleCasale Monferrato
  • CesenaCesena
  • ComoComo
  • CremaCrema
  • CremoneseCremona
  • CuneoCuneo
  • FanfullaLodi
  • ForlìForlì
  • GallarateseGallarate
  • LeccoLecco
  • LegnanoLegnano
  • MantovaMantua
  • NovaraNovara
  • PadovaPadua
  • PanigaleBologna
  • ParmaParma
  • PiacenzaPiacenza
  • Pro GoriziaGorizia
  • Pro PatriaBusto Arsizio
  • Pro SestoSesto San Giovanni
  • Pro VercelliVercelli
  • ReggianaReggio Emilia
  • SavonaSavona
  • SeregnoSeregno
  • SestreseGenoa
  • SPALFerrara
  • SuzzaraSuzzara
  • TrentoTrento
  • TrevisoTreviso
  • UdineseUdine
  • VeronaVerona
  • VigevanoVigevano
  • VoghereseVoghera
  • Champions and promotions

    [edit]
    Season Champions Runners-up Other promoted
    1929–30 Casale Legnano
    1930–31 Fiorentina Bari
    1931–32 Palermo Padova
    1932–33 Livorno Brescia
    1933–34 Sampierdarenese Baria
    1934–35 Genoa Bari
    1935–36 Lucchese Novara
    1936–37 Livorno Atalanta
    1937–38 Modenab Novarab
    1938–39 Fiorentina Venezia
    1939–40 Atalanta Livorno
    1940–41 Sampierdarenese Modena
    1941–42 Bari Vicenza
    1942–43 Modena Brescia
    1945–46 Alessandria Pro Patriaa Napoli

    1946–47
    Northern champions Central champions Southern champions
    Pro Patria Lucchese Salernitana
    1947–48

    Novara Padova Palermo
    Champions Runners-up Other promoted
    1948–49 Como Venezia
    1949–50 Napoli Udinese
    1950–51 SPAL Legnano
    1951–52 Roma Bresciaa
    1952–53 Genoa Legnano
    1953–54 Catania Pro Patria
    1954–55 Vicenza Padova
    1955–56 Udinese Palermo
    1956–57 Hellas Verona Alessandria
    1957–58 Triestina Bari
    1958–59 Atalanta Palermo
    1959–60 Torino Lecco Catania
    1960–61 Venezia Mantova Palermo
    1961–62 Genoa Napoli Modena
    1962–63 Messina Bari Lazio
    1963–64 Varese Cagliari Foggia
    1964–65 Brescia Napoli SPAL
    1965–66 Venezia Lecco Mantova
    1966–67 Sampdoria Varese
    1967–68 Palermo Hellas Verona Pisa
    1968–69 Lazio Brescia Bari
    1969–70 Varese Foggia Catania
    1970–71 Mantova Atalanta Catanzaro
    1971–72 Ternana Lazio Palermo
    1972–73 Genoa Cesena Foggia
    1973–74 Varese Ascoli Ternana
    1974–75 Perugia Como Hellas Verona
    1975–76 Genoa Catanzaro Foggia
    1976–77 Vicenza Atalanta Pescara
    1977–78 Ascoli Catanzaro Avellino
    1978–79 Udinese Cagliari Pescara
    1979–80 Como Pistoiese Brescia
    1980–81 Milan Genoa Cesena
    1981–82 Hellas Verona Pisa Sampdoria
    1982–83 Milan Lazio Catania
    1983–84 Atalanta Como Cremonese
    1984–85 Pisa Lecce Bari
    1985–86 Ascoli Brescia Empoli
    1986–87 Pescara Pisa Cesena
    1987–88 Bologna Lecce Lazio, Atalanta
    1988–89 Genoa Bari Udinese, Cremonese
    1989–90 Torino Pisa Cagliari, Parma
    1990–91 Foggia Hellas Verona Cremonese, Ascoli
    1991–92 Brescia Pescara Ancona, Udinese
    1992–93 Reggiana Cremonese Piacenza, Lecce
    1993–94 Fiorentina Bari Brescia, Padova
    1994–95 Piacenza Udinese Vicenza, Atalanta
    1995–96 Bologna Hellas Verona Perugia, Reggiana
    1996–97 Brescia Empoli Lecce, Bari
    1997–98 Salernitana Venezia Cagliari, Perugia
    1998–99 Hellas Verona Torino Reggina, Lecce
    1999–2000 Vicenza Atalanta Brescia, Napoli
    2000–01 Torino Piacenza Chievo, Venezia
    2001–02 Como Modena Reggina, Empoli
    2002–03 Siena Sampdoria Lecce, Ancona
    2003–04 Palermo Cagliari Livorno, Messina, Atalanta, Fiorentinac
    2004–05 Empoli Torinoa Treviso, Ascoli
    2005–06 Atalanta Catania Torino
    2006–07 Juventus Napoli Genoa
    2007–08 Chievo Bologna Lecce
    2008–09 Bari Parma Livorno
    2009–10 Lecce Cesena Brescia
    2010–11 Atalanta Siena Novara
    2011–12 Pescara Torino Sampdoria
    2012–13 Sassuolo Hellas Verona Livorno
    2013–14 Palermo Empoli Cesena
    2014–15 Carpi Frosinone Bologna
    2015–16 Cagliari Crotone Pescara
    2016–17 SPAL Hellas Verona Benevento
    2017–18 Empoli Parma Frosinone
    2018–19 Brescia Lecce Hellas Verona
    2019–20 Benevento Crotone Spezia
    2020–21 Empoli Salernitana Venezia
    2021–22 Lecce Cremonese Monza
    2022–23 Frosinone Genoa Cagliari
    2023–24 Parma Como Venezia

