Skip to main content

Juventus offers Italian football way forward

By Ravi Ubha, CNN
May 7, 2013 -- Updated 1418 GMT (2218 HKT)
Juventus supporters celebrate after Sunday's 1-0 win over Palermo gave their team a 29th Italian Serie A title. Juventus supporters celebrate after Sunday's 1-0 win over Palermo gave their team a 29th Italian Serie A title.
HIDE CAPTION
29th scudetto for Juve
29th scudetto for Juve
29th scudetto for Juve
29th scudetto for Juve
Treble for Ajax
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Juventus secure second successive Serie A title with 1-0 win over Palermo
  • Success was record 29th Italian title for Juve
  • Club stripped of 2005 and 2006 scudettos due to "Calciopoli" match-fixing scandal

(CNN) -- Amid all the talk of Germany's new-found domination of European football after the success of Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund in reaching the Champions League final, Juventus' achievement of winning the Italian title for a record-extending 29th time almost passed by without notice at the weekend.

It was Juve's second consecutive Serie A crown and provided further testimony to the impact coach Antonio Conte has had given he has only been in charge since mid-2011.

Like all successful coaches, Conte has already turned his thoughts to the future rather than the past as he called for renewed investment from the club to enable him to take the team forward.

"Conte the man definitely wants to stay at Juventus," he had said prior to Sunday's 1-0 win over Palermo, which confirmed Juve's title success.

"However there is also Antonio Conte the professional, who needs to sit down with the club. I've left big jobs before when I didn't believe in the club's plans."

Hargreaves: Scholes is the best
Friedel: 'Bale can be world's best'
Aston Villa or Sharon Stone?

Back in April, Antonio Conte had lamented his team's lack of spending power when the 'Old Lady' of Italian football lost to Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarterfinals.

"If you have money, you buy players and you win," said Conte after Juve's exit. "There are superpowers like Real, Bayern, Barcelona and PSG who have a turnover of $524 million."

But if Juve hasn't yet been able to replicate its prowess of the mid-1990s in Europe's top club competition following the match-fixing scandal of seven years ago, relief might be on the way.

If an Italian side is to break through in the Champions League, Juve, which appeared in three straight Champions League finals between 1996 and 1998, will be the most likely candidate, not a rebuilding AC Milan.

Read: 29 titles? It's 31, insists defiant Juventus

Unlike most other Italian teams, Juve's financial outlook isn't gloomy.

Long backed by car manufacturer Fiat and owning its own, newer stadium -- bucking the trend in Italy -- that replaced the eyesore of the Stadio Delle Alpi gives Juve a sizable head start.

The good times domestically could kick-start a run in Europe, according to an Italian football expert.

"They have can a massive advantage domestically, and I think in the long run, that's going to give them the ability to challenge in the Champions League," John Foot, author of Calcio: A History of Italian Football and a professor of modern Italian history at University College London, told CNN.

"I don't think they're that far away. They've done this thing which all the other Italian teams find very difficult to do or have the will to do, which is to move to the German model of having their own stadium, which is a cash cow.

"I think they're extremely well managed and the scandal is behind them," added Foot, referring to the "Calciopoli" match-fixing scandal which saw the club stripped of its 2005 and 2006 titles.

Read: For Italy's 'ultras,' nothing black and white about football and racism

Gullit: Mourinho will return to Chelsea
Marcel Desailly's Ghana regret
Didi Hamann on beating AC Milan

According to the 2013 version of the Deloitte Money League, a list of the highest earning clubs in football, Juve placed 10th with revenues of $256 million in 2011/2012.

Juve was the second-highest ranked Italian team, two spots behind AC Milan.

Television package

More encouragingly for Juve, though, was an increase of around $52 million from the previous term -- bettering Real Madrid, Barcelona and Manchester United, the top three clubs on the list.

And Juve did top Bayern Munich in one revenue stream -- broadcast revenues. Continual appearances in the Champions League, coupled with the new stadium, will only help matters.

