Serie A 2021-22 (23 Viewers)

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rainhard

Senior Member
May 5, 2004
3,917
Roma looks quite solid. Kinda weird seeing functional team after yesterdays match. They are not world beaters surely but there's no rush in their play, players know how and when to move. I think Abraham will turn out to be a very good signing for them. He's tall but also very fast and good in the air.

I don't even think they have better squad than we do but they play a lot better.
The coach effect :lol3: maybe, but what comes fast will not stay as long ........ Fuck this whatever :wine:

In my defense of Allegri, or maybe Roma players have more intelligent in tactical awareness than ours
Allegri will need some times to sort it out. My advice just use the system when we beat Atalanta at the pre season
Keep that in place, be simple, no weird experiments. Keep the form up and get results
Have a courage to play younger players (Fagioli) as a sub after we lead, integrate them with continously 30 mins of play

so when the times come they can be slot in right when there is a first teamer injured

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We will beat both Napoli & Milan.
There is a big difference between the hope and the reality
Hope sometimes can mislead you, but reality will not change and it comes to stay forever
 

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rainhard

Senior Member
May 5, 2004
3,917
Week 2 review (7 prediction spot on with 3 X)

Udinese vs Venezia (Udinese win by 1 goal) Udinese win 3-0 V
Hellas Verona vs Inter (Inter win by 2 goals or more) Inter 3-1 win V spot on
Lazio vs Spezia (Lazio win by 2 goals or more) 6-1 V spot on
Genoa vs Napoli (Napoli win by 1 goal) Napoli win 1-2 V spot on
Sassuolo vs Sampdoria (Draw) DRAW V spot on
AC Milan vs Cagliari (Milan to win by 1 or 2 goals and more) 4-1 Milan win spot on
Salernitana vs AS Roma (Roma to win by 1 or 2 goals) 0-4 Roma win spot on

Atalanta BC vs Bologna (Atalanta win by 2 goals or more) DRAW X
-> I watch this game, Atalanta did have so much shot but most of them off target, it is a bad day for them
Juventus vs Empoli (Juventus win by 2 goals or more) 0-1 X
-> What can I say more, awful performance from us, we need to rebound ASAP. How can we not win this one is pffftt
Fiorentina vs Torino (Draw) Fiorentina win 2-1 X, I did notice Fio will have a slight chance to win with small margin
 

ggnoree

Junior Member
Jul 24, 2009
369
Will SMS play his whole career for Lazio? Wonder why he extended with them the last time when there was big hype around him if I am not mistaken
 

GarfielD

Senior Member
May 21, 2009
12,798
So, what are the predictions after the first 2 games? Will we won the Scudetto this year? Who will be the surprise team? I am interested on the general opinion around here on Tuz.
 

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
72,296
So, what are the predictions after the first 2 games? Will we won the Scudetto this year? Who will be the surprise team? I am interested on the general opinion around here on Tuz.
In a nutshell we are getting relegated and the top 4 spots will be contested by the 4 teams who did best in the opening 2 games.

Saved you a lot of reading.
 

rainhard

Senior Member
May 5, 2004
3,917
Tonali scored a free kick goal. We should go for him when Brescia give Milan a discount
Young regista ? that is not our kind of transfer. Besides , he is a milanista. He push everything so he can go to Milan

We prefer Pjanic, so we can put the tagline NO PANIC, YES PJANIC. Allegri effect :lol3: > that's our boy
 

Siamak

╭∩╮( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)╭∩╮
Aug 13, 2013
15,013
So, what are the predictions after the first 2 games? Will we won the Scudetto this year? Who will be the surprise team? I am interested on the general opinion around here on Tuz.
Milan and Inter and Atalanta are serious contender for scudetto
 

pavluska

Senior Member
Apr 25, 2013
7,339
Don't know if it will last and end up them finishing top 4, but funny how finished Mou looks rejuvenated and at home in backwards Serial A/Italy

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In a nutshell we are getting relegated and the top 4 spots will be contested by the 4 teams who did best in the opening 2 games.

