This is a point partly about Juve, but it can also be said of very many teams around Europe:
Why do teams insist on always playing the ball out short a goal-kicks nowadays?
Once upon a time it was a fine tactic, but most decent teams now just use that as a way to press you very high up the pitch very early.
That press means that even though you have played the initial ball out short, there is every chance that you will very quickly be in a position where you need to kick the ball long - and because of the press, it is going to be a less controlled long ball than would have been played if the keeper had just kicked it up to the halfway line initially.
For a team like Juve, who have a decent physical presence among the forwards, when playing against a good team, I think they would be much better off taking an orthodox goal-kick i.e. long, aiming for a centre-forward and hoping that he will win the header or that one of the midfielders picks up the loose ball from the aerial challenge. The other main option for Juve playing long would be for Lichtsteiner to puch high up his wing and for him to try and win the header.
I understand teams like Barca who have no physical presence and, therefore, no chance of winning the long ball, needed to play short relentlessly, but that doesn't mean everyone else should.
Anyway, that's what was bouncing around my head last night watching Juve-Inter and watching Inter, in particular, get themselves in trouble trying to play out from the back.