Juve posted a profit of $14.8 million in the first half of 2012/2013, and although it said it expects the full-year figure to be in the red, losses are anticipated to be less than last season's $64 million and far less than 2010/2011's club record deficit of $124 million.

The Italian champions are said to be in discussions with Samsung, already a sponsor of the team, over naming rights to the stadium and a shirt sponsorship pact that could bring in $157 million.

But when Conte refers to Juve and other Italian teams lagging behind other football powerhouses, he is fully justified given Real Madrid's revenue figure of $672.6 million headed the Deloitte list.

Despite Manchester City being a relatively new player in world football, City's matchday revenues outdid those of Juve.

The Turin club's broadcast revenues were inferior to the likes of Manchester United, Manchester City, Arsenal and Chelsea, who benefit from the English Premier League's multi-billion pound television rights deal.

Serie A's overseas television rights deal, the Daily Mail reported last fall, was a mere one-sixth of the English Premier League.

Read: The horror of Heysel: Football's forgotten tragedy?

CNN Football Club: Bayern dominate Barca
Michael Owen's Liverpool regret?
Ferrer: Spain can win 2014 World Cup

Perhaps an indication of its lessening appeal, Serie A -- dissimilar to the English Premier League, La Liga and the Bundesliga -- doesn't have a jersey sponsor for its match officials.

"One of the problems of Serie A is that it's difficult to see it," Foot said. "There's not a package, which is worse than it was in the '90s."

Call for reform

Juve president Andrea Agnelli wants change in Italian football, and so too does retired AC Milan and Italy great Paolo Maldini, part of the Milan team that beat Conte and Juventus in all an-Italian Champions League final in 2003.

"If you go outside the San Siro you can see people selling fake merchandising," he told Reuters news agency in April.

"It was like that when I started to play and it is still like that now. You can't allow this. Then you have old stadiums, very old stadiums. San Siro is a historic stadium. It's nice but doesn't offer comfort ... we have to improve it.

"Above all we need to learn from leagues that make money from sports rather than lose money."

Conte echoed those thoughts after Juve's Champions League exit.

I think we need to change Italian football and when I say we I mean us, the other clubs, media, fans and institutions," he said.

"Abroad they invest money in projects, here we talk about referees and what cars the players are driving."

On the pitch Juve didn't do as well as last season, which was not a surprise since it finished unbeaten in Serie A in 2011/2012.

Yet the margin of victory was still impressive. Juve pulled away from Napoli and by the end of the weekend held a 11-point lead.

Without benefiting from the individual brilliance of a Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Robin van Persie or Luis Suarez, Juve relied on a balanced attack and various sources to hit the back of the net.

Creativity came from more than playmaker Andrea Pirlo, too. Before Sunday's win over Palermo, four Juve players had more assists than Pirlo.

Conte's team was marshalled at the back by three notable Italian internationals, keeper Gianluigi Buffon and central defenders Andrea Barzagli and Giorgio Chiellini.

A deal with Samsung would help Juve in its chase of summer targets and bolster its European prospects next season.

Alexis Sanchez of Barcelona, who hasn't shown his Udinese form in Spain, Paris Saint-Germain's Italian playmaker Marco Verratti, and talismanic striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic -- a former Juve players -- have all been linked with the Italian champions.

It all points to a promising period for Juve.

Maybe the glory days in Europe will return sooner than Conte anticipated.

