out now?


  • Total voters
    166
  • Poll closed .

K.O.

Senior Member
Nov 24, 2005
13,883
Allegri is irreplaceable at the moment. The options available are clearly inferior. But Juve is Juve, a winning coaches factory like it always been.

If Max already decided to leave, from available Italians, I'd actually prefer to get Montella if he get sacked when Milan fail to reach Europe. The things he does with this subpar Milan are special. Also, he showed that he has the class necessary for the Juve bench. Spalletti teams have exceptionally showed weak mentality over the years. Sarri is too fiery and has been showing some low-class behavior as of late.

1- Keeping Allegri
...
2- Montella
3- Sarri
4- Spalletti
 

spurdo

Senior Member
Jun 4, 2016
1,917
In terms of mentality and tactics Simeone or Sampaoli would be ideal, but both are essentially impossible. I am certain the management has already found a suitable manager if it has been decided already that Allegri leaves, and I'm certain it's gonna be an Italian like Di Francesco or Spaletti, whether we like it or not. Too many rumours around for there not to be a small truth behind it.
 

IlCapitano

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2012
5,614

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
74,973
I think Allegri is the perfect coach for this Juve in the stage we are in. Is he going to get a better chance at the CL with other teams he is linked to? Doesn't look like it. The French and the quasi-French can't get past the RO16.
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,773
Damn, Max schooled those clowns

--

Max Allegri shared his frustrating comments on the controversy surrounding Juventus in the media in recent weeks.


“I won’t talk about the dressing room, because I haven’t seen it, I can only give my reaction, and I think that will take a bit of time and we should talk about it in another setting. I think Italian football must go down a completely different path, because we’re definitely not setting a good example. Above all I think there are rules in life and it takes education and respect. Especially for children in football academies, who see certain things on Serie A pitches from an early age. It’s not what happened on Friday, Friday is the latest in a long list of things which have happened.”


Max was adamantly harsh on the media and fans and criticized the “Italian way” of doing things and the nature of the media to create controversy with Juve whenever they win.


“In life you have to do, not talk, you need to have respect, rules and education. Then you need to have the culture of winning and losing, but this is a topic that I can’t address properly in two minutes. I have my ideas, but it’s difficult in Italy…In Italy we promise and say things, then do the opposite of what was said. If we want to be constructive, we have to be better at planning, in building things for the future. That’s my view. Friday was a beautiful game between two teams who fought hard, between the two sides the one which deserved to win was Juventus, then there was another team who are doing great things in the League and that’s Milan. The 17-20 points of difference are everything, these controversies which arose on Friday, as they have arisen in other situations, must in no way affect what the team is doing, what the lads are doing.”


Allegri talked about the hostile environment that is created around the officials when things don’t go a team’s way.


“As I’ve said before, we only remember the things which go against us. The things in our favour, never, and genuinely, certain statements make me smile, but not on Friday and also on other occasions. One week we attack a referee because he didn’t give a penalty, the next our referees are better than anyone’s. We’re on the edge of madness, lads, in Italy we’re on the edge of madness.”

http://www.around-j.com/allegri-italy-edge-disaster/
 

Hust

Senior Member
Hustini
May 29, 2005
93,703
At this point I can see Allegri leaving for a new league. Not because he "lost the dressing room" (which is fabricated) but because he is tired of everyone else taking pot shots and slinging mud on Juve. He probably feels he or the club simply are getting the respect they deserve and might say soon enough he is gonna take his talents elsewhere.
 

Wings

Banter era connoiseur
Contributor
Jul 15, 2002
21,621
Damn, Max schooled those clowns

--

Max Allegri shared his frustrating comments on the controversy surrounding Juventus in the media in recent weeks.


“I won’t talk about the dressing room, because I haven’t seen it, I can only give my reaction, and I think that will take a bit of time and we should talk about it in another setting. I think Italian football must go down a completely different path, because we’re definitely not setting a good example. Above all I think there are rules in life and it takes education and respect. Especially for children in football academies, who see certain things on Serie A pitches from an early age. It’s not what happened on Friday, Friday is the latest in a long list of things which have happened.”


Max was adamantly harsh on the media and fans and criticized the “Italian way” of doing things and the nature of the media to create controversy with Juve whenever they win.


“In life you have to do, not talk, you need to have respect, rules and education. Then you need to have the culture of winning and losing, but this is a topic that I can’t address properly in two minutes. I have my ideas, but it’s difficult in Italy…In Italy we promise and say things, then do the opposite of what was said. If we want to be constructive, we have to be better at planning, in building things for the future. That’s my view. Friday was a beautiful game between two teams who fought hard, between the two sides the one which deserved to win was Juventus, then there was another team who are doing great things in the League and that’s Milan. The 17-20 points of difference are everything, these controversies which arose on Friday, as they have arisen in other situations, must in no way affect what the team is doing, what the lads are doing.”


Allegri talked about the hostile environment that is created around the officials when things don’t go a team’s way.


“As I’ve said before, we only remember the things which go against us. The things in our favour, never, and genuinely, certain statements make me smile, but not on Friday and also on other occasions. One week we attack a referee because he didn’t give a penalty, the next our referees are better than anyone’s. We’re on the edge of madness, lads, in Italy we’re on the edge of madness.”

http://www.around-j.com/allegri-italy-edge-disaster/
Check the extended version on FI. What an interview!
“We’ve never fallen into the trap of controversy, because it’s a waste of energy. We need to keep working and get results.
 

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