Future Coach (22 Viewers)

Who would you like to see coach Juve this summer?

  • Benitez

  • Pellegrini

  • Allegri

  • Gasperini

  • Prandelli

  • Blanc


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Fred

Senior Member
Oct 2, 2003
41,113
I think you're not giving the coach enough credit here.

You don't honestly think that when things are going good or great it's due to the players being good but when things take a turn for the worse, it's the manager's fault? Because that is how you could interpret that post.
No, but sometimes you have reasonable minimum expectations you want fulfilled, and when the said manager fulfills those minimum expectations and nothing more, then i would say that manager has done nothing special.

Juve with the squad they had, the minimum expectation was for them to get a top four place. Ranieri did just that, i wouldn't say he did anything special at Juve.

Looks like you didn't really follow serie A back in those days. 7 top players left Juventus and they weren't replaced. Chiellini wasn't even rated as a good player, even among the Juve fans. It was in Ranieri's Juve where he made his name.
You don't need to follow the Serie A to know that 7 of Juves players left. But Juve had a really strong squad then, that even after those 7 players left, Juve still had a squad that was more than capable of getting a top four position. They did not need a Capello or a Ferguson to qualify for the CL with the squad they had at the time.

As for Chiellini, i don't agree with you. Chiellini was regarded as a promising fullback at the time. At least thats how i rated him. Injuries to Juve's Centerbacks and Criscito's poor form forced Ranieri to play him as an emergency fullback and he just excelled from there.

After the best players left us, we had 5 stars (all of them, except Buffon, in their 30s already) and a bunch of newbies, who were supposed to fight against Milan (who won the CL only 3-4 months earlier) a much stronger Inter and a very strong Roma (Roma had a better team than us back then).
DP was in his thirties, but he was still a top player and was still one of the best in the Serie A at the time. Trezeguet was still a deadly striker and one of the best in Europe at the time too. Camo was still performing and was also one of the best(actually the best) wingers in the Serie A at the time. Nedved while not being as good as the other three, still wasn't really past it yet. Almiron and Tiago both came to Juve after having really good seasons with their club, Buffon was still the best keeper in the world. Zanetti was still playing really well and there were voices calling for him to be recalled to the Italian NT.

Roma did not have a better squad than you, that it just taking it too far. Compare them player by player, you will find that only their fullbacks and De Rossi would have made that Juve squad. Nobody else would have. Was Taddei better than Camo, was Mancini better than Nedved? Was Totti better than DP? Was Vucinic better than Trez? Doni and Buffon? Mexes and Chiellini?

You guys had a good squad that was more than capable of being in the top four, i would say it would have been a disaster had you not qualified for the CL at that season. It would have needed a Ciro Ferrara not to qualify.



Our defense was consisted of Chiellini-Andrade-Criscito-Zebina, but due to Andrade's and Zebina's injuries and Criscito's poor showings, the defense was completely changed. Most of those guys played for the first time in their lives together. In midfield we had 2 newbies (Tiago, Almiron and then Nocerino).
It was a group of players who hardly even knew each other. We started with a big disadvantage compared to Roma, Milan and Inter, who on top of it, had a better team than us. 4th place was the best every single Juve fan expected. Actually, the 4th place was something we dreamed of and secretely hoped we can get.
Ranieri ended 3rd.

I don't know how, but for some reason we all expected that. Maybe because we were aware that we lacked quality compared to the top 3 teams and because it was a new team that still had to gel.


Second season. They played CL last year too.
But this achievement in the CL will cost a lot. Even though Prandelli has the 4th best team in the league (4th or 5th, depending how you rate Roma's squad. Imo, Fiorentina have the 4th best team in the league) his team is sharing the 10/11th place in serie A. Fiorentina have one of the deepest squads in the league and playing Wednesday/Sunday shouldn't be a problem for them. But it looks like someone isn't doing his job right, with the preparations or with the squad rotation.

It was an achievement. In both seasons Milan and Inter had a much better team than Juve and in the first season Roma too had a (much) better team. In his second season Ranieri had to do with 6-7 injuries per round on average.

I mean, most of these guys you mentioned were old. It's like saying that Ferguson will underachieve if he gets the third place in EPL with a squad consisted of Giggs, Scholes, Neville and van der Sar.
Prandelli is not doing a good job this season, that much is obvious to everyone i would imagine. But you are downplaying his achievment in his first few years at Fiorentina imo.
 

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
74,903
Exactly.



The problem with Italian coaches is that if the going gets tough, they do tend to revert back to their typical negative football. There are a few possible exceptions like Gasperini, but what's to say he wouldn't play a more closed down system at Juventus?

Ranieri never played that poor brand of football before he instituted it here, so there must have been something internal that made him choose it. Perhaps his interpretation of the squad. Looking at the group of players we have now, it's similar to that of 2007.

At Genoa, Gasperini has several good acting options for a club its size. But if he were to come to Juve he could very well choose a more conservative approach, or be forced to use it. That could be true with every Italian manager because that's really all they know.

So I'd rather play it safe, stay away from Italian managers at this time, and get someone like Benitez in there. As others have said, the league needs a change of style and so do we.
Interesting post, so you think that coaches feel limited by pressure put onto them by the club? So what about Ferrara, who came in and promised attacking football, bought a fantasista and changed to a 4-3-1-2 to accomodate him? We played some good stuff to start with, look at the games up until post-Genoa and the late Trez equaliser. Then teams sussed us out and saw we had a soft underbelly.

