Serie B

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Serie B
Splash logo serieb.png
Founded1929
Country
 Italy
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams19
Level on pyramid2

Promotion to
Serie A

Relegation to
Serie C
Domestic cup(s)Coppa Italia
International cup(s)
UEFA Europa League
(via winning Coppa Italia)
Current champions
Empoli (2nd title)
(2017–18)
Most championshipsGenoa, Atalanta
(6 titles each)
TV partnersDAZN
Websitelegab.it

2018–19 Serie B

Serie B (Italian pronunciation: [ˈsɛːrje ˈbi]), currently named Serie BKT for sponsorship reasons,[1] is the second-highest division in the Italian football league system after the Serie A. It is currently contested by 19 teams,[2] however usually consists of 22 teams, and is organized by the Lega Serie B since July 2010, after the split of Lega Calcio that previously took care of both the Serie A and Serie B. Common nicknames for the league are campionato cadetto and cadetteria, as cadetto is the Italian for junior or cadet.


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.


During the regular season, each team plays 42 games – two games against every opponent. In Italian football, a true round-robin format is used. In the first half of the season, called andata, each team plays once against all its opponents, a total of 21 games. In the second half of the season, called ritorno, each team will play the same teams in exactly the same order, the only difference being that a home game played in the first half will be an away game with that same team in the second half, and vice versa.


Since the 2006–07 season, the Serie B champion is awarded the cup Ali della Vittoria (Wings of Victory). The trophy is 63 cm high and weighs 5 kg. Its structure represents the wings of the goddess Nike, the goddess of victory, holding a cup similar to an olympic flame.


Serie B matches are usually played on Saturday. After one year where all games were played on Saturday, the league is again scheduling one game that is played on Friday called anticipo (the advanced game) and one game that is played on Monday called posticipo (the post-dated game). The league also plays on several Tuesdays to fit in all 42 games. The league also plays on Sunday if Serie A is off.




Contents





  • 1 Promotion and relegation


  • 2 Brief history


  • 3 Serie B clubs

    • 3.1 2018–19 members


    • 3.2 Seasons in Serie B


    • 3.3 The Serie B-C Alta Italia post-war championship



  • 4 Club performances

    • 4.1 Promotions by season

      • 4.1.1 Prima Divisione


      • 4.1.2 Serie B



    • 4.2 Performance by club


    • 4.3 Titles by region


    • 4.4 Titles by city


    • 4.5 Promotions by region



  • 5 See also


  • 6 Footnotes


  • 7 References


  • 8 External links




Promotion and relegation


At the end of the season, three teams are promoted to Serie A and four teams are relegated to the reformed Serie C (formerly Lega Pro Prima Divisione). The top two teams are automatically promoted. If the 3rd-placed team is 10 or more points ahead of the 4th-placed team, it is automatically promoted too, otherwise a playoff tournament determines the third team that will be ascending.
In the 2013–14 season, anywhere between two and six teams within a "playoff margin" of 14 points from the 3rd-placed team will enter the playoff tournament. Under the new playoff format, up to three rounds may be required. The final two rounds are two-legged ties, while opening round matches (if required) are single legs hosted by the higher-ranked team. If a tie is drawn at the end of regular play (one or two matches, depending on the round), extra time is played. If the two teams are still tied after thirty minutes, the higher classified team advances.


In the relegation zone, the three last-placed teams (20th, 21st and 22nd) are automatically demoted to Serie C. If the 18th-placed team is 5 or more points ahead of the 19th-placed team, then the 19th-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 18th and 19th-placed teams are paired in a two-legged series with home-field advantage in the 2nd leg going to the 18th-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 18th-placed team is saved, and the 19th-placed team is demoted.



Brief history


A junior football championship was created at first in Italy in 1904, after seven editions of the major tournament of FIGC: it was called Second Category, and was composed both by 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 consequentely 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, the big reform was conceived by FIGC's 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 whom it was divided again between the northern and the southern part of the country, due to the destructions 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 biggest in the history of all levels of the Italian championship. After 2004, a 22-teams format was introduced together with playoffs.


After Serie A split with Serie B to form Lega Serie A, Lega Serie B was formed 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 where five clubs have ever played: Torino, Juventus, Milan, Roma and Lazio.


