La Vecchia Signora (The Old Lady) La Fidanzata d'Italia (The Girlfriend of Italy) Madama (Piedmontese pronunciation:[maˈdama]; The Lady) I Bianconeri (The White and Blacks)[a] Le Zebre (The Zebras) La Gheuba (Piedmontese pronunciation:[laˈɡøba]; The Hunchback)
Short name
Juve
Founded
1 November 1897; 127 years ago (1897-11-01),[b] as Sport-Club Juventus[3]
Juventus Football Club (fromLatin:iuventūs, 'youth';Italian pronunciation:[juˈvɛntus]), commonly known asJuventus or colloquially asJuve (pronounced[ˈjuːve]),[5] is an Italian professionalfootballclub based inTurin,Piedmont, who compete inSerie A, the top tier of theItalian football league system. Founded in 1897 by a group of Torinese students, the club played in different grounds around the city, and plays now inJuventus Stadium.
Founded with the name of Sport-Club Juventus, initially as anathletics club,[11] it is the second oldest of its kind still active in the country afterGenoa's football section (1893) and has competed every season of the premier club division (reformulated in different formats until the Serie A inception in 1929) since its debut in 1900 with the exception of the2006–07 season, being managed by theindustrialAgnelli family almost continuously since 1923.[e] The relationship between the club and that dynasty is the oldest and longest innational sports, making Juventus one of the firstprofessional sporting clubsante litteram in the country,[13] having established itself as a major force in the national stage since the 1930s and at confederation level since the mid-1970s,[14] and becoming, in a nearly stable basis, one of the top-ten wealthiest in world football in terms ofvalue,revenue andprofit since the mid-1990s,[15] being listed on theBorsa Italiana since 2001.[16]
Under the management ofGiovanni Trapattoni, the club won 13 trophies in the ten years before 1986, including six league titles and five international tournaments, and becamethe first to win all three seasonal competitions organised by the Union of European Football Associations: the1976–77 UEFA Cup (first Southern European side to do so), the1983–84 Cup Winners' Cup and the1984–85 European Champions' Cup.[17] With successive triumphs in the1984 European Super Cup and1985 Intercontinental Cup, it becamethe first and thus far only in the world to complete a clean sweep of all five historical confederation trophies;[18] an achievement that they revalidated with the title won in the1999 UEFA Intertoto Cup after another successful era led byMarcello Lippi,[19] becoming in addition, until2022, the only professional Italian club to have won every ongoing honour available to the first team and organised by a national or internationalfootball association.[f] In December 2000, Juventus was placed seventh in theFIFA's historic ranking of the best clubs in the world,[20] and nine years later was ranked second best club in Europe during the 20th century based on a statistical study series by theInternational Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS), the highest for an Italian club in both.[21]
The Juventus team during the 1905 season in which they won their first league title
In 1904, businessmanMarco Ajmone-Marsan revived the finances of Juventus, making it possible to transfer the training field from piazza d'armi to the more appropriate Velodrome Umberto I. During this period, the team wore a pink and black kit. Juventus first won the1905 Italian Football Championship while playing at theirVelodrome Umberto I ground. By this time, the club colours had changed to black and white stripes, inspired by English sideNotts County.[32]
There was a split at the club in 1906, after some of the staff considered moving Juve out of Turin.[30]Alfred Dick, the club's president,[g] was unhappy with this, and left with some prominent players to foundFBC Torino, which in turn spawned theDerby della Mole.[33] Juventus spent much of this period steadily rebuilding after the split, surviving the First World War.[32]
In 1913, Juventus was relegated to the second division after ended inlast place, but after pressure made by their executives to the Italian Federation, it was decided to increase the number of teams in the following season, that permitted Juventus to remain in the top league.[34][35]
Juventus moved to theStadio Comunale, but for the rest of the 1930s and the majority of the 1940s they were unable to recapture championship dominance. After the Second World War,Gianni Agnelli was appointed president.[30] In the late 1940s and early 1950s, the club added two more league championships to its name, winning the1949–50 Serie A under the management of EnglishmanJesse Carver, and then repeating in the1951–52 Serie A. For the1957–58 Serie A, two new strikers, WelshmanJohn Charles and Italian ArgentineOmar Sívori, were signed to play alongside longtime memberGiampiero Boniperti. In the1959–60 Juventus F.C. season, they beatFiorentina to complete their first league and cupdouble, winning the1959–60 Serie A and the1960 Coppa Italia final. Boniperti retired in 1961 as the all-time top scorer at the club, with 182 goals in all competitions, a club record that stood for 45 years.[39]
During the rest of the decade, the club only won the1966–67 Serie A.[32] The 1970s saw Juventus further solidify their strong position in Italian football, and under former playerČestmír Vycpálek they won thescudetto in the1971–72 Serie A, and followed through in the1972–73 Serie A,[32] with players like asRoberto Bettega,Franco Causio, andJosé Altafini breaking through. During the rest of the decade, they won the league thrice more, with defenderGaetano Scirea contributing significantly. The latter two success in Serie A was underGiovanni Trapattoni, who also led the club to their first ever major European title, the1976–77 UEFA Cup, and helped the club's domination continue on into the early part of the 1980s.[40]
The club led under Trapattoni in the 1980s brought them the league title three more times by 1984.[32] This meant Juventus had won 20 Italian league titles and were allowed to add a second goldenstar to their shirt, becoming the only Italian club to achieve this.[40] Around this time, the club's players were attracting considerable attention, andPaolo Rossi was namedEuropean Footballer of the Year following his contribution to Italy's victory in the1982 FIFA World Cup, where he was named Player of the Tournament.[41]
FrenchmanMichel Platini was awarded the European Footballer of the Year title for three years in a row in 1983, 1984 and 1985, which is a record.[42] Juventus are the first and one of the only two clubs to have players from their club winning the award in four consecutive years.[43][h] It was Platini who scored the winning goal in the1985 European Cup final againstLiverpool; this was marred by theHeysel Stadium disaster, which changed European football.[45] That year, Juventus became the first club in the history of European football to have won all three majorUEFA competitions;[46][47] after their triumph in the1985 Intercontinental Cup, the club also became the first and thus far the only in association football history to have won all five possible confederation competitions,[48] an achievement that it revalidated with a sixth title won in the1999 UEFA Intertoto Cup.[49][50]
After a two-and-a-half-season absence, Lippi returned to the club in 2001, following his replacementCarlo Ancelotti's dismissal, signing big name players likeGianluigi Buffon,David Trezeguet,Pavel Nedvěd, andLilian Thuram, helping the team to win the2001–02 Serie A, which was their first since 1998, and confirmed themselves in the2002–03 Serie A.[32] Juventus were also part of the all Italian2003 UEFA Champions League final but lost out to Milan on penalties after the game ended in a 0–0 draw. At the conclusion of the following season, Lippi was appointed as the Italy national team's head coach, bringing an end to one of the most fruitful managerial spells in Juventus's history.[40]
Calciopoli scandal (2004–2007)
Fabio Capello was appointed as Juventus's coach in 2004 and led the club to two more consecutive Serie A first places. In May 2006, Juventus emerged as one of the five clubs linked to theCalciopoli scandal. In July, Juventus was placed at the bottom of the league table and relegated toSerie B for the first time in its history. The club was also stripped of the2004–05 Serie A title, while the2005–06 Serie A winner, after a periodsub judice, was declared to be third-placed Inter Milan.[60] This remains a much debated and controversial issue,[61][62][63] particularly due to Inter Milan's later revealed involvement, the 2004 championship (the sole being investigated) deemed regular and not fixed,[64][65][66] Juventus being absolved as club in the ordinary justice proceedings,[67][68] their renounce to the Italian civil courts appeal, which could have cleared the club's name and avoid relegation, afterFIFA threatened to suspend theItalian Football Federation (FIGC) and barring all Italian clubs from international play,[69][70][71] and the motivations,[72] such assentimento popolare (people's feelings),[73] and the newly createdad-hoc rule used to relegate the club.[74][75][76]
Star goalkeeperGianluigi Buffon was among a group of players who remained with the club following their demotion to Serie B in 2006.