Alen, don't you think getting Capello back in and attempting to get the team back to the top level the good old fashioned way, THEN trying something a bit different afterwards is preferential? I just see too much risk factor with certain foreign coaches and their styles, call me paranoid, we seem to be going down that Inter 90's route.

On the topic of squad strength and achievement, even when Juve were winning the league most seasons under Capello and Lippi people always looked at the Milan and Inter squads and said they were better, in terms of depth, but we always made up for that with our superior 'Spirito Juve' and winning mentality. That has all but gone for now. Or perhaps it was the mythical 'Moggi system' :shifty:
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
115,984
Interesting post, so you think that coaches feel limited by pressure put onto them by the club? So what about Ferrara, who came in and promised attacking football, bought a fantasista and changed to a 4-3-1-2 to accomodate him? We played some good stuff to start with, look at the games up until post-Genoa and the late Trez equaliser. Then teams sussed us out and saw we had a soft underbelly.
That's what Ferrara "promised", but it was anything but attacking football. Either he started out with that philosophy at first and had to change it as the season went along, or else it was just a complete disaster that failed in epic proportion. I think it was a combination of both. That notion is confirmed in how Ciro immediately threw away the attacking 4-2-3-1 system with Seba that really looked good. He gave it up for more central midfielders instead of attacking players, relying only on Diego in midfield to provide the creativity.
 

Hust

Senior Member
Hustini
May 29, 2005
93,703
Why though did he ever change when Gio was playing so well, that's what I don't understand. What happened that would make him drop Gio and revert to another formation that was less effective and attractive.
 

Alen

Ѕenior Аdmin
Apr 2, 2007
53,922
I have been sacrificed for the greater good.

I'm not sure some Del Piero fans would understand the meaning of that, though.
Of course they won't.

A: I'm not sure if Muhammad was a messenger of God.
B: OMG OMG OMG , MUSLIM HATER!!!


Same shit here.
 

sateeh

Day Walker
Jul 28, 2003
8,020
My biggest criteria for a manager is someone who is willing to stay at least three years. We are in desperate need of consistency.
Personally, I'd rather have someone who knows more about football in general than one who is limited to Serie A. Gaining experience in other leagues adds to your overall view of the game and could shape your own tactical approach of the game for the better.

Looking at how the foreign-coached English teams have been better against the Italians over the years, one has to admit that such tactics could work in Serie A.
Just about bringing in someone fresh, a big thing we need to consider is how the manager will fit in the with culture of the club and how much he could deal with the culture in Italy.

I guess that is one of the reasons that tips someone like Benitez over Blanc (on plain view I guess, it will need more analysis) but dealing with the Italian media, fans other teams' managers presidents etc. It is completely different than anywhere else. Even someone like Mourinho is struggling. So its important to have someone who knows when to attack or be more diplomatic and its harder than it looks.

The other is that I want someone who could bring back our never die mentality and attitude on the pitch. Someone who is aligned with the mentality of old.
Some might say that we're disrespecting or underestimating the Italian coaches, but at least I am not doing that.
Others will use Mancini, Capello and Ancelotti to prove how the Italians are still coaching top foreign teams and they're being respected in Europe.

No doubt that Italy has great football culture and great coaches. But isn't it obvious that these coaches can't offer anything new and can't improve or change the Italian football?

In England you have different styles. French coaches, British coaches, Spanish coaches, Italian coaches etc. All of them give their knowledge to the players. Styles are being mixed, players learn from different coaches who come from different football schools. They take the best out of every football school and you get a mixture, a winning one.
In Italy nothing has been changed for decades now. Italy needs something new to shake them up, to wake them up from this lethargy.

I rate Capello higher than both Benitez and Blanc. On top of it, Capello is one of my all time favorite coaches. But i'm willing to sacrifice getting Cap, just so we can get something new, something unseen here, but proven elsewhere. It might be a costly experiment, a risk that the foreign coach won't be able to handle Italy. But it's a risk i'm willing to take.
Mourinho and Leonardo are leading the #1 and #2 teams in serie A.
There are a few progressive coaches in Serie A. You mentioned Prandelli before but I think Mazzarri proved year after year that he is one of them and Allegri is getting there.

Something new is good and refreshing. Domenech's name before has prompted this response. Getting someone from outside has a great deal of risk and if we don't get the right one than we will be going in the wrong direction in no time because we will have someone who doesn't understand how to deal with Serie A or the team. And that will affect results everywhere.

Lets see if they could find the proven, yet committed name we need.
 

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
74,903
I have been sacrificed for the greater good.

I'm not sure some Del Piero fans would understand the meaning of that, though.
I'm not sure why they wouldn't? It's a double edged sword with Del Piero and has been for years, he has often proven himself worthy of the call though.
 

cimenk

Senior Member
Jul 23, 2008
3,129
Blanc is my pick, I like Benitez, or Pellegrini too if Pool and RM really sack them. Rijkaard will be my pick out of the list. And Allegri will be my pick if our board insist on Italian coach
 

pitbull

Senior Member
Jul 26, 2007
11,045
You can't be that dumb, in last 5 years he achieved one CL final (I'm talking about 2007, you probably could notice that if you tried to actually read not blabber off topic all the time) and was close to winning league with Pool last season. Now would you be satisfied and call it a great achievement if you were Liverpool fan? In Italy he would be sacked in summer of 2008 if not faster.

Domenech reached the final in 2006, do you want him too? I believe a final in WC (and almost a victory) is even bigger achievement than 2 CL finals in 6 years and one worthy trophy.
 
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