Saved you a lot of reading.
And Chiesa the only good player we have, everyone else should be sold. Dybala went from best player in Serial A to midtable EPL level overnight.
 
Last edited:
Jun 8, 2021
564
Don't know if it will last and end up them finishing top 4, but funny how finished Mou looks rejuvenated and at home in backwards Serial A/Italy

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And Chiesa the only good player we have, everyone else should be sold. Dybala went from best player in Serial A to midtable EPL level overnight.
We all know he really wasnt
 

Ronn

#TeamPestoFlies
May 3, 2012
19,566
So, what are the predictions after the first 2 games? Will we won the Scudetto this year? Who will be the surprise team? I am interested on the general opinion around here on Tuz.
Based on balance of the squads I predict we end up 3rd-6th.
 

s4tch

Senior Member
Mar 23, 2015
28,221
an other horncastle piece: https://theathletic.com/2797959/202...ving-rather-than-thriving-change-has-to-come/
didn't read yet, but he's usually quality

Without Ronaldo and Lukaku, Serie A is surviving rather than thriving. Change has to come

CRISTIANO-RONALDO-JUVENTUS-scaled-e1630330692582-1024x682.jpg

By James Horncastle Aug 31, 2021
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As Max Allegri walked down the tunnel at half-time on Saturday night, he perhaps didn’t expect to already hear whistles from the crowd at the Allianz Stadium.
It was the first time in nearly 18 months Juventus had played in front of their own supporters in Turin, and the first time anywhere since Wojciech Szczesny’s mistakes threw away a win in Udine last weekend and Cristiano Ronaldo told the club he was leaving and re-signed for Manchester United.
Losing at home to newly-promoted Empoli — who had never beaten them away, managing just one draw in 13 prior visits — brought back memories of one of the low points of last season, when Benevento came to town and upset the Old Lady.
In his post-match press conference, Allegri was asked if this is the weakest Juventus team he has coached. The others under him made history, always winning the league and making two Champions League finals, so standards are impeccably high.

“That’s not fair,” he replied. “It’s a Juventus team with top young players…” Matthijs de Ligt, Manuel Locatelli, Federico Chiesa, Weston McKennie, Dejan Kulusevski, Kaio Jorge and the returning Moise Kean. “As you know, young players don’t always have experience or the ability to manage some moments in games so gradually we need to strike a balance.”
Juventus’s defeat at the weekend cannot be blamed on Ronaldo’s sale.
By Christmas, the time in a season when Allegri tends to settle on a winning formula, we may even be talking about them being better off as a collective without him. They scored 86 league goals the season before signing the five-time Ballon d’Or winner in the summer of 2018 compared with 70, 76 and 77 in the Portugal forward’s three years at the club and while there is no Gonzalo Higuain to pick up the slack this time, Allegri will figure it out. The balance sheet can certainly breathe a sigh of relief now it has unburdened itself from shouldering the €86.1 million Ronaldo cost the club every year.
His tardy exit instead needs setting in a different context.
MAX-ALLEGRI-JUVENTUS-scaled-e1630330671244.jpg


