2016–17 Coppa Italia

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2016–17 Coppa Italia
TIM Cup
File:Juventus Coppa Italia 2017.jpg
Juventus captain Giorgio Chiellini receives the 2017 Coppa Italia from the President of Italy Sergio Mattarella
Tournament details
Country  Italy
Dates 29 July 2016 – 17 May 2017
Teams 78
Final positions
Champions Juventus (12th title)
Runner-up Lazio
Tournament statistics
Matches played 79
Goals scored 252 (3.19 per match)
Top goal scorer(s) Marco Borriello
Paulo Dybala
Goran Pandev
(4 goals each)

The 2016–17 Coppa Italia, also known as TIM Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 70th edition of the domestic national tournament. Juventus successfully defended its title by defeating Lazio 2–0 in the final, becoming the first team to win the title for three consecutive years.[1][2]

Participating teams

Serie A (20 teams)

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Serie B (22 teams)

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Lega Pro (27 teams)

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Serie D (9 teams)

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source: legaseriea.it[3]

Format and seeding

Teams entered the competition at various stages, as follows:[4]

  • First phase (one-legged fixtures)
    • First round: 36 teams from Lega Pro and Serie D started the tournament
    • Second round: the eighteen winners from the previous round were joined by the 22 Serie B teams
    • Third round: the twenty winners from the second round met the twelve Serie A sides seeded 9–20
    • Fourth round: the sixteen winners faced each other
  • Second phase
    • Round of 16 (one-legged): the eight fourth round winners were inserted into a bracket with the Serie A clubs seeded 1–8
    • Quarter-finals (one-legged)
    • Semi-finals (two-legged)
  • Final (one-legged)

Round dates

The schedule of each round was as follows:[5]

Phase Round First leg Second leg
First stage First round 29–31 July 2016
Second round 5–8 August 2016
Third round 12–15 August 2016
Fourth round 29 November – 1 December 2016
Final stage Round of 16 11 & 18 January 2017
Quarter-finals 25 January & 1 February 2017
Semi-finals 1 March 2017 5 April 2017
Final 17 May 2017<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

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First stage

First round

A total of 36 teams from Lega Pro and Serie D competed in this round, eighteen of which advanced to second round. The matches were played between 29 and 31 July 2016.[7]

Second round

A total of forty teams from Serie B and Lega Pro competed in the second round, twenty of which advanced to join twelve teams from Serie A in the third round. The matches were played from 5 to 8 August 2016.[7]

Third round

A total of 32 teams from Serie A, Serie B and Lega Pro competed in the third round, sixteen of which advanced to the fourth round. The matches were played between 12 and 15 August 2016.[7]

Fourth round

Fourth round matches were played between 29 November and 1 December 2016.[5][7][10]

Final stage

Bracket

Round of 16 Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
                           
Juventus (1) 3
Atalanta (1) 2
Juventus 2
Milan 1
Milan (1) 2
Torino (1) 1
Juventus 3 2 5
Napoli 1 3 4
Napoli (1) 3
Spezia (2) 1
Napoli 1
Fiorentina 0
Fiorentina (1) 1
Chievo (1) 0
Juventus 2
Lazio 0
Internazionale (1) (aet) 3
Bologna (1) 2
Internazionale 1
Lazio 2
Lazio (1) 4
Genoa (1) 2
Lazio 2 2 4
Roma 0 3 3
Roma (1) 4
Sampdoria (1) 0
Roma 2
Cesena 1
Sassuolo (1) 1
Cesena (2) 2

Round of 16

Round of 16 matches were played from 10 to 19 January 2017.[5][7]

Quarter-finals

Quarter-final matches were played from 24 January to 1 February 2017.[5][7]

Semi-finals

The first semi-final legs were played on 28 February and 1 March, and the second legs were played on 4 and 5 April 2017.[5][7]

First leg
Second leg

Final

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2017 Coppa Italia final

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Club Goals[11]
1 Italy Marco Borriello Cagliari 4
Argentina Paulo Dybala Juventus
Republic of Macedonia Goran Pandev Genoa
4 Italy Rolando Bianchi Perugia 3
Italy Luca Cognigni Ancona
Italy Stefano Del Sante Juve Stabia
Argentina Gonzalo Higuaín Juventus
Italy Ciro Immobile Lazio
Serbia Sergej Milinković-Savić Lazio

Notes

  1. ^ The Italian Sports Court decided to award the match to Matera against Caronnese as a 3–0 forfeit win after Caronnese were found guilty of fielding an ineligible player (Filippo Sgarbi). The match originally ended 2–1 to Matera[12]

References

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External links

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