Andrea "Il Bruco Brutto" Agnelli (9 Viewers)

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
65,562
Juventus Club DOC MotoGP inaugurated in Misano.
Agnelli: "We have been making efforts to internationalise our brand and we're proud to see our logo alongside MotoGP's. I really believe great things will come of this partnership."


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Mawr money?
 

Mister

Senior Member
Apr 4, 2014
5,742
Agnelli's letter to Juventus

Juventus President Andrea Agnelli wrote an open letter to shareholders discussing club finances, changing Italian football and Antonio Conte’s exit.

Dear Champions of Italy, began the letter published on the Juventus website.

This balance sheet up for your approval marks a crossroads in the recent history of Juventus. It is an important step in a journey, which began in May 2010, of reconstruction and of a new phase of development.

The ingredients that contributed to this turnaround are multiple, but can be summed up in a profound managerial revolution that brought sport back to its natural central role, maintaining a constant effort to bring in new revenue and control costs.

The challenges that we will face in the next few years are even more demanding. If in Italy the return to being competitive has brought a run of three consecutive Scudetti, the fundamental economics of our international competitors face us with an evident truth: the gap with the best European clubs remains elevated and the gap must be reduced if we are to aspire to results in line with our international history.

From the start of my mandate I signalled the need and urgency to enact structural reforms of the ‘system.’ Everything changed in the way Juventus is controlled, but almost nothing on the national stage.

Our work and profound renewal therefore reaches a formidable limitation in the lack of overall development in Italian football. Changing this state of affairs is a complex operation that is of the utmost urgency if we are to achieve our objectives.

The Juventus Stadium, of which we are proud, remains the only example of a sporting structure at the vanguard, capable of representing a model of security and an experience of the top level both ‘live’ and on television.

Unfortunately, this is just 1/20th of the potential of Italian stadiums. It’s not enough for the collective sport to make a decisive step forward.

The development of new infrastructures is the crucial issue of the next five years, during which Italian football must choose between being internationally competitive, both on the field and in its increase of revenue, or being pushed to the margins, something that today seems inevitable.”

Agnelli also urged the Lega Serie A to reappropriate its leadership role, cleaning out a level of argumentative debate and lack of transparency that is frankly no longer acceptable.

He called for a reduction of the number of professional clubs and a revision of the squads to guarantee a certain number of Italian players and the introduction of B-Teams.

Finally, Agnelli discussed the group of people who worked with the club over the last four years, including ex-Coach Antonio Conte.

All of us thank him, but he decided for himself a new professional path. Our effort today is to support a new Coach: Massimiliano Allegri, a winner who has already brought to us new passion and a new desire to take on everyone and everything.
 
Jul 20, 2012
20,044
Agnelli anger over Juve defeat

Club President Andrea Agnelli was reportedly angered by Juventus’ defeat to Olympiacos on Wednesday.

Juve went down 1-0 to the Greek side in Athens, with Pajtim Kasami’s strike and heroics from goalkeeper Roberto Jimenez enough to confine Massimiliano Allegri’s men to a second defeat of the Champions League group stage.

Now Tuttosport reports that the loss could have far-reaching consequences, with President Agnelli reportedly angered by the Bianconeri’s capitulation.

The Turin-based sports newspaper reports that Agnelli has specified that the Old Lady must qualify for the Last 16 of the Champions League not only given the history and prestige of the club, but also for financial reasons.

The sports daily indicates that last year’s failure to qualify from the group stage after losing a do-or-die clash with Galatasaray in Istanbul had a serious impact on club finances, and Agnelli will not allow the same thing to happen again.

Agnelli is reported to have discussed the match at length on Wednesday night with directors Giuseppe Marotta and Fabio Paratici, being particularly aggrieved by the Bianconeri’s jaded first-half display, according to Tuttosport.

The Juventus President laid out his European ambitions clearly in the summer.

“We want to continue what we’re doing in Italy, and do as well as we can in Europe. That’s our level.

“We need to catch-up, and get back among the best eight teams in Europe.”
 

Dostoevsky

Tzu
Administrator
May 27, 2007
88,449
Reposting article from Serie A thread, just to stay here

Juventus President Andrea Agnelli has declared that Italian football is lagging behind its continental rivals.

The club today announced a record turnover of over €300m, but Agnelli believes Italian clubs are failing to compete with those in England, Spain and Germany.

“Is everything ok then?” Agnelli pondered after pinpointing the Premier League as an example to follow to club shareholders.

