Andrea Pirlo (33 Viewers)

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Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,890
my brother is a barcelona fan. (yeah i know)

he said he's feeling some guardiola vibes: unproven coach, but has the utmost respect of all players. he's got the winning dna, knows the club, is familiar with the league, was perfectly disciplined tactically.

at this point, any flexibility, proper people management and some motivational skills would take us forward. forza pirlo.
Minus the world class squad
 

Strickland

Senior Member
May 17, 2019
5,863
He played exactly the kind of position that make great coaches, but it's a crazy gamble. I guess Covid played its part in this one, hopefully it pays off. But I don't think it's a good gamble, traditionally you have to spend money to make money and Pirlo is the cheapest option there is.
 

icemaη

Rab's Husband - The Regista
Moderator
Aug 27, 2008
36,448
Very risky, most probably terrible, appointment. The man must love gambling, taking such a high profile job having never even managed a school side. Hopefully the management will hire some experienced assistants to guide him through the journey.
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
61,589


Pirlo as the ringleader in Milan/Azzurri was absolute terror with pranks&trolling, you wouldnt think so with his calm collected persona publically lol, read this and weep :rofl:









BOOK EXTRACT
By Andrea Pirlo

My face, with its fixed expression, doesn't let on what I'm thinking. But therein lies the beauty. I can make up the craziest stories, say the most ridiculous things to my team-mates and everyone thinks I'm being deadly serious. They don't realise what's happening and I have a whale of a time. I'll be smiling inside, but outwardly completely impassive as I plot my next joke. And sometimes it's cost me a slap, particularly when Rino Gattuso was around.

With him not being a man of letters, or a distinguished orator, whenever Rino opened his mouth the dressing room turned into the Rio Carnival. People would be blowing raspberries, making trumpet noises, doing the conga. Always the same reaction. We'd never let him finish before we started with the p*** taking.

I'd call him "terrone" (a derogatory term for a southern Italian) and he'd hit me. To get my own back, I'd nick his phone and send a bunch of texts to Ariedo Braida, our general manager. This one time, Rino de Janeiro, like me, was waiting for his contract to be renewed. I did the negotiating on his behalf by means of a single message. "Dear Ariedo, if you give me what I want, you can have my sister."

Rino found out and gave me a beating before ringing up Braida. "It's just one of Pirlo's stupid jokes," he said. I've always wondered if the response was, "what a pity".

Before Italy games, Daniele De Rossi would hide under Rino's bed and wait. He'd be there for anything up to half an hour. Gattuso would come in, brush his teeth, stick on his leopard-print pyjamas, get into bed, take out a book and look at the pictures. Just as he was about to fall asleep, Daniele would reach up from under the bed and grab his sides, while I'd burst out of the wardrobe like the worst kind of lover, making horrendous noises. Rino took it really well, despite risking a massive heart attack. First he'd beat up Daniele and then he'd do the same to me. Just to prove he was even handed.

375019_heroa.jpg

Hardman | Gattuso's career is remembered for a number of physical encounters

Another time we gave him a soaking with a fire extinguisher. A draw away to the Republic of Ireland had been enough to secure our qualification for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and so the last group game, against Cyprus in Parma four days later, had become almost like a friendly. Pretty much meaningless, and that's exactly how we treated it.

Lippi gave us a night off in Florence, and almost all of us went out for dinner. Gattuso didn't – he stayed at the team hotel. When we got back, we were quite drunk, actually very drunk, and we ended up chatting in the lounge. We weren't tired, so we needed to find something to pass the time. Everyone had the same idea: "Let's go and p*** off Gattuso."

He was already asleep, with his little nightcap on his head. On the way up the stairs to Rino's room, De Rossi spotted a fire extinguisher. "I'm off to put out Gattuso," he said. We knocked on the door and out Rino came, screwing his eyes up as he advanced. Daniele started spraying, covering him in every last drop before running off to hide in his room.

He left me at the mercy of that monster in its underpants, absolutely dripping with foam and shouting total gibberish. Listening to him, though, I knew he was beginning to wake up and regain his senses. I tried to escape, but I was already done for. When the guy on your shoulder is Gattuso and he's out to do you harm, you can run as hard as you like, but he'll always catch you. Rino ran me through his full range of slaps.

Gattuso's also superstitious to a pretty disgusting degree. At the 2006 World Cup, because things were going well, he kept the same tracksuit on for more than a month. It was something like 40 degrees in Germany and he was going about dressed like a deep-sea diver. From round about the quarter-finals, he began to stink. Never mind a fire extinguisher – what he really needed was an industrial supply of lavender.

141265.jpg
Gattuso would grab a fork and try and stick it in us. Some of us ended up missing games because of Rino's fork attacks"

Rino's always been my favourite target, top of the table by some distance. This despite the fact that on several occasions he's tried to kill me with a fork. During meal times at Milanello, we'd invent all sorts to torment him and put him on the spot. When he got his verbs wrong (pretty much the whole time), we'd jump on him immediately. And then when he actually got them right, we'd make out that it was still wrong just to wind him up even more. Me, Ambrosini, Nesta, Inzaghi, Abbiati, Oddo: that was the group of bast***s right there.