    a Not promoted for Serie A reduction.

    b Modena and Novara were both awarded champions in 1937–38.

    c Six teams were promoted in 2003–04 due to the expansion of Serie A from 18 to 20 teams.

    Club performances

    [edit]

    Performance by club

    [edit]

    Updated as of 2023–24 season

    Club Winners Runners-up Winning years
    Genoa 6 2 1935, 1953, 1962, 1973, 1976, 1989
    Atalanta 5 3 1940, 1959, 1984, 2006, 2011
    Palermo 5 2 1932, 1948, 1968, 2004, 2014
    Bari 4 6 1935, 1942, 1946, 2009
    Brescia 4 6 1965, 1992, 1997, 2019
    Hellas Verona 3 5 1957, 1982, 1999
    Como 3 3 1949, 1980, 2002
    Torino 3 2 1960, 1990, 2001
    Varese 3 1 1964, 1970, 1974
    Vicenza 3 1 1955, 1977, 2000
    Fiorentina 3 1931, 1939, 1994
    Novara 3 3 1927, 1938, 1948
    Empoli 3 1 2005, 2018, 2021
    Venezia 2 3 1961, 1966
    Napoli 2 3 1946, 1950
    Lecce 2 2 2010, 2022
    Pescara 2 2 1987, 2012
    Udinese 2 2 1956, 1979
    Ascoli 2 1 1978, 1986
    Livorno 2 1 1933, 1937
    Bologna 2 1 1988, 1996
    Salernitana 2 1 1947, 1998
    Sampierdarenese 2 1934, 1941
    Lucchese 2 1936, 1947
    Milan 2 1981, 1983
    SPAL 2 1951, 2017
    Modena 1 4 1943
    Pisa 1 4 1985
    Cagliari 1 3 2016
    Padova 1 3 1948
    Lazio 1 2 1969
    Perugia 1 2 1975
    Pro Patria 1 2 1947
    Alessandria 1 1 1946
    Catania 1 1 1954
    Foggia 1 1 1991
    Frosinone 1 1 2023
    Mantova 1 1 1971
    Piacenza 1 1 1995
    Reggiana 1 1 1993
    Sampdoria 1 1 1967
    Siena 1 1 2003
    Ternana 1 1 1972
    Benevento 1 2020
    Carpi 1 2015
    Casale 1 1930
    Chievo 1 2008
    Juventus 1 2007
    Messina 1 1963
    Roma 1 1952
    Sassuolo 1 2013
    Triestina 1 1958
    Spezia 1 1929
    Parma 1 2 2024
    Legnano 4
    Catanzaro 2
    Cesena 2
    Cremonese 2
    Crotone 2
    Lecco 2
    Pistoiese 1
    Treviso 1

    Titles by region

    [edit]

