JUVENTUS FC
"'Always exciting when they ask me to talk about Juventus. Why
means not only to rethink many sporting successes, but is retracing a journey into memory, on the edge of so many personal memories and my family for 75 years which are interwoven with the history of this football team. The Bianconeri have a particular way of reading the story: a story of profound and radical changes, which invest the city where was born and lives Juventus, Torino, its people and millions of fans in Italy and the world history of costume and habits. And then of emotions. Why
, Juventus has been, is and will always be a football team. And it is a great pleasure to remember that all the "best" of football has shifted from Juve, review the many games, "historical" to live again, so the thrill of those moments. "
(Umberto Agnelli, 1934-2004, Italian entrepreneur and politician. President of Juventus from 1955 to 1962.)
The Juventus Football Club, also known as Juventus Turin Juventus as abroad (or Juventus Turin) or informally as Juve, is a football club in Turin. Founded in 1897 as Sport Club Juventus in Turin by young high school students, is in the top category of the Italian football league after its foundation, except in the season (2006-2007). The team represents the capital Piedmont soccer along with compatriot Torino Football Club 1906, born in that year by dissident members of the training for Juventus. The team is training in the fields of sports center Juventus Center in Vinovo, on the outskirts of Turin.
The club name is a license literal Latin noun iuventus (Youth in Italian) and was chosen by the founders of the company.
There are no news or attest with certainty that chronicles the rise of the black and white, given that the press of the little space devoted to sports. The only written considered "official" was written by one of the company's founders, Henry Canfari, and his magazine published by Institutional December 26, 1915.
Third Italian football clubs in order of antiquity among those in business today, Juventus is historically the most noble of training and one of the most successful country in Europe and worldwide, with a total of 51 Official Trophies: 40 trophies 11 trophies at national and international level (see Chapter trophy in this entry). In the latter area, the team is the second Italian team Juventus, the third European team and sixth in the world in number of titles won and officially recognized by each of the six regional confederations - in this case, the Union of European Football Associations - and the International Federation of Association Football. Before
South European and Italian team to have won the UEFA Cup (Edition 1976-1977), the Old Lady - as it is known at home - is the only club in the world to have won all the tournaments and official international cups . In addition, in 1985 became the first club to win the three major European competitions, a goal that would later be reached only by two other teams: Ajax in 1992 and Bayern Monaco in 1996.
According to research published in the newspaper La Repubblica in August 2007, Juventus, one of the best known and supported teams in the world, is also the first team in Italy for the number of supporters with 28% preferences, a slight decrease compared with last year. Like Inter, Juventus, the fans has a diverse geographical spread throughout the country.
The Turin team, linked from the twenties to the Agnelli family, is also a founding member of the Association of the European Club Association (ECA), an international organization, established in place of the G-14, composed of major football clubs for consorziatisi obtain a joint protection of sports rights, legal and television in front of FIFA.
Index
1 History 1.1 Origins 1.2 The
first quarter of a century
1.3 The partnership with the lambs and the five-year Golden
1.4 The post-war period and the first star
1.5 The Legendary cycle (1972-1986) 1.6 The early nineties
1.7 Triad Years (1994-2006)
1.8 The B-series and the return to A History
2 3 4 Colors and symbols
Stage 5
Rose 2007 Past Seasons
-2008 5.1 5.2 Training Type: 4-4-2
6 Notable players and coaches
Presidents
7 8 Honours Honours
8.1 (40)
8.2 International Competitions (11) 9
10 The Record and statistics Juventus and the Italian national historic
11 Items 12 Company Structure Company Organization
12.1 12.2
Sponsor technicians and Curiosities
13 14 15
Fans The social commitment
16 Notes 17 Bibliography 18 References
19 more projects
20 External links
History Main article: History of Juventus Football Club
Origins
The workshop of the brothers Eugenio and Enrico Canfari first head office. "'Juventus soul is a complex way of feeling, a mixture of feelings, education, bohemian, happiness and love, of faith in our will to exist and continually improve. "
(Fragment of document Canfari autograph of Henry Francis, 1879-1915, one of the founders and second president of Juventus FC, met in 1914 at the City of Turin and published by the magazine company's institutional Hurrah Juventus Turin 26 December 1915.)
On 1 November 1897 was born in Turin Juventus Sport Club with the idea of \u200b\u200bsome students of the Liceo Classico D'Azeglio including Canfari Eugene and Henry, who used to meet on a bench (now enshrined in the company's headquarters). The first shirt was pink, with a tie or bow tie, and in 1903 became Juventus. The first president was Eugene Canfari Juventus history at the behest of his brother Henry (who died at the front during the First World War).
The first quarter of a century
The former Juventus Champions 1905.Nel of Italy in 1900, with the name of Foot-Ball Club Juventus, the company is in its first national championship, but it is immediately deleted, facing opponents much more prepared than her. But after only five years comes the first championship, after a thrilling final (third consecutive final in the league) to three U.S. against Genoa and Milanese. The President was at that time the Swiss Alfred Dick, but, after some heated discussions in the locker room, he decided to leave the company, and almost out of spite, he founded the Foot-Ball Club Torino. In those years, and until the outbreak of World War I, however, Juventus had to settle for a less prominently than the other football powers, especially the Pro Vercelli and Casale. In 1913 the team, along with five others, is ranked last in their group and avoid the Second Category with a reform of the tournament.
With the end of World War I a born again thanks to his Juventus president Giovanni Hess and Corrado Corradini, between 1914 and 1920, he made great strides in providing some national league players to the senior team.
His association with the lambs and the five-year Golden
training during the five years of Gold (1931-1935). Since July 24, 1923 the name of Juventus is firmly linked to that of the family with Edoardo Agnelli, son of founder of FIAT, the company's president. In the Juventus first team debut at goalkeeper Giampiero Combi. Then, with the arrival of players such as Fred Munerati, Virginio Rosetta, Bigatto Charles I, among others, the Bianconeri won their second championship in the 1925-26 season. In those years the black and white is beginning to prove to be a new power football and, with coach Carlo Carcano and new arrivals Umberto Caligaris, Giovanni Ferrari, Felice Placido Borel II, Mario Varglien I, II and John Varglien of players from Argentina Raimundo Orsi and Luis Monti, entered the history of Italian football by winning five consecutive league titles (from 1930-31 season to season 1934-35), historical record of Italian football to this day. Nine players
of that team are part of the National Vittorio Pozzo, world champion in 1934. At international Juventus arrives at Central European Cup (or Mitropa Cup), but for four consecutive years will stop the semifinals. During the so-called Golden Quinquennio, precisely in 1933, Juventus made his entrance at the Municipal Stadium (now the Olympic Stadium in Turin), in which unforgettable pages of history will be written for Juventus. On 14 July 1935 in a plane crash in front of the port of Genoa, the president lost his life Juventus Edoardo Agnelli: we have to wait 12 years before seeing a member of the Agnelli family at the helm of Juventus.
Filed Quinquennio d'Oro (the first golden age of the black and white), we start with a period less rich in victories, ending with the Second World War and the subsequent suspension of the championship in 1944 and 1945. Instead of the old champions of the third decade of the twentieth century - with the exception of mountains and Borel II, leaving the team or to another company or career to end - there's new champions such as Alfredo Foni, Pietro Rava, Albanian Riza Lushta and Theobald Depetrini.