Serie B introduced the "green card" at the beginning of the 2015–16 season. The green card is given to promote fair play and good acts. The green card will not be given during the game, as it would alter sport rules, but awarded after the match to a player or coach who exhibited fair play by the referee. The player or coach with the most green cards at the end of the season will be rewarded.[5]



Serie B clubs



2018–19 members




Serie B is located in Italy

Ascoli

Ascoli



Benevento

Benevento



Brescia

Brescia



Carpi

Carpi



Cittadella

Cittadella



Cosenza

Cosenza



Cremonese

Cremonese



Crotone

Crotone



Foggia

Foggia



Lecce

Lecce



Livorno

Livorno



Padova

Padova



Palermo

Palermo



Perugia

Perugia



Pescara

Pescara



Salernitana

Salernitana



Spezia

Spezia



Verona

Verona



Venezia

Venezia




Location of teams in 2018–19 Serie B






































































































Team
Home city
Stadium
Capacity
2017–18 season

Ascoli

Ascoli Piceno

Stadio Cino e Lillo Del Duca

7004108870000000000♠10,887

18th in Serie B

Benevento

Benevento

Stadio Ciro Vigorito

7004175540000000000♠17,554

20th in Serie A

Brescia

Brescia

Stadio Mario Rigamonti

7004167430000000000♠16,743

16th in Serie B

Carpi

Carpi

Stadio Sandro Cabassi

7003551000000000000♠5,510

11th in Serie B

Cittadella

Cittadella

Stadio Pier Cesare Tombolato

7003762300000000000♠7,623

6th in Serie B

Cosenza

Cosenza

Stadio San Vito-Gigi Marulla

7004242090000000000♠24,209

5th Serie C/C, play-off winner

Cremonese

Cremona

Stadio Giovanni Zini

7004206410000000000♠20,641

14th in Serie B

Crotone

Crotone

Stadio Ezio Scida

7004165470000000000♠16,547

18th in Serie A

Foggia

Foggia

Stadio Pino Zaccheria

7004167980000000000♠16,798

9th in Serie B

Hellas Verona

Verona

Stadio Marc'Antonio Bentegodi

7004384020000000000♠38,402

19th in Serie A

Lecce

Lecce

Stadio Via del Mare

7004406700000000000♠40,670

Serie C/C Champions

Livorno

Livorno

Stadio Armando Picchi

7004192380000000000♠19,238

Serie C/A Champions

Padova

Padua

Stadio Euganeo

7004197400000000000♠19,740

Serie C/B Champions

Palermo

Palermo

Stadio Renzo Barbera

7004363490000000000♠36,349

4th in Serie B

Perugia

Perugia

Stadio Renato Curi

7004231250000000000♠23,125

8th in Serie B

Pescara

Pescara

Stadio Adriatico-Giovanni Cornacchia

7004205150000000000♠20,515

17th in Serie B

Salernitana

Salerno

Stadio Arechi

7004313000000000000♠31,300

12th in Serie B

Spezia

La Spezia

Stadio Alberto Picco

7004102900000000000♠10,290

10th in Serie B

Venezia

Venice

Stadio Pierluigi Penzo

7003745000000000000♠7,450

5th in Serie B


Seasons in Serie B


This is the complete list of the clubs that have taken part in the 87 Serie B seasons played from the 1929–30 season until the 2018–19 season.[6][a] The teams in bold compete in Serie B in the current season.