"What Agnelli goes on about now is the system must be reformed," Foot said. "But he has done more than anyone else domestically, so I think Juventus are in a good position."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
CNN Football Club
Be part of CNN's coverage of European Champions League matches and join the social debate.
April 24, 2013 -- Updated 1434 GMT (2234 HKT)
Luis Suarez's biting of Branislav Ivanovic is the latest episode of moments of madness when soccer stars behave badly.
March 29, 2013 -- Updated 0938 GMT (1738 HKT)
Former South African president and Nobel peace prize laureate Nelson Mandela joins guests at his home in Cape Town, on August 20, 2008 to celebrate his 90th birthday year, at an event organised by the Mandela Rhodes Foundation (RODGER BOSCH
Sunderland's partnership with the Nelson Mandela Foundation is part of its bid to woo the African market.
March 28, 2013 -- Updated 1558 GMT (2358 HKT)
South African children play football in a township in Bloemfontein on June 21, 2010. South Africa will face France in their final Group A, 2010 World Cup, first round football match on June 22.
Each year as many as 700 Cameroonian young footballers leave Africa in search of a professional career abroad.
May 6, 2013 -- Updated 1201 GMT (2001 HKT)
Referees across Europe are feeling the heat. Insulted, threatened, chased off the field, attacked, hospitalized and, tragically, killed.
March 6, 2013 -- Updated 1345 GMT (2145 HKT)
A red card for Manchester United's Nani during Tuesday's loss to Real Madrid sparks huge social media reaction.
February 26, 2013 -- Updated 1225 GMT (2025 HKT)
A real human brain being displayed as part of new exhibition at the @Bristol attraction is seen on March 8, 2011 in Bristol, England. The Real Brain exhibit - which comes with full consent from a anonymous donor and needed full consent from the Human Tissue Authority - is suspended in large tank engraved with a full scale skeleton on one side and a diagram of the central nervous system on the other and is a key feature of the All About Us exhibition opening this week.
Footballers have a battery of physios, fitness trainers and doctors all striving to fine-tune their physique -- but are they missing a trick?
February 26, 2013 -- Updated 1424 GMT (2224 HKT)
No Englishman has won the EPL title in over 20 years, while a leading manager reveals that English coaches are now "not respected abroad."
February 21, 2013 -- Updated 1601 GMT (0001 HKT)
Football supporters demonstrate in front of Italian TV RAI after the match between A.C.Milan and Lazio Roma was cancelled 11 November 2007. The spectre of football violence resurged in Italy on Sunday as the shooting dead of a fan sparked nationwide disturbances which forced the suspension of several Serie A matches. Banner reads 'Racism can stop League but death of tifosi has no signification.
Hardcore Italian football "ultra" Federico is a Lazio supporter who happily admits directing monkey chants at black players.
March 5, 2013 -- Updated 1123 GMT (1923 HKT)
When Jupp Heynckes made his Bundesliga debut as a player in 1965, the name of Bayern Munich was a new one for the nascent German league.
February 19, 2013 -- Updated 1902 GMT (0302 HKT)
Football's world governing body FIFA has confirmed it will use goal-line technology at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
February 19, 2013 -- Updated 1403 GMT (2203 HKT)
Match-fixing has become a worldwide issue, with hundreds of matches under investigation -- but how do you actually fix a football game?
February 18, 2013 -- Updated 1700 GMT (0100 HKT)
U.S soccer star Robbie Rogers has "come out" as gay on the day he retired from the game, making the announcement on his blog.
February 11, 2013 -- Updated 2231 GMT (0631 HKT)
The wealth of owners like Chelsea's Roman Abramovich often fuels success, but for other clubs such backers prove a mixed blessing.
January 31, 2013 -- Updated 1740 GMT (0140 HKT)
Brand Beckham is moving from the "City of Angels" to the "City of Light" as the football icon signs a short-term deal and offers to give away his pay.
January 31, 2013 -- Updated 1247 GMT (2047 HKT)
Fireworks inside his own house, a car crash in his first week at Manchester City, that iconic t-shirt -- the EPL will miss Mario Balotelli.
January 30, 2013 -- Updated 1342 GMT (2142 HKT)
The Secret Footballer reveals the complex issues surrounding racism in the English Premier League.
January 30, 2013 -- Updated 1543 GMT (2343 HKT)
The death of 73 football fans in Port Said tragedy continues to haunt Egypt.
ADVERTISEMENT