2011–12 Serie A


The 2011–12 Serie A was the 110th season of top-tier Italian football, the 80th in a round-robin tournament, and the second since its organization under a league committee separate from Serie B. It began on 3 September 2011 and ended on 13 May 2012. The league was originally scheduled to start on 27 August, but this was delayed due to a strike by the players. The fixtures were drawn up on 27 July 2011.
The league title was won by Juventus, winning its 28th official Serie A title or scudetto, and first since the 2005–06 Serie A. The team completed the season undefeated, becoming the first team to do so in a 38-game league season in Italy; Perugia were undefeated in the 30-game 1978–79 Serie A, in which they finished second in the table, while Milan were unbeaten and won the title in the 34-game 1991–92 Serie A.
Since Italy dropped from third to fourth place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2010–11 season, the league lost a group stage berth for the UEFA Champions League from the 2012–13 season.

Rule changes

The rules for the registration of non-EU nationals transferred from abroad were revised in the summer of 2011. Clubs could now sign two non-EU players. This was a reverse of the decision made the previous summer in the wake of [Italy national association football|football team|Italy]'s failure at the 2010 World Cup that limited clubs to the signing of just one such player.

Teams

Stadia and locations

TeamHome cityStadiumCapacity2010-11 season
AtalantaBergamoAtleti Azzurri d'ItaliaSerie B champions
BolognaBolognaRenato Dall'Ara16th in Serie A
CagliariCagliariSant'Elia14th in Serie A
CataniaCataniaAngelo Massimino13th in Serie A
CesenaCesenaDino Manuzzi15th in Serie A
Chievo VeronaVeronaMarc'Antonio Bentegodi11th in Serie A
FiorentinaFlorenceArtemio Franchi9th in Serie A
GenoaGenoaLuigi Ferraris10th in Serie A
InternazionaleMilanSan SiroSerie A Runner-up
JuventusTurinJuventus Stadium7th in Serie A
LazioRomeOlimpico5th in Serie A
LecceLecceVia del Mare17th in Serie A
MilanMilanSan SiroSerie A champions
NapoliNaplesSan Paolo3rd in Serie A
NovaraNovaraSilvio PiolaSerie B play-off winners
PalermoPalermoRenzo Barbera8th in Serie A
ParmaParmaEnnio Tardini12th in Serie A
RomaRomeOlimpico6th in Serie A
SienaSienaArtemio FranchiSerie B Runner-up
UdineseUdineFriuli4th in Serie A

Personnel and sponsorship

TeamManagerCaptainKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
Atalanta

Managerial changes

In Italy, football managers are only permitted to manage one club per season. For this purpose, the "season" is defined as starting when its first match kicks off, so Roberto Donadoni and Stefano Pioli, who lost their job at Cagliari and Palermo on 12 and 31 August 2011 were able to take respectively the Parma job in January 2012 and the Bologna job in October 2011 because the first matches were not until 9 September 2011.
TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyPosition in tableReplaced byDate of appointment
Lecce

League table


Statistics

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstResultDate
NapoliMilan 18 09 2011
MilanLecce 23 10 2011
MilanParma 26 10 2011
4InternazionalePalermo 01 02 2012
PalermoInternazionale 01 02 2012
AtalantaRoma 26 02 2012
MilanPalermo 03 03 2012
CagliariNapoli 09 03 2012
CagliariCesena 18 03 2012
InternazionaleGenoa 01 04 2012
InternazionaleMilan 06 05 2012
PalermoChievo 06 05 2012
NovaraCesena 06 05 2012

Attendances

Source:
#ClubAvg. attendanceHighest
1AC Milan49,02079,522
2Internazionale44,80678,222
3SSC Napoli39,80857,402
4Juventus FC37,54540,944
5AS Roma36,21950,801
6SS Lazio32,41057,148
7ACF Fiorentina21,41236,387
8Bologna FC19,25730,321
9US Città di Palermo19,21828,941
10Genoa CFC18,69827,527
11Udinese Calcio18,59528,588
12AC Cesena16,41023,343
13Atalanta BC15,49222,335
14Calcio Catania15,38720,839
15Parma FC13,64619,481
16Novara Calcio10,95717,649
17Cagliari Calcio10,69820,120
18AC Siena10,12815,265
19US Lecce9,96123,298
20ChievoVerona9,64922,000