"Rino, how are you?"

"Bad. We got beat yesterday. I was better if we won."

"Rino, try again. It's: 'I'd be better if we'd won.'"

“But it's the same thing."

"Not exactly, Rino."

"Fine then. I'd be better if we'd won."

"Rino, just how ignorant are you? 'I was better if we won.' That's how you say it."

"But that's what I said before."

"What, Rino?"

"That thing about winning."

"What thing, Rino? Can you repeat it?"

You could see the red mist coming down and he just wasn't able to hide it. We could tell what was coming and so we'd commandeer all the knives. Gattuso would grab a fork and try to stick it in us. On more than one occasion, he struck his intended target and the fork sank into our skin. We were as soft as tuna; the kind you can cut with a breadstick. Some of us ended up missing games because of one of Rino's fork attacks, even if the official explanation from the club was one of “muscle fatigue”.

We'd get out of his way when he got mad but once he'd calmed down and gone to his room, we'd come back out, pile up the sofas in front of the door and block his exit.

"Let me out – training starts in a while."

"Deal with it, terrone."

He'd then go crazy again, smashing up everything in sight. But even when he was angry, he was one of the good guys.

Amongst other things, I've seen Rino catch and eat live snails for a bet. He really does belong in a film.
 

pavluska

Senior Member
Apr 25, 2013
7,339
my brother is a barcelona fan. (yeah i know)

he said he's feeling some guardiola vibes: unproven coach, but has the utmost respect of all players. he's got the winning dna, knows the club, is familiar with the league, was perfectly disciplined tactically.

at this point, any flexibility, proper people management and some motivational skills would take us forward. forza pirlo.
Pep vibes including how proven as a coach when Pep coached Barca B before getting promoted while Pirlo is yet to coach a single game?
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
69,332
my brother is a barcelona fan. (yeah i know)

he said he's feeling some guardiola vibes: unproven coach, but has the utmost respect of all players. he's got the winning dna, knows the club, is familiar with the league, was perfectly disciplined tactically.

at this point, any flexibility, proper people management and some motivational skills would take us forward. forza pirlo.
But the thing is guardiola already had some coaching experience. We've handed the reins to someone who hasn't even so much held a training session!
 

Alen

Ѕenior Аdmin
Apr 2, 2007
54,071
So Pirlo is tasked with getting us scudetto number 10 in a row and getting us deep in the CL. All I will say is that we have a handsome coach to complement our handsome players.
He won't be tasked with that. Sure, our directors will keep saying that CL is priority, but everyone knows that this current Juventus team doesn't stand a chance in CL. This current team won't even win the scudetto next year, no matter the coach.
It's gonna be a transition year. We'll get rid of some old players and replace them with younger ones. Then, with this new blood, we might get the scudetto like we did in 2016, but it won't be a disaster if we don't win it, as long as we build for the future. If we got a proven and expensive coach, we weren't gonna be able to invest much, and especially to invest smart. The new coach would have demanded an expensive player or two and we'd have been stuck with the deadwood.
Unfortunately we are in Inter's position a decade ago. They went with Benitez and kept all their old players. It took them 9 years to enter the scudetto race. We're taking a different road and I am glad. I'd have been worried if we did this in 2014 when Conte left or in 2015 after the CL final. But this current squad needs at least 2 or 3 summers to be fixed (in the meantime Ronaldo will leave too) and I prefer to do it smart and without pressure.
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
69,332
He won't be tasked with that. Sure, our directors will keep saying that CL is priority, but everyone knows that this current Juventus team doesn't stand a chance in CL. This current team won't even win the scudetto next year, no matter the coach.
It's gonna be a transition year. We'll get rid of some old players and replace them with younger ones. Then, with this new blood, we might get the scudetto like we did in 2016, but it won't be a disaster if we don't win it, as long as we build for the future. If we got a proven and expensive coach, we weren't gonna be able to invest much, and especially to invest smart. The new coach would have demanded an expensive player or two and we'd have been stuck with the deadwood.
Unfortunately we are in Inter's position a decade ago. They went with Benitez and kept all their old players. It took them 9 years to enter the scudetto race. We're taking a different road and I am glad. I'd have been worried if we did this in 2014 when Conte left or in 2015 after the CL final. But this current squad needs at least 2 or 3 summers to be fixed (in the meantime Ronaldo will leave too) and I prefer to do it smart and without pressure.
Makes the ronaldo investment an absolute failure if that's the case
 

s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
34,445
Pep vibes including how proven as a coach when Pep coached Barca B before getting promoted while Pirlo is yet to coach a single game?
next to zero experience vs zero experience, not a huge diff. anyway, it's about feelings and similarities as stated, but great job sherlock, feel free to please yourself with a sauna, check out some dicks and send me the invoice.
 

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