1999–2000 Serie A

The 1999–2000 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 98th season of top-tier Italian football, the 68th in a round-robin tournament. It was contested by 18 teams.

Serie A
Season1999–2000
Dates28 August 1999 – 14 May 2000
ChampionsLazio
2nd title
RelegatedTorino
Venezia
Cagliari
Piacenza
Champions LeagueLazio
Juventus
Milan
Internazionale
UEFA CupParma
Roma
Fiorentina
Intertoto CupUdinese
Matches played306
Goals scored764 (2.5 per match)
Top goalscorerAndriy Shevchenko
(24 goals)

By late March, Juventus topped the table by nine points over Lazio with only eight games remaining, but they lost to Milan, to Lazio at the Stadio delle Alpi, and to Hellas Verona, with Lazio only dropping two points, against Fiorentina.[1] Lazio won the title on the final day of the season when Juventus lost their match against Perugia 1–0 on an almost flooded pitch, while Lazio comfortably beat Reggina 3–0 at home at the Stadio Olimpico.[1][2]

Teams edit

Serie A 1999-2000 team distribution

Hellas Verona, Torino, Lecce and Reggina had been promoted from Serie B.

Personnel and sponsorship edit

TeamHead coachKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Bari Eugenio FascettiLottoTELE+
Bologna Francesco GuidolinDiadoraGranarolo
Cagliari Renzo UlivieriBiemmePecorino Sardo
Fiorentina Giovanni TrapattoniFilaToyota
Hellas Verona Cesare PrandelliErreaSalumi Marsili
Internazionale Marcello LippiNikePirelli
Juventus Carlo AncelottiKappaD+
Lazio Sven-Göran ErikssonPumaCirio
Lecce Alberto CavasinAsicsBanca 121
Milan Alberto ZaccheroniAdidasOpel
Parma Alberto MalesaniChampionParmalat
Perugia Carlo MazzoneGalexPerugina
Piacenza Maurizio BraginLottoCopra (H)/Gruppo DAC (A)
Roma Fabio CapelloDiadoraINA Assitalia
Reggina Franco ColombaAsicsCaffè Mauro
Torino Emiliano MondonicoKelmeSDA Express Courier
Udinese Luigi De CanioDiadoraTelit
Venezia Francesco OddoKronosEmmezeta

League table edit

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Lazio (C)3421946433+3172Qualification to Champions League first group stage
2Juventus3421854620+2671
3Milan34161356540+2561Qualification to Champions League third qualifying round[3]
4Internazionale[a]34177105836+2258
5Parma34161085237+1558Qualification to UEFA Cup first round
6Roma34141285734+2354
7Fiorentina[b]34131294838+1051
8Udinese341311105545+1050Qualification to Intertoto Cup third round[4]
9Hellas Verona341013114045−543
10Perugia[c]34126163652−1642Qualification to Intertoto Cup second round
11Bologna34913123239−740[d]
12Reggina34913123142−1140[d]
13Lecce341010143349−1640[d]
14Bari34109153448−1439
15Torino (R)34812143547−1236Relegation to Serie B
16Venezia (R)3468203060−3026
17Cagliari (R)34313182954−2522
18Piacenza (R)3449211945−2621
Source: Serie A, RSSSF.com, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head points; 3) Head-to-head goal difference; 4) Goal difference; 5) Goals scored; 6) Draw. (Note: Head-to-head record is used only after all the matches between the teams in question have been played).[5]
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ Internazionale entered the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League after winning the UEFA Champions League qualification match against Parma.
  2. ^ Fiorentina gained entry to the 2000–01 UEFA Cup as both 1999–2000 Coppa Italia finalists had qualified for the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League.
  3. ^ Perugia gained entry to the 2000 UEFA Intertoto Cup as Hellas Verona had declined to enter.
  4. ^ a b c REG: 9 pts; BOL: 4 pts → BOL 2–0 LEC; LEC: 4 pts → LEC 1–1 BOL

Results edit

Home \ AwayBARBOLCAGFIOINTJUVLAZLCEMILPARPERPIAREGROMTORUDIVENVER
Bari1–11–01–02–11–10–03–11–10–10–23–21–10–01–11–13–01–1
Bologna1–01–00–03–00–22–32–02–31–02–10–00–11–00–02–11–10–0
Cagliari2–32–21–10–20–10–00–00–02–32–13–00–11–01–10–31–10–1
Fiorentina1–02–22–02–11–13–33–02–10–21–02–11–01–31–11–13–04–1
Internazionale3–01–12–10–41–21–16–01–25–15–02–11–12–11–13–03–03–0
Juventus2–02–01–11–01–00–11–03–11–03–01–01–12–13–24–11–01–0
Lazio3–13–12–12–02–20–04–24–40–01–02–03–02–13–02–13–24–0
Lecce1–01–12–10–01–02–00–12–20–00–10–12–10–02–11–02–12–1
Milan4–14–02–21–11–22–02–12–22–13–11–02–22–22–04–03–03–3
Parma2–11–13–10–41–11–11–24–11–01–21–03–02–04–10–03–13–0
Perugia1–23–23–01–21–21–00–22–20–31–12–02–12–21–00–52–10–0
Piacenza2–10–01–12–01–30–20–21–10–11–20–00–01–10–20–12–21–0
Reggina1–01–01–12–20–10–20–02–11–22–21–11–00–42–10–01–01–1
Roma3–12–02–24–00–00–14–13–21–10–03–12–10–21–01–15–03–1
Torino3–12–11–11–00–10–02–41–22–22–20–12–12–11–10–12–10–3
Udinese5–12–15–21–13–01–10–32–11–20–12–13–03–20–20–05–23–3
Venezia0–10–13–02–11–00–42–00–01–00–21–20–02–01–32–21–12–2
Hellas Verona0–10–02–02–21–22–01–02–00–04–32–01–01–12–20–12–21–0
Source: lega-calcio.it (in Italian)
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

UEFA Champions League qualification edit

Internazionale3–1Parma
Baggio 35', 73'
Zamorano 89'
Stanić 69'

Internazionale qualified to 2000–01 UEFA Champions League's third qualifying round, while Parma qualified to the 2000–01 UEFA Cup first round.

Top goalscorers edit

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Andriy ShevchenkoMilan24
2 Gabriel BatistutaFiorentina23
3 Hernán CrespoParma22
4 Marco FerranteTorino18
Vincenzo MontellaRoma
6 Filippo InzaghiJuventus15
Cristiano LucarelliLecce
Giuseppe SignoriBologna
9 Christian VieriInternazionale13
10 Roberto MuzziUdinese12
Marcelo SalasLazio

References and sources edit

  • Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio – La Storia 1898-2004, Panini Edizioni, Modena, September 2005

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Newman, Blair (30 March 2015). "How Sven-Goran Eriksson's Lazio won the great Serie A title race of 1999-2000". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  2. ^ Sutherland, Ben (9 October 2019). "Typhoon Hagibis: When the weather changed a sporting result". BBC Sport. Retrieved 9 October 2019.
  3. ^ Inter was consequently demoted to UEFA Cup first round
  4. ^ With consequent qualification to UEFA Cup first round
  5. ^ Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio – La Storia 1898-2004, Panini Edizioni, Modena, September 2005 "Norme organizzative interne della F.I.G.C. – Art. 51.6" (PDF) (in Italian). Italian Football Federation. 12 September 2018. Retrieved 11 November 2018.

External links edit