1921–22 Prima Categoria

1

The 1921–22 Prima Categoria season was won by Novese. During the summer of 1921, a dispute between the Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio (FIGC) and the largest teams within the league arose. The teams asked for a reduction of the number of participants in the 1a Divisione. Vittorio Pozzo developed a plan to accommodate the teams' requests, however, after a vote the plan was not passed; the smaller clubs feared that they would disappear if such a reduction was introduced. This led to the creation of a new Italian football federation, the Confederazione Calcistica Italiana (CCI), who organised the 1921–22 Prima Divisione that ran concurrent to the FIGC championship. This separation, however, only lasted one season and the following summer FIGC accepted a reduction in the league participants. The 1921-22 FIGC winner was U.S. Novese.

Regulation

Tuscany was added to the main championship as the sixth region. The regional FAs remained with 48 clubs. The preliminary regional phase was the bulk of the tournament, with even twelve matchdays and regular regional football champions, while the following national phase was reduced to a spring tournament of two little groups and a final. The main tournament was completely divided in six independent sections, and each region had its own football champions that joined the national championship.

Teams

Consequently to the controversy with the secessionist clubs, the Regional FAs quite respected the promotion rules. Only two clubs were added to the six rightful winners of the lower secondary regional tournaments.

Qualifications

Piedmont

Classification

Results table

Liguria

Classification

Results table

Lombardy

Group A

Group B

Group C

Group D

Final round

Veneto

Classification

Results table

Emilia

Group A

Group B

Relegation playoff

Since the aggregate rule wasn't applied, a tie-breaker was needed.

Final round

Tuscany

Classification

Results table

Semifinals

Group A

Classification

Results table

Group B

Classification

Results table

Qualification playoff

National Finals

References and sources

Qualifications to the Northern League

This FIGC was very poor, and risks of a general bankruptcy was real. The FIGC had a sole resource, its FIFA membership, during the talks that started with the Northern League. The rich League proposed that FIGC’s Prima Categoria became the Second Division of its CCI’s championship. An agreement was found in late June: the Colombo Compromise by the boss of newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The League imposed its idea of a 24 clubs First Division and a 48 clubs Second Division from 1923. The FIGC obtained a special 36 clubs championship for 1922-23, including champions and runner-ups of the disbanded Regional FAs. More, a third club of each regional FA could test its strength against a League bottom club. To respect as possible its clubs, the FIGC decided a test-match between the third and the forth clubs of each region. All other clubs went directly to Division Two.

Barrage

On mid-July Sundays, the six FIGC’s qualification winners could try to match the Northern League’s six bottom clubs. (*) Since the away goal rule wasn't applied, a tie-break was needed: Rivarolese and Pastore Turin were the sole two FIGC clubs which joined the regional champions and runners-up in the new First Division.

Footnotes

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