Allegri’s return to Juventus has not been without problems (Photo: Giuseppe Cottini/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
It has been a glorious summer for Italy, with a quite unforgettable run of triumphs at Eurovision, the European Championship and at the Olympic Games. On the eve of the new season, La Gazzetta dello Sport described Serie A as the “League of Champions” and, it’s true, 22 of Roberto Mancini’s 26-man victorious Euros squad play at home. But then you reflect on the 2020-21 season’s awards Serie A announced in May which were due to be handed out to the players at the first home game of the campaign.
The MVP, Romelu Lukaku, is gone.
Best Striker, and top scorer, Ronaldo has followed.
Rodrigo De Paul, who perhaps should have been named Best Midfielder instead of Nicolo Barella, moved to Spanish champions Atletico Madrid from Udinese.
Best Defender winner Cristian Romero left Atalanta for Tottenham Hotspur after winning the Copa America with Argentina.
The Best Goalkeeper, and Euros player of the tournament, Milan’s Gianluigi Donnarumma, switched San Siro for Paris Saint-Germain, as did Inter’s Achraf Hakimi.
Astronomers reach for their telescopes to see the stars and football fans are no different. Glance at the Serie A sky just now and its biggest ones have been inked out.
“The league has been weakened,” one of the country’s most influential commentators, Lele Adani said, in conversation with former Italy internationals Christian Vieri and Antonio Cassano. “Then there’s Antonio Conte, the coach who won (the title last season at Inter) with a team that hadn’t won the league in 11 years, and the best young coach, Roberto De Zerbi, who isn’t around anymore (having left for Sassuolo for Ukraine’s Shakhtar Donetsk).”
The circumstances behind each of those departures are different, with Romero’s sale to Spurs feeling like an outlier.
Atalanta, who turned a €51.7 million profit during the pandemic, flipped a player they were buying for €16 million for a €55 million fee one year after taking him on an initial loan from Juventus — where they have found his replacement, Merih Demiral, on a rental with a €30 million option to buy. One experienced recruitment figure described that deal to The Athletic as a “masterclass” by the best-run club in the country. Pandemic or not, Atalanta would shake hands on that deal.
The rest are a consequence of COVID-19 and Serie A’s structural deficiencies, which left the league exposed in a buyer’s market to the might of the Premier League and state-wealth clubs. PSG trumped the pay-rise Milan offered Donnarumma by doubling his salary from €6 million to €12 million a year, despite having Keylor Navas on their books. Four games into the new Ligue 1 season, Donnarumma has not played a single minute with Navas still first choice.
Signing Ronaldo was supposed to bridge the revenue gap between Juventus and their peers in Europe but the pandemic threw a spanner in those works. Inter’s benefactors could not sustain the aggressive spending of the last five years with Suning’s core business hurting in China and painful sacrifices had to be made in the transfer market.
The rest of the league, with few exceptions, was already suffering before the pandemic; too dependent on shrinking TV money and player trading — the money for which has dried up lower down the table.
New Torino coach Ivan Juric, who is beginning to make Conte look shy and retiring, attacked his own bosses last week over a lack of business this summer.
“My club has gone down the path of austerity, cutting costs in every way, irrespective of its impact on a team that has gone into the final game of the season two years running fighting for its top-flight survival,” he complained. “That’s fine because the club has lost a lot of money in recent years. The only problem is me and my staff weren’t aware of this austerity policy, of cutting back everything, so I’m a bit surprised. But it’s justified, because the club has lost money because of (bad) results, COVID and bad signings.”
conte-lukaku.jpg