    Updated as of 2023–24 season

    Region Titles Winning club(s) (titles)
     Lombardia 20 Atalanta (6), Brescia (4), Como (3), Varese (3), Milan (2), Mantova (1), Pro Patria (1)
     Toscana 12 Empoli (3), Fiorentina (3), Livorno (2), Lucchese (2), Pisa (1), Siena (1)
     Emilia-Romagna 10 Bologna (2), SPAL (2), Carpi (1), Modena (1), Parma (1), Piacenza (1), Reggiana (1), Sassuolo (1)
     Veneto 10 Hellas Verona (3), Vicenza (3), Venezia (2), Chievo (1), Padova (1)
     Liguria 9 Genoa (6), Sampierdarenese (2), Sampdoria (1), Spezia (1)
     Piemonte 8 Torino (3), Novara (3), Alessandria (1), Casale (1), Juventus (1)
     Puglia 7 Bari (4), Lecce (2), Foggia (1)
     Sicilia 7 Palermo (5), Catania (1), Messina (1)
     Campania 5 Salernitana (2), Napoli (2), Benevento (1)
     Friuli-Venezia Giulia 3 Udinese (2), Triestina (1)
     Lazio 3 Frosinone (1), Lazio (1), Roma (1)
     Abruzzo 2 Pescara (2)
     Marche 2 Ascoli (2)
     Umbria 2 Perugia (1), Ternana (1)
     Sardinia 1 Cagliari (1)

    Titles by city

    [edit]

    Updated as of 2023–24 season

    City Titles Winning club(s) (titles)
    Genoa 9 Genoa (6), Sampierdarenese (2), Sampdoria (1)
    Bergamo 6 Atalanta (6)
    Palermo 5 Palermo (5)
    Turin 4 Torino (3), Juventus (1)
    Verona 4 Hellas Verona (3), Chievo (1)
    Bari 4 Bari (4)
    Brescia 4 Brescia (4)
    Como 3 Como (3)
    Florence 3 Fiorentina (3)
    Varese 3 Varese (3)
    Vicenza 3 Vicenza (3)
    Novara 3 Novara (3)
    Empoli 3 Empoli (3)
    Ascoli Piceno 2 Ascoli (2)
    Bologna 2 Bologna (2)
    Ferrara 2 SPAL (2)
    Lecce 2 Lecce (2)
    Livorno 2 Livorno (2)
    Lucca 2 Lucchese (2)
    Milan 2 Milan (2)
    Naples 2 Napoli (2)
    Pescara 2 Pescara (2)
    Rome 2 Lazio (1), Roma (1)
    Salerno 2 Salernitana (2)
    Udine 2 Udinese (2)
    Venice 2 Venezia (2)
    Alessandria 1 Alessandria (1)
    Benevento 1 Benevento (1)
    Busto Arsizio 1 Pro Patria (1)
    Cagliari 1 Cagliari (1)
    Carpi 1 Carpi (1)
    Casale Monferrato 1 Casale (1)
    Catania 1 Catania (1)
    Foggia 1 Foggia (1)
    Frosinone 1 Frosinone (1)
    La Spezia 1 Spezia (1)
    Mantua 1 Mantova (1)
    Messina 1 Messina (1)
    Modena 1 Modena (1)
    Padua 1 Padova (1)
    Parma 1 Parma (1)
    Perugia 1 Perugia (1)
    Piacenza 1 Piacenza (1)
    Pisa 1 Pisa (1)
    Reggio Emilia 1 Reggiana (1)
    Sassuolo 1 Sassuolo (1)
    Siena 1 Siena (1)
    Terni 1 Ternana (1)
    Trieste 1 Triestina (1)

    Promotions by region

    [edit]

    Updated as of 2023–24 season

    Region Promotions Promoted clubs (263)
     Lombardia 52 Atalanta (12), Brescia (12), Como (6), Cremonese (5), Varese (4), Legnano (3), Mantova (3), Lecco (2), Milan (2), Pro Patria (2), Monza (1)
     Veneto 29 Hellas Verona (10), Venezia (7), Vicenza (5), Padova (4), Chievo (2), Treviso (1)
     Emilia-Romagna 28 Modena (5), Cesena (5), Bologna (4), Parma (4), Piacenza (3), SPAL (3), Reggiana (2), Carpi (1), Sassuolo (1)
     Toscana 27 Empoli (7), Livorno (6), Pisa (5), Fiorentina (4), Lucchese (2), Siena (2), Pistoiese (1)
     Puglia 26 Bari (11), Lecce (10), Foggia (5)
     Liguria 16 Genoa (9), Sampdoria (4) Sampierdarenese (2) Spezia (1)
     Sicilia 16 Palermo (9), Catania (5), Messina (2)
     Piemonte 14 Torino (6), Novara (4), Alessandria (2), Casale (1), Juventus (1)
     Campania 11 Napoli (5), Salernitana (3), Benevento (2), Avellino (1)
     Lazio 9 Lazio (5), Frosinone (3), Roma (1)
     Calabria 7 Catanzaro (3), Reggina (2), Crotone (2)
     Friuli-Venezia Giulia 7 Udinese (6), Triestina (1)
     Marche 7 Ascoli (5), Ancona (2)
     Sardinia 7 Cagliari (7)
     Abruzzo 6 Pescara (6)
     Umbria 5 Perugia (3), Ternana (2)