At this time there are no victories in the league, but only a second place in the 1937-38 season and two wins in the Coppa Italy: in 1938 (for the first time, coinciding with the second world title of the blue), and in 1942, respectively, against Torino and Milan.
The war and the first star
The formation of the first Stella d'Oro in 1947 1958.Nel Gianni Agnelli became president of Juventus Football Club, replacing Peter Dusio, and will remain at the helm of the team until 1953. Start a new period of victories: only fifteen years after the Juventus will win another championship (1949-50 season, the first title of the post-war society), with the support of new standards, such as Carlo Parola, the Danes Karl Aage Præstø and John Hansen and, especially, Giampiero Boniperti. Meanwhile (1959) the team wins its third Italian Cup.
In 1956, on the advice Gianni Agnelli, who will join him, and became president of his brother Umberto. With him, you open a new round of victories, thanks to new standards like the Welshman John Charles and Omar Sivori, Argentine of Italian origin (first Juventus player to win the Golden Ball in 1961). Juventus wins three more championships in the 1957-58 season (the tenth, which gives the right to use the Gold Star of Merit Sports), 1959-60 and 1960-61 seasons and two Italian Cups in 1958-59 and 1959 - 60.
Legendary Cycle (1972-1986)
celebrations for the fifteenth season title in 1960 1972/73.Nel Umberto Agnelli leaves the presidency. In 1966-67, with the President and Heriberto Vittore Catella Herrera, originally from Paraguay, coach (one of the forerunners of total football in Italy), Juventus won their thirteenth league: Juventus, the company is preparing to spend as one of the most glorious periods in its history: The Legendary cycle (the second golden age of the black and white). On July 13, 1971
Giampiero Boniperti, a former symbol of the team, became president. He called to coach the team before the Czech Čestmír Vycpálek, then the former Juventus player Carlo Parola, and finally the former AC Milan player Giovanni Trapattoni, almost to debut as coach. In those years the great champions Juventus uses, including Dino Zoff, Roberto Bettega (from by the youth), Franco Cause, Claudio Gentile, Pietro Anastasi, Jose Altafini, Antonello Cuccureddu, Romeo Benetti, Roberto Boninsegna, Giuseppe Furino, Marco Tardelli, Antonio Cabrini and, above all, the master of many battles Gaetano Scirea, and then the Frenchman Michel Platini, Liam Brady, Zbigniew Boniek, Paolo Rossi, Stefano Tacconi and goalkeeper Massimo Bonini, won nine league titles in fifteen years (1971-72, 1972-73, 1974-75, 1976-77, 1977-78, 1980-81, 1981-82, 1983-84 and 1985-86), winning a second Gold Star of Merit Sports, and putting himself into the limelight by winning World and European all official international cups (UEFA Cup, without foreign players, May 18 1977 in Bilbao against Athletic Club, the Cup Winners' Cup May 16, 1984 in Basel, defeating Porto 2-1, the European Super Cup in Turin, 16 January 1985 against Liverpool, passed 2-0, the European Cup, in its third final, 29 May 1985, again beating Liverpool 1-0 in the tragic Heysel night, and won the Intercontinental Cup in Tokyo on December 8, 1985 against Argentinos Juniors, 2-2 result after extra time and 6-4 after penalties). Juventus enters the European football history as the first company to hit the Grand Slam (ie to have won the three main European competitions), and received by the Union of European Football Associations, the Plate UEFA (The UEFA Plaque) in 1987.
The early nineties
After four years without trophies, with Vittorio Chiusano Caissotti of the President, in 1990, the year of the Stadio delle Alpi, Juventus, coached by Dino Zoff won the Italian Cup for the eighth time and the Cup UEFA. Zoff in the following season gave way to the emerging Maifredi coach Gigi, who, despite the arrival of new champions such as Roberto Baggio (Future Ballon d'Or in 1993), Júlio César, Paolo Di Canio and Jürgen Kohler, not only did not win anything, but I could not even bring the team over the seventh place in the league: After twenty-eight, Juve did not qualify for any European competition. With
Trapattoni's return, Juventus won the UEFA Cup in 1993 with a team that included, among others, Roberto Baggio, Andreas Möller, Gianluca Vialli - became the new idol of the fans - and Antonio Conte.
stamp commemorating the victory of Juventus in the Champions League (1996).
Triad Years (1994-2006)
the summer of 1994 page turns with the arrival at the top of the Triad Bettega, Giraudo, Moggi and coach Marcello Lippi. Thanks to players like Alessandro Del Piero, Gianluca Pessotto, Fabrizio Ravanelli, Angelo Peruzzi, Didier Deschamps, Ciro Ferrara and Paulo Sousa, and further with Zinedine Zidane, Edgar Davids and Paolo Montero, began a new cycle where the Juventus team managed to win three league titles (1994-95 seasons, the first after nine years, 1996-97 and 1997-98), an Italian Cup (1994-95), two Italian Super Cups (1995 and 1997), a Champions League (1995-96), a European Supercup (1996) and an Intercontinental Cup (1996). In the following two seasons the team reaches the second and then for the third consecutive time the final of the UEFA Champions League, losing in both cases, respectively, against Borussia Dortmund and Real Madrid.
Carlo Ancelotti takes his place in the middle of Lippi 1998-1999 season, but failed to carry his team to the summit, despite reaching the Champions League semi-final of that year (losing play-off for the UEFA Cup and qualifying for the Intertoto Cup, which won the international competition next season and second in the championship in seasons 1999-2000 and 2000-2001.
Lippi returned to lead the league in 2001-02 and Juventus can count on a team strengthened by the engagement of champions such as Gianluigi Buffon, Lilian Thuram and Pavel Nedved. The technical training Turin Tuscany leads to the capture of two other tricolor (seasons 2001-02 and 2002-03) and two Italian Super Cups (2002 and 2003). Juventus the following season came for the seventh time in the final of the Champions League, losing 2-3 on penalties against AC Milan in the first edition of the Champions League Italian two finalists.
stingy After the 2003-04 season, arriving on May 28, 2004 Juventus coach Fabio Capello, a former midfielder of the seventies instead of Marcello Lippi, who instead was called to coach the national team. With him coming to Turin players the likes of Emerson, Fabio Cannavaro, Patrick Vieira and Zlatan Ibrahimovic. With him on the bench in the Juventus gets two other top leagues at the end of 2004-05 (later withdrawn) and 2005-06 (after office assigned to Inter).
The 2005-06 season is the year of Calciopoli and relegation to Serie B with nine penalty points as a result of unsportsmanlike conduct (Article 1 of the Regulation) established in the third levels of jurisdiction from the judgments in the scandal called Calciopoli. As a result of this ruling, there is a veritable diaspora of samples that do not want your cadet out play in the series: in addition to the coach Capello - who is the first to immediately resign to go to coach Real Madrid - do suitcases Cannavaro and Emerson (also at Real Madrid), Thuram and Zambrotta (Barcelona), Ibrahimovic and Vieira (Inter), and Mutu (Fiorentina).