Many key players left following their relegation to Serie B, including Thuram, star strikerZlatan Ibrahimović, midfieldersEmerson andPatrick Vieira, and defensive stalwartsFabio Cannavaro andGianluca Zambrotta;[77] other big name players, such as Del Piero, Buffon, Trezeguet, and Nedvěd, as well as the club's future defense coreGiorgio Chiellini, remained to help the club return to Serie A,[78] while youngsters from theCampionato Nazionale Primavera (youth team), such asSebastian Giovinco andClaudio Marchisio, were integrated into the first team.[79][80] Juventus won theCadetti title (Serie B championship) despite starting with a points deduction and gained promotion straight back up to the top division, with Del Piero claiming the top scorer award with 21 goals, as league winners after the2006–07 Serie B season.[81]
As early as 2010, when many other clubs were implicated and Inter Milan,Livorno, and Milan liable of direct Article 6 violations in the 2011 Palazzi Report, Juventus considered challenging the stripping of theirscudetto from 2005 and the non-assignment of the 2006 title, dependent on the results ofCalciopoli trials connected to the 2006 scandal.[82] When former general managerLuciano Moggi's conviction in criminal court in connection with the scandal was partially written off by the Supreme Court in March 2015,[83][84] the club sued the FIGC for €443 million for damages caused by their 2006 relegation. Then-FIGC presidentCarlo Tavecchio offered to discuss reinstatement of the lostscudetti in exchange for Juventus dropping the lawsuit.[85]
In September 2015, the Supreme Court released a 150-page document that explained its final ruling of the case, based on the controversial 2006 sports ruling, which did not take in consideration the other clubs involved because they could not be put on trial due to the statute of limitations, and it would be necessary to request and open a revocation of judgment pursuant to Article 39 of the Code of Sports Justice. Despite his remaining charges being cancelled without a new trial due to statute of limitations, the court confirmed that Moggi was actively involved in the sporting fraud, which was intended to favour Juventus and increase his own personal benefits according toLa Gazzetta dello Sport.[86] As did the Naples court in 2012,[87][88] the court commented that the developments and behavior of other clubs and executives were not investigated in depth.[89] Once they exhausted their appeals in Italy's courts,[90] both Moggi and Giraudo appealed to theEuropean Court of Human Rights in March 2020; Giraudo's was accepted in September 2021.[91][92] Juventus continued to present new appeals,[93] which were declared inadmissible.[94]
Return to Serie A (2007–2011)
After making their comeback for the2007–08 Serie A, Juventus appointedClaudio Ranieri as manager.[95] They finished in third place in their first season back in the top flight and qualified for the2008–09 UEFA Champions League's third qualifying round in the preliminary stages. Juventus reached the group stages, where they beat Real Madrid in both home and away legs, before losing in the knockout round toChelsea. Ranieri was sacked following a string of unsuccessful results andCiro Ferrara was appointed as manager on a temporary basis for the last two games of the2008–09 Serie A,[96] before being subsequently appointed as the manager for the2009–10 Serie A.[97]
Ferrara's stint as Juventus manager proved to be unsuccessful, with Juventus knocked out of2009–10 UEFA Champions League, and also of the2009–10 Coppa Italia, as well as just lying on the sixth place in the league table at the end of January 2010, leading to the dismissal of Ferrara and the naming ofAlberto Zaccheroni as caretaker manager. Zaccheroni could not help the side improve, as Juventus finished the season in seventh place in Serie A. For the2010–11 Serie A,Jean-Claude Blanc was replaced byAndrea Agnelli as the club's president. Agnelli's first action was to replace Zaccheroni and director of sportAlessio Secco withSampdoria managerLuigi Delneri and director of sportGiuseppe Marotta.[98] Delneri failed to improve their fortunes and was dismissed, and former player and fan favouriteAntonio Conte, fresh after winning promotion withSiena, was named as Delneri's replacement.[99] In September 2011, Juventus relocated to the newJuventus Stadium, known as the Allianz Stadium since 2017.[100]
Nine consecutivescudetti (2011–2020)
PlaymakerAndrea Pirlo playing for Juventus in 2012
With Conte as manager, Juventus were unbeaten for the entire2011–12 Serie A season. Towards the second half of the season, the team was mostly competing with northern rivals Milan for first place in a tight contest. Juventus won the title on the 37th matchday after beatingCagliari 2–0 and Milan losing to Inter 4–2. After a 3–1 win in the final matchday againstAtalanta, Juventus became the first team to go the season unbeaten in the current 38-game format.[101] In2013–14 Serie A, Juventus won a third consecutivescudetto with a record 102 points and 33 wins.[102][103] The title was the 30th official league championship in the club's history.[104] They also achieved the semi-finals of2013–14 UEFA Europa League, where they were eliminated at home against ten-manBenfica'scatenaccio, missing the2014 UEFA Europa League final at the Juventus Stadium.[105][106]
In the2014–15 Serie A,Massimiliano Allegri was appointed as manager, with whom Juventus won their 31st official title, making it a fourth-straight, as well as achieving a record tenthCoppa Italia, after beatingLazio 2–2 in the2015 Coppa Italia final, for the domestic double.[107] The club also beat Real Madrid 3–2 on aggregate in the semi-finals of the2014–15 UEFA Champions League to faceBarcelona in the2015 UEFA Champions League final in Berlin for the first time since the2002–03 UEFA Champions League.[108] Juventus lost the final against Barcelona 3–1.[109] In the2016 Coppa Italia final, the club won the title for the 11th time and second straight win, becoming the first team in Italy's history to win Serie A and Coppa Italia doubles in back-to-back seasons.[110][111][112] In the2017 Coppa Italia final, Juventus won their 12th Coppa Italia title in a 2–0 win over Lazio, becoming the first team to win three consecutive titles.[113] Four days later on 21 May, Juventus became the first team to win six consecutive Serie A titles.[114] In the2017 UEFA Champions League final, their second Champions League final in three years, Juventus were defeated 1–4 by defending champions Real Madrid; the2017 Turin stampede happened ten minutes before the end of the match.[115][116] In the2018 Coppa Italia final, Juventus won their 13th title and fourth in a row in a 4–0 win over Milan, extending the all-time record of successive Coppa Italia titles.[117] Juventus then secured their seventh consecutive Serie A title, extending the all-time record of successive triumphs in the competition.[118]
Juventus's signing ofCristiano Ronaldo in 2018 elevated the club's popularity
Juventus, eager to secure the Champions League title, signedCristiano Ronaldo for £99.2 million from Real Madrid on 10 July 2018.[119] In Italy, the signing was dubbed the "deal of the century."[119] For Juventus, the signing of Ronaldo went beyond football—it represented a step toward elevating the club's status as a global business.Deloitte ranked the world's richest clubs earlier in the year and Juventus ranked 10th; by leveraging Ronaldo's massive social media following and commercial appeal, the club expected to close the financial gap with the likes of Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Manchester United.[119] In the2018 Supercoppa Italiana, which was held in January 2019, Juventus and Milan, who were tied for Supercoppa Italiana wins with seven each, played against each other; Juventus won their eight title after beating Milan 1–0.[120] In April 2019, Juventus secured their eighth consecutive Serie A title, further extending the all-time record of successive triumphs in the competition.[121] Following Allegri's departure,[122]Maurizio Sarri was appointed manager of the club ahead of the2019–20 Juventus F.C. season.[123] Juventus were confirmed2019–20 Serie A champions, reaching an unprecedented milestone of nine consecutive league titles.[124] Ronaldo was key to Juventus's continuation of domestic success; notable achievements include his reaching 100 goals in Serie A quicker than anyone in the league's history.[125] He also equalled the record of scoring in the most consecutive Serie A matches (11).[125]