  • 61 seasons: Brescia


  • 53 seasons: Verona


  • 50 seasons: Modena


  • 46 seasons: Bari


  • 44 seasons: Palermo


  • 38 seasons: Monza, Padova


  • 37 seasons: Pescara


  • 35 seasons: Catania, Venezia, Vicenza


  • 34 seasons: Como, Novara


  • 33 seasons: Genoa, Reggiana


  • 32 seasons: Cesena, Messina, Pisa


  • 31 seasons: Taranto


  • 29 seasons: Cagliari


  • 28 seasons: Atalanta, Catanzaro, Cremonese, Salernitana


  • 27 seasons: Lecce, Parma, Ternana


  • 26 seasons: Livorno, Perugia, Spezia


  • 25 seasons: Foggia


  • 22 seasons: Ancona, Ascoli, Reggina, Triestina


  • 21 seasons: Sambenedettese, SPAL, Varese


  • 20 seasons: Alessandria, Cosenza, Empoli


  • 19 seasons: Avellino, Lucchese, Pistoiese


  • 18 seasons: Piacenza, Udinese


  • 16 seasons: Arezzo, Treviso


  • 14 seasons: Legnano, Mantova


  • 13 seasons: Pro Patria, Pro Vercelli, Siena


  • 12 seasons: Bologna, Cittadella, Crotone, Fanfulla, Napoli, Torino


  • 11 seasons: Lazio, Lecco, Sampdoria, Vigevano


  • 10 seasons: Marzotto, Prato


  • 9 seasons: AlbinoLeffe, Rimini


  • 8 seasons: Chievo, Frosinone


  • 7 seasons: Ravenna, Siracusa


  • 6 seasons: Brindisi, Fidelis Andria, Grosseto, Seregno, Viareggio


  • 5 seasons: Campobasso, Carpi, Fiorentina, Potenza, Sassuolo, Savona


  • 4 seasons: Barletta, Casale, Juve Stabia, Latina, Monfalcone, Pavia, Pro Sesto, Trapani, Virtus Entella, Virtus Lanciano


  • 3 seasons: Cavese, Derthona, Grion Pola, L'Aquila, Nocerina, Piombino, Sanremese, Savoia


  • 2 seasons: Acireale, Benevento, Biellese, Carrarese, Casertana, Castel di Sangro, Crema, Fiumana, Gallaratese, Gubbio, Licata, Liguria, Milan, Pro Gorizia, Rieti, Sampierdarenese, Scafatese, Suzzara, Trani, Vogherese


  • 1 season: Alba Trastevere, Alzano Virescit, Arsenale Taranto, Bolzano, Centese, Fermana, Forlì, Gallipoli, Juventus, La Dominante, Maceratese, Magenta, Massese, M.A.T.E.R., Matera, Mestrina, Molinella, Portogruaro, Roma, Sestrese, Sorrento, Vita Nova


The Serie B-C Alta Italia post-war championship


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.








  • Alessandria – Alessandria


  • Ausonia Spezia – La Spezia


  • Biellese – Biella


  • Casale – Casale Monferrato


  • Cesena – Cesena


  • Como – Como


  • Crema – Crema


  • Cremonese – Cremona


  • Cuneo – Cuneo


  • Fanfulla – Lodi


  • Forlì – Forlì


  • Gallaratese – Gallarate


  • Lecco – Lecco


  • Legnano – Legnano


  • Mantova – Mantua


  • Novara – Novara


  • Padova – Padua


  • Panigale – Bologna



  • Parma – Parma


  • Piacenza – Piacenza


  • Pro Gorizia – Gorizia


  • Pro Patria – Busto Arsizio


  • Pro Sesto – Sesto San Giovanni


  • Pro Vercelli – Vercelli


  • Reggiana – Reggio Emilia


  • Savona – Savona


  • Seregno – Seregno


  • Sestrese – Genoa


  • SPAL – Ferrara


  • Suzzara – Suzzara


  • Trento – Trento


  • Treviso – Treviso


  • Udinese – Udine


  • Verona – Verona


  • Vigevano – Vigevano


  • Vogherese – Voghera


Club performances




Promotions by season



  • Italics denotes teams promoted after playoff or qualification match.


  • Parentheses denote teams not promoted.


Prima Divisione














Season
Winners
Eventual other promotions
1926–27Novara
Pro Patria, Reggiana, Lazio
1927–28Atalanta
Pistoiese, Bari, Biellese, Venezia, Fiumana, Triestina, Legnano, Prato, Fiorentina
1928–29Spezia


Serie B


























































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season
Winners
Runners-up
Third place
Eventual other promotions

1929–30

Casale

Legnano
(La Dominante)


1930–31

Fiorentina

Bari
(Palermo)


1931–32

Palermo

Padova
(Hellas Verona)


1932–33

Livorno

Brescia
(Modena)


1933–34

Sampierdarenese
(Bari)
(Modena)


1934–35

Genova 1893

Bari



1935–36

Lucchese

Novara
(Livorno)


1936–37

Livorno

Atalanta
(Modena)


1937–38

Modena

Novara
(Alessandria)


1938–39

Fiorentina

Venezia
(Atalanta)


1939–40

Atalanta

Livorno
(Lucchese)


1940–41

Liguria

Modena
(Brescia)


1941–42

Bari

Vicenza
(Pescara)


1942–43

Modena

Brescia
(Napoli)


1945–46

Alessandria
(Pro Patria)
(Vigevano)

Napoli, Bari[b]

1946–47

Gir. A: Pro Patria
Gir. B: Lucchese
Gir. C: Salernitana

Gir. A: (Legnano)
Gir. B: (Padova)
Gir. C: (Ternana)