Series B and the return
A game with a penalty of 17 points - then reduced to nine of the CONI arbitration - and having long led the ranking of the Cadets, May 19, 2007 Juventus under guide Technical former Juventus player Didier Deschamps, the game won at the Stadio Comunale Arezzo 1-5 against the team of the same name, among other things, coached by former Juventus captain Antonio Conte, reached the mathematics promotion to Serie A with three days prior to the end of the season. In the next game, May 26, 2007 Olimpico in Turin, Juventus got even mathematically the first-place finish following a 2-0 victory at Mantova. That same evening, the French coach Didier Deschamps resolved by mutual agreement the contract with the company. The technical guide went up to the end of the season, second in the coach Giancarlo Corradini, who lost both remaining matches (by so the team lose their unbeaten home in B). On June 4, 2007 was the official name of the new coach, Claudio Ranieri, now that from 1 July 2007. Under his guidance, aims to return to Juventus in a short time a top team, even with the purchase of considerable thickness (Vincenzo Iaquinta, Hasan Salihamidzic, Zdenek Grygera, Tiago Mendes, Sergio Bernardo Almiron, Jorge Andrade), and thanks to the extension of contracts of their players the most representative (Alessandro Del Piero, Gianluigi Buffon, Mauro Camoranesi, David Trezeguet and Pavel Nedvěd).
History History of Juventus Football Club 1897
Foundation Sport Club Juventus in Turin on November 1. Adopt as a uniform pink jersey with black shorts and black tie.
not take part in the 1898 national championship.
1899 changed its name to Foot-Ball Club Juventus. It does not take part in the national championship.
Participate in the 1900 Federal Championship First Class III (his first championship rounds). Do not exceed the group stage Piemontese. He won the Cup of the Ministry of Education.
1901 1st in the group stage Piemontese, reaching the semifinals of the Federal Championship. He won the Cup of the Ministry of Education, receiving the Banner and the Medal of the City Hall by the City of Turin.
1902 2nd in Group Stage Piemontese after play-off. He won the Cup of the Ministry of Education and the Coppa Città di Torino.
1903 adopts the current uniform consists of a knitted white stripes and white shorts. 1 st in the national round, the Federal Championship finalist. He won the Coppa Città di Torino.
1904 1st in the national round, the Federal Championship finalist. He won the Silver Ball Dapples Henry, the Tournament of Vercelli and Trine University Cup.
1905 he won the Italian League. Champion Team of the Second Category (or reserve team championship) and the Cup Luigi Bozino. Resignation
1906 corporate and foundation of the Foot-Ball Club Torino. 2 nd in the final round of the championship Federal act FIF of having renounced the play-off final in Milan with Milan. He won the Coppa Luigi Bozino.
1907 2nd in Group Stage Piemontese.
1908 he won the Federal Cup, Cup James Spensley. Dropped by the single round of the Italian Cup, Romulus Buni.
1909 he won the Federal Cup, Cup James Spensley. 3 rd in the qualifying rounds of the Italian Piedmont, Romulus Cup Buni.
1909/10 3rd in Group One National.
1910/11 9th in the final standings of the Lombardo-Piemontese-Ligure Championship or Tournament Staff.
1911/12 8th in the final standings of the major tournaments.
1912/13 6th in Group Piemontese and accepted in Group Lombardo.
1913/14 2nd in Group Lombardo and 4th in the final round of the championship of Northern Italy.
1914/15 2nd in Group B of the championship of Northern Italy and 2nd in Group A of the inter-regional semifinals.
1915/16 1st Round in Western Piedmont (or Piemonte Pool A) and 2nd in the final round of the Federal Cup football.
1919/20 1st in Group A Piemontese, 1st in Group B semi-finals of the inter-and 2nd in the final standings of the championship of Northern Italy.
1920/21 4th in Group A of the group stage Piemontese.
1921/22 4th in Group A of the Northern League Championship CCI (Italian Football Confederation), 6th in the final round of CCI Championship 1922/23
Sodality of Juventus with the Agnelli family July 24, 1923. 5th in Group B of the Northern League.
1923/24 6th in Group A of the Northern League.
1924/25 3rd in Group B of the Northern League.
1925/26 he won the Italian League.
1926/27 1st in Group A of the National Division and 3rd in the final round. Arrive until the fourth elimination round of the Italian Cup.
1927/28 2nd in Group B of the National Division and 4th in the final round.
1928/29 2nd in Group B of the National Division and 3rd in the final round. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Central European Cup (or Mitropa Cup).
Juventus was admitted to Serie A Championship single round set by the President of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC), Leandro Arpinati in July 1929.
1929/30 3rd in Serie A.
1930/31 he won the Italian League. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Cup of Central Europe.
1931/32 he won the Italian League. Way down to the Central European Cup semi-final.
1932/33 he won the Italian League. Way down to the Central European Cup semi-final.
1933/34 he won the Italian League. Way down to the Central European Cup semi-final.
1934/35 he won the Italian League. Reaches the semifinals of the European Cup Central.
1935/36 5th in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup.
1936/37 5th in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup.
1937/38 2nd in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup. Way down to the Central European Cup semi-final.
1938/39 8th in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup.
1939/40 3rd in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup.
1940/41 5th in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup.
1941/42 6th in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup.
1942/43 takes the name of Juve Cisitalia. 3 ª in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup.
1944 2nd in Group Ligure-Piemontese predatory and 2nd in Group Lombardo-Piemontese-Ligure Championship semi-finals of the War.
1945/46 Change the name and assumed its present name of Juventus Football Club Championship in northern Italy in the 3rd and 2nd in the final round of the Championship Series Mixed AB.
1946/47 Adopt the rank of joint stock companies (SpA) in 1947. 2 ª in Serie A.
1947/48 3rd in Serie A.
1948/49 4th in Serie A.
1949/50 he won the Italian League.
1950/51 3rd in Serie A. Rio Cup finalist (the first official edition of the FIFA Club World Championship).
1951/52 he won the Italian League. 3 rd in Latin Cup.
1952/53 2nd in Serie A.
1953/54 2nd in Serie A.
1954/55 7th in Serie A.
1955/56 12th in Serie A.
1956/57 9th in Serie A.
1957/58 he won the Italian League.
is the first Italian soccer center in Bacheta ten victories in league championships, receiving for the first time the Golden Star for Sporting Merit of the Italian Football Federation.
1958/59 3rd in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the Champions Cup.
1959/60 he won the Italian League. Italy wins the Cup. Martin wins the championship.
1960/61 he won the Italian League. Reaches the semi-finals Italian Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the Champions Cup.
1961/62 12th in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Champions League.
1962/63 2nd in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. He won the Coppa Delle Alpi
1963/64 5th in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Fairs Cup. He won the Coppa Città di Torino.
1964/65 4th in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup. Runner-Cities Fairs Cup. He won the Italo-English Friendship Cup.
1965/66 5th in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the Cup Winners' Cup.
1966/67 he won the Italian League. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Fairs Cup.
1967/68 3rd in Serie A. Eliminated in 1st round of the Italian Cup. Reaches the semifinals of the Champions League.
1968/69 5th in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the final sixteenth of the Fairs Cup.
1969/70 3rd in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the final sixteenth of the Fairs Cup.
1970/71 4th in Serie A. Eliminated in 1st round of the Italian Cup. Runner-Cities Fairs Cup.
1971/72 he won the Italian League. Reaches Semifinal Round Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup.
1972/73 he won the Italian League. Italian Cup final. Finalist of the European Cup.
1973/74 2nd in Serie A. Reaches Semifinal Round of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the Champions Cup. Intercontinental Cup finalist.