Recent history (2020–present)
On 8 August 2020, Sarri was sacked from his managerial position, one day after Juventus were eliminated from the2019–20 UEFA Champions League byLyon.[126] On the same day, former playerAndrea Pirlo was announced as the new coach, signing a two-year contract.[127] In the2020 Supercoppa Italiana, which was held in January 2021, Juventus won their ninth title after a 2–0 victory againstNapoli.[128] With Inter Milan's win of the2020–21 Serie A, Juventus's run of nine consecutive titles came to an end;[129] the club managed to secure a fourth-place finish on the final day of the league, granting Juventus qualification to the following season's Champions League.[130] In the2021 Coppa Italia final, Juventus won their 14th title.[131] On 28 May, Juventus sacked Pirlo from his managerial position,[132][133] and announced Allegri's return to the club as manager after two years away from management on a four-year contract.[134] During the three seasons that featured Ronaldo, the Champions League all-time top scorer, Juventus disappointingly failed to win the Champions League.[125] Ronaldo left the club for Manchester United in late 2021.[125]
Although Allegri had considered the victory of thescudetto as a seasonal goal,[135] Juventus reached another fourth place in the league.[136] After losing 4–2after extra time to Inter Milan in the2022 Coppa Italia final, the2021–22 Juventus F.C. season marked the first season since 2010–11 in which the club had not won a trophy.[136] In the2022–23 season, Juventus had one victory and five defeats in their Champions League group, achieving their worst-ever score (3 points) and their greatest-ever number of losses in the competition's group stage.[137] Through their better goal difference over fourth-placedMaccabi Haifa, the team finished third and dropped down into the Europa League,[137] in which they were defeated 2–1 bySevilla after extra time at theRamón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium in the semi-final.[138] On 28 November 2022, the entire board of directors resigned from their respective positions,Andrea Agnelli as president,Pavel Nedvěd as vice president, andMaurizio Arrivabene as CEO.[139][140][141] Agnelli's presidency was the most victorious of the club's history, with 19 titles won.[142]Exor, the club's controlling shareholder, appointedGianluca Ferrero as its new chairman ahead of the shareholders' meeting on 18 January 2023.[143]
Two days later, after being acquitted by the FIGC's Court of Appeal in April–May 2022,[144][145][146] Juventus were deducted 15 points as punishment for capital gain violations,[147] as part of an investigation related to the 2019–2021 budgets during theCOVID-19 pandemic starting in November 2021.[148] This was harsher than the point deduction recommended by the FIGC prosecutor, who said that in the standings Juventus "must now finish behind Roma, outside the European Cup area".[149][150] The penalty caused an uproar and protests among Juventus supporters,[151] who cancelled, or threatened to do so, theirSky Sport andDAZN subscriptions.[152][153][154] Following Juventus's appeal, the decision had initially been reversed on 20 April 2023,[155] but the club were given a new penalty, this time of ten points, on 22 May.[156] Within the aforementioned FIGC's inquiry, on 29 May, Juventus proposed a plea bargain for their false accounting on staff salaries;[157][158] the request was accepted one day later and Juventus only received a fine of €718,240 without any further penalty.[159] Juventus finished the2022–23 Serie A in seventh place and qualified to theUEFA Europa Conference League with 62 points.[i][160] However, on 28 July, UEFA ejected Juventus from its competitions for one year as the club violated a settlement agreement with UEFA signed in August 2022.[161] The2023–24 season was the first in which Juventus did not participate in UEFA competitions since 2011–12.[161]
Due to their UEFA competition ban, Juventus only had the Serie A title and Coppa Italia to play for during the 2023–24 season. InSerie A Juventus finished the season in third place with 71 points, qualifying for the champions league but they finished the season 23 points behind a dominant Inter Milan side. In theCoppa Italia, Juventus made the final where they would faceAtalanta. Juventus would win the final 1–0 after an early goal fromDušan Vlahović, earning the Turin club their 15th Coppa Italia title.[162] However the game was not without controversy, as manager Massimiliano Allegri was sent off in stoppage time after shouting at the 4th official. Allegri after leaving the pitch was reported to have attacked the referees, threatened a journalist and waved off sporting directorCristiano Giuntoli during the post match celebrations.[163]
Despite winning the Coppa Italia, two days after the final Juventus announced they had sacked Allegri, mainly due to his behaviour during the game not being in line with the club's values,[164] Juventus announced that former defenderPaolo Montero would take charge for the final two league games of the season.
On 12 June 2024, Juventus announced that formerBologana coach and Inter Milan midfielderThiago Motta would become their new head coach for the2024–25 season, on a three-year contract.[165]
Juventus have played in black and white striped shirts, with white shorts, sometimes black shorts since1901–02 season.[166] Originally, they played in pink shirts with a black tie. The father of one of the players made the earliest shirts, but continual washing faded the colour so much that in December 1901 the club sought to replace them.[167] Juventus asked one of their team members, EnglishmanJohn Savage, if he had any contacts in England who could supply new shirts in a colour that would better withstand the elements. He had a friend who lived in Nottingham, who being aNotts County supporter, shipped out the black and white striped shirts to Turin.[167] Juventus have worn the shirts ever since, considering the colours to be aggressive and powerful.[167]
Juventus's official emblem has undergone different and small modifications since the 1920s. The previous modification of the Juventus badge took place in 2004, when the emblem of the team changed to a black-and-whiteoval shield of a type used by Italian ecclesiastics. It is divided in five vertical stripes: two white stripes and three black stripes, inside which are the following elements, while in its upper section the name of the society superimposed on a whiteconvex section, over golden curvature (gold for honour). The white silhouette of acharging bull is in the lower section of the oval shield, superimposed on a blackold French shield and the charging bull is a symbol of thecomune of Turin. There is also a black silhouette of amural crown above the black spherical triangle's base. This is a reminiscence to Augusta Tourinorum, the old city of theRoman era which the present capital of Piedmont region is its cultural heiress.In January 2017, presidentAndrea Agnelli announced the change to the Juventus badge for alogotype. More specifically, it is apictogram composed by a stylised Black and White "J" which Agnelli said reflects "the Juventus way of living."[168] Juventus was the first team in sports history to adopt astar as a symbol associated with any competition's triumph, who added one above their badge in 1958 to represent their tenth Italian Football Championship and Serie A title, and has since become popularized with other clubs as well.[169]
In the past, the convex section of the emblem had a blue colour (another symbol of Turin) and it wasconcave in shape. The old French shield and the mural crown, also in the lower section of the emblem, had a considerably greater size. The two "Golden Stars for Sport Excellence" were located above the convex and concave section of Juventus's emblem. During the 1980s, the club emblem was the blurred silhouette of a zebra, alongside the two golden stars with the club's name forming an arc above.
