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1964–65 Coppa Italia
Juventus poses with the trophy
Tournament details
Country  Italy
Dates6 September 1964 –
29 August 1965
Teams38
Final positions
Champions Juventus (5th title)
Runner-up Internazionale
Tournament statistics
Matches played37
Goals scored106 (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 →

The 1964–65 Coppa Italia was the 18th edition of the Coppa Italia, a domestic football cup organised by the Italian Football Federation. It was won by Juventus, who defeated Internazionale 1–0 in the final. [1]

First round

Home team Score Away team
Alessandria 1–2 Juventus
Bari 1–4 ( a.e.t.) 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 ( a.e.t.) Genoa
Monza 2–1 ( a.e.t.) Milan
SPAL 3–0 Fiorentina
Napoli 2–1 ( a.e.t.) Messina
Palermo 4–3 ( a.e.t.) Catanzaro
Vigor Trani 0–3 Lazio
Triestina 1–3 Atalanta

Intermediate round

Home team Score Away team
Napoli 0–0 ( a.e.t.) * 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 (4–5 pen.) Atalanta
Pro Patria 1–2 ( a.e.t.) Genoa
Napoli 2–1 ( a.e.t.) Foggia
Palermo 1–0 Catania
Cagliari 1–0 SPAL
Monza 2–1 ( a.e.t.) Venezia

Third round

Home team Score Away team
Genoa 3–0 Monza
Lecco 0–2 ( a.e.t.) Juventus
Napoli 1–0 Palermo
Cagliari 5–0 Atalanta

Quarter-finals

Torino, Bologna, Internazionale and Roma joined the competition in this round.

Home team Score Away team
Torino 2–0 Genoa
Bologna 0–0 (4–5 pen.) Juventus
Internazionale 6–3 ( a.e.t.) Cagliari
Napoli 1–2 Roma

Semi-finals

Home team Score Away team
Roma 2–2 (4–6 pen.) Internazionale
Juventus 1–0 Torino

Final

Juventus1–0 Internazionale
Menichelli 15'
Referee: Alessandro D'Agostini

Top goalscorers

Rank Player Club Goals
1 Italy Gigi Riva Cagliari 3
Italy Renzo Cappellaro Cagliari
Italy Francesco Rizzo Cagliari
Brazil Cané Napoli
Italy Giampaolo Menichelli Juventus
Italy Bruno Petroni Atalanta
2 Brazil Jair da Costa Internazionale 2
Italy Sergio Gori Internazionale
Italy Dario Cavallito SPAL
Italy Dino Panzanato Napoli
Italy Mariano Melonari Monza

References

  1. ^ "Italy - Coppa Italia History". www.rsssf.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.