In the first two seasons in top flight the club did not pass the regional phase, obtaining a third and a second place, with first driving Fornari and then Garozzo.
This is the eleventh second in the league: Visciano, Nebbia, Lobianco, Cassese, Gaia, Borghetto, Orsini, Ghisi I, Bobbio, Mombelli, Maltagliati.
From the thirties, in the first five years of which was the name of Fascio Sportivo Savoia, the club played steadily in Serie C until after the war, excluding the two years 1936–1938, becoming first Football Association Torre Annunziata and then Spolettificio Torre Annunziata, in fact a team military consisting mainly of footballers who held the lever in the city barracks, which regained the Serie C dominating the league with fourteen wins and a draw in sixteen matches.
With the purchase of Enrico Colombari, who ended his career as a footballer in Torre Annunziata and started as a coach, the club ranked second in 1938-1939 behind the MATER of Fulvio Bernardini; then, with Osvaldo Sacchi as a trainer, he obtained in 1939 the best result ever in the Italian Cup, in which he reached the final sixteenths; subsequently, with Ruggero Zanolla, he arrived fifth in 1940–41 and third in 1942–43.
Under the presidency Carotenuto, the technical guide of Dario Compiani and with the goals of the attacking trio Eugenio Calleri, Renato Ghezzi and Secondo Rossi, the team was classified sixth in 1946–47, which is today the highest point reached by the company from the establishment of the single round.
In 1998/1999, under coach Osvaldo Jaconi, popular for his successful years at Castel di Sangro, Savoia qualified for the Serie B promotion playoffs.
In the playoff semifinals, Savoia sensationally eliminated Palermo, winning both the matches, and defeating 2–0 Juve Stabia in a final, and also a derby between two rival teams.
In 1999/2000, despite a fairly good start, Savoia quickly entered into crisis, and Jaconi was fired at the 14th day, being replaced by Franco Varrella, who however was unable to save the team from relegation.