“No. All you have to do is look at the situation in Italian football with a minimum of detachment and without partisanship to recognise a progressive decline.

“Someone in the establishment tried to argue that, since Italy as a whole has lost ground in every other sector, then the growth of our industry [football] - albeit lower than other countries - should reassure us.

“This is not the case, because the growth is linked exclusively to the evolution of the television market.

“Less than 20 years ago, England, Spain and Germany looked to Italy as an example. Today we have been overtaken in every respect - revenue, sustainability of businesses, sporting results, filling stadiums and UEFA ranking.

“Today we’re struggling to defend fourth [in the UEFA coefficient] from Portugal.”

The Bianconeri President hailed the club’s return to the top 10 clubs in Europe in terms of turnover, but warned Italian clubs are limited structurally.

“The level of turnover that we’re presenting today confirms Juventus as one of the top 10 clubs in the world, and our UEFA ranking has improved.

“However, our competitors - Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Barcelona - have significantly outdistanced us.

“No Italian club has been able to grow at their pace, a clear sign of the structural limitations that plague our football.”

Agnelli called on other Serie A clubs to follow the example being set by Juventus, as he sees Italian football falling further and further behind.

“Only 10 years ago, matchdays in Serie A and the Bundesliga generated the same revenue, slightly less than those in La Liga and a third of the revenues in the Premier League.

“We were already a tortoise - today we are a shrimp.

“The Bundesliga and La Liga now generate twice the revenues of our football stadiums, which this year fell below €200m - of which one fifth, 20 per cent was generated by Juventus Stadium.

“The latter remains the only example of a cutting-edge facility [in Italy], but it only represents 1/20th of the total product. It’s not enough.

“Football is about the fans, but the fans and families have abandoned Italian stadiums. Some people blame increased television availability, which is a strange argument, because without TV money Italian football would have died a slow death.

“It still will, if clubs don’t take up a double challenge.

“Domestically, we need to get fans back into popular stadiums. Juventus, thanks to Juventus Stadium has reached a point where we’re at 95 per cent capacity - it’s news when a game doesn’tsell out. The rest of Serie A is constantly below 50 per cent, and falling.

“And then there’s abroad. Italian football has disappeared from the television screens of the big Western markets without getting into new markets.

“Juventus are trying to recover lost ground. Tours and social media give us new capabilities and new markets that will allow us to grow revenues.

“But Juventus will only grow fractionally if the collective product that is Serie A doesn’t do the same.

“Many years ago a book by Simon Kuper called 'Football Against The Enemy’ was released.

“The author wrote: 'When the English football fan seeks a better life, he goes to Italy, where he’ll find the world’s best players, games broadcast in full on television and lots of sports papers. The weather is also good’.

“This was Serie A for the English 20 years ago.

“I’m not saying this out of nostalgia. I’m saying this with the ambition that Serie A goes back to being thepoint of reference.”
 

Vialli_92

Senior Member
Mar 7, 2013
6,499
Agnelli :touched:

We had 20% of all revenue just because of our own stadium. Jesus.
Quite shocking how far Serie A has fallen, i still believe if it was not for Calcioppoli we would be a powerhouse like Bayern/Barca/Madrid in Europe. The fact we are no.1 in italy again after being relegated and losing our image just shows how strong of a club we are. If that had happened to AC Milan or Inter they would have been doomed.
 

Vialli_92

Senior Member
Mar 7, 2013
6,499
They would have ceased to exist for sure. Or bein totally sold out right away at the very least
Yep and they have the cheek to say we are a disgrace to italian football? We fucking had 1 arm tied behind our back for the last 9 fucking years we were not far off being a mid table team for life if it were not for Agnelli who instead of bankrolling the club changed our structure and gave us our dignity back.

Inter and Milan had such a huge advantage on us since Calciopoli and now look at them? Mid table fodder who's clubs are run like it's still the 1990's and have not got with the times.
 

Hydde

Minimiliano Tristelli
Mar 6, 2003
38,724
Yep. Thats because their 2 CEOs were pretty pretty bad.

Moratti ran inter all his tenure like in the old times. Pumping cash of his own in hopes of winning something. Berlusca is just a corrupt old geezer who doesnt care about the club and dont know how to sell it right now. Both were pretty mediocre in their spells, because even when both won CL titles, they had zero vision and were not able to build upon those achievements. They were stuck in the past and not prepared properly for modern football management.

Agnelli has been runing this club in an intelligent and conservative way. I would not blame him for that, and in fact we should thank him that we are not bankrupt after calciopoli and the Cobolli giggli era
 

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