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An English Speaking Voice from the Curva Scirea















He starts that job today when the club holds its CDA, where Beppe Marotta is widely expected to be unveiled as the new Sporting Director. He will certainly be busy over the next two months to get the squad to the level it needs to be aiming for, and there must be heavy traffic both in & out of the club.
The rumour mill has been working overtime in the past few months, alleged deadlines for Rafael Benitez to agree a deal have come & gone, Prandelli, Spalletti & now Del Neri have emerged as possible alternatives. The club's choice of new coach is vital, the new man has to be given at least two full seasons to embed the team with his style of play.
That direction will shape the moves in the transfer market, which needs to be tailored to fit the new coach's philosophy. It is no use continually signing players without some idea of the system & tactics they will be needed to fit into. This has happened too often under the previous regime & the squad now lacks balance.
Lets hope the new President inspires us with confidence today, by unveiling his plan, & if Marotta is revealed as his first appointment at least we can enter the summer knowing the days of ill-advised & poorly considered transfer campaigns are over.








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Oh, its a man...
The very mention of the name makes Juve fans remember the success that flowed under the stewardship of Gianni, Umberto & Edoardo. Now a fourth member of the "Royal Family" has taken control hopefully a third star won't be too far behind.
Hope you kept the receipt!
With a never ending stream of rumours linking players with moves to & from Juventus here is how the squad stands right now;
P: Buffon - Club legend, must stay Manninger - Solid backup, stays unless good offer comes in Chimenti - time to retire (a year too late!)


A list of 50 legends has been released, and each will be featured on a star around the stadium. Sports daily Tuttosport, based in Turin, understands that the names will be grouped in era's.
Juventus enter San Siro on Friday night with their season all but over. This time, unlike recent encounters, there is no title race to win for Juve, no chance of catching their most hated rivals.
Links to the identity of a new Juventus coach are now like vitamins to every fan, it doesn't matter where you look, what you read, the country you live in, you simply can't escape it. You wake up, there the latest. Usually its not a fresh idea, just a re-hashed one from another days old news. Yet you still have to take it. "One-A-Day"

I admired Ferrara from a distance as he won two scudetti and the UEFA Cup as part of the Napoli of Diego Maradona, holding both his style of play, and his will to win, in high regard. When Juventus signed him in 1994 it just felt right. The fact he is the only man Lippi brought with him from Naples speaks volumes.
When he retired from playing I felt the hole he left in our defence would be tough to fill. Lillian Thuram quickly changed that, but since he left for Barcelona, the right back slot became a problem for Juventus that remains to this day. Perhaps fitting, considering what has followed.
Over the 11 years Ferrara spent in Turin, Juventus slowly but surely replaced Napoli in his heart. He eventually played more games in his new home than he did under the shadow of Vesuvio. He was not born Bianconero, but he became one of us, by his own admission. Playing with that much passion and desire to succeed meant it could be no other way.
After Ranieri was fired last season with two games to spare, it was by channelling that same will and desire that ensured Juventus held on to second place under Ferrara's then-temporary charge. Then the current directors went to work.
They started of their summer by openly courting a number of managers to take permanent charge. Cesare Prandelli, Gianpiero Gaperini, and Antonio Conte all flirted with the club, before all three decided they were better off staying where they were.
Throughout it all, Ferrara did as he always had, acting with diplomacy, being a true gentleman, never once asking for anything. Only then, when all other avenues were seemingly exhausted, did the board turn to him as a full-time manager. Ciro Ferrara did what all Juventini would do at that point: He seized the offer with both hands and ran with it.
With no managerial experience whatsoever, the task was always beyond his capabilities at that time. But could any fan really turn down the opportunity to coach the club of his heart? After being a player is it not the dream job, the chance of a lifetime? Yes, he probably knew, deep down, that it was too soon, but love conquers all, right?
Another error by the men in charge—looking to experience failed, so they went for the cheap option. A no-lose situation when appointing a club legend as it ensures the fans get right behind the new man, restoring some faith in the tifosi hearts after it had been lost under Ranieri.
Then Ferrara started work making it "his" team. Out went the previous, safety-first 4-4-2 formation, replaced early in the summer with a three-man midfield, enabling marquee signing Diego to flourish. Taking his idea to the board, he told them his requirement for a deep-lying passer in midfield, a regista . They looked, making a very public bid for Udinese's Gaetano D'Agostino, which ultimately failed.
Felipe Melo was brought in, however, another destroyer to add to Christain Poulsen and Momo Sissoko. To make room for this expensive folly, Cristiano Zanetti was shipped to Fiorentina. This mistake was huge, as he was probably the only midfielder with the qualities required to make the new tactic work.
Defensive cover was also required, and the directors saw fit to hinder Ferrara even more by securing Fabio Cannavaro's return to the club. Clearly aging and fading, he was no upgrade on the Chiellini-Legrottaglie partnership of the previous season. To make room for these expensive additions, Marco Marchionni was also sacrificed. While not a great loss, this sale removed a safety net for Ferrara.
Without the winger, and with the retirement of Pavel Nedved, injuries to Mauro Camoranesi and Hasan Salihamidzic meant no wide players were available. This meant that the three-man-midfield would have to work, no matter the flaws. Despite all these handicaps, Ferrara and his team made their biggest mistake.
Unlike Milan, under fellow new manager Leo, Juventus got off to a great start. This raised fans' expectations to ridiculous heights, dreaming of both scudetto and Champions League success. When, after a few months, reality bit, there was only going to be one fall guy.
The horrendous injury list, the loss of form of the Brazilian players as the Turin winter set in, the loss of Sissoko to the Cup of Nations, the complete failure of Cannavaro. None of these are excuses for a club of this magnitude. All are reasons why Juve have struggled.
That is not to say Ferrara is blameless. His persistence with using Molinaro over De Ceglie. His reluctance to play Sebastian Giovinco. His blind assumption that Amauri and Diego would somehow rediscover their best form if they both played 90 minutes every game. His lack of faith early on in Martin Caceres. Yes, he made mistakes, what rookie doesn't?
What becomes all the more clear is that while he might never be the right man for the top job, he was exactly the kind of man the club needs as it attempts to move on from Calciopoli. Men who know the game, who love the club, who know how to win. The board rectified one similar mistake recently in bringing Roberto Bettega back to the club, it needs to act much quicker before it loses another in Ciro Ferrara.