Lukaku and coach Conte, right, both left champions Inter Milan in the summer (Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images)
Top clubs who might have raised cash in the past by selling a string of fringe players to the likes of Torino have had to instead reluctantly accept offers for their leading men.
Outside the European places, only the foreign-backed teams are pumping money in, with Fiorentina investing €23 million in Nico Gonzalez and bucking the trend elsewhere by declaring Dusan Vlahovic unsellable even when Atletico Madrid were willing to pay €70 million for the Serie A awards’ Best Under 23 player. Owner Rocco Commisso insists his club are an exception in a league where, according to a report in La Gazzetta dello Sport, the level of net debt has doubled over the last decade to €2.8 billion. “We bring cash,” he says proudly.
Wound up and forced to start at the bottom of the football pyramid while still in negotiations with the taxman over late VAT payments, Chievo owner Luca Campedelli told La Repubblica: “Calcio lives on debt. But in the end, we’re the only ones who have been made to pay for it. Barcelona are a billion in debt. Inter won the league paying their wages late. I paid our players up until May, then in June all hell broke loose.”
It is frankly a surprise then that others have not gone the same way, particularly in light of the letter the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) sent the government last month, appealing for help. The FIGC’s president Gabriele Gravina made a series of requests, asking for tax bills to be spread out and paid in manageable instalments, easier access to credit, the lifting of the ban on sponsorship and ad revenue from betting companies and the reopening of stadiums at maximum capacity. Grounds are currently operating at half that and clubs dearly need to up their gate receipts.
The situation has refreshed memories of the €1.65 billion that private equity groups CVC, Advent and FSI were prepared to invest in 10 per cent of a new media company Serie A planned to set up to run the commercial side of the league’s business. The deal fell apart around the time of the Super League’s ill-fated launch this spring but resistance to it went beyond Juventus and Inter, with Lazio, Napoli, Atalanta, Fiorentina and Verona all making their dissenting voices heard. Resurrecting it will be a challenge for the league’s president Paolo Dal Pino, who also needs to help drive stadium reform.
Last year, Milan chief executive Ivan Gazidis spoke about the €70 million gulf in match-day revenue between his club and their peers across Europe. Without new grounds to generate that kind of money, Serie A won’t catch up and the lack of progress has driven owners including Jim Pallotta away and frustrated others, like Commisso.
One of Gazidis’s Milan predecessors, the legendary Adriano Galliani, who is now running second division Monza, recently highlighted how far the business of the Italian game has fallen behind.
“In my day, we would have definitely tried to sign Messi (for Milan),” he said. “We managed to hold onto Marco van Basten when Cruyff wanted him at Barcelona but at that time Italian clubs were the ones making the most money. Serie A was the destination in those days. Now I fear it’s somewhere players pass through. The TV rights are holding us back. We missed the boat because the foreign rights to English and Spanish football are sold more widely. Tonight I watched the (Monza-Cremonese) game with the Leeds owner and Leeds’ revenues are the same as Milan’s.”
Back to the pitch, and to Lele Adani’s point. The league’s star power has indeed waned. The faces of Serie A are now Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Jose Mourinho and the heroes of Italy’s European Championship-winning side. And yet you can argue the league’s competitive balance has not suffered in the wake of Lukaku and Ronaldo leaving.
Predictions of Inter’s demise were exaggerated with new coach Simone Inzaghi and his summer signings giving a couple of reassuringly dominant displays as Edin Dzeko, Hakan Calhanoglu and Joaquin Correa all hit the ground running.
Allegri’s return doesn’t appear to guarantee Juventus reclaiming their title either, although two games in August when the transfer window is still open is far too small a sample size on which to judge this team — especially when he made as bad a start (one point from three matches) in 2015 and still won the title by nine points.
Milan have a deeper, better squad than they did last season, Lazio seem to fit their new coach Maurizio Sarri like a glove and Mourinho is living up to the hype that greeted him on his appointment by Roma.
Encouragingly for Mancini as he prepares for the World Cup next year, Juventus have brought Kean back to Italy from Everton, Milan have signed Pietro Pellegri and committed to Sandro Tonali, whose first goal for the club was a carbon copy of Andrea Pirlo’s back in the day. Nicolo Zaniolo’s goal for Roma against Trabzonspor last week — his first in 13 months because of an ACL injury — is yet more proof that the generation coming through is very promising indeed.
New stars are emerging and you don’t have to look too hard to see them.
But Serie A is surviving rather than thriving at the moment and the €1.6 billion in losses it accumulated in the five years before the pandemic should have been warning enough.
A change has to come.
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
59,259
all the done deals in the transfer window this summer. Roma and Milan are among the highest spenders in Serie A with the Rossoneri who have invested more than €70m in new signings, including Olivier Giroud, Mike Maignan and Junior Messias who was signed on the deadline day.



ATALANTA
In
: Musso (G, Udinese), Giu. Pezzella (D, Parma), Lovato (D, Verona), Demiral (D, Juventus), Zappacosta (D, Chelsea), Koopmeiners (M, AZ Alkmaar)
Return from loan: Carnesecchi (G, Cremonese), (D, Spezia), Piccoli (S, Spezia)
Out: Caldara (D, Venezia), Radunovic (G, Cagliari), Gollini (G, Tottenham), Ruggeri (M, Salernitana), Romero (D, Tottenham). Kovalenko (M, Spezia), Sutalo (D, Verona), Lammers (S, Eintracht Frankfurt), Mallamo (D, Bari)
Coach: Gasperini

