How Inter stole the Scudetto (10 Viewers)

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Alen

Ѕenior Аdmin
Apr 2, 2007
53,891
#3
I'll be honest with you, i never expected this question in this forum. :D


But yeah, when Juve were demoted to Serie B they took some 60 pts or so from our 2005/06 season account and they also took points from Milan. That way Inter were left with most points and they were given that scudetto.

As for the next years, you can't really say that Inter stole those scudetti but it's true that they had a much easier job, at least in season 2006/07 when Juve were in serie B while most of their rivals (Milan, Fiorentina etc) started with points deduction.
 

Azzurri7

Pinturicchio
Moderator
Dec 16, 2003
72,692
#4
I haven't followed the Serie A very close the last few years, and I keep reading about INter stealing a Scudetto or two or three or something over the last few years.

What is the story behind that? Does it have to do with the match fixing scandal?

Very simple, we won both Scud's seasons 04/05-05/06, on the pitch.

We were accused of the match fixing scandal, but no evidence or a single proof was shown to public fans, court or anything.

Inter celebrated their fake Scudetto of 05-06 saying they won it deservedly on the pitch and that the decision was fair when in-fact we won both matches vs them home and away.

We were sent to Serie B, Milan started with minus points, same with Lazio etc... that was the only way for them to win another Scudetto putting their direct rivals somewhere far.
 
OP
Vinny Del Pogba
Jul 10, 2006
6,753
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #5
    I'll be honest with you, i never expected this question in this forum. :D
    lol, I feel bad for asking.

    But yeah, when Juve were demoted to Serie B they took some 60 pts or so from our 2005/06 season account and they also took points from Milan. That way Inter were left with most points and they were given that scudetto.

    As for the next years, you can't really say that Inter stole those scudetti but it's true that they had a much easier job, at least in season 2006/07 when Juve were in serie B while most of their rivals (Milan, Fiorentina etc) started with points deduction.
    And when we went to Serie B we lost Cannavaro and Ibrahimovic?
     

    Alen

    Ѕenior Аdmin
    Apr 2, 2007
    53,891
    #7
    lol, I feel bad for asking.



    And when we went to Serie B we lost Cannavaro and Ibrahimovic?
    Yes, among other players. We were about to lose millions and millions of dollars and we had to compensate that somehow. Also, we couldn't afford paying the high wages of all our superstars. Plus, some of them, like Ibrahimovic, didn't even wanna think about playing in serie B and they wanted to leave.

    That summer we sold Cannavaro, Emerson, Ibrahimovic, Vieira, Zambrotta, Thuram and Mutu, but we kept legends like Del Piero, Nedved, Trezeguet, Buffon and Camoranesi.
     

    swag

    L'autista
    Administrator
    Sep 23, 2003
    84,749
    #18
    Here's my short-ish answer:

    Inter spent a lot of money and had no silverware for years to show for it. In Italian conspiracy theory style, they blamed a Juventus conspiracy for their ills -- since they were the reigning most successful team at the time.

    Inter, among other conspiracy theorists, turned to the courtrooms to overcome failures on the pitch. After a successive number of years of failure at that too, in 2006 a frustrated guy with some transcripts found by questionable means (wiretaps enabled by Inter board members, today deemed illegal by the Italian government) slaps it in the media through some backdoor attempt at justice.

    It got a lot of press, a lot of debate, and raised a lot of cries. Because the game did have shady dealings -- Italian influence style. And the game needed some tighter lines and rules to prevent abuses. Because without them, some teams, Juve's board included, thought the best defense from abuses was a good offense to prevent them. And that became ground zero for referee biases and influence.

    Inter got their wishes, as matters were settled behind closed doors within the Italian sporting league and yet Inter was somehow considered of pure and clean hands throughout. But oddly, nothing about the game was changed. No oversight board. No improved rules for eliminating conflicts of interest. The Prime Minister of Italy still owns a club and much of the media that funnels money into the league. So the perception of any clean-up was really just a one-time make-good action, then back to business as usual. Meanwhile, as for Serie A, Inter also poisoned the well in the process.
     
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