    Top scorers (2000–)

    [edit]
    Season Top scorer(s) Club(s) Goals
    1999–2000 Italy Cosimo Francioso Genoa 24
    2000–01 Italy Nicola Caccia Piacenza 23
    2001–02 Belgium Luís Oliveira Como 23
    2002–03 Italy Igor Protti Livorno 23
    2003–04 Italy Luca Toni Palermo 30
    2004–05 Italy Gionatha Spinesi Arezzo 22
    2005–06 Italy Cristian Bucchi Modena 29
    2006–07 Italy Alessandro Del Piero Juventus 20
    2007–08 Italy Denis Godeas Mantova 28
    2008–09 Italy Francesco Tavano Livorno 24
    2009–10 Brazil Éder Empoli 26
    2010–11 Italy Federico Piovaccari Cittadella 24
    2011–12 Italy Ciro Immobile Pescara 28
    2012–13 Italy Daniele Cacia Verona 24
    2013–14 Italy Matteo Mancosu Trapani 26
    2014–15 Italy Andrea Cocco Vicenza 19
    2015–16 Peru Gianluca Lapadula Pescara 23
    2016–17 Italy Giampaolo Pazzini Verona 23
    2017–18 Italy Francesco Caputo Empoli 26
    2018–19 Italy Alfredo Donnarumma Brescia 25
    2019–20 Nigeria Simy Crotone 20
    2020–21 Italy Massimo Coda Lecce 22
    2021–22 Italy Massimo Coda Lecce 20
    2022–23 Peru Gianluca Lapadula Cagliari 21
    2023–24 Finland Joel Pohjanpalo Venezia 22

    See also

    [edit]

    Footnotes

    [edit]
    1. ^ The championship was suspended from 1943 to 1945 due to WWII, and the 1945–46 northern edition is not statistically considered by FIGC, even if its promotion result was official.

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Luciano Canepari. "serie". DiPI Online (in Italian). Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  • ^ Redazione (22 June 2018). "La B cambia nome: si chiamerà Serie BKT fino al 2021".
  • ^ "Dalla nuova Lega Serie B, nasce il campionato Serie bwin". Lega Serie B (in Italian). 7 July 2010. Archived from the original on 12 July 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2010.
  • ^ "Ecco il calendario ufficiale della Serie B ConTe.it". legab.it (in Italian). Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie B. 27 August 2015. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  • ^ "Presentata la Coppa Nexus". Lega B (in Italian). 4 May 2022. Retrieved 14 June 2022.
  • ^ "COMUNICATO UFFICIALE N. 22/A" (PDF). 20 July 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2018.}
  • ^ Mariani, Maurizio; Di Maggio, Roberto. "Italy – Serie B All-Time Table since 1929". RSSSF. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  • ^ Pursuant to the Federal Internal Organizational Rules of the Italian Football Federation (NOIF, art. 20, subsection 5), Unione Calcio Sampdoria inherits and continues the sporting tradition of its most valuable ancestor, A.C. Sampierdarenese, which played at Serie B for 5 seasons.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Serie_B&oldid=1230314981"

    Categories: 
    Serie B
    Football leagues in Italy
    Second level football leagues in Europe
    1929 establishments in Italy
    Sports leagues established in 1929
    Professional sports leagues in Italy
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 Italian-language sources (it)
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    EngvarB from July 2022
    Use dmy dates from July 2022
    Pages with Italian IPA
    Commons category link from Wikidata
    Official website different in Wikidata and Wikipedia
     



    This page was last edited on 22 June 2024, at 00:51 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki