The 1992–93 Coppa Italia, the 46th Coppa Italia was an Italian Football Federation domestic cup competition won by Torino.
| Tournament details | |
|---|---|
| Country | Italy |
| Dates | 23 Aug 1992 – 19 June 1993 |
| Teams | 48 |
| Final positions | |
| Champions | Torino (5th title) |
| Runners-up | Roma |
| Tournament statistics | |
| Matches played | 78 |
| Goals scored | 227 (2.91 per match) |
| Top goal scorer | Giuseppe Signori (6 goals) |
First round
edit| Home team | Result | Away team |
|---|---|---|
| Ternana (2) | 1–1 (p: 5–3) | Piacenza (2) |
| Sambenedettese (3) | 0–1 | Cagliari (1) |
| Avellino (3) | 0–0 (p: 2–4) | Reggiana (2) |
| SPAL (2) | 0–1 | Pisa (2) |
| Perugia (3) | 2–0 | Cremonese (2) |
| Taranto (2) | 2–1 | Lucchese (2) |
| Vicenza (3) | 0–4 | Hellas Verona (2) |
| Casertana (3) | 0–1 | Modena (2) |
| Monza (2) | 1–0 (aet) | Bologna (2) |
| Empoli (3) | 1–2 | Bari (2) |
| Messina (3) | 0–2 | Cesena (2) |
| Como (3) | 1–2 | Ascoli (2) |
| Venezia (2) | 2–0 | Cosenza (2) |
| Palermo (3) | 2–2 (p: 6–7) | Lecce (2) |
| Genoa (1) | 2–0 | Giarre (3) |
| Fidelis Andria (2) | 3–0 | Padova (2) |
p=after penalty kicks.
Second round
edit| Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milan (1) | 10–2 | Ternana (2) | 4–0 | 6–2 |
| Cagliari (1) | 6–4 | Udinese (1) | 2–0 | 4–4 |
| Reggiana (2) | 5–8 | Internazionale (1) | 3–4 | 2–4 |
| Foggia (1) | 3–2 | Pisa (2) | 1–0 | 2–2 |
| Fiorentina (1) | 4–1 | Perugia (2) | 1–0 | 3–1 |
| Roma (1) | 7–2 | Taranto (2) | 4–1 | 3–1 |
| Brescia (1) | 3–4 | Hellas Verona (2) | 2–3 | 1–1 |
| Napoli (1) | 6–0 | Modena (2) | 3–0 | 3–0 |
| Monza (2) | 2–4 | Torino (1) | 2–3 | 0–1 |
| Bari (2) | 6–5 | Pescara (1) | 3–3 | 3–2 |
| Sampdoria (1) | 2–2 (a) | Cesena (2) | 2–1 | 0–1 |
| Ascoli (2) | 0–5 | Lazio (1) | 0–4 | 0–1 |
| Atalanta (1) | 2–3 | Venezia (2) | 1–1 | 1–2 (aet) |
| Parma (1) | 1–0 | Lecce (2) | 1–0 | 0–0 |
| Ancona (1) | 3–6 | Genoa (1) | 2–1 | 1–5 (aet) |
| Juventus (1) | 5–1 | Fidelis Andria (2) | 4–0 | 1–1 |
Round of 16
edit| Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milan (1) | 3–0 | Cagliari (1) | 3–0 | 0–0 |
| Foggia (1) | 0–2 | Internazionale (1) | 0–0 | 0–2 |
| Roma (1) | 5–3 | Fiorentina (1) | 4–2 | 1–1 |
| Napoli (1) | 7–1 | Hellas Verona (2) | 2–1 | 5–0 |
| Bari (2) | 1–2 | Torino (1) | 1–1 | 0–1 |
| Cesena (2) | 2–4 | Lazio (1) | 1–1 | 1–3 |
| Parma (1) | 2–1 | Venezia (2) | 1–0 | 1–1 |
| Juventus (1) | 5–3 | Genoa (1) | 1–0 | 4–3 |
Quarter-finals
editSemi-finals
editFirst leg
editSecond leg
editRoma won 2–1 on aggregate.
| Juventus | 2–2 | Torino |
|---|---|---|
| Marchegiani Ravanelli |
Poggi Carlos Aguilera |
3–3 on aggregate. Torino won on the away goals rule.
Final
editFirst leg
edit| Torino | 3–0 | Roma |
|---|---|---|
| S. Benedetti Cois D. Fortunato |
Second leg
edit| Roma | 5–2 | Torino |
|---|---|---|
| Giannini Rizzitelli Mihajlović |
Silenzi |
5–5 on aggregate. Torino won on the away goals rule.
Top goalscorers
edit| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lazio | 6 | |
| 2 | Roma | 5 | |
| Bari | |||
| Internazionale | |||
| 5 | Roma | 4 | |
| Roma | |||
| Milan | |||
| Milan | |||
| Juventus |