2000–01 Serie A Explained

Competition:Serie A
Season:2000–01
Dates:30 September 2000 – 17 June 2001
Winners:Roma
3rd title
Relegated:Reggina
Vicenza
Napoli
Bari
Continentalcup1:Champions League
Continentalcup1 Qualifiers:Roma
Juventus
Lazio
Parma
Continentalcup2:UEFA Cup
Continentalcup2 Qualifiers:Internazionale
Milan
Fiorentina
Continentalcup3:Intertoto Cup
Continentalcup3 Qualifiers:Brescia
League Topscorer:Hernán Crespo
(26 goals)
Matches:306
Total Goals:845
Average Attendance:29,441
Prevseason:1999–2000
Nextseason:2001–02

The 2000–01 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 99th season of top-tier Italian football, the 69th in a round-robin tournament. It was contested by 18 teams, for the 13th consecutive season since 1988–89.

Roma won its first Scudetto since 1982–83, its third title overall. Juventus finished second, and these two teams automatically qualified for the first group stage of the 2001–02 UEFA Champions League. Lazio, the defending champions, and Parma finished third and fourth respectively, to enter the third qualifying round of the same competition. Internazionale and Milan finished fifth and sixth respectively, and qualified for the 2001–02 UEFA Cup along with Fiorentina, the winners of the Coppa Italia. Brescia gained entry into the 2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup.

Vicenza, Napoli and Bari were automatically relegated to Serie B. Reggina and Hellas Verona were forced to contest a relegation tie-breaker after finishing level on points, with Verona winning on away goals to relegate Reggina.

Rule changes

In the middle of the season, the old quota system was abolished, meaning that each team was no longer limited to having no more than five non-EU players and using no more than three in each match.[1] [2]

Passport scandal

Concurrent with the abolition of the quota system, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) investigated footballers from South America and Africa who had used fake passports in order to enable their teams to field them as Europeans. Alberto, Warley, Alejandro Da Silva and Jorginho of Udinese,[3] Fábio Júnior and Gustavo Bartelt of Roma,[4] Dida of Milan, Álvaro Recoba of Inter, Thomas Job, Francis Zé and Jean Ondoa of Sampdoria, and Jeda and André Leone of Vicenza were all handed bans in July 2001, ranging from six months to one year.[5] However, most of these bans were subsequently reduced.

Personnels and sponsoring

TeamHead coachKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Atalanta Giovanni VavassoriAsicsOrtobell
Bari Arcangelo SciannimanicoLottoTELE+
Bologna Francesco GuidolinUmbroGranarolo
Brescia Carlo MazzoneGarmanRistora
FiorentinaDiadoraToyota
Hellas Verona Attilio PerottiLottoNET Business
Internazionale Marco TardelliNikePirelli
Juventus Carlo AncelottiLottoTELE+/sportal.com (in UEFA matches)
Lazio Dino ZoffPumaSiemens Mobile
Lecce Alberto CavasinAsicsBanca 121
Milan Cesare MaldiniAdidasOpel
Napoli Emiliano MondonicoDiadoraPeroni
Parma Renzo UlivieriChampionMr.Day (Home)/Parmalat (Away)
Perugia Serse CosmiGalexDaewoo Matiz
Roma Fabio CapelloKappaINA Assitalia
Reggina Franco ColombaAsicsCaffè Mauro
Udinese Luciano SpallettiDiadoraTelit
Vicenza Edoardo RejaUmbroArtel Clima
(*) Promoted from Serie B.
  1. News: Italians bar non-EU imports. 2002-07-17. 2010-03-09. UEFA.com.
  2. News: Milan challenge non-EU rule. 2000-11-03. 2010-03-09. BBC Sport.
  3. News: Fake passport scandal hits Serie A . BBC News . 2000-10-08 . 2010-05-23.
  4. News: Lazio hit with passport charges . BBC News . 2001-05-08 . 2010-05-23.
  5. News: Players banned over false passport scandal . https://web.archive.org/web/20100206014855/http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/internationals/players-banned-over-false-passport-scandal-675847.html . dead . February 6, 2010 . The Independent . London . Frances . Kennedy . 2001-06-28 . 2010-05-23.

Managerial changes

TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyIncoming managerPosition in tableDate of appointment
Fiorentina Giovanni TrapattoniEnd of contract30 June 2000 Fatih TerimPre-season1 July 2000
Perugia Carlo Mazzone30 June 2000 Serse Cosmi1 July 2000
Brescia Nedo Sonetti30 June 2000 Carlo Mazzone1 July 2000
Napoli Walter Novellino30 June 2000 Zdeněk Zeman1 July 2000
Internazionale Marcello LippiSacked10 October 2000 Marco Tardelli15th11 October 2000
Napoli Zdeněk Zeman14 November 2000 Emiliano Mondonico18th15 November 2000
Lazio Sven-Göran ErikssonResigned9 January 2001 Dino Zoff5th10 January 2001
Parma Alberto MalesaniSacked10 January 2001 Arrigo Sacchi (caretaker)10th10 January 2001
Parma Arrigo SacchiEnd of caretaker spell29 January 2001 Renzo Ulivieri8th30 January 2001
Fiorentina Fatih TerimSacked27 February 2001 Luciano Chiarugi (caretaker)10th28 February 2001
Fiorentina Luciano ChiarugiEnd of caretaker spell6 March 2001 Roberto Mancini11th7 March 2001
Milan Alberto ZaccheroniSacked12 March 2001 Cesare Maldini9th13 March 2001
Udinese Luigi De Canio20 March 2001 Luciano Spalletti12th21 March 2001
Bari Eugenio Fascetti8 May 2001 Arcangelo Sciannimanico18th9 May 2001

League table

Overall records

Relegation tie-breaker

----Reggina relegated to Serie B.

Top goalscorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Hernán CrespoLazio26
2 Andriy ShevchenkoMilan24
3 Enrico ChiesaFiorentina22
4 Gabriel BatistutaRoma20
5 Christian VieriInternazionale18
6 Dario HübnerBrescia17
7 Marco Di VaioParma15
Giuseppe SignoriBologna
Roberto SosaUdinese
10 David TrezeguetJuventus14
11 Francesco TottiRoma13
Vincenzo MontellaRoma
13 Cristiano LucarelliLecce12
Marco MaterazziPerugia
15 Filippo InzaghiJuventus11
Davor VugrinecLecce

References and sources

See also

External links