Ranieri or someone else ; Part XXVII (32 Viewers)

New coach

  • Vialli

  • Spalletti

  • Prandelli

  • Mancini

  • Grant

  • Rijkaard

  • Conte

  • Gasperini

  • Malesani

  • Someone else. Who?

  • Keep the one we have

  • Andrew Beck (manager) and Michael Burke (assistant manager)


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cyril

Let's roll
Jul 6, 2006
2,689
Blog: Got lemons? Make lemonade

As the pressure builds on Claudio Ranieri, Scott Fleming argues his case given the resources at his disposal

Claudio Ranieri and Juventus never really seemed like the perfect fit. On the one hand there’s Ranieri, amiable and laid back, and on the other there’s Juventus, Italian football’s most successful team, a hard nosed, efficient unit with winning in their blood.

No disrespect to Ranieri, who had just reasserted his credentials by salvaging Parma from the drop, but it seemed a little like hiring a sitcom star to play a dramatic lead. The Tinkerman had already wilted under the pressure at Chelsea.

Nonetheless, as the Old Lady’s title dreams fade into a tussle for second place with the resurgent Milan, their last shot at silverware disappears with defeat home and away to Lazio in the Coppa Italia semi final, and the murmurs that have dogged Ranieri throughout his tenure build to a crescendo, I feel it is time to mount a defence of the man.

This is because I genuinely believe few could have done any better with the current Juve squad. Many are deceived by the smattering of stars in the Bianconeri squad, players like Alessandro Del Piero, Gigi Buffon, Pavel Nedved and David Trezeguet.

The reality is that this is a club, for all its pride and desire, that is still reeling from its spell in Serie B, with a squad full of players who belong there. The blame for this surely lies with the much maligned sporting director Alessio Secco.

To suggest that Ranieri didn’t have some input into transfers would be misguided and naïve, but ultimately the buck stops with Secco. His dealings have left Juventus with a squad no better than Roma’s or Fiorentina’s, and yet they are weighed down with a much greater expectation.

All things considered, not forgetting the mammoth injury crisis the side endured early on, what Ranieri has coaxed out of his players this season is respectable. For a squad so carelessly assembled and unbalanced to sustain a title challenge this long is impressive.

In addition Juve were easily the most impressive of Italy’s Champions League participants, topping a tough section, beating Real Madrid home and away and pushing Chelsea to the limit. If Phil Scolari had still been in charge it most probably would have ended differently.

The truth may be that Ranieri, as he did at Stamford Bridge, will eventually have to step aside for the club to reach a position worthy of its status. Hopefully he is remembered fondly, for injecting a bit of pride into a limited squad with the weight of the world on their shoulders
 

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v1rtu4l

Senior Member
Mar 4, 2008
6,349
You do have a point there.
but in order to get rid of those clowns you need a good coach.
you need a coach that will push the team he have to the max so the board of directors can look at the other elements that hold the club back, our great "trio".

you need a coach that has balls to say he isnt satisfied, that he is pissed, that our team is lacking quality. we need a coach that can say what we need. we need a coach period.
now just imagine ranieri :lol:
honestly first the coach will be fired before a board is fired (because the coach says so).

it is more probable, that you first need a decent board that will find a good coach, than the other way around
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
68,900
there was something ranieri said in a press conference yesturday about knowing what was wrong with Juve and he will discuss it to everyone come the end of the season, i couldn't help but think his expression and wording sounded like even he knew he was on borrowed time.
 

Tomice

Senior Member
Mar 25, 2009
3,024
honestly first the coach will be fired before a board is fired (because the coach says so).

it is more probable, that you first need a decent board that will find a good coach, than the other way around
Do you really belive a coach like lippi/cappello/mou/saf/ would be fired before secco? please.
how can someone fire our board when no one inside the system sees any thing wrong?
 

cyril

Let's roll
Jul 6, 2006
2,689
Guys if any of you has al jazeera and understands arabic, tune in to al jazeera +1. Altobelli just claimed that rainieri isn't at fault for juventus struggles but the directors of the club, he states that with this team ranieri has done as much as he could, according to him 60 percent of our team aren't worthy of being in a club like juventus. He also states, that lippi is pressuring the board to sack ranieri so they can appoint conte as our coach and then after the world cup lippi is planning on becoming club director.
 

Paid-off-Ref

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2004
4,102
“I was not disappointed by the performance against Lazio, as the team gave its all. We’re trying to do everything we can.”- Ranieri after the second leg on Channel 4

Seriously, does anyone think Ranieri doesn't quite understand the difference between Serie A and the little league? "There is no "I" in team" and "you did all you could" are phrases that are used to introduce sportmanship to children, not grown men who are expected to win.
 
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