1974/75 he won the Italian League. Reaches Semifinal Round of the Italian Cup. Reaches the semifinals of the UEFA Cup.
1975/76 2nd in Serie A. Do not exceed the preliminary round of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Champions League.
1976/77 he won the Italian League. Reaches Semifinal Round of the Italian Cup. He won the UEFA Cup.
1977/78 he won the Italian League. Reaches Semifinal Round of the Italian Cup. Reaches the semifinals of the Champions League.
1978/79 3rd in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the Champions Cup.
1979/80 2nd in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the semifinals of the Cup Winners' Cup.
1980/81 he won the Italian League. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in First round of the UEFA Cup.
1981/82 he won the Italian League.
receives for the second time the Stella d'Oro al Merito Sportivo Italian Football Federation in the middle shouts twenty wins championships alloy. Do not exceed the preliminary round of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Champions League.
1982/83 2nd in Serie A. Italy wins the Cup. Finalist of the European Cup. He won the Super Clubs Cup.
1983/84 he won the Italian League. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup. He won the Cup Winners' Cup.
1984/85 6th in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. He won the European Cup and European Super Cup.
is the first European football to hit the three main European competitions for clubs, receiving recognition in the UEFA Targa (The UEFA Plaque) Union of European Football Associations in 1987.
1985/86 he won the Italian League. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Champions League. He won the Intercontinental Cup.
is the first football club in the world to have won all the cups and championships for clubs worldwide.
1986/87 2nd in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Champions League.
1987/88 6th in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the sixteenth-finals of the UEFA Cup.
1988/89 4th in Serie A. Eliminated in 2nd round of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup.
1989/90 4th in Serie A. He won the Italian Cup and UEFA Cup.
1990/91 7 ª in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the semifinals of the Cup Winners' Cup. Finalist in the Italian Super Cup.
1991/92 2nd in Serie A. Italian Cup final. Pierre wins the Memorial Cesare Baretti.
1992/93 4th in Serie A. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. He won the UEFA Cup. Pierre wins the Memorial Cesare Baretti.
1993/94 2nd in Serie A. Eliminated in the final sixteenth of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup.
1994/95 he won the Italian League. Italy wins the Cup. UEFA Cup finalists.
1995/96 2nd in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup. He won the UEFA Champions League and the Italian Super Cup. 1996/97
The Centenary of the founding institutions of Juventus Football Club (The Juvecentus). He won the Italian League. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Champions' League. Wins the European Super Cup and Intercontinental Cup.
1997/98 he won the Italian League. Reaches the semifinals of the Italian Cup. Champions' League. He won the Italian Super Cup.
1998/99 7th in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Way down to the semifinals of the Champions' League. Finalist in the Italian Super Cup.
1999/2000 2 ª in Serie A. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup. Wins Intertoto Cup.
2000/01 2nd in Serie A. Eliminated in first knockout round of the Italian Cup. Eliminated in the first group stage of the Champions' League.
2001/02 he won the Italian League. Italian Cup final. Eliminated in the second group stage of the Champions' League.
2002/03 he won the Italian League. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Champions' League. He won the Italian Super Cup.
2003/04 3rd in Serie A. Italian Cup final. Eliminated in first knockout round of Champions' League. He won the Italian Super Cup.
2004/05 1st Serie A, but the license is revoked at the club for unsportsmanlike conduct. Eliminated in first knockout Italian Cup final. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Champions' League.
2005/06 1st Serie A but the title was not awarded to the club, which is relegated to Serie B for unsportsmanlike conduct. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Champions' League. Finalist in the Italian Super Cup.
2006/07 1st Serie B (9 penalty points), promoted to Serie A. Eliminated in the final sixteenth of the Italian Cup.
2007/08 Serie A in the course. Reaches the quarter-finals of the Italian Cup.
colors and symbols
Main article: Colors and symbols of the Juventus Football Club
The black and white striped shirt that Juventus became the official currency was introduced in 1903 thanks to a British businessman who gave a gift to society. The corporate uniform is inspired in the colors of the Notts County English.
Stadium
Main articles: Stadio Olimpico in Turin and the Alps
Stadium Municipal Stadium "Vittorio Pozzo, field 1990.Dopo Juventus from 1933 to the first two years (1897-1898) in which Juventus played the Parco del Valentino and Parco Cittadella, the home games were held at the Piazza d'Armi Stadium until 1908, except in 1905, the year of the first championship, and in 1906, years in which was played at Velodrome Umberto I.
Subsequently, from 1909 to 1922, Juventus played its home games at the Sebastopol Golf Course, then moved the following year and until 1933 to Marseille Golf Course, where he won four league titles. At the end of 1933 he began playing at the new stadium, "Benito Mussolini" (later Stadio Comunale Vittorio Pozzo, "and finally Stadio Olimpico in Turin), launched ahead of World Championships of 1934. In this stage he played 890 league games for 57 years until 1990. Even then continued to train in this stadium, until the City of Turin, in 2003, gave it free of charge to Torino, while entrusting the "Delle Alpi" to the black and white.
Stadium "Delle Alpi", the playing field from 1990 to 2006.A Juventus from 1990 until the 2005-06 season, the Turin team has played all home games at the Stadio Delle Alpi was built during the World Cup Italy 1990 ( although in very rare circumstances, he preferred to play a few matches at other stadiums, such as the Dino Manuzzi of Cesena, the Giuseppe Meazza in Milan and the Renzo Barbera in Palermo).
In 2007, the Bianconeri are back to play in the glorious "City", now with the name of Stadio Olimpico, after the restructuring during the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, plant capable of seating 27,168 spectators.
▼ EspandiIl design of the new Stadio Delle Alpi
On February 5, 2007 the Board of Directors (BoD) of the Juventus Football Club has in fact adopted the draft of the club's new stadium to be built in place of the Stadio delle Alpi, waiting for the funds of the credit for a sports figure of 100 million € (excluding commercial areas). On 6 February the project was approved by the City of Turin.
The new stadium, designed by Gau and shes studies, coordinated the design by architect Gino Zavanella and Eloy Suarez and the designs of the engineer Massimo Majoviecki, will cover an area of \u200b\u200b50,000 square meters (37,000 square feet for the stadium, 12,000 and 5,000 for commercial activities available for offices) and will have a nearly rectangular structure, surrounded by two semi-ellipses which will house the businesses, restaurants and bars: the grandstands will be accessed with the specific pathways included in the various areas of the stadium. But, looking in the drawings section, the VIP boxes stand, facing directly onto the lawn.
The stadium, in the most direct contact with the field, will have 40,600 seats, a figure calculated on the basis of the number of visitors to the Alps in recent years: a bit 'more than the minimum dictated the need for UEFA events international level, distributed in a single reservoir and does not cover the athletics track, as the HSH Nordbank Arena in Hamburg (Germany) and the Stade de Suisse, set up for Euro 2008 in the city of Berne (Switzerland).
Two significant new features include the exterior and roof. The first will be wrapped in a micro-network that will allow it, through a projection system, to take different colors depending on the time of day and host of written, video and images to be "white metal day, multi-colored night." The cover, transparent Teflon, will leave the light filtered into the stadium. The opening has been proposed for the 2011-12 season.
