Serie A used to be home to some of the world's most elite attacking talents during its golden era. Some of the greatest goalscorers of all time have ever graced Italian top-flight pitches league, with many of them registering over 150 goals.
From Silvio Piola to Francesco Totti and from Gunnar Nordahl to Alessandro Del Piero, we have seen longevity and ruthlessness in front of goal for decades.
Who, though, forms part of this exclusive club of 150 goals and in what order do they sit on the all-time chart?
GOAL takes a look…
Who is the Serie A’s all-time top goalscorer?
The late Piola is widely regarded as one of the best Italian players of all time and his goal tally of 274 goals is the highest in Italian top-division history.
The Italian played for four teams during his time and sits at the top of all-time goalscoring charts for three of them (Pro Vercelli, Lazio and Novara). He is also the Italian with the most goals scored in all competitions with 364 in his 24-year career.
He was part of the Italian squad that won the 1938 World Cup and was posthumously inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame in 2011.
AFPRoma and Italy legend Totti is the only other player with 250+ goals to his name. He is the top goalscorer and leading appearance maker for Roma, making 786 appearances for the club while scoring 316 goals during his time spanning over 24 years.
Sweden legend Nordahl sits third on the list with 225 goals to his name in 291 appearances, at a rate of 0.77 goals per game, the best in the league's history. He won the top scorer award five times during his seven year spell with AC Milan and scored a whooping 210 goals for the Rossoneri.
Giuseppe 'Peppino' Maezza and Jose Altafini are both tied on 4th place with 216 goals a piece. Meazza is one of the only three Italians to have won two World Cups, whereas Altafini is the fifth-youngest player to have reached the 100 goal mark in Serie A, doing so at just 24 years of age.
Antonio Di Natale and Roberto Baggio are the only two other players with over 200 goals scored in the history of the competition. Di Natale is the highest goalscorer for Udinese and is also their leading appearance maker, while Baggio was the first ever to be inducted in Italian Football Hall of Fame in 2011.
Rank | Player | Goals | Club(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Silvio Piola | 274 | Pro Vercelli, Lazio, Juventus, Novara |
2 | Francesco Totti | 250 | Roma |
3 | Gunnar Nordahl | 225 | Milan, Roma |
4 | Giuseppe Meazza | 216 | Inter, Milan, Juventus |
4= | Jose Altafini | 216 | Milan, Napoli, Juventus |
6 | Antonio Di Natale | 209 | Empoli, Udinese |
7 | Roberto Baggio | 205 | Fiorentina, Juventus, Milan, Bologna, Inter, Brescia |
8 | Kurt Hamrin | 190 | Juventus, Padova, Fiorentina, Milan, Napoli |
9 | Giuseppe Signori | 188 | Foggia, Lazio, Sampdoria, Bologna |
=9 | Alessandro Del Piero | 188 | Juventus |
=9 | Alberto Gilardino | 188 | Piacenza, Hellas Verona, Parma, Milan, Fiorentina, Genoa, Bologna, Palermo, Empoli, Pescara |
How many players have scored 150 or more Serie A goals?
There are 27 players to have hit the coveted 150-goal mark in Serie A history.
Lazio's Ciro Immobile is the active player with most goals scored with 188.
Fabio Quagliarella, who sits just behind legendary Argentine striker Gabriel Batistuta, is another intriguing name on the list with 181. The Sampdoria forward won the league's golden boot award in 2018-19 season, where he scored in 11 consecutive games and finished the season with 26 goals.
Getty ImagesZlatan Ibrahimovic recently joined the elite list in his second stint at AC Milan.
Rank | Player | Goals | Club(s) |
---|---|---|---|
=9 | Ciro Immobile | 188 | Juventus, Genoa, Torino, Lazio |
13 | Gabriel Batistuta | 183 | Fiorentina, Roma, Inter |
14 | Fabio Quagliarella | 181 | Sampdoria, Udinese, Juventus, Torino, Napoli, Ascoli |
15 | Giampiero Boniperti | 178 | Juventus |
16 | Amedeo Amadei | 174 | Roma, Inter, Napoli |
17 | Giuseppe Savoldi | 168 | Atalanta, Bologna, Napoli |
18 | Giuglielmo Gabetto | 164 | Juventus, Torino |
19 | Roberto Boninsegna | 164 | Varese, Cagliari, Inter, Juventus |
20 | Luca Toni | 157 | Vincenza, Brescia, Palermo, Fiorentina, Roma, Genoa, Juventus, Hellas Verona |
20 | Gigi Riva | 156 | Legnano, Cagliari |
=20 | Roberto Mancini | 156 | Bologna, Sampdoria, Lazio |
=20 | Filippo Inzaghi | 156 | Parma, Atalanta, Juventus, Milan |
=20 | Zlatan Ibrahimovic | 156 | Juventus, Inter Milan, AC Milan |
25 | Luis Vinicio | 155 | Napoli, Vincenza, Bologna, Inter Milan |
=25 | Carlo Reguzzoni | 155 | Pro Patria, Bologna |
27 | Istvan Nyers | 153 | Inter, Roma |
=27 | Hernan Crespo | 153 | Parma, Lazio, Inter, Milan, Genoa |
Current Italy manager Roberto Mancini, also features on the list, scoring 156 goals during his time at Sampdoria. He sits in the elite company of another legendary striker in Filippo Inzaghi. Inzaghi also holds the record for most hat-tricks in Serie A history (10).
Legendary Argentine strikers Hernan Crespo and Batistuta both feature on the list with 153 and 183 goals respectively.
Crespo was the world's most expensive player in 2000 when he joined Lazio from Parma and he finished the subsequent season as the competition's top goalscorer.
Batistuta's exploits with Fiorentina earned him a reputation of an incredible goalscorer and he is still their record top goalscorer in Serie A history.