Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,775
partly because of the new stadium will release funds, plus marotta seems adament that we will sign at least aquilani and probably quags too which can only mean that he knows there will be money in the summer, thats just my taking on it.
They surely would have taken the Quag and Aqua funds into account already and have it set aside for those players, so nothing would likely change there. Stadium revenue is earned over the course of the season, not in the summer.
 

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Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
69,007
I would be concerned that most of that 'pot of cash' is depending on Juve making the CL.

I don't know that the stadium will start generating cash that soon, but it is possible Juve will release cash in the expectation of what money the stadium will generate in the future.
not sure, apparently Andrea asked John for funds recently, no idea how true that is, or how it went.
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
69,007
They surely would have taken the Quag and Aqua funds into account already and have it set aside for those players, so nothing would likely change there. Stadium revenue is earned over the course of the season, not in the summer.
im not talking so much about the stadium revenue itself, im talking more about the money a company will pay us to sponsor their name on it.
 

Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
im not talking so much about the stadium revenue itself, im talking more about the money a company will pay us to sponsor their name on it.
I doubt Juve will see much of that cash in terms of fresh spending on players.

I reckon that money may well have been used to finance the building of the stadium, while still allowing Juve to spend a fair bit of cash on players.
 

Zlatan

Senior Member
Jun 9, 2003
23,049
I'm not aware that we've paid 18 Million for him. Sure you're not mixing January and June here?
Just because we're paying in installments does not mean we got him for free. You still have to pay the 18 mil. Thats how deals are done, rare are the deals when the money is all paid at once, only ManCity and Chelsea can maybe afford that. Other deals are usually done in installments as well.


15.5 mil and if we decide to purchase him, the 2.5 mil from Ariuado deal will be deducted.
So 13 mil is his price...

Actually, its 2,5 mil € for the loan + 15.5 mil € to buy him - 2.5 million for Ariaudo, so it evens out at 15.5 mil € + Ariaudo.
 

Trezegol17

Senior Member
Nov 1, 2006
9,131
:lol: We are talking about Amauri here, he's never been a goalbanger, He had great moment and an iron header, but that's a long time ago and i dont see his form ressurect at Parma.
 

WΏΏdy?

Senior Member
Dec 23, 2005
14,997
So, haters, he got rid of Amauri, what do you say now? :lol:
We are still paying his wages,its not different than lugi benching him for the rest of the season,so bravo marotta for paying amauri to suck for parma.

Yeah, if he gets his form back and scores some goals he might even rise his price for us to sell.
What form? He was never in world class form,ever.

But i agree with this point,if he manages a decent show we might gain a little from his sales,and by that time marotta will be hopefully sacked.
 
Jul 2, 2006
19,443
Milan & Inter Dealt Like Champions In The Transfer Market, Juventus Dealt Like Pretenders
While two of Italy's biggest club sought to fill gaps in their squad, another did their best to right off their Champions League hopes, as Goal.com's Kris Voakes explains.

There were some big winners and even bigger losers to be found across Europe in the January transfer window, and not just in relation to a certain €41 million striker with less top flight goals to his name than Amauri has scored for Juventus. The Bianconeri themselves may well have offloaded their misfiring forward, but that may well prove to be the single positive from what has been a disastrous month on and off the field for the one-time transfer kings.

With their bid for a return to the Champions League having been compromised by a return of only four points from five games so far in 2011, their dealings in the market have been even more shameful. With issues to resolve in both full-back slots, cover needed at centre-back, new life due on the left side of midfield and a proxy for Fabio Quagliarella required up front, it is arguable that the club has barely met any of the targets they were set a month ago.

This is Juventus Football Club everybody… Juventus Football Club. You know them, 27/29-time champions of Italy and winners of 51 major trophies in total. That Juventus. And they’ve managed to add in the past month a 33-year-old centre-forward who could hardly hit a barn door with a banjo these days, the reserve centre-back of a club struggling in the bottom half of the Bundesliga, and a striker who this weekend chalked up only his second ever 10-goal top flight return.

So where was the left winger? What about the chronic full-back problem? There wasn’t even any real intention ever expressed by the club to go out and fix these obvious issues. They will now have to make do with the right-footed trio of Simone Pepe, Jorge Martinez and Claudio Marchisio in a form of ballottaggio for the left midfield slot while at full-back they are stuck with Zdenek Grygera, Marco Motta, Hasan Salihamidzic, Fabio Grosso, Armand Traore and, once fit, Paolo De Ceglie, all of whom have struggled to various degrees when called upon this season.

Up top they have plugged the gap in terms of numbers at least by introducing Matri and Toni, but the Cagliari striker has cost them €2.5 million for a loan – yes, a loan! – and the former Italy front man has scored eight goals in two years. Matri may well prove to be a decent acquisition, but he hardly strikes as being the kind of player who will score the goals necessary to push Juve back into Champions League contention, especially when you consider five of his 11 goals this season have come against Bari, Brescia and Lecce, all of whom sit in the bottom four of Serie A right now.

Here in Lombardy, the twin forces of Milan and Inter have almost served as perfect examples as to the kind of January that the Old Lady could have had. With the Rossoneri needing experienced defensive cover, new legs at full-back and a rugged midfielder who can dictate the play, they promptly went out and acquired Nicola Legrottaglie, Didac Vila and Mark van Bommel. Add to the mix Urby Emanuelson and Antonio Cassano, and you’ve got a pretty convincing month’s business. Sure, there are question marks over the signing of Legrottaglie in particular, but if he plays five games in the remainder of the season and Milan win the title, he’ll have done his job.

Inter have also dealt well. They reinforced their numbers in defence and midfield with Andrea Ranocchia and Houssine Kharja respectively before moving quickly to secure highly-rated left back Yuto Nagatomo after the latest Davide Santon horror show against Palermo on Sunday. And of course, there was the signing of Giampaolo Pazzini to freshen things up in attack.

Which brings us back to Juve. For while it would have been a struggle to persuade Sampdoria president Riccardo Garrone to part with Pazzini given his falling out with former charge Giuseppe Marotta last summer, his resolve should at least have been tested with a big money bid. After all, Pazzini would have been perfect for the Old Lady given that Serie A rules forbade them from signing number one target Edin Dezko. Add to that their indifference to the potential signings of Nagatomo and, more glaringly, the virtual free agent Cassano, and one is left wondering exactly why Marotta and Luigi Del Neri sat and twiddled their thumbs for a month while near-perfect fits were allowed to move to rival clubs.

Juventus still talk the talk. They say they want Champions League football again. They reckon they want to be winning Scudetti once more in the coming years. But right now, they are not walking the walk. The club is being run with less direction and conviction than any other club in the top eight in Italy. Juventus Football Club will once again be missing from the Champions League in 2011-12, and the origins for that failure will be traced back to January 2011.
 

Neutrol

Anti-Moggi
May 24, 2009
2,673
We will get a discount on Quags im sure. Matri depends how well he will do.

We bought no fullbacks because we couldn't get rid of the ones we have in this window.

And that article is such a joke :lol: We spend like 3m we had in this window, and they compare us to melan or inter.
 

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