Juventus unofficially won their 30th league title in 2011–12, but a dispute with the FIGC, which stripped Juventus of their 2004–05 title and did not assign them the 2005–06 title due to their involvement in theCalciopoli scandal, left their official total at 28; the club elected to wear no stars at all thefollowing season, but added the message "30 sul campo" ("30 on the pitch", referring to the two titles that were won but vacated) underneath the badge.[170] Juventus won their 30th title in 2013–14 and thus earned the right to wear their third star, but Agnelli stated that the club suspended the use of the stars until another team wins their 20th championship, having the right to wear two stars "to emphasise the difference".[171] For the2015–16 season, Juventus reintroduced the stars and added the third star to their jersey as well with new kit manufacturersAdidas, in addition to the Coppa Italia badge for winning their tenthCoppa Italia theprevious season.[172] For the2016–17 season, Juventus re-designed their kit with a different take on the trademark black and white stripes.[173] For the2017–18 season, Juventus introduced theJ shaped logo onto the kits.[174]
In September 2015, Juventus officially announced a new project called JKids for its junior supporters on its website. Along with this project, Juventus also introduced a new mascot to all its fans which is called J. J is a cartoon-designed zebra, black and white stripes with golden edge piping on its body, golden shining eyes, and three golden stars on the front of its neck.[175] J made its debut atJuventus Stadium on 12 September 2015.[176]
The official anthem of Juventus isJuve (storia di un grande amore), orJuve (story of a great love) in English, written by Alessandra Torre and Claudio Guidetti, in the version of the singer and musicianPaolo Belli composed in 2007.[178] In 2016, a documentary film calledBlack and White Stripes: The Juventus Story was produced by theLa Villa brothers about Juventus.[179] On 16 February 2018, the first three episodes of adocu-series calledFirst Team: Juventus, which followed the club throughout theseason, by spending time with the players behind the scenes both on and off the field, was released onNetflix; the other three episodes were released on 6 July 2018.[180] On 25 November 2021, an eight-episode docu-series calledAll or Nothing: Juventus, which followed the club throughout theseason, by spending time with the players behind the scenes both on and off the field, was released onAmazon Prime.[181]
After the first two years (1897 and 1898), during which Juventus played in the Parco del Valentino and Parco Cittadella, their matches were held in the Piazza d'Armi Stadium until 1908, except in 1905 (the first year of thescudetto) and in 1906, years in which they played at theCorso Re Umberto.
From 1909 to 1922, Juventus played their internal competitions at Corso Sebastopoli Camp before moving the following year to Corso Marsiglia Camp, where they remained until 1933, winning four league titles. At the end of 1933, they began to play at the newStadio Benito Mussolini inaugurated for the1934 World Championships. After the Second World War, the stadium was renamed as Stadio ComunaleVittorio Pozzo. Juventus played home matches at the ground for 57 years, a total of 890 league matches.[183] The team continued to host training sessions at the stadium until July 2003.[184]
From 1990 until the 2005–06 season, the Torinese side contested their home matches at Stadio delle Alpi, built for the 1990 FIFA World Cup, although in very rare circumstances the club played some home games in other stadia such asRenzo Barbera at Palermo,Dino Manuzzi inCesena and theStadio Giuseppe Meazza in Milan.[184]
In August 2006, Juventus returned to play in the Stadio Comunale, then known asStadio Olimpico, after the restructuring of the stadium for the2006 Winter Olympics onward. In November 2008, Juventus announced that they would invest around €120 million to build a new ground, the Juventus Stadium, on the site of delle Alpi.[185] Unlike the old ground, there is not a running track and instead the pitch is only 7.5 metres away from the stands.[4] The capacity is 41,507.[4] Work began during spring 2009 and the stadium was opened on 8 September 2011, ahead of the start of the 2011–12 season.[186] Since 1 July 2017, the Juventus Stadium is known commercially as theAllianz Stadium of Turin until 30 June 2030.[187][188]
Juventus is the most-supported football club in Italy, with over 12 million fans ortifosi, which represent approximately 34% of the total Italian football fans according to a research published in September 2016 by Italian research agency Demos & Pi,[22] as well as one of the most supported football clubs in the world, with over 300 million supporters (41 million in Europe alone),[23] particularly in the Mediterranean countries to which a large number ofItalian diaspora have emigrated.[189] The Torinese side has fan clubs branches across the globe.[190]
Demand for Juventus tickets in occasional home games held away from Turin is high, suggesting that Juventus have stronger support in other parts of the country. Juventus is widely and especially popular throughout mainland Southern Italy,Sicily andMalta, leading the team to have one of the largest followings in its away matches,[191] more than in Turin itself.
Juventus have significant rivalries with two main clubs.
Their traditional rivals are fellow Turin clubTorino; matches between the two sides are known as theDerby della Mole (Turin Derby). The rivalry dates back to 1906 as Torino was founded by break-away Juventus players and staff.
