With the extraordinary transfer market that Juve have
meticulously pulled off this summer, a lot of people are complaining about
Juventus. The typical childish taunts of cheating, doping, and more are