Rosa 2007-2008
Goalkeepers 1 Gianluigi Buffon
12 Emanuele Belardi
13 Jess Kedwell Vanstrattan
Cristiano
31 November
Defenders
2 Alessandro Birindelli 3 Giorgio Chiellini
5 Jonathan Zebina
14 Jorge Andrade 21
Zdeněk Grygera
25 William Banner
33 28 Cristian Molinaro Nicola Legrottaglie Midfielders
6 Cristiano Zanetti
Hasan Salihamidžić
7 8 11 Mauro Camoranesi Pavel Nedvěd
22 Mohamed Sissoko
23 Antonio Nocerino
30 32 Marco Marchionni Tiago
Forwards
9 Vincenzo Iaquinta
10 Alessandro Del Piero (C) 17 David Trezeguet
20 Raffaele Palladino
Coach Claudio Ranieri
Young aggregates from the Spring 34
Christian Easter (C)
35 Simone Edwards (C)
36 Luca Castiglia (C) 37 Marco
Duravia (D) 38
Salvatore D'Elia (C) Nicola Cosentini
41 (C) 43 Lorenzo
Ariaudo (D)
Past Seasons
Juventus FC - Archive
seasons 1897/98 - 1898/99 - 1899/00 - 1900/01 - 1901/02 - 1902/03 - 1903/04 - 1904/05 - 1905/06 - 1906/07 - 1907/08 - 1908/09 - 1909/10 - 1910/11 - 1911/12 - 1912/13 - 1913/14 - 1914/15 - 1915/16 - 1916/17 - 1917/18 - 1918/19 - 1919/20 - 1920/21 - 1921/22 - 1922/23 - 1923/24 - 1924/25 - 1925/26 - 1926/27 - 1927/28 - 1928/29 - 1929/30 - 1930/31 - 1931/32 - 1932/33 - 1933/34 - 1934/35 - 1935/36 - 1936/37 - 1937/38 - 1938/39 - 1939/40 - 1940/41 - 1941/42 - 1942/43 - 1943/44 - 1944/45 - 1945/46 - 1946/47 - 1947/48 - 1948/49 - 1949/50 - 1950/51 - 1951/52 - 1952/53 - 1953/54 - 1954/55 - 1955/56 - 1956/57 - 1957/58 - 1958/59 - 1959/60 - 1960/61 - 1961/62 - 1962/63 - 1963/64 - 1964/65 - 1965/66 - 1966/67 - 1967/68 - 1968/69 - 1969/70 - 1970/71 - 1971/72 - 1972/73 - 1973/74 - 1974/75 - 1975/76 - 1976/77 - 1977/78 - 1978/79 - 1979/80 - 1980/81 - 1981/82 - 1982 / 83 - 1983/84 - 1984/85 - 1985/86 - 1986/87 - 1987/88 - 1988/89 - 1989/90 - 1990/91 - 1991/92 - 1992/93 - 1993/94 - 1994/95 - 1995/96 - 1996/97 - 1997/98 - 1998/99 - 1999/00 - 2000/01 - 2001/02 - 2002/03 - 2003/04 - 2004/05 - 2005/06 - 2006/07 - 2007 / 08
Formation: 4-4-2
G. Buffon
1J. Zebina
5N. Legrottaglie
33G. Chiellini
3C. Molinaro
28M. Camoranesi
8A. Nocerino
23C. Zanetti
6P. Nedvěd
11A. Del Piero (C)
10D. Trezeguet 17 Notable players
'or played in because Nancy is the team of my city, in Saint-Étienne because it is the strongest team in France, and because Juventus is the best team in the world. "
(Michel Platini, former French footballer, in response to a journalist than his career in AS Nancy-Lorraine, AS Saint-Étienne in and Juventus FC and its loyalty to the teams he played. Stadio Comunale Vittorio Pozzo di Torino , May 17, 1987.)
What follows is a brief list, divided by historical periods, some of the greatest players who have worn the jersey of Juventus FC.
▼ Expand the first three decades of life during
Luigi Alberto Barberis
Donna Giovanni Domenico Giacone
Oswaldo Novo Bruna
Antonio Mauve Umberto Luigi Allemandi
Gianpiero Combi
Virginio Rosetta
Umberto Caligaris
Bigatto I
Carlo Antonio Giuseppe Vojak I
Grabbi
Munerati
Federico Giuseppe Aldo Borel
I Ferenc József Viola Hirzer
Walty
Paul Arnold Ludwig Weber
Jack Diment
▼ EspandiIl Quinquennio James Squire Golden (1931-1935)
Gianpiero Combi
Virginio Rosetta
Umberto Caligaris
Luigi Bertolini
Federico Munerati Giovanni Ferrari Giovanni
old woman
Mario Varglien
I John II Varglien
Alfredo Foni
Pietro Rava Felice Placido Borel II
Renato Cesarini
Luis Monti
Raimundo Orsi
Show ▼ 1934 world champions Italy
Gianpiero Combi (C)
Luis Monti
Raimundo Orsi
Luigi Bertolini Giovanni Virginio Rosetta Ferrari
Felice Placido Borel II
Varglien I
Mario Umberto Caligaris
Show ▼ 1936 Olympic champions and 1938 world
Pietro Rava
Alfredo Foni
▼ EspandiGli years 1940, 1950 and 1960
Alfredo Foni
Pietro Rava
Giampiero Boniperti
Alberto Bruno Bertuccelli
Garzena
Ugo Locatelli Umberto Colombo Carlo Parola
John Viola
Silvio Piola
Rino Ferrario
Giampaolo Menichelli
Anzolin
Joseph Roberto Corradi
Sergio Manente
Charles Giancarlo Mattrel
Bercellino I (EC)
Ernesto Castano (EC)
Pietro Magni
Sandro Salvadore (EC)
Hermes Muccinelli
Gino Stacchini
Adolfo Gori
Slide Sentiments Omar Enrique Sivori IV
John Charles, OBE (GP)
John Hansen Karl Aage Hansen Karl Aage
Præstø
Helmut Haller
Luis Del Sol (EC)
Riza Lushta
Cinesinho
João José Altafini
▼ EspandiIl Legendary Cycle (1972-1986)
Roberto Bettega Roberto Boninsegna
Antonello Cuccureddu
Fabio Capello
Giuseppe Furino
Dino Zoff (GP)
Antonio Cabrini, Gaetano Scirea
Paul Marco Tardelli Rossi
Romeo Benetti Pietro Anastasi
Luciano Spinosi
Franco Causio
Stefano Tacconi
Domenico Cesare Prandelli Moroccan
Sergio Morini Francesco Gori
Gianluigi Roveta
Sergio Brio
Beniamino Vignola Claudio Gentile
Liam Brady
Michel Platini (EC)
Zbigniew Boniek
Massimo Bonini GP)
Michael Laudrup (GP) Show
▼ 1982 world champions Spain
Dino Zoff (C)
Antonio Cabrini, Marco Tardelli
Gaetano Scirea
Paolo Rossi Claudio Gentile
▼ EspandiGli years 1986-1995
Sergio Brio
Roberto Gaetano Galia
Scirea
Stefano Tacconi
Luigi De Agostini
Salvatore Schillaci
Roberto Baggio Andrea Fortunato
Pierluigi Casiraghi
Sergeij Alejnikov (GP)
Júlio César da Silva, Paulo Sousa
Jürgen Kohler
Andreas Möller
▼ Expandable ' was Lippi (1995-1999)
Angelo Peruzzi, Ciro Ferrara
Filippo Inzaghi
Moreno Torricelli
Alessio Tacchinardi
Alessandro Del Piero Gianluca Vialli
Fabrizio Ravanelli
Antonio Conte Angelo Di Livio
Christian Vieri
Gianluca Pessotto
Paulo Sousa
Didier Deschamps (CM)
Zinedine Zidane (CM , EC, GP)
Edgar Davids
Paolo Montero
Vladimir Jugović
Alen Bokšic
▼ EspandiIl XXI century
Gianluca Zambrotta Gianluigi Buffon Fabio Cannavaro
Mauro Germán Camoranesi
Alessandro Del Piero David Trezeguet
Lilian Thuram, Patrick Vieira
Pavel Nedved
Emerson
Zlatan Ibrahimovic
Show ▼ 2006 world champions Germany
Gianluigi Buffon Fabio Cannavaro (C), Gianluca Zambrotta
Mauro Germán Camoranesi
Alessandro Del Piero
NB (CM) World champions Juventus players as foreigners.