Their most high-profile rivalry is withInter Milan, another big Serie A club located inMilan, the capital of the neighbouring region ofLombardy. Matches between these two clubs are referred to as theDerby d'Italia (Derby of Italy) and the two regularly challenge each other at the top of the league table, hence the intense rivalry.[192] Until theCalciopoli scandal which saw Juventus forcibly relegated, the two were the only Italian clubs to have never played below Serie A. Notably, the two sides are the first and the second most supported clubs in Italy and the rivalry has intensified since the later part of the 1990s; reaching its highest levels ever post-Calciopoli, with the return of Juventus to Serie A.[192][193]
The rivalry withAC Milan is a rivalry between the two most titled and two of the most supported teams in Italy.[194] The match-ups between Milan and Juventus, is regarded as the championship of Serie A, and both teams were often fighting for the top positions of the standings, sometimes even decisive for the award of the title.[195]
The Juventus youth set-up has been recognised as one of the best in Italy for producing young talents.[199] While not all graduates made it to the first team, many have enjoyed successful careers in the Italian top flight. Under long-time coachVincenzo Chiarenza, thePrimavera (under-19) squad enjoyed one of its successful periods, winning all age-group competitions from 2004 to 2006. Like Dutch club Ajax and manyPremier League clubs, Juventus operates several satellite clubs and football schools outside of the country (i.e. United States, Canada,Greece,Saudi Arabia, Australia andSwitzerland) and numerous camps in the local region to expand talent scouting.[200] On 3 August 2018, Juventus founded their professional reserve team, calledJuventus U23 (renamed to Juventus Next Gen in August 2022),[201] playing inSerie C,[202] who won theCoppa Italia Serie C in 2020.[203] In the2021–22 UEFA Youth League, the U19 squad reached the semi-finals, equalling the best-ever placing in the competition for a Serie A team.[204]
The youth system is also notable for its contribution to the Italian national senior and youth teams. 1934 World Cup winnerGianpiero Combi,1936 Gold Medal and1938 World Cup winnerPietro Rava,Giampiero Boniperti, Roberto Bettega, 1982 World Cup hero Paolo Rossi and more recently Claudio Marchisio and Sebastian Giovinco are a number of former graduates who have gone on to make the first team and full Italy squad.[205]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Juventus have had overall 24presidents (Italian:presidenti,lit. 'presidents' orItalian:presidenti del consiglio di amministrazione,lit. 'chairmen of the board of directors') and two administrative committees, some of which have been members of the club's main stakeholder group and elected since the club's foundation by the thenassemblea di soci (membership assembly) through anannual meeting. Since 1949, they have been often corporate managers that were nominated in charge by theassemblea degli azionisti (stakeholders assembly). On top of chairmen, there were several living former presidents, that were nominated as the honorary chairmen (Italian:Presidenti Onorari,lit. 'honorary presidents').[207]
Giovanni Trapattoni, the longest serving and most successful manager in the history of Juventus with 14 trophies
Below is a list of Juventus managers from 1923, when theAgnelli family took over and the club became more structured and organised,[30] until the present day.[208]
Overall, Juventus have won 71 official competitions,[p]more than any other club in the country: 60 at national level (which is also a record) and 11 at international stage,[212] making them,in the latter case, the second most successful Italian team.[213] The club is sixth in Europe and twelfth in the world with the most international title won officially recognised by their respectiveassociation football confederation andFédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA).[q] In1977, the Torinese side become the first inSouthern Europe to have won theUEFA Cup and the first—and only to date—in Italian football history to achieve an international title with a squad composed by national footballers.[215] In1993, the club won its third competition's trophy, an unprecedented feat in the continent until then, a confederation record for the next22 years and the most for an Italian team. Juventus was also the first club in the country to achieve the title in theEuropean Super Cup, having won the competitions in1984 and the first European side to win theIntercontinental Cup in1985, since it was restructured byUnion of European Football Associations (UEFA) andConfederación Sudamericana de Fútbol (CONMEBOL)'s organizing committee five years beforehand.[18]
The club has earned the distinction of being allowed to wear threegolden stars (Italian:stelle d'oro) on its shirts representing its league victories, the tenth of which was achieved during the 1957–58 season, the 20th in the1981–82 season and the 30th in the2013–14 season. Juventus were the first Italian team to have achievedthe national double four times (winning the Italiantop tier division and thenational cup competitions in the same season), in the 1959–60, 1994–95, 2014–15 and 2015–16 season. In the 2015–16 season, Juventus won theCoppa Italia for the 11th time and their second-straight title, becoming the first team in Italy's history to complete Serie A and Coppa Italiadoubles in back-to-back season; Juventus would go on to win another two consecutive doubles in 2016–17 and 2017–18.[110]
Alessandro Del Piero made a record 705 appearances for Juventus, including 478 in Serie A and is the all-time leading goalscorer for the club, with 290 goals.
Alessandro Del Piero holds Juventus's official appearance record of 705 appearances. He took over from Gaetano Scirea on 6 April 2008 againstPalermo.[222] He also holds the record for Serie A appearances with 478. Including all official competitions, Del Piero is the all-time leading goalscorer for Juventus, with 290—since joining the club in 1993. Giampiero Boniperti, who was the all-time topscorer since 1961 comes in second in all competitions with 182. In the1933–34 season,Felice Borel scored 31 goals in 34 appearances, setting the club record for Serie A goals in a single season. Ferenc Hirzer is the club's highest scorer in a single season with 35 goals in 24 appearances in the1925–26 season. The most goals scored by a player in a single match is 6, which is also an Italian record. This was achieved by Omar Sívori in a game against Inter in the1960–61 season.[32]
The first ever official game participated in by Juventus was in theThird Federal Football Championship, the predecessor of Serie A, againstTorinese in a Juventus loss 0–1. The biggest victory recorded by Juventus was 15–0 against Cento, in the second round of the1926–27 Coppa Italia. In the league, Fiorentina and Fiumana were famously on the end of Juventus's biggest championship wins, with both beaten 11–0 in the 1928–29 season. Juventus's heaviest championship defeats came during the 1911–12 and 1912–13 seasons: they were against Milan in 1912 (1–8) and Torino in 1913 (0–8).[32]
The signing ofGianluigi Buffon in 2001 fromParma cost Juventus €52 million (100 billion lire), making it the then-most expensive transfer for a goalkeeper of all-time until 2018.[223][224][225][226][227] On 20 March 2016, Buffon set a new Serie A record for the longest period without conceding a goal (974 minutes) in theDerby della Mole during the 2015–16 season.[228] On 26 July 2016, Argentine forwardGonzalo Higuaín became the third highest football transfer of all-time and highest ever transfer for an Italian club, at the time,[229] when he was signed by Juventus for €90 million from Napoli.[230] On 8 August 2016,Paul Pogba returned to his first club,Manchester United, for an all-time record for highest football transfer fee of €105 million, surpassing the former record holderGareth Bale.[231] The sale ofZinedine Zidane from Juventus to Real Madrid of Spain in 2001 was theworld football transfer record at the time, costing the Spanish club around €77.5 million (150 billion lire).[232][233] On 10 July 2018,Cristiano Ronaldo became the highest ever transfer for an Italian club with his €100 million transfer from Real Madrid.[234]
Overall, Juventus are the clubthat has contributed the most players to theItaly national team in history,[236] being the only Italian club that has contributed players to every Italy national team since the2nd FIFA World Cup.[237] Juventus have contributed numerous players to Italy'sWorld Cup campaigns, these successful periods principally have coincided with two golden ages of the Turin club's history, referred asQuinquennio d'Oro (The Golden Quinquennium), from 1931 until 1935, andCiclo Leggendario (The Legendary Cycle), from 1972 to 1986.
Below are a list of Juventus players who represented the Italy national team during World Cup winning tournaments.[238]
Two Juventus players have won thegolden boot award at the World Cup with Italy, Paolo Rossi in 1982 andSalvatore Schillaci in1990. As well as contributing to Italy's World Cup winning sides, two Juventus players Alfredo Foni and Pietro Rava, represented Italy in the gold medal-winning squad at the1936 Summer Olympics.
