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1963–64 Serie A

61st season of top-tier Italian football


61st season of top-tier Italian football

FieldValue
competitionSerie A
image1963–64 Bologna FC - Championship tie-breaker.jpg
caption1963–64 Bologna team
season1963–64
dates14 September 1963 – 31 May 1964
winnersBologna
7th title
relegatedModena
SPAL
Bari
continentalcup1[European Cup](1964-65-european-cup)
continentalcup1 qualifiersBologna
Internazionale
continentalcup3[Inter-Cities Fairs Cup](1964-65-inter-cities-fairs-cup)
continentalcup3 qualifiersMilan
Fiorentina
Juventus
Roma
continentalcup2[Cup Winners' Cup](1964-65-european-cup-winners-cup)
continentalcup2 qualifiersTorino
league topscorerHarald Nielsen
(21 goals)
matches306
total goals647
prevseason[1962–63](1962-63-serie-a)
nextseason[1964–65](1964-65-serie-a)

7th title SPAL Bari Internazionale Fiorentina Juventus Roma (21 goals) The 1963–64 Serie A season was won by Bologna.

Teams

Messina, Bari and Lazio had been promoted from Serie B.

Final classification

Results

Championship tie-breaker

With both Inter and Bologna level on 54 points, a play-off match was conducted to decide the champion for the first and only time in Serie A history. Nielsen

Relegation tie-breaker

Salvi Modena relegated to Serie B.

Top goalscorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1Denmark Harald NielsenBologna21
2Sweden Kurt HamrinFiorentina19
3Brazil Luís VinícioVicenza18
4Brazil AmarildoMilan14
5Italy José AltafiniMilan13
ARG Italy Omar SívoriJuventus
Italy Paolo BarisonSampdoria
8Brazil Jair da CostaInternazionale12
9Brazil NenéJuventus11
10ITA Sergio BrighentiModena10

Attendances

#ClubAverage
1Internazionale43,328
2Milan38,148
3Roma31,269
4Bologna30,286
5Juventus28,233
6Fiorentina25,051
7Lazio24,979
8Torino21,153
9Bari19,934
10Genoa19,572
11Atalanta16,690
12Modena15,962
13Sampdoria15,118
14Mantova14,550
15Catania13,169
16Messina12,408
17SPAL9,855
18Vicenza9,392

Source:

Footnotes

References and sources

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

References

  1. "Il Bologna di Bernardini e lo storico spareggio". gazzetta.it.
  2. https://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn/archive/ita/aveita64.htm
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