Gir. A: (Novara)
Gir. B: (Empoli)
Gir. C: (Pescara)


1947–48

Gir. A: Novara
Gir. B: Padova
Gir. C: Palermo

Gir. A: (Brescia)
Gir. B: (Hellas Verona)
Gir. C: (Pisa)

Gir. A: (Como)
Gir. B: (Spal)
Gir. C: (Lecce)


1948–49

Como

Venezia
(Vicenza)


1949–50

Napoli

Udinese
(Legnano)


1950–51

SPAL

Legnano
(Modena)


1951–52

Roma
(Brescia)
(Messina)


1952–53

Genoa

Legnano
(Catania)


1953–54

Catania

Pro Patria
(Cagliari)


1954–55

Lanerossi Vicenza

Padova
(Modena)


1955–56

Udinese

Palermo
(Como)


1956–57

Hellas Verona

Alessandria
(Brescia)


1957–58

Triestina

Bari
(Venezia)


1958–59

Atalanta

Palermo
(Lecco)


1959–60

Torino

Lecco

Catania


1960–61

Venezia

Ozo 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
(Catanzaro)


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

Lanerossi 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

Verona

Pisa

Sampdoria


1982–83

Milan

Lazio

Catania


1983–84

Atalanta

Como

Cremonese


1984–85

Pisa

Lecce

Bari


1985–86

Ascoli

Brescia
(Lanerossi Vicenza)

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

1999–00

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, Fiorentina[c]

2004–05
(Genoa)

Empoli
(Torino)

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
(Sassuolo)

Sampdoria

2012–13

Sassuolo

Hellas Verona

Livorno


2013–14

Palermo

Empoli
(Latina)

Cesena

2014–15

Carpi

Frosinone
(Vicenza)

Bologna

2015–16

Cagliari

Crotone
(Trapani)

Pescara

2016–17

SPAL

Hellas Verona
(Frosinone)

Benevento

2017–18

Empoli

Parma

Frosinone


Performance by club


Updated as of 2017–18 season






























































































































































































































































Club
Winners
Runners-up
Winning Years

Genoa
6
1
1935, 1953, 1962, 1973, 1976, 1989

Atalanta
6
3
1928, 1940, 1959, 1984, 2006, 2011

Palermo
5
2
1932, 1948, 1968, 2004, 2014

Bari
4
6
1935, 1942, 1946, 2009

Brescia
3
6
1965, 1992, 1997

Hellas Verona
3
5
1957, 1982, 1999

Como
3
2
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

Venezia
2
3
1961, 1966

Napoli
2
3
1946, 1950

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

Empoli
2
1
2005, 2018

Lucchese
2

1936, 1947

Milan
2

1981, 1983

Salernitana
2

1947, 1998

SPAL
2

1951, 2017

Modena
1
4
1943

Pisa
1
4
1985

Cagliari
1
3
2016

Padova
1
3
1948

Lazio
1
2
1969

Lecce
1
2
2010

Perugia
1
2
1975

Pro Patria
1
2
1947

Alessandria
1
1
1946

Catania
1
1
1954

Foggia
1
1
1991

Mantova
1
1
1971

Piacenza
1
1
1995

Reggiana
1
1
1993

Sampdoria
1
1
1967

Siena
1
1
2003

Ternana
1
1
1972

Carpi
1

2015

Casale
1

1930

Chievo
1

2008

Juventus
1

2007

Liguria
1
-
1941

Messina
1

1963

Roma
1

1952

Sampierdarenese
1
-
1934

Sassuolo
1

2013

Triestina
1

1958

Spezia
1

1929

Legnano

4


Catanzaro

2


Cesena

2


Lecco

2


Parma

2


Cremonese

1


Crotone

1


Frosinone

1


Pistoiese

1


Treviso

1


Titles by region


Updated at the end of 2017–18 season


















































Region
Titles
Winning Clubs

 Lombardia

18

Atalanta (6), Brescia (3), Como (3), Varese (3), Milan (2), Mantova (1), Pro Patria (1)

 Toscana

11

Fiorentina (3), Livorno (2), Lucchese (2), Empoli (2), Pisa (1), Siena (1)

 Veneto

10

Verona (3), Vicenza (3), Venezia (2), Chievo (1), Padova (1)

 Liguria

9

Genoa (6), Liguria (1), Sampdoria (1), Sampierdarenese (1), Spezia (1)