Founded as anassociation, in 1923, during theEdoardo Agnelli presidency, the club, at the time ruled by anassemblea di soci (membership assembly), became one of the first in the country to acquireprofessional statusante litteram, starting also the longest and most uninterrupted society inItalian sports history between a club and a private investor. Juventus wasrestructured as the football section ofmultisportsparent company Juventus – Organizzazione Sportiva S.A. since the constitution of the later in that year to 1943, when it wasmerged with another three Torinese enterprises for founding theCompagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia (CISITALIA). In that twenty years Juventus progressive competed in different disciplines such astennis,swimming,ice hockey, andbocce, gaining success in the first cited. After a longliquidation process of the automotive corporation started after theItalian Civil War (1945), all Juventus O.S.A. sections were closed with the exception of football and tennis, which weredemerged. The football section, then called Juventus Cisitalia forsponsorship reasons, wasrenamed Juventus Football Club and theAgnelli family, which some members have held different executive charges inside the club for the past six years,[12] obtained the club's majorityshares after industrialistPiero Dusio, Cisitalia owner, transferred hiscapital shares in the ending of the decade.[243] Juventus has been constituted as an independentsocietà a responsabilità limitata (S.r.l.), a type ofprivate limited company, in August 1949 and supervised by aconsiglio d'amministrazione (board of directors) since then.[244]
On 27 June 1967, the Torinese club changed its legal corporate status tosocietà per azioni (S.p.A.)[245] and on 3 December 2001 it became the third in the country to has been listed on theBorsa Italiana afterLazio andRoma;[246] since that date until 19 September 2011, Juventus'sstock took part of the Segmento Titoli con Alti Requisiti (STAR), one of the mainmarket segment in the world.[247] Since October 2016 to December 2018,[248] and again since March 2020,[249] The club's stock is iscrited in theFTSE Italia Mid Capstock market index of the Mercato Telematico Azionario (MTA); previously, between December 2018 and March 2020, it waslisted in theFTSE MIB index.[250] The club has also asecondary listing on Borsa's sister stock exchangebased in London.
From 1 July 2008, the club has implemented asafety management system for employees and athletes in compliance with the requirements of international OHSAS 18001:2007 regulation[256] and a Safety Management System in the medical sector according to the internationalISO 9001:2000 resolution.[257]
The club is one of the founding members of theEuropean Club Association (ECA), which was formed after the merge of theG-14, an independent group of selected European clubs with international TV rights purposes, with the European Clubs Forum (ECF), a clubs'task force ruled by UEFA composed by 102 members,[258] which Juventus was a founder and permanent member bysporting merits, respectively.[259]
Juventus was placed seventh in the global ranking drawn up by the British consultancy organisation Brand Finance in terms of brand power, where it was rated with acredit rating AAA ("extremely strong") with a score of 86.1 out of 100,[260] as well as eleventh in terms ofbrand value (€705 million)[261] and ninth byenterprise value (€2294 billion as of 24 May 2022).[262] All this madeI Bianconeri, in 2015, the country's second sports club—first in football—afterScuderia Ferrari bybrand equity.[263]
in May 2016, it became the first football club in the country to cross the billion euro mark.[264]
According to theDeloitte Football Money League, a research published by consultantsDeloitte Touche Tohmatsu in March 2022, Juventus is the ninth-highest earning football club in the world with an estimated revenue of €433.5 million as of 30 June 2021[265] and, on 2002, the club reached the second position overall, the highest-ever achieved for a Serie A team, a ranking which they retained for the following two years.[266]
On 14 September 2020, Juventus officially announced that Raffles Family Office, a Hong Kong-based multi-family office would be the club's Regional Partner in Asia for the next three years.[267]
Original contract terms: Total €139.5 million / 2015–2021 (6 years)[269] The contract was prematurely extended under improved terms at the end of the 2018–2019 season
21 December 2018
2019–2027 (8 years)
Total €408 million[270][271] (€51 million per year)
Multisport activities
The club was involved in various sports activities at different times until the late 1970s. Initially, from its foundation until 1899, it had sections forcycling,athletics,wrestling, andrunning.
In the early 1920s, Juventus expanded its sports involvement, led by President Edoardo Agnelli. This led to the creation of Juventus Organizzazione Sportiva Anonima, which participated in various national championships in disciplines such as bowls, swimming, ice hockey, and tennis until its dissolution afterWorld War II, with tennis being the most successful. Juventus achieved its greatest successes with the tennis section.[272] In the late 1960s, a skiing section named Sporting ClubJuventus was established, based inCastagneto Po and active throughout the following decade.[273][274]
In the 2017–2018 season, Juventus established a women's football section with a team in the Serie A women's championship.[275][276] The Women's team won the league in their debut season, mirroring the achievement of the men's team and becoming the first Italian club to hold both major national football championships, male and female, simultaneously.[277] This success continued for the next two seasons.[278][279]
Since 2019, the club has had an eSports section.[280][281] In 2021, the team won the eFootball.Pro, a prominent eSports competition for club teams worldwide.[282] In the same year, they also claimed the TIMVISION Cup | eSports Edition, the first digital edition of the Italian Cup organized by theLega Serie A.[283] In 2023, under the name Juventus Dsyre – in collaboration with the eSports team of the same name[284] – they secured their first Italian championship title in the eSerie A TIM, the virtual version of Serie A organized by the Lega Serie A.[285]
^As of June 2020,Union of European Football Associations (UEFA), based in its owncoefficient's standard calculation procedure, applies two points for each match won and one point for each point drawn in European Champions' Cup and Champions League, UEFA Cup and Europa League, UEFA Super Cup, Cup Winners' Cup, UEFA Intertoto Cup and Intercontinental Cup for historical-statistical purposes; not considering the introduction ofthree points for a match won at international level in 1994–95 season.[10]
^During theItalian resistance againstNazi-fascism (1943–1945), the club, at the time a multisports association, was controlled by Torinese industrialist and former Juventus playerPiero Dusio through car houseCisitalia; however, various members of the Agnelli family have held various positions at executive level in the club since 1939.[12]
^Excluding competitions organised by a private committee not related with a governing body such as theInter-Cities Fairs Cup or theMitropa Cup.
^Frédéric Dick, a son of Alfred Dick, was a Swiss footballer and joined the team of the Juventus that won the tournament of the Second Category in 1905.
^The other club wasBarcelona with its captain, the Argentinian starLionel Messi. Messi was awardedBallon d'Or for four years in a row from 2009 to 2013.[44]
^Without considering the penalty, Juventus would have qualified to the Champions League with 72 points.
^The zebra is Juventus's official mascot because the black and white vertical stripes in its present home jersey and emblem remembered the zebra's stripes.
^Including exclusively the official titles won during its participation in the top flight of Italian football.
^Sixth most successful European club for confederation and FIFA competitions won with 11 titles. Sixth most successful club in Europe forconfederation club competition titles won (11).[214]
^Additionally, since the 1990–91 season to the 2008–09 season, Juventus have won 15 official trophies: five Serie A titles, one Coppa Italia title, four Supercoppa Italiana titles, one Intercontinental Cup, one European Champions' Cup-UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Cup, one UEFA Intertoto Cup and one UEFA Super Cup.[221]
^Consiglio Federale FIGC, ed. (27 May 2014).Comunicato ufficiale n. 171/A(PDF) (in Italian). Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio. pp. 11–13. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 14 September 2014. Retrieved1 November 2014.
^Planet Football(PDF). Deloitte Football Money League. Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Ltd. January 2017. p. 5.Archived(PDF) from the original on 19 November 2017.
^ab"Giovanni Trapattoni". Union des Associations Européennes de Football. 31 May 2010. Archived fromthe original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved27 December 2010.
^"Giovanni Trapattoni". Union des Associations Européennes de Football. 31 May 2010. Archived fromthe original on 3 July 2011. Retrieved27 December 2010.
