Maurizio Sarri (79 Viewers)

tassard

Senior Member
Jul 30, 2004
6,842
I don't know what Juventus is anymore.

I've been following this club for more than 20 years. There were a lot of difficult moments along the way. I still remember the sleepless night after the game in Perugia and the picture of Collina throwing the ball down to the puddle. I remember 5 maggio 2002. I remember Serie B and years of turmoil after that.

Juventus identity adjusted to circumstances, like in 2006, but never profoundly changed at will.

Now it did. And I don't accept it. It's not for me.

I don't wish Sarri to fail at Juventus. I don't have reasons to. I just don't care.

Juventus used to be an interesting part of my life, and I appreciate it. But our roads diverged. The club moved on, so will I.

Thanks to everyone on Tuz I had a pleasure to have conversations with during this year. You're by far the best community I've seen on the Internet.

P.S. For those who already started typing something about "whining", "drama", or things like that - just don't. I'm not trying to convince you to change your opinion. I'm just explaining mine. You won't see my posts on Tuz anymore.

I agree on everything more than tou can imagine.

But you can still post here.Sometimes i thimk that this forum even if it is a Juve forum, is something completely different.
 

.zero

★ ★ ★
Aug 8, 2006
80,787
He has a point? What more could you demand? Winning PL with a Chelsea, when Liverpool and City are dominating?

You are crazy if you can't accept that his time in Napoli was very good. They played great football and made great results.

If Inter challenge us next year until the end, finishing second. I would say Conte made a good job if that happens, because nobody can demand that Inter should win the leauge, if they did Conte will become a legend coach in their club(sad but true). Just an example.

Winning counts, but you must look at the conditions of the club (economy, rivals, players)
Sarri boyz seem to be content with making excuses for not winning. Enjoy the downgrade
 

Mister

Senior Member
Apr 4, 2014
5,742
Juventus are ready to build their new foundations. After it was announced today that Maurizio Sarri is their new manager, the Bianconeri are ready to start working on the transfer market after having planned it for a while now (along with Sarri).

Sales

Sarri's tactical ideas will impose some forced decisions: Joao Cancelo is the first man that is closing in on a departure, not fitting into Sarri's game in the defensive phase. Talks have already advanced well with Man City, and a deal could soon materialize.

In addition to Cancelo, Mandzukic is evaluating his future despite the recent renewal, since Juventus are looking at other strikers. Douglas Costa will be evaluated directly by the coach before a decision is taken.

Sami Khedira is at great risk: Sarri will have Ramsey but also at least one other midfielder, he also wants to bet on Bentancur and Khedira's slow pace could take him away from Turin. Speaking of midfielders, Juan Cuadrado is also expected to leave, as Sarri doesn't rate him.

Last but not least, Mattia Perin could also be on the move. Sarri rarely switches between goalkeepers and thus the Italian could move on to a new adventure. Of course, a decision is yet to be taken though an exit is possible.

SigningsAt least one winger will soon arrive in Turin: Federico Chiesa is the chosen one. An agreement will have to be reached with Fiorentina, but the feeling is that Chiesa will push for a move. There will also be a new important striker, the Icardi idea remains the most intriguing yet not the only one, Paratici is at work in this aspect.

The real big shot will be in midfield: Paul Pogba is the main desire, Milinkovic-Savic the alternative but Juve have already promised Sarri a top player in the middle of the field. A right-back will also arrive to replace Cancelo, while in the centre of the defence a big signing shouldn't be ruled out.

Ideas and surprises

Surprises shouldn't be excluded as Juventus have moved quietly in the last few weeks. An example is Isco, one that Paratici likes, though Sarri's take will be decisive. The formation will also decide Paolo Dybala's future. With regards to Pjanic, Sarri will work to change his attitude towards staying at Juventus.

Another potential surprise leads to Nicolò Zaniolo: Roma don't want to sell, but contacts continue between Juve and the agents. In other words, a blitz shouldn't be excluded. Paratici is at work, and now Sarri is officially at the helm. The new Juve is being born, also on the market.

Fabrizio Romano
 

PhRoZeN

Livin with Mediocre
Mar 29, 2006
15,893
Back to reality!

Lmao@ momblano and those who were convinced this coach thread would have the peps name on it.

Anyway welcome sarri, wish you all the best. You got my backing 100%.

Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
 

kao_ray

Senior Member
Feb 28, 2014
6,567
Juventus are ready to build their new foundations. After it was announced today that Maurizio Sarri is their new manager, the Bianconeri are ready to start working on the transfer market after having planned it for a while now (along with Sarri).

Sales

Sarri's tactical ideas will impose some forced decisions: Joao Cancelo is the first man that is closing in on a departure, not fitting into Sarri's game in the defensive phase. Talks have already advanced well with Man City, and a deal could soon materialize.

In addition to Cancelo, Mandzukic is evaluating his future despite the recent renewal, since Juventus are looking at other strikers. Douglas Costa will be evaluated directly by the coach before a decision is taken.

Sami Khedira is at great risk: Sarri will have Ramsey but also at least one other midfielder, he also wants to bet on Bentancur and Khedira's slow pace could take him away from Turin. Speaking of midfielders, Juan Cuadrado is also expected to leave, as Sarri doesn't rate him.

Last but not least, Mattia Perin could also be on the move. Sarri rarely switches between goalkeepers and thus the Italian could move on to a new adventure. Of course, a decision is yet to be taken though an exit is possible.

SigningsAt least one winger will soon arrive in Turin: Federico Chiesa is the chosen one. An agreement will have to be reached with Fiorentina, but the feeling is that Chiesa will push for a move. There will also be a new important striker, the Icardi idea remains the most intriguing yet not the only one, Paratici is at work in this aspect.

The real big shot will be in midfield: Paul Pogba is the main desire, Milinkovic-Savic the alternative but Juve have already promised Sarri a top player in the middle of the field. A right-back will also arrive to replace Cancelo, while in the centre of the defence a big signing shouldn't be ruled out.

Ideas and surprises

Surprises shouldn't be excluded as Juventus have moved quietly in the last few weeks. An example is Isco, one that Paratici likes, though Sarri's take will be decisive. The formation will also decide Paolo Dybala's future. With regards to Pjanic, Sarri will work to change his attitude towards staying at Juventus.

Another potential surprise leads to Nicolò Zaniolo: Roma don't want to sell, but contacts continue between Juve and the agents. In other words, a blitz shouldn't be excluded. Paratici is at work, and now Sarri is officially at the helm. The new Juve is being born, also on the market.

Fabrizio Romano
Unformatted

Juventus are ready to build their new foundations. After it was announced today that Maurizio Sarri is their new manager, the Bianconeri are ready to start working on the transfer market after having planned it for a while now (along with Sarri).

Sales

Sarri's tactical ideas will impose some forced decisions: Joao Cancelo is the first man that is closing in on a departure, not fitting into Sarri's game in the defensive phase. Talks have already advanced well with Man City, and a deal could soon materialize.

In addition to Cancelo, Mandzukic is evaluating his future despite the recent renewal, since Juventus are looking at other strikers. Douglas Costa will be evaluated directly by the coach before a decision is taken.

Sami Khedira is at great risk: Sarri will have Ramsey but also at least one other midfielder, he also wants to bet on Bentancur and Khedira's slow pace could take him away from Turin. Speaking of midfielders, Juan Cuadrado is also expected to leave, as Sarri doesn't rate him.

Last but not least, Mattia Perin could also be on the move. Sarri rarely switches between goalkeepers and thus the Italian could move on to a new adventure. Of course, a decision is yet to be taken though an exit is possible.

SigningsAt least one winger will soon arrive in Turin: Federico Chiesa is the chosen one. An agreement will have to be reached with Fiorentina, but the feeling is that Chiesa will push for a move. There will also be a new important striker, the Icardi idea remains the most intriguing yet not the only one, Paratici is at work in this aspect.

The real big shot will be in midfield: Paul Pogba is the main desire, Milinkovic-Savic the alternative but Juve have already promised Sarri a top player in the middle of the field. A right-back will also arrive to replace Cancelo, while in the centre of the defence a big signing shouldn't be ruled out.

Ideas and surprises

Surprises shouldn't be excluded as Juventus have moved quietly in the last few weeks. An example is Isco, one that Paratici likes, though Sarri's take will be decisive. The formation will also decide Paolo Dybala's future. With regards to Pjanic, Sarri will work to change his attitude towards staying at Juventus.

Another potential surprise leads to Nicolò Zaniolo: Roma don't want to sell, but contacts continue between Juve and the agents. In other words, a blitz shouldn't be excluded. Paratici is at work, and now Sarri is officially at the helm. The new Juve is being born, also on the market.

Fabrizio Romano
 

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