BOLOGNA
In
: Urbanski (M, Lechia Gdansk), Bonifazi (D, Udinese), Van Hooijdonk (S, NAC Breda), Bardi (G, Frosinone), Arnautovic (S, Shanghai SIPG), Theate (D, Oostende).
Return from loan: Corbo (D, Ascoli), Cangiano (M, Ascoli), Falcinelli (S, Red Star).
Out: Da Costa (G, out of contract), Danilo (D, out of contract), Palacio (S, out of contract), Antov (D, Cska Sofia), Faragò (D, Cagliari), Vergani (S, Inter), Ravaglia (G, Frosinone), Poli (M, Antalyaspor), Baldursson (M, Copenaghen), Juwara (S, Crotone).
Coach: Mihajlovic

CAGLIARI
In
: Strootman (M, Genoa), Radunovic (G, Atalanta), Altare (D, Olbia), Dalbert (D, Rennes), Grassi (M, Parma), Bellanova (D, Bordeaux), Keita Baldé (S, Monaco)
Return from loan: Faragò (D, Bologna), Pinna (D, Ascoli), Oliva (M, Valencia), Caligara (M, Ascoli), Ladinetti (M, Olbia), Ceter (S, Pescara), Farias (S, Spezia).
Out: Klavan (D, Paide Linnameeskond), Calabresi (D, Bologna), Asamoah (D, out of contract), Rugani (D, Juventus), Duncan (M, Fiorentina), Nainggolan (M, Inter), Sottil (S, Fiorentina), Tramoni (S, Brescia), Vicario (G, Empoli), Bradaric (M, Al Ahly), Juwara (S, Crotone), Tripaldelli (D, Spal), Cerri (S, Como), Simeone (S, Verona)
Coach: Semplici

EMPOLI
In
: Vicario (G, Cagliari), Stojanovic (D, Dinamo Zagreb), Marchizza (D, Spezia), Ismajli (D, Spezia), Henderson (M, Lecce), Luperto (D, Napoli), Cutrone (S, Wolverhampton), Pinamonti (S, Inter), Tonelli (D, Sampdoria), Di Francesco (S, Spal), Ujkani (G, Torino).
Return from loan: –
Out: Fiamozzi (D, Lecce), Terzic (D, Fiorentina), Casale (D, Verona), Cambiaso (D, Genoa), Olivieri (S, Juventus), Matos (S, Udinese), Sabelli (D, Genoa), Nikolaou (D, Spezia), Moreo (S, Brescia), Canestrelli (D, Crotone), Crociata (M, SPAL), Pirrello (D, Cosenza), Brignoli (G, Panathinaikos)
Coach: Andreazzoli

FIORENTINA
In
: Nico Gonzalez (S, Stuttgart), Maleh (M, Venezia), Nastasic (D, Schalke 04), Torreira (M, Arsenal), Odriozola (D, Real Madrid).
Return from loan: Terzic (D, Empoli), Benassi (M, Verona), Duncan (M, Cagliari), Saponara (M, Spezia), Sottil (S, Cagliari).
Out: Eysseric (M, Kasimpasa), Maxi Olivera (D, out of contract), Borja Valero (M, retired), Ribery (S, out of contract), Caceres (D, out of contract), Barreca (D, Monaco), Malcuit (D, Napoli), Pezzella (D, Betis), Kouame (S, Anderlecht), Montiel (S, Siena), Ranieri (D, Salernitana)
Coach: Italiano

GENOA
In
: Buksa (A, Wisla Krakow), Andrenacci (G, Brescia), Sabelli (D, Empoli), Vanheusden (D, Standard Liege), Sirigu (G, Torino), Hernani (M, Parma), Ekuban (S, Trabzonspor), Semper (G, Chievo), Vazquez (D, Pumas), Touré (D, Nantes), Caicedo (S, Lazio), Maksimovic (D, Napoli), Fares (M, Lazio)
Return from loan: Vodisek (G, Triglav), Bani (D, Parma), Njie (D, Skenderbeu), Cambiaso (D, Empoli), Sturaro (M, Verona)
Out: Perin (G, Juventus), Pellegrini (D, Juventus), Goldaniga (D, Sassuolo), Onguené (D, Salzburg), Zapata (D, out of contract), Zappacosta (D, Chelsea), Strootman (M, Cagliari), Zajc (M, Fenerbahce), Scamacca (S, Sassuolo), Paleari (G, Benevento), Pjaca (S, Torino), Shomurodov (S, Roma), Czyborra (D, Arminia Bielefeld), Agudelo (M, Spezia), Oddei (S, Crotone)
Coach: Ballardini