(EC) as European champions Juventus players.
(GP) Golden Player by the Union of European Football Associations.
presidents and coaches
The Presidents The Presidents of Juventus FC Juventus FC
[{{fullurl: {{{link}}} - Henry Canfari
1901-1902 - Carlo Favale
1903-1904 - James Parvopassu
1905-1906 - Alfred Dick
1907-1910 - Charles Victor Varetti
1911-1912 - Attilio Ubertalli
1913-1915 - Joseph Hess
1915-1918 - Gioacchino Armano, Fernando Nice and Sandro Zambelli (Presidential Committee of War)
1919-1920 - Corrado Corradini
1920-1923 - Gino Olivetti
1923-1935 - Edoardo Agnelli
1935-1936 - Henry Craven and John Mazzonis
1936-1941 - Emilio de la Forest de Divonne
1941-1947 - Peter Dusio
1947-1954 - Giovanni Agnelli
1954-1955 - Henry Craven, Nino Cravetto and Marcello Giustiniani (acting) 1955-1962
- Umberto Agnelli
1962-1971 - Vittore Catella
1971-1990 - Giampiero Boniperti
1990-2003 - Vittorio Chiusano Caissotti of
2003-2006 - Franzo Grande Stevens
2006-present - John Cobolli Gigli
[[ William Chalmers
1948-1949 1949-1951 Jesse Carver
1951 (int.) Luigi Bertolini
Saros
György 1951-1953 1953-1955 1955-1957
Aldo Olivieri Sandro Puppo
1957-1959 Ljubisa Broćić
1959 (int.) Theobald Depetrini
1959-1961 Renato Cesarini
1961 (int.)
Carlo Parola 1961 (int.) and Gunnar Gren Július Korostelev
1961-1962 1962-1964 Carlo Parola
Paulo Lima Amaral
1964 (int.) Eraldo Monzeglio
1964 Heriberto Herrera 1969-1970 -1969
Luis Carniglia
1970 (int.) Ercole Rabitti
1970-1971 Armando Picchi
Čestmír Vycpálek
1971-1974 1974-1976 1976-1986 Carlo Parola
Giovanni Trapattoni
Rino Marchesi
1986-1988 1988-1990 1990-1991 Dino Zoff
Louis Maifredi
1994-1999 1991-1994 Giovanni Trapattoni Marcello Lippi Carlo Ancelotti
1999-2001 2001-2004 2004-2006 Fabio Capello, Marcello Lippi
2006-2007 Didier Deschamps
2007 (int.) Giancarlo Corradini
2007 - Claudio Ranieri
[[ 27 times - including five consecutive national titles - and won the Cup nine times for Italy - two of them won in a row -, records in both cases.
The Old Lady was the first European team to have won the three traditional clubs in UEFA competitions, receiving recognition in the UEFA Targa (The UEFA Plaque) Union of European Football Associations in 1987. The team Juventus is the only winning team in the world of all football events organized by clubs for their continental confederation, UEFA, and the Intercontinental Cup (now World Cup for clubs) of FIFA.
According to the Institute of History and Statistics of the football team Juventus is the fifth best club the world from 1991 to 2007.
Honours (40)
Title Year / The runners
Italian Championships: 27 (record) 1905, 1925/26, 1930/31, 1931/32, 1932/33, 1933/34, 1934/35, 1949 / 50, 1951/52, 1957/58, 1959/60, 1960/61, 1966/67, 1971/72, 1972/73, 1974/75, 1976/77, 1977/78, 1980/81, 1981/82 , 1983/84, 1985/86, 1994/95, 1996/97, 1997/98, 2001/02, 2002/03, 1903, 1904, 1906, 1937/38, 1945/46, 1946/47, 1952/53; 1953/54, 1962/63, 1973/74, 1975/76, 1979/80, 1982/83, 1986/87, 1991/92, 1993/94, 1995/96, 1999/2000, 2000/01
Cups Italy : 9 (record) 1937/38; 1941/42, 1958/59, 1959/60, 1964/65, 1978/79, 1982/83, 1989/90, 1994/95 1972/73, 1991/92, 2001/02, 2003/04 Italian Super
: 4th 1995, 1997, 2002, 2003 1990, 1998, 2005
International Competitions (11)
Title Year / The runners
Cups: 2 1985 1996 1973
European Cup-UEFA Champions League 2 1984/85 , 1995/96 1972/73, 1982/83, 1996/97, 1997/98, 2002/03
Cup Winners' Cup: 1 1983/84
UEFA Cups: 3 (record) 1976/77, 1989/90, 1992 / 93 1994/95 European Super
: 2 1984 1996
UEFA Intertoto Cup: 1999/2000 1
Record and statistics
Main article: Records and statistics of Juventus Football Club
Michel Platini, who won the Golden Ball in 1983, 1984 and 1985 with the Juventus.Il Golden Ball trophy raffled by individual French magazine France Football has been awarded eight times to players who were active at the time of recognition in Juventus. The winners of the trophy were Omar Sivori (1961), Paolo Rossi (1982), Michel Platini (1983, 1984 and 1985), Roberto Baggio (1993), Zinedine Zidane (1998) and Pavel Nedved (2003). This is a record as any other team in Europe has had in its ranks a greater number of winners of this trophy. Fabio Cannavaro, who won the trophy in 2006 for his performance in Turin and the Italian national team during the 2005/06 season, was acquired by Real Madrid next season. Note that all the players of Italian descent - with the exception of Milan's Gianni Rivera - have won the trophy during their militancy in the Old Lady.
Gaetano Scirea holds the record for appearances for Juventus in official matches (552 games from 1974 to 1988). Giampiero Boniperti is the record holder for appearances for Juventus in Serie A with 444 races from 1946 to 1961. The historic top scorer Alessandro Del Piero of Juventus, with 229 networks - to 11 January 2008 - in official matches since 1993. Boniperti - top scorer Lady until 2006 - is the second player for Juventus number of goals (182 in 460 races). The 31
Felice Placido Borel II networks in 34 national league matches of the 1933/34 record companies are in the same league football in Serie A. The Hungarian Ferenc Hirzer, along with Gunnar Nordahl, is the player to have scored more goals in a season of top flight with his 35 goals in 26 races in the Federal Championship 1925/26. Argentine Omar Sivori, the player is, along with Silvio Piola, the only player in the history of the championship round only one who scored 6 goals in one game (Juventus Inter 9-1, in the twenty-eighth day of the Serie A 1960/61) .
