This articleneeds additional citations forverification.(January 2013) |
Lega Pro Prima Divisionewas the third highestfootballleague inItaly.It consisted of 33 teams, divided geographically into two divisions of 16 and 17 teams for group A and B respectively. Until 2008 it was known asSerie C1.[1]
Founded | 1935 asSerie C 1978 asSerie C1 2008 asLega Pro Prima Divisione |
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Folded | 2014 |
Country | Italy |
Other club(s) from | San Marino |
Confederation | FIGC |
Number of teams | 33 (17, 16 respectively for the group A, B) |
Level on pyramid | 3 |
Promotionto | Serie B |
Relegationto | Lega Pro Seconda Divisione |
Domestic cup(s) | Coppa Italia Lega Pro Supercoppa di Lega di Prima Divisione |
Last champions | Virtus Entella(group A) Perugia(group B) (2013–14) |
Most championships | CatanzaroandRavenna(3 each) |
Website | lega-pro |
Before the 1978–79 season there were only three leagues of professional football in Italy, the third beingSerie C.In 1978, it was decided to splitSerie Cinto Serie C1 andSerie C2.Serie C2, the fourth highest professional league in the Italian system, was also renamed in 2008 and was calledLega Pro Seconda Divisione.[citation needed] The reform, already decided by theFIGCled to the reunification with the second division starting from 2014-2015 and with the subsequent rebirth of the third division championship organized by the pro league with 60 teams divided into three groups of 20 inLega Pro.[citation needed]
Promotion and relegation
editIn each division, two teams were promoted toSerie B,and three teams were relegated toLega Pro Seconda Divisione.In total, the league promoted 4 teams to Serie B and relegated 6 teams to Seconda Divisione.
The team finishing first in the regular season was directly promoted toSerie B,while teams placing 2nd to 5th were entered into a play-offsemi-finalfor the chance of gaining the second promotional spot for that particular division.
Past champions
editSource for league winners:[2]
Serie C1
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Lega Pro Prima Divisione
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Group A
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Group B
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References
edit- ^"La serie C cambia nome: sarà Lega Pro".Corriere della Sera(in Italian). 19 June 2008.Retrieved17 September2015.
- ^Igor Kramarsic (17 July 2012)."Italy - List of Third Division (Serie C) Champions".RSSSF.Retrieved12 January2013.