^Di Santo, Giampiero (27 April 2007)."Calciopoli, la Cupola era una bufala".Italia Oggi (in Italian).Archived from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved23 May 2022.The suspicion, in short, is that the path of summary justice was chosen, to eliminate from the scene characters like Moggi, ultimately expelled from Juve and then condemned by sports justice based on wiretapping which, are the words of the sentences, did not prove none of the allegations. Based on the first interceptions ordered by the Turin's public prosecutor and prosecutor Raffaele Guariniello, who had ordered the dismissal of the investigation opened for alleged sports fraud already in July 2005 on the grounds that, for the crime in question, 'are not allowed.' The prosecutor had underlined the 'weakness of the accusatory hypothesis.' Yet, according to the authors, the investigation that led to the commissioner of the FIGC, the landing in via Allegri of Guido Rossi, and the new head of the investigation office, Francesco Saverio Borrelli, started from that weak accusatory hypothesis, to the involvement of referees and designators, of six first and second row clubs (in addition to Juve, Milan, Fiorentina, Lazio, Reggina and Arezzo) and, finally, to the real sentence for a few. Indeed, only for Moggi and Juve, kicked out and relegated to B.
^Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (2007).Il processo illecito(PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. pp. 5–6,47–57.Archived(PDF) from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved23 May 2022 – via Ju29ro, 15 April 2010.
^Zunnino, Corrado (27 July 2006)."Salvati perché la gente voleva così".La Repubblica (in Italian).Archived from the original on 30 May 2022. Retrieved23 May 2022.'We recognized everything about the CAF ruling, apart from two episodes: the falsified championship, the repeated offences of Juventus, [and] the existence of a system.'
^Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (2007).Il processo illecito(PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. p. 52.Archived(PDF) from the original on 18 December 2021. Retrieved23 May 2022 – via Ju29ro, 15 April 2010.'Ours is a purely statistical study. We are not interested, nor are we able to establish, if Moggi and the other executives under investigation could influence the matches, but from our point of view we can highlight three hypotheses more than valid: either there was no referee conditioning in the 2004–05 championship, or it existed but did not produce relevant results, or it's possible to think of a clash between executives for the acquisition of the football system that gave rise to winning and losing clubs in that which we can define as a 'parallel championship'.
^Vaciago, Guido (28 July 2015)."Cassazione: 'Sistema inquinato'. Ma non spiega i misteri di Calciopoli".Tuttosport (in Italian).Archived from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved23 May 2022.Justice decided that Moggi and Giraudo actually 'polluted' the system, it decided so in 2006 and did not want to know or understand other truths. Indeed, it had already decided it during the investigations, when all the phone calls that could exonerate or alleviate the position of Juventus's executives had not been taken into consideration, to the point of dismantling the very concept of theCupola. Moggi and Giraudo, therefore, 'polluted' the system: a term that serves to dodge the fact that no judge has ever returned enough evidence to affirm that championship (the subject of investigation was only 2004–05) has actually been altered. Indeed, in the first instance sentence we basically read the opposite.
^Castellani, Massimiliano (8 November 2011)."Gazzoni Frascara: 'Fiorentina e Juve mi devono 70 milioni. Calciopoli...'".Avvenire (in Italian).Archived from the original on 29 May 2022. Retrieved18 May 2022 – via Fiorentina.it.'... [Juventus] was acquitted in the ordinary [justice] proceedings as Moggi himself also acted out of personal interest [to favour Lazio and Fiorentina].'
^Rossini, Claudio (5 March 2014)."Calciopoli e la verità di comodo".Blasting News (in Italian).Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved24 January 2023.Juventus has been acquitted, the offending championships (2004/2005 and 2005/2006) have been declared regular, and the reasons for the conviction of Luciano Moggi are vague; mostly, they condemn his position, that he was in a position to commit a crime. In short, be careful to enter a shop without surveillance because even if you don't steal, you would have had the opportunity. And go on to explain to your friends that you're honest people after the morbid and pro-sales campaign of the newspapers. ... a club has been acquitted, and no one has heard of it, and whoever has heard of it, they don't accept it. The verdict of 2006, made in a hurry, was acceptable, that of Naples was not. The problem then lies not so much in vulgar journalism as in readers who accept the truths that are convenient. Juventus was, rightly or wrongly, the best justification for the failures of others, and it was in popular sentiment, as evidenced by the new controversies concerning 'The System.' But how? Wasn't the rotten erased? The referees since 2006 make mistakes in good faith, the word of Massimo Moratti (the only 'honest'). ... it isn't a question of tifo, but of a critical spirit, of the desire to deepen and not be satisfied with the headlines (as did Oliviero Beha, a well-known Viola [Fiorentina] fan, who, however, drew conclusions outside the chorus because, despite enjoying it as a tifoso, he suffered as a journalist. He wasn't satisfied and went into depth. He was one of the few).
^Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (2007).Il processo illecito(PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. pp. 9–10.Archived(PDF) from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved24 January 2023 – via Ju29ro, 15 April 2010.The Juventus defence, among other things, objects that a sum of several Articles 1 (unfair and dishonest sporting conduct) cannot lead to an indictment for Article 6 (sporting offence), using for example the metaphor that so many defamations do not carry a murder conviction: an unimpeachable objection. ... Hence the grotesque concept of 'standings altered without any match-fixing'. The 'Calciopoli' rulings state that there is no match-fixing. That the championship under investigation, 2004–2005, is to be considered regular. But that the Juventus management has achieved effective standings advantages for Juventus FC even without altering the individual matches. In practice, Juventus was convicted of murder, with no one dead, no evidence, no accomplices, no murder weapon. Only for the presence of a hypothetical motive.
^Ingram, Sam (20 December 2021)."Calciopoli Scandal: Referee Designators As Desired Pawns".ZicoBall.Archived from the original on 1 July 2022. Retrieved16 May 2022.FIGC's actions in relegating Juventus and handing the title to Inter Milan were somewhat peculiar. Of course, Moggi and Juventus deserved punishment; that is not up for dispute. However, the severity of the ruling and the new location for the Scudetto was unprecedented and arguably should never have happened. The final ruling in the Calciopoli years later judged that Juventus had never breached article 6. As a result, the Serie A champions should never have encountered a shock 1–1 draw away to Rimini in the season's curtain-raiser. Nor should they have trounced Piacenza 4–0 in Turin or handed a 5–1 thrashing away to Arezzo in Tuscany. The findings stated that some club officials had violated article 6, but none had originated from Juventus. FIGC created a structured article violation with their decision-making. This means that instead of finding an article 6 breach, several article 1 violations were pieced together to create evidence damning to warrant relegation from Italy's top flight. Article 1 violations in Italian football usually command fines, bans, or points deductions, but certainly not relegation.
^Capasso, Stefano (7 February 2012)."Motivazioni sentenza Calciopoli: 'Il campionato 2004/2005 è stato regolare'".Calcio Blog (in Italian). Archived fromthe original on 25 January 2023. Retrieved24 January 2023.'Neither can we overlook the data of the resizing of the scope of the accusation which derives from the partiality with which the events of the 2004/2005 championship were examined, to run after only Moggi's misdeeds, of which modalities have been ascertained, as regards the sports fraud, to the limit of the existence of the crime of attempt, with the consequent further difficulty of hooking up to the responsibility of the employer, supplier of the occasion for the criminal action.'
^Beha, Oliviero (7 February 2012)."Il 'caso Moggi' e le colpe della stampa: non fa inchieste, (di)pende dai verbali, non sa leggere le sentenze".Tiscali (in Italian). Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved22 June 2021.... the motivations in 558 pages are summarized as follows. 1) Championships not altered (therefore championships unjustly taken away from Juve...), matches not fixed, referees not corrupted, investigations conducted incorrectly by the investigators of the Public Prosecutor's Office (interceptions of theCarabinieri which were even manipulated in the confrontation in the Chamber). 2) The SIM cards, the foreign telephone cards that Moggi has distributed to some referees and designators, would be proof of the attempt to alter and condition the system, even without the effective demonstration of the rigged result. 3) Moggi's attitude, like a real 'telephone' boss, is invasive even when he tries to influence the [Italian Football Federation] and the national team, see the phone calls with Carraro and Lippi. 4) That these phone calls and this 'mafia' or 'sub-mafia' promiscuity aimed at 'creating criminal associations' turned out to be common practice in the environment as is evident, does not acquit Moggi and C.: and therefore here is the sentence. ... Finally point 1), the so-called positive part of the motivations, that is, in fact everything is regular. And then the scandal of 'Scommettopoli' [the Italian football scandal of 2011] in which it's coming out that the 2010–2011 championship [won by Milan] as a whole with tricks is to be considered really and decidedly irregular? The Chief Prosecutor of Cremona, Di Martino, says so for now, while sports justice takes its time as always, but I fear that many will soon repeat it, unless everything is silenced. With all due respect to those who want the truth and think that Moggi has objectively become the 'scapegoat'. Does the framework of information that does not investigate, analyze, compare, and take sides out of ignorance or bias seem slightly clearer to you?
^Vaciago, Guido (28 July 2015)."Cassazione: 'Sistema inquinato'. Ma non spiega i misteri di Calciopoli".Tuttosport (in Italian).Archived from the original on 31 May 2022. Retrieved23 May 2022.However, the accusatory castle exists, built with interceptions expertly selected by the 170,000. That is, there are the famous 'barbecues', or the telephone calls between Moggi and the Bergamo designator, during which the two established the referees to be included in the drawing scheme. Phone calls that have particularly affected the Cassation which cites them as an example of pollution. In short, the fact that other managers (Meani from Milan, Facchetti from Inter, just to give an example, but the list could be long) also called Bergamo to plead their case and explicitly ask this or that referee isn't taken into consideration (Collina, for example...). But then, how many domes were there? The Cassation does not tell us, even if it admits between the lines that 'the system of preparing the grids was quite widespread' and admits that the developments of the behaviors of Meani and Facchetti (explicitly mentioned) 'were not investigated in depth'.
^"Moggi ban confirmed".Football Italia. 16 March 2017.Archived from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved27 March 2020.
^Corsa, Antonio (29 January 2023)."What's the deal with... the capital gains? 🇬🇧".AntonioCorsa.it. Archived fromthe original on 3 February 2023. Retrieved3 February 2023.[Quote from Sergio Santoro, former president of the FIGC's Federal court and member of Italy's Council of State] 'I find it unusual that the president of the court that handed down the sentence in January 2023 is the same one who, in May 2022, issued the sentence of acquittal in the same trial. ... We don't know if the court has decided to sanction Juventus and its directors for the capital gains affair. If this were the case, it would be a decision in contrast with the precedents of intra-federal justice in matters of capital gains. We need to understand the reasons for this sudden change in jurisprudence. Furthermore, if the penalty imposed is a consequence of capital gains violations, it is unclear how this violation could have been committed by a single company. The capital gain is realized by at least two subjects, while in the case in question no other companies appear to have been punished for this offence.'
^Vaciago, Guido (26 November 2021)."Juve, inchiesta plusvalenze. Milan e Inter assolte nel 2008".Tuttosport (in Italian).Archived from the original on 28 January 2023. Retrieved28 January 2023.Of course there is a precedent that is also quite close in time: Milan and Inter ended up on trial in 2008 for the 2004 budgets, which ended up in the sights of the Judiciary for the usual capital gains. But they were acquitted because 'the fact does not constitute a crime'. The problem is the scientific definition of the value of a player in the transfer market. In short, there are no exact parameters for deciding that an evaluation is 'false', given that the number of factors and conditions that can influence it. Thirteen years after the acquittal of the Milanese [clubs], the investigation brings back the age-old question of capital gains in the offices of a prosecutor, just as [FIFA president] Infantino, only a couple of weeks ago, hypothesised the introduction of a mathematical algorithm to decide the player rating.
^Porzio, Francesco (22 January 2023)."Juventus penalized 15 points from Serie A standings; 11 execs banned for mishandling transfer finances".CBS Sports.Archived from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved20 January 2023.Juventus have formally submitted an appeal to the penalty. The 15-point penalty is harsher than the nine-point deduction recommended by an FIGC prosecutor earlier in the day. This all comes after the club's recent financial statements were under scrutiny by prosecutors and Italian market regulator CONSOB in the past months for alleged false accounting and market manipulation. ... The investigation led to the board stepping down in November, which also marked the end of an era for Agnelli and Nedved. The club acknowledged the so-called 'salary maneuvers' from the 2019–20 and 2020–21 fiscal years, adding that 'the complexity of such profiles on valuation elements may be subject to different interpretations.'
^Pavan, Massimo (21 January 2023)."Tastiera Velenosa – Una nuova Calciopoli, ma forse pure peggio nei modi".TuttoMercatoWeb (in Italian).Archived from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved22 January 2023.During the exposition of his defensive line, the Juventus lawyer Nicola Apa asked that the revocation procedure be rejected for a formal question. The public prosecutor's office allegedly exceeded the time limit for presenting the request. As emerged from press articles, the public prosecutor's office had contacted the Turin prosecutors on 26 October and on 27 October the news of a visit to Turin by a prosecutor's envoy had spread. So the first new facts would have come into the possession of the prosecution at the end of October. And the sporting justice code prescribes a 30-day deadline for submitting the revocation request, which arrived, however, only on December 22, i.e. 56 days later.
^abc"Black & White". Notts County F.C. official website. Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2010. Retrieved7 November 2008. Extracts taken from theOfficial History of Notts County.
^"European Championship".The Record Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation.Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved8 June 2007.
^"Relazione finanziaria annuale al 30 giugno 2020" [Yearly financial report at 30 June 2020](PDF) (in Italian). Juventus Football Club S.p.A. 30 June 2020.Archived(PDF) from the original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved29 October 2020.
^Subscribed with code nº 214687, cf."Movimento anagrafico – Iscrizioni dal 1º al 31 agosto 1949".Cronache economiche (in Italian). No. 63. Camera di Commercio, Industria e Agricoltura di Torino. 5 August 1949. p. 5.
^US$1,299 billion equivalent to €1,150 billion as of May 2016, cf."The Business of Soccer: Juventus".Forbes. April 2021.Archived from the original on 3 January 2022. Retrieved3 January 2022.
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