INTER
In
: Calhanoglu (M, Milan), Cordaz (G, Crotone), Dzeko (S, Roma), Dumfries (D, PSV Eindhoven), Correa (S, Lazio)
Return from loan: Brazao (G, Oviedo), Dimarco (D, Verona), Vagiannidis (D, Sint-Truiden), Salcedo (S, Verona), Colidio (S, Sint-Truiden),
Out: Padelli (G, Udinese), Young (D, Aston Villa), Hakimi (D, PSG), Lukaku (S, Chelsea), Pinamonti (S, Empoli), Lazaro (M, Benfica), Joao Mario (M, out of contract), Agoume (M, Brest), Vergani (S, Salernitana)
Coach: Simone Inzaghi

JUVENTUS
In
: Kaio Jorge (S, Santos), Locatelli (M, Sassuolo), Kean (S, Everton)
Return from loan: Perin (G, Genoa), De Sciglio (D, Lyon), Rugani (D, Cagliari), Pellegrini (D, Genoa)
Out: Buffon (G, out of contract), Frabotta (D, Verona), Demiral (D, Atalanta), Cristiano Ronaldo (S, Manchester United), Ranocchia (M, Vicenza), Dragusin (D, Samp), Fagioli (M, Cremonese), Delli Carri (D, Salernitana)
Coach: Allegri

LAZIO
In
: Kamenovic (D, Cukaricki), Hysaj (D, Napoli), Felipe Anderson (S, West Ham), Pedro (S, Roma), Romero (M, Mallorca), Basic (M,Bordeaux), Zaccagni (M, Verona)
Return from loan: Adamonis (G, Salernitana), Vavro (D, Huesca), Durmisi (D, Salernitana), Lukaku (D, Anversa), Jorge Silva (D, Boavista), Dziczek (M, Salernitana), Maistro (M, Pescara), Jony (M, Osasuna), Lombardi (S, Salernitana), Gondo (S, Salernitana).
Out: Minala (M, out of contract), Lulic (M, out of contract), Parolo (M, out of contract), Hoedt (D, Southampton), Pereira (M, Manchester United), Armini (D, Piacenza), Correa (S, Inter), Musaccchio (D, out of contract), D. Anderson (M, Cosenza), Caicedo (S, Genoa), Fares (M, Genoa), Casasola (D, Frosinone), Cicirelli (M, Frosinone)
Coach: Sarri

MILAN
In
: Maignan (G, Lille), Giroud (S, Chelsea), Ballo-Touré (D, Monaco), Florenzi (D, Roma), Pellegri (S, Monaco), Bakayoko (M, Chelsea), Messias (S, Crotone), Adli (M, Bordeaux, returns on loan to his club)
Return from loan: Plizzari (G, Reggina), Conti (D, Parma)
Out: Mandzukic (A, out of contract), G. Donnarumma (G, out of contract), A. Donnarumma (G, out of contract), Calhanoglu (M, out of contract), Meité (M, Benfica), Dalot (D, Manchester United), Hauge (S, Eintracht Frankfurt).
Coach: Pioli

NAPOLI
In
: Juan Jesus (D, Roma), Marfella (G, Bari), Anguissa (M, Fulham).
Return from loan: Malcuit (D, Fiorentina), Ounas (S, Crotone).
Out: Hysaj (D, Lazio), Maksimovic (D, Genoa), Bakayoko (M, Chelsea), Ciciretti (S, Pordenone), Tutino (S, Parma), Luperto (D, Empoli), Bakayoko (M, Chelsea), Contini (G, Crotone), Gaetano (M, Cremonese), Palmiero (M, Cosenza)
Coach: Spalletti

