Rough translation:
"
The turn taken by this championship was at a certain point, for Juventus 8.0, like a long and never quite applauded lap of honor. Like Gelindo Bordin in Seoul, the team (led by Massimiliano Allegri) used the last five days a bit like the great marathon runner from Vicenza in the last 80 meters that afternoon of 2 October 1988: fatigue is measured, awareness is taken , the smile opens, the value of the stopwatch is deleted and thanks. Fatigue that for the Bianconeri is above all in the head after five years of unique method and eight of systematic successes on a national scale.
And when you win this way you don't even remember either the intermediate times or the exact distance from the pursuers. To revive and re-launch team sports allow something that at an individual level is enormously more complex: to change the method. This is exactly what the head of the club has decided, pace an Allegri that perhaps he had guessed but had not fully understood: from the official separation to the post-race of Marassi - in his last historian on the bench of the Vecchia Signora - the technician had to live with the long shadow of the whole successor.
It seems, moreover, that he too has (apparently) enjoyed assuming its name. In the course of winter he feared that the shoes could be given to him by Antonio Conte (well, something he had actually guessed), and then gradually convinced himself that the ghost could instead be that of Maurizio Sarri (veiledly cited in the joint conference with president Agnelli).
Honestly, I don't know what's worse for him on the card as an immediate effect. The accounts in the long run could give eternal reason to his work, to someone undervalued and to someone else overvalued, but that will be fixed in the right fees when the Juve team will not look anything like this Juve.
If Conte was a name that could irritate him conceptually, that of Sarri is a name that could demean him from football (keeping the conditional good). Because a Sarri experience attached to the Allegri experience would describe an absolute nemesis and a sharper judgment on the part of society with respect to what has been left to show. Not to mention the fans.
Obvious that Pep Guardiola would put everyone in agreement (we would be almost at the plebiscite, and in Juventus even to say it is worth the same given the intentions that leave in a corner the statements), with Jurgen Klopp the adrenaline would overcome the charm and the cheer would react almost at the levels above. And if with José Mourinho it would be a split like between Guelphs and Ghibellines, here is instead that Maurizio Sarri would frighten several of them.
Is he really Fabio Paratici's card? Does Fabio Paratici choose the next coach? But really, even chosen by others, would you deal with Fabio Paratici? It is not at all a question of how much Sarri is prepared or how true a coach he is. Because it is. The point is the Juventus's anxiety at the mere thought, already activated by the first total convergence of the big media on a single name. But every hour, in this race to the exact name, it's like a game. Stress, a lot of stress, and if you have won or lost you will only understand it in May 2020."