However, this is not all, as the player’s lawyer seems determined to sue Juventus because they didn’t extend the striker’s expiring contract in 2021-22.
Dybala’s lawyer Luca Ferrari reportedly told Assistant Prosecutor Marco Gianoglio and Prosecutor Mario Bendoni on February 28 that the club and his client had agreed to a new contract ‘in every essential element’: a five-year contract worth €9.2m net, circa €17.4m before taxes.
Therefore, Dybala will not only sue Juventus for €3m if they don’t pay by April but will demand €50m more, which is the difference between the agreement he had reached with Juventus and the three-year contract he signed with Roma last summer.