 Emilia-Romagna

9

Bologna (2), SPAL (2), Carpi (1), Modena (1), Piacenza (1), Reggiana (1), Sassuolo (1)

 Piemonte

8

Torino (3), Novara (3), Alessandria (1), Casale (1), Juventus (1)

 Sicilia

7

Palermo (5), Catania (1), Messina (1)

 Puglia

6

Bari (4), Foggia (1), Lecce (1)

 Campania

4

Salernitana (2), Napoli (2)

 Friuli-Venezia Giulia

3

Udinese (2), Triestina (1)

 Abruzzo

2

Pescara (2)

 Lazio

2

Lazio (1), Roma (1)

 Marche

2

Ascoli (2)

 Umbria

2

Perugia (1), Ternana (1)

 Sardinia

1

Cagliari (1)


Titles by city


Updated at the end of 2017–18 season















































































































































City
Titles
Winning Clubs

Genoa

9

Genoa (6), Liguria (1), Sampdoria (1), Sampierdarenese (1)

Bergamo

6

Atalanta (6)

Palermo

5

Palermo (5)

Turin

4

Torino (3), Juventus (1)

Verona

4

Verona (3), Chievo (1)

Bari

4

Bari (4)

Brescia

3

Brescia (3)

Como

3

Como (3)

Florence

3

Fiorentina (3)

Varese

3

Varese (3)

Vicenza

3

Vicenza (3)

Novara

3

Novara (3)

Ascoli Piceno

2

Ascoli (2)

Bologna

2

Bologna (2)

Empoli

2

Empoli (2)

Ferrara

2

SPAL (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)

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)

La Spezia

1

Spezia (1)

Lecce

1

Lecce (1)

Mantua

1

Mantova (1)

Messina

1

Messina (1)

Modena

1

Modena (1)

Padua

1

Padova (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


Updated at the end of 2017–18 season





















































Region
Promotions
Promoted Clubs

 Lombardia

48

Atalanta (12), Brescia (11), Como (5), Cremonese (4), Varese (4), Legnano (3), Mantova (3), Lecco (2), Milan (2), Pro Patria (2)

 Veneto

27

Verona (9), Venezia (6), Vicenza (5), Padova (4), Chievo (2), Treviso (1)

 Emilia-Romagna

27

Modena (5), Cesena (5), Bologna (4), Parma (3), Piacenza (3), SPAL (3), Reggiana (2), Carpi (1), Sassuolo (1)

 Puglia

25

Bari (12), Lecce (8), Foggia (5)

 Toscana

24

Empoli (6), Pisa (5), Fiorentina (4), Livorno (4), Lucchese (2), Siena (2), Pistoiese (1)

 Sicilia

16

Palermo (9), Catania (5), Messina (2)

 Liguria

14

Genoa (8), Sampdoria (4), Liguria (1), Sampierdarenese (1)

 Piemonte

14

Torino (6), Novara (4), Alessandria (2), Casale (1), Juventus (1)

 Campania

10

Napoli (6), Salernitana (2), Avellino (1), Benevento (1)

 Lazio

8

Lazio (5), Frosinone (2), Roma (1)

 Friuli-Venezia Giulia

7

Udinese (6), Triestina (1)

 Marche

7

Ascoli (5), Ancona (2)

 Abruzzo

6

Pescara (6)

 Calabria

6

Catanzaro (3), Reggina (2), Crotone (1)

 Sardinia

6

Cagliari (6)

 Umbria

5

Perugia (3), Ternana (2)


See also


  • Italian football league system

  • Italian Football League Teams

  • Sports league attendances


Footnotes




  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.


  2. ^ 1945–46 Serie A-B Southern Italy co-champions.


  3. ^ Due to expansion from 18 teams to 20 teams of Serie A.




References




  1. ^ Redazione (22 June 2018). "La B cambia nome: si chiamerà Serie BKT fino al 2021"..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output .citation qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-maintdisplay:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ "Official: Serie B with 19 clubs". Football Italia. 10 August 2018.


  3. ^ "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.


  4. ^ "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.


  5. ^ "Italy's Serie B to introduce green cards; rewards given after season". Foxsports.com. 4 September 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2017.


  6. ^ "Italy - Serie B All-Time Table 1929–2011". rsssf.com. Retrieved 21 September 2011.




External links



  • Serie B ConTe.it League official website (in Italian)










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