Victory with the highest goal difference in a race official in the history of Juventus was 15-0 for, away from home, against the hundred in the second round of the Italian Cup 1926/27. The winning goal difference with most of the Old Lady of Italian football in the league since its first participation in 1900, was a double 11-0: against Fiorentina and against the Flood, respectively in the second and sixth day of the Federal Championship 1928/29.
The defeats with most in the history of Juventus on goal difference were against Milan, 1-8 in the thirteenth day of the Federal Championship 1911/12, and 1906 against Torino FC, 0-8 in the third day of the 1912 Federal Championship / 13.
Juventus and the Italian national
Main article: Italy national football team.
Sandro Pertini with Zoff, Causes and Bearzot, coming back from World Cup 1982, play a game of scientific Scopone aereo.In absolute Juventus is the club that has provided the largest number of players to the Italian national team and, in particular , on the occasion of the four victories in the World Championship of 1934, 1938, 1982 and 2006 (which happened to coincide with major periods of winning companies, especially the World Cup in 1934 and 1982).
The first Juventus player who wore the national team was goalkeeper John Giacone, March 28, 1920, against Switzerland in Bern. The game ended 3-0 to Switzerland.
The nine Juventus players become world champions in 1934 were the goalie (and captain) Combi, G. Ferrari, Monti, Orsi Bertolini and between owners, Rosetta, Borel II, Caligaris Varglien and I among the reserves.
Two Juventus youth, Foni and Rava, also won the Olympic football tournament in Berlin in 1936 and 1938 world championship.
Juventus players employed by Enzo Bearzot in Spain for the World Cup 1982 was the goalie (and captain) Zoff, Gentile, Cabrini, Scirea, Tardelli and Rossi (who won the top scorer of the tournament).
In 2006, under orders from Marcello Lippi, the Juventus fans who have become world champions in Germany have been Buffon, Zambrotta, F. Cannavaro (captain), Camoranesi and Del Piero.
Franco involved while having played for a long time at Juventus, he became world champion in 1982 during his militancy nell'Udinese.
There are, of course, indisputable technical merit of the players who played for the national team despite having never won the championship of the world, such as Roberto Baggio, Pietro Anastasi (winner of a European Championship in 1968), Romeo Benetti Salvatore Schillaci (which won the top scorer of the World Championship in 1990) and Roberto Bettega (who was unable to attend the world championship in 1982 because of a back injury in November 1981 in a clash with the dell'Anderlecht goalkeeper, Jacky Munaron in Champions League).
Among the foreign world champions at the time of militancy in Juventus, the most famous is certainly the French Zinedine Zidane (1998), but must also be mentioned Platini (1984) and Deschamps (2000) (the latter also a champion of world with Zidane in 1998), who became European champions while serving with the French national team in Juventus.
The Lady is, by far, the team that boasts the highest number of players who have won at least one edition of the World Championship with 24 players (of which 22 are Italian). Limited to only the Italian team, Juventus players were summoned 9th edition 1934, second in 1938, 6 in 1982 and 5 in 2006.
historical parts
Main article: historical part of the Juventus Football Club
Since its first participation in the Italian championship in the third group, in 1900, there are some matches that Juventus have been in the annals of both for the result, both the observed level football, and for the team's performance and / or a player in particular, both for the prestige of the tournament at the national and / or international level and the stage reached by the team.
The first official race:
's FC Torinese invited us to play against him, and did not seem real to us we can challenge themselves to with real players although the constitution and stature little reassuring. Were setbacks as a team, but individually, for the major exercise in dribbling, not undone at all. Made in this way, the size eleven, we began to accept challenges and to launch until public to affirm the presence of Turin launched a tournament. On this occasion we wanted a uniform, but how? Of cotton, flannel shirt? In the end, the choice: a thin, rosy parcalle We carried on, faded beyond belief, until the year 1902 ... "
(Canfari Henry Francis, 1879-1915, one of the founders and second president of Juventus FC, the first race of the Foot-Ball Club Juventus in the league on 11 March 1900. From document published by the magazine Institutional Juventus in 1915.)
-------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------
III Federal Football Championship, the first round, first day Sunday, March 11, 1900
FC Torino 1-0 Juventus FC Campo Piazza d'Armi, Torino
15:30
Referee: Marc Jourdain
Colongo
Company Structure
Gianni Agnelli, chairman of Juventus FC 1954.Dal from 1947 to 1947, under the chairmanship of Giovanni Agnelli, Juventus is a company limited by shares. Owned by private individuals only, now sixty per cent of its shares is held by financial IFIL Investment SpA, the holding company owned by the Agnelli family company Giovanni Agnelli and atraverso CSapa. The remaining stake is held by the company Libyan Arab Foreign Investment Company (LAFICO) to 7.5% and other shareholders for 32.5%.
The organization's current Juventus Football Club SpA currently consists of seven sectors: Administration and Finance, Human Resources, Information Technology, Commercial Area, Planning, Control and Special Projects, and Communications Area Sports Area. The Bianconeri are governed by a Board of Directors (BoD), a corporate body composed of eight members Ellett from the property (the President of the club, the Managing Director (AD), the Director-General, the six directors) for all ordinary and extraordinary administration, the only EXCEPT WHERE reserved to the shareholders.
from 3 December 2001, the Turin-based company is listed on the Italian stock exchange and is currently one of the three Italian companies listed on the Stock Exchange of football - along with Lazio and Rome - and, between them, the only part Segment STAR, one of the most successful equity groups in Europe and worldwide.
The Old Lady is also a founding member of the European Club Association (ECA), successor organization of the G-14, composed of European football clubs more important, influential and prestigious consorziatisi to obtain a joint protection of sports rights, legal and television in front of UEFA and FIFA.
Organization Society
▼ EspandiStaff current administrative area
Ownership: Agnelli family.
President: Giovanni Cobolli Gigli.
Honorary Presidents: Giampiero Boniperti and Franzo Grande Stevens.
Managing Director and CEO: Jean-Claude Blanc.
Sports Committee: Gian Paolo Montali.
Compensation and Nominating Committee: Carlo Barel di Sant'Albano, Camillo Venesio, Riccardo Montanaro.
Internal Control: Marzio Saa, Riccardo Montanaro.
Sporting Director: Alessio Secco.
Sales and Marketing Director: Marco Fassone.
Finance and Administration Director: Michele Bergero. Finance Director
planning, control and special projects: Stefano Bertola.
Human Resources Manager: Alessandro Sorbonne.
Juventus Channel Communications Manager and Director: Giuseppe Gattino.
information technology manager: Claudio Leonardi.
Juventus Center Director: Victor Ferrino.
Juventus Merchandising Manager: Laurent Boquillet.
senior press officers: Marco Girotto. Workers
printing and publishing: Fabio Ellena and Gabriella Ravizzotti. Responsible for editorial content
: Enrica Tarchi.
Corporate Communication: Stefano Coscia. ▼
EspandiStaff
present the sports coach Claudio Ranieri.
assistant coach (coach in 2 ª): Christian Damiano.
Trainer Goalkeepers: George Pellizzaro. Trains of
: Andrea Scanavino and Riccardo Capanna.
