out now?


  • Total voters
    166
  • Poll closed .

Hust

Senior Member
Hustini
May 29, 2005
93,703
Allegri Recap #InterJuve
- The fans came to support us
- No fights in lockeroom
- Play with courage v Inter
- Team has worked well
- Dybala has a month to make a big contribution
- De Sciglio, Sturaro out
- Time to stay quiet and work
- Mandzukic will play
- Chiellini season over
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,773
Allegri Recap #InterJuve
- The fans came to support us
- No fights in lockeroom
- Play with courage v Inter
- Team has worked well
- Dybala has a month to make a big contribution
- De Sciglio, Sturaro out
- Time to stay quiet and work
- Mandzukic will play
- Chiellini season over
Probably meaning to claim his spot for the world cup.

Re Inzaghi. If we do sign him, we can expect to be further away from CL glory for a few years again imo. Experience truly counts in this competition
 

Adrian

Senior Member
Jan 31, 2003
6,872
Allegri may male it easy gor the club to move him on. 352 no costa or dybala...results are needed and pressure is bigger now than ever before.

Bring in inzaghi, assure dybala he is needed, clean out the washed up players, plug the gaps in midfield, keep sandro buy a RB and fucking start playing some exciting football and rule europe again enough of this bullshit!
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,773
Allegri may male it easy gor the club to move him on. 352 no costa or dybala...results are needed and pressure is bigger now than ever before.

Bring in inzaghi, assure dybala he is needed, clean out the washed up players, plug the gaps in midfield, keep sandro buy a RB and fucking start playing some exciting football and rule europe again enough of this bullshit!
No matter who comes here, unless it's the likes of Pep or Klopp, we won't play "exciting football". The standard at Juve is always results first, and the Scudetto is the primary objective. Coaches will have to conform, and results will trump style.

Theoretically you can have both, but in Italy being pragmatic and conservative gets you results.

Also not sure what makes you think Inzaghi has what it takes to rule Europe. I mean, he didn't exactly manage the EL quarter final very well
 

Hust

Senior Member
Hustini
May 29, 2005
93,703
——————

'Juve need three things at Inter’ | Football Italia

Max Allegri has outlined the three 'C’s Juventus need against Inter on Saturday – courage, chutzpah and carefreeness.

Juve lost to Napoli in their last Serie A match, making Saturday’s trip to San Siro a must-win if they are to win a seventh-straight Scudetto.

“When I arrived, things were a bit worse compared to now,” the Coach said at a Press conference.

“The fans? They came to support us. We have a run-in, where everything’s still at stake.

“Dressing-room row? I’m sorry to hear these things, they’re without foundation and it puts everyone’s professionalism in question.

“We just have to let it go. We have five games that lead us to the end of the season.

“There are times of difficulty in a season, when things go less well for you. We didn’t go from being unbeatable to losers.

“Now we have Inter, at a wonderful stadium, against a team who have conceded only 23 goals.

“The title won’t be decided between tomorrow and Sunday. There’ll still be a long way to go.

“We must play with courage, chutzpah and carefreeness. These are beautiful moments to live through.

“We’ll have to be ready for every ball, in every 50-50. On Sunday, we suffered 18 fouls and committed nine. Against Inter, a tough performance is needed.

“What happened against Napoli? Let’s think about Inter. We’ve had some good games recently, except against Crotone and Napoli, which were two bad ones.

“We conceded a 90th-minute goal against Napoli, as did Real. We need to be more attentive. Talking is useless. Now we need to be quiet and work.

“There’s everything to play for in the title race. I hear Napoli are the favourites because they’ll win their next four games.

“We just have to take to the field and have good games, playing for our chances.”
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,773
Point is sometimes greatness is unexpected :D
That's what I'm saying: don't expect it :p

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Maybe give him an opportunity and see how he fares ?

I'd rather Inzaghi than some old outdated coach like Mancini and the likes should Allegri leave
Sure, try him. Just don't cry when he throws away a 2 goal first leg lead to Man U or something. It's just part of the learning curve
 

Xperd

Allegrophobic Infidel
Jun 1, 2012
35,070
That's what I'm saying: don't expect it :p

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Sure, try him. Just don't cry when he throws away a 2 goal first leg lead to Man U or something. It's just part of the learning curve
Ofcourse. He isn't going to bring immediate results here especially in Europe. That's a given.
 

pitbull

Senior Member
Jul 26, 2007
11,045
Probably meaning to claim his spot for the world cup.

Re Inzaghi. If we do sign him, we can expect to be further away from CL glory for a few years again imo. Experience truly counts in this competition
On one hand I agree, experience counts in CL. On the other, Barca is declining, Bayern will have a coach as inexperienced in Europe as anyone, the English are very inconsistent and PSG is a big question mark for everyone at this point. So there's only one clear contender next season in Real Madrid and a bunch of teams that might challenge, so I'd say it's not hopeless, although it is less likely than Juve winning CL last season or the one before that.
 

Negan

Junior Member
Apr 11, 2018
98
No matter who comes here, unless it's the likes of Pep or Klopp, we won't play "exciting football". The standard at Juve is always results first, and the Scudetto is the primary objective. Coaches will have to conform, and results will trump style.

Theoretically you can have both, but in Italy being pragmatic and conservative gets you results.

Also not sure what makes you think Inzaghi has what it takes to rule Europe. I mean, he didn't exactly manage the EL quarter final very well
I think slowly it is changing for Serie A, we have seen that it doesn't work in other countries and in European competitions anymore and it's only a matter of time before it happens in Serie A as well
 

Xperd

Allegrophobic Infidel
Jun 1, 2012
35,070
I think slowly it is changing for Serie A, we have seen that it doesn't work in other countries and in European competitions anymore and it's only a matter of time before it happens in Serie A as well
Italian teams are reinventing themselves. Atalanta, Lazio, Sampdoria etc all being managed by Italian coaches and all play an 'exciting' brand of football. Lazio and Atalanta in paeticular have been in their best phases in more than a decade , so the change in approach has helped the team results wise as well.
 

Negan

Junior Member
Apr 11, 2018
98
Italian teams are reinventing themselves. Atalanta, Lazio, Sampdoria etc all being managed by Italian coaches and all play an 'exciting' brand of football. Lazio and Atalanta in paeticular have been in their best phases in more than a decade , so the change in approach has helped the team results wise as well.
Yes no doubt it is changing at the moment we are still competitive and fighting but time is running out before out style no longer guarantees success in Italy, I think it's important that the next manager we pick be able to step away from the pragmatic football that we have seen at Juve and adapt to the new way of playing
 

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