ROMA
In
: Rui Patricio (G, Wolverhampton), Shomurodov (S, Genoa), Matias Viña (D, Palmeiras), Abraham (S, Chelsea).
Return from loan: Olsen (G, Everton), Bouah (D, Cosenza), Nzonzi (M, Rennes), Riccardi (M, Pescara).
Out: Mirante (G, out of contract), Farelli (G, out of contract), Juan Jesus (D, out of contract), Bruno Peres (D, out of contract), Pau Lopez (G, Marseille), Under (M, Marseille), Dzeko (S, Inter), Pedro (S, Lazio), Pastore (M, out of contract)
Coach: Mourinho

SALERNITANA
In
: Zortea (D, Atalanta), Strandberg (D, free agent), Obi (M, Chievo), Ruggeri (M, Atalanta), Kechrida (D, Etoile Sportive du Sahel), Lassana Coulibaly (M, Angers), Bonazzoli (S, Torino), Fiorillo (G, Pescara), Kastanos (M, Frosinone), Simy (S, Crotone), Delli Carri (D, Juventus), Gagliolo (D, Parma)
Return from loan: –
Out: Adamonis (G, Lazio), Bogdan (D, Livorno), Casasola (D, Lazio), Durmisi (D, Lazio), Dziczek (M, Lazio), Kiyine (M, Venezia), Anderson (M, Lazio), Lombardi (S, Lazio), Cicerelli (S, Lazio), Gondo (S, Lazio), Antonucci (S, Cittadella), Tutino (S, Parma), Kupisz (M, Pordenone), Mantovani (D, Alessandria), Sy (D, Cosenza), Micai (G, Regggina), Kiyine (M, Venezia), Kristoffersen (S, Cosenza).
Coach: Castori

SAMPDORIA
In
: Ihattaren (S, PSV, Juve), Dragusin (D, Juve), Caputo (S, Sassuolo)
Return from loan: Falcone (G, Cosenza), Murillo (D, Celta Vigo), Depaoli (D, Benevento), Murru (D, Torino), Chabot (D, Spezia), Vieira (M, Verona), Ciervo (S, Roma)
Out: Ramirez (M, out of contract), Regini (D, out of contract), Letica (G, Bruges), Keita (S, Monaco), La Gumina (S, Como), Leris (M, Brescia), Jankto (M, Getafe), Tonelli (D, Empoli), Rocha (D, Internacional), Caprari (S, Verona)
Coach: D’Aversa

SASSUOLO
In
: Henrique (M, Gremio).
Return from loan: Goldaniga (D, Genoa), Meroni (D, Pisa), Ravanelli (D, Cremonese), Pinato (M, Cremonese), Frattesi (M, Monza), Scamacca (S, Genoa)
Out: Marlon (D, Shakhtar Donetsk) Turati (G, Reggina), Locatelli (M, Juve), Bourabia (M, Spezia), Haraslin (S, Sparta Praha), Caputo (S, Sampdoria), Brigonla (S, Benevento), Pierini (S, Cesena)
Coach: Dionisi

SPEZIA
In
: Hristov (D, Fiorentina), Zovko (G, free agent), Amian (D, Toulouse), Colley (S, Verona), Kovalenko (M, Atalanta), Nikolaou (D, Empoli), Mraz (M, Zaglebie Lubin), Sher (M, Hammarby), Antiste (S, Tolouse), Reca (D, Crotone), Sanca (Braga), Bourabia (M, Sassuolo), Manaj (S, Barcelona), Strelec (S, Slovan Bratislava), Agudelo (M, Genoa)
Return from loan: –
Out: Mattiello (D, Atalanta), Marchizza (D, Sassuolo), Chabot (D, Sampdoria), Dell’Orco (D, Sassuolo), M. Ricci (M, svincolato), Estevez (M, Estudiantes), Agoumé (M, Inter), Pobega (M, Milan), Saponara (M, Fiorentina), Farias (S, Cagliari), Piccoli (S, Atalanta), Galabinov (S, out of contract), Acampora (M, Benevento), Ismajli (D, Empoli), Capradossi (D, Spal), Terzi (D, Siena), Ramos (D, Penarol), Vignali (D, Como).
Coach: Thiago Motta