Field Assistant: Paolo Benetti. Responsible medical
: dr. Riccardo Agricola.
Doctor: Dr. Michael Gemignani, dr. Bartolomeo Goitre and dr. Luca Stefanini.
Physics: Aldo Esposito and Luigi Pochettino.
physiotherapist: Mauro Caudana, Dario Franco and Garbiero Giacometto.
Spring Team Coach: Vincenzo Chiarenza.
Team manager: Gianluca Pessotto.
Head of Youth: Ciro Ferrara. Responsible observers
: Pasquale Sensitive.
Juventus Soccer Schools Manager: Marco Marchi.
Technical sponsors and official sponsors technical
▼ EspandiCronologia
1979/80-1999/2000: Kappa.
2000/01: CiaoWeb / Lotto.
2001/02- 2002/03: Lotto.
2003/04-oggi: Nike. ▼
EspandiCronologia Official Sponsor
1981/82-1988/89: Ariston.
1989/90-1991/92: UPIM.
1992/93-1994/95: Danone.
1995/96-1997/98: Sony (Sony Minidisc).
1998/99: D + Digital Freedom / Tele +.
1999/2000: CCampionato: D + Digital Freedom / Cups: Sony.
2000/01: Sportal.com / Tele +.
2001/02: Championship: Fastweb / Cups: You Mobile.
2002/03-2003/04: Championship: Fastweb / Cups: Tamoil.
2004/05: Championship: Sky Sports / Awards: Tamoil.
2005/06-2006/07: Tamoil.
From 2007/08: FIAT Group (New Holland).
Curiosity
Section 'Curiosity' is not recommended in the guidelines of Wikipedia.
The article could be improved by integrating relevant heading in the body and removing inappropriate ones.
Main article: Curiosity about Juventus Football Club Supporters
To Main Voice supporters of Juventus Football Club
"Juventus is a wonderful machine that each day brings on board his fifteen million fans. "
(Mario Sconcerti, Italian journalist and columnist for La Stampa of Sky Sports, 8 January 2007.)
Fans of Juventus Football Club are more than ten million in Italy, a record (28% of preferences) according to a survey in August 2007 Judah institute Demos snaps published by the newspaper La Repubblica. The Turin team, is also one of the teams with the most supporters in the world with more than 170 million - most of forty-three million of them in Europe - with supporters clubs in Canada, USA, Malta, San Marino, Switzerland, Germany, United Kingdom, Iran, Israel and Vietnam to name only a few countries with a large number of Italian immigrants. In
national team Juventus - traditionally, the most cross-country in terms of territory and population - is also very popular in southern regions and islands, making it one of the teams with the largest following of supporters in the away games.
Politically, typhoid is organized lined up right at the positions of almost all the fans of football in the country. The Juventus fans
is twinned with those dell'Avellino, the Netherlands ADO Den Haag and Legia Warsaw, Poland, and the rivalry fiercest survive with Inter (see Derby of Italy), Torino (see Derby della Mole), AC Milan, Fiorentina and Roma. Interestingly, attendance at the stadium home of Juventus supporters at the peaks around the exhaustion of seats when there are challenges with the historic rivals indicated earlier.
the beginning of last century, according to popular thought at the time, supporters of Juventus was the bourgeoisie and the fans of his team compatriot rival Torino, belonged to the popular class and the proletariat. Some years later, with the association of the "Old Lady" by the Agnelli family in 1923, Juventus was "adopted" by the workers of the factory also Italian Automobili Torino (FIAT) - a company owned by the Agnelli - most of whom were immigrants, mainly of the southern region of the country, particularly from Sicily, Palermo and Catania, and Napoli. This migration was greatest during the decades of 1960 and 1970, where Juventus seemed to represent, through its fans, the spirit of a new worker from Piedmont, that of immigrants in the rich north-west of Italy, while the company remained tied grenade at home purely to Turin. Thus was born one of the reasons for the great rivalry between the two teams, symbolized by the Derby della Mole, meeting the city's oldest and most prestigious of Italian football.
present, as a consequence of the fact stated above, the differences between the social origins of the supporters of Juventus and shell companies are outdated, but it was the stereotype and the large number of Juventus fans present in the team races away, which became another rivalry, This above all by the decade of 1980 to date, including Madama and Napoli, the team with the most fans in Southern Italy.
▼ EspandiTifosi
famous Juventus Salvatore Accardo, Italian conductor.
Jean Alesi, a former French Formula 1 driver.
Giorgio Almirante (1914-1988), former secretary of the MSI. Claudia
Andreatti, winner of the Miss Italy contest, 2006 edition.
Pippo Baudo, Italian television presenter.
Paolo Belli, Italian singer and television presenter. Author of the Company's current anthem titled Juve Juventus FC, a great love story.
Pierangelo Bertoli (1942-2002), Italian singer.
Tarcisio Bertone, the Italian archbishop, cardinal of the Catholic Church, Vatican Secretary of State and Camerlengo of Holy Roman Church.
Mike Bongiorno, Italian television presenter.
Flavio Briatore, Italian businessman and CEO of the Renault Formula 1 Team.
Loris Capirossi, Italian MotoGP rider. Current Ducati rider.
Beppe Carletti, keyboardist and founder of the Nomad. Cristina
Chiabotto, TV presenter and winner of the Miss Italy contest, 2004 edition.
Michael Forest, Italian television presenter.
Mikhail Gorbachev, former head of state 's Soviet Union and Nobel Peace Prize 1990.
Granbassi Margherita, Italian fencer.
Ezio Greggio, actor, comedian, director and presenter of Italian television.
Idris (Edrissa Sanneh), Italo-Senegalese journalist and columnist. Massimo Giletti
Italian television presenter.
Carolina Kostner, Italian skater. European champion of the specialty in the seasons 2006-07 and 2007-08.
Isolde Kostner, a former Italian skier. Double silver medal at the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City 2002.
Linus (Pasquale Di Molfetta), Italian radio host. Luciana
Littizzetto, Italian actress.
Edelfa Masciotta Chiara, winner of the Miss Italy contest, 2005 edition.
François Mitterrand (1916-1996), former French statesman. Giampiero
Mughini, journalist, writer and intellectual Italian.
Luciano Pavarotti (1935-2007), Italian tenor.
Eleonora Pedron, winner of the Miss Italy contest, 2002 edition.
Eros Ramazzotti, Italian pop music interpreter.
Ainett Stephens, Venezuelan model and showgirl.
Palmiro Togliatti (1893-1964), politician, founder and leader of the old PCI.
Turki Bin Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Prince of Saudi Arabia.
Walter Veltroni, Italian politician. Current mayor of Rome.
The social commitment
Juventus Football Club is actively involved in social and humanitarian issues. With the "facts and projects for young people," the Turin-based company helps to improve the living conditions of young people and study at home through the creation of a 'Welcome Centre' to accommodate mothers and non-minors in difficulty, ' allocation - in collaboration with the Faculty of Economics, University of Turin - to 10 scholarships in memory of Giovanni Alberto Agnelli and support and support for activities of Piedmontese Foundation for Cancer Research. Moreover, the black and white part, in collaboration with Anne-Regina Margherita Hospital in Turin, the project "Growing together at St. Anna," the restructuring program of the Department of Neonatology of the Hospital St. Anne Hospital.
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