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1933–34 Serie A
33rd season of top-tier Italian football
33rd season of top-tier Italian football
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| competition | Serie A |
| season | 1933–34 |
| image | Juventus 1933-34.jpg |
| caption | The 1933–34 Serie A winning Juventus squad |
| winners | Juventus |
| 6th title | |
| relegated | Padova |
| Genoa | |
| Casale | |
| league topscorer | Felice Borel |
| (32 goals) | |
| matches | 306 |
| total goals | 844 |
| prevseason | [1932–33](1932-33-serie-a) |
| nextseason | [1934–35](1934-35-serie-a) |
6th title Genoa Casale (32 goals) The 1933-34 Serie A was the thirty-fourth edition of the Italian Football Championship and its fifth season since 1929 re-branding to create Serie A. It was the eleventh season from which the Italian Football Champions adorned their team jerseys in the subsequent season with a Scudetto. Juventus were champions for the fourth of five successive seasons and for the sixth time in their history. This was their fifth scudetto since the scudetto started being awarded in 1924 and their fourth win contested as Serie A.
_1933-34.png)
Teams
Livorno and Brescia had been promoted from Serie B.
Events
A temporary relegation spot was added to reduce the league.
Final classification
Results
Top goalscorers
| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ITA Felice Borel | Juventus | 31 |
| 2 | ITA Giovanni Busoni | Livorno | 24 |
| 3 | ITA Giuseppe Meazza | Ambrosiana-Inter | 21 |
| ITA Antonio Vojak | Napoli | ||
| 5 | ITA Giovanni Ferrari | Juventus | 16 |
| ITA Alfredo Notti | Alessandria | ||
| ITA Pietro Arcari | Milan | ||
| ITA Nereo Rocco | Triestina | ||
| ITA Vinicio Viani | Fiorentina | ||
| 10 | ITA Silvio Piola | Pro Vercelli | 15 |
| ARG ITA Enrique Guaita | Roma | ||
| 12 | URU ITA Francisco Fedullo | Bologna | 14 |
| 13 | ARG ITA Alejandro Scopelli | Roma | 13 |
| 14 | ARG ITA Attilio Demaría | Ambrosiana-Inter | 12 |
| ITA Renato Cattaneo | Alessandria | ||
| ITA Aldo Borel | Palermo | ||
| 17 | ITA Onesto Silano | Torino | 11 |
| ITA Filippo Prato | Torino | ||
| BRA Filó | Lazio |
References and sources
- Almanacco Illustrato del Calcio – La Storia 1898–2004, Panini Edizioni, Modena, September 2005
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