Juventus v Parma: a look back (1 Viewer)

Marty

tuz
Administrator
Jul 2, 2005
16,967
#1

Twelve wins, 5 draws and 3 defeats: Juventus very much hold the upper hand in matches against Parma in Turin since the national league was formed in 1929/30.
Among those victories are a number of crushing scorelines that will long live in the memories of the Bianconeri faithful. Juve’s biggest-ever win margin against Parma (excluding the 6-0 in 1925/26, when the two sides competed in the Northern League) was the 5-0 drubbing dished out in 1991, an otherwise unforgettable year for Juventus. Julio Cesar (whose fellow countryman Taffarel was between the sticks) gave Juve a 1-0 half-time lead before the floodgates opened after the interval, Casiraghi, Marocchi and a brace by Roberto Baggio completing the rout.
Juventus put four past Parma at the tail-end of the 1993/94 season – a match of little importance for the league standings but a sign of things to come for Alessandro Del Piero. The top scorer in this fixture with ten goals to his name, Ale opened his account against the Emilians by bagging his first hat-trick in professional football at the age of 19. Fabrizio Ravanelli was also on the score sheet.
That landmark encounter was followed up a year later with another 4-0 victory, which coincided with Bianconeri jubilation for Scudetto number 23. Ravanelli put Juve in front with a long-range effort before a Baggio’s backheel set up Deschamps to double the lead. In the second half, Vialli made it three (celebrating with a certain Massimo Carrera on the touchline) and Ravanelli added a fourth to kick-start our first title party since 1986.
Another 4-0 win came on 14 December 2003. Fabrizio Miccoli set the team on their way with a well-taken first-half double, then Del Piero and Nedved put the game to bed with further goals after the break.
Juve's most recent four-goal haul came on 11 September 2011, an unforgettable date as it marked the first competitive fixture ever played at Juventus Stadium as well the start of our march to title number 30. Lichtsteiner latched onto Pirlo’s inch-perfect pass to slot home the first, and the visitors’ resistance was crushed after the break as Pepe rifled home at the end of a move begun by Del Piero and Vidal celebrated his Serie A debut with an acrobatic effort. A terrific performance capped off with a sublime fourth, Pirlo’s vision setting up Marchisio for the deftest of volleys. Giovinco scored a consolation goal from the spot for Parma deep into stoppage time.


Source: Juventus.com
 

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Elvin

Senior Member
Nov 25, 2005
36,873
#2
They should've mentioned the 2003 Supercoppa in Tripoli as well. But I guess this article refers to Serie A matches only.
 

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