TORINO
In
: Berisha (G, Spal), Warming (S, Lyngby), Pjaca (S, Genoa), Pobega (M, Milan), Zima (D, Slavia Praha), Praet (M, Leicester), Brekalo (M, Wolfsburg)
Return from loan: Aina (D, Fulham), Djidji (D, Crotone), Segre (M, Spal), Edera (S, Reggina), Iago Falque (S, Benevento)
Out
: Nkoulou (D, out of contract), Ujkani (G, out of contract), Murru (D, Sampdoria), Bonazzoli (S, Sampdoria), Goyak (M, Dinamo Zagreb), Sirigu (P, Genoa), Lyanco (D, Southampton), Ferigra (D, Las Palmas), Segre (M, Perugia), Ujkani (G, Empoli), Millico (S, Cosenza)
Coach: Juric

UDINESE
In
: Padelli (G, Inter), Udogie (D, Verona), Silvestri (G, Verona), Samardzic (M, Lipsia), Perez (D, Atletico Madrid), Soppy (D, Rennes), Beto (S, Portimonense)
Return from loan: Teodorczyk (S, Charleroi)
Out: Prodl (D, out of contract), Ouwejan (D, Schalke), Bonifazi (D, Bologna), Musso (G, Atalanta), Gasparini (G, Legnago), De Paul (M, Atletico Madrid), Cristo Gonzalez (S, Valladolid), Palumbo (M, Juventus U23), Scuffet (G, Apoel Nicosia), Matos (S, Perugia).
Coach: Gotti

VENEZIA
In
: Sandberg (M, Nykopings), Pecile (M, Vancouver Whitecaps), Heymans (M, Waasland-Beveren), Schnegg (D, Lask), Peretz (M, Maccabi Tel Aviv), Ebuehi (D, Benfica), Tessmann (M, FC Dallas), Arvidsson (G, Helsbinborgs), Jonsson (S, Valur Reykjavik), Sigurdsson (M, Cska Mosca), Busio (M, Sporting Kansas City), Caldara (D, Atalanta), Okereke (S, Club Bruges), Henry (S, Leuven), Neri (G, Livorno), Kiyine (M, Salernitana), de Vries (M, Philadelphia), Ampadu (M, Chelsea), Haps (D, Feyenoord), Vergani (S, Salernitana)
Return from loan: Zigoni (S, Novara).
Out: Maleh (M, Fiorentina), Cremonesi (D, out of contract), Ricci (D, Parma), Marino (D, Carrarese), Ferrarini (D, Fiorentina), Esposito (S, Basel), Karlsson (S, Siena), Pomini (G, Spal), Di Mariano (S, Lecce), Taugourdeau(M,Vicenza)
Coach: Zanetti

VERONA
In
: Hongla (M, Anversa), Montipò (G, Benevento), Frabotta (D, Juventus), Sutalo (D, Atalanta), Simeone (S, Cagliari), Caprari (S, Sampdoria)
Return from loan: Casale (D, Empoli), Ragusa (M, Brescia),
Out: Badu (M, retired), Dimarco (D, Inter), Benassi (M, Fiorentina), Sturaro (M, Genoa), Vieira (M, Sampdoria), Colley (S, Spezia), Salcedo (S, Inter), Favilli (S, Monza), Udogie (D, Udinese), Laribi (M, Reggina), Silvestri (G, Udinese), Lovato (D, Atalanta), Amione (D, Reggina), Zaccagni (M, Lazio)
Coach: Di Francesco
 

JCK

Biased
JCK
May 11, 2004
123,476
The league has three coaches who have won the league previously, Mourinho, Allegri and Sarri. When was the last time there were three previous winner (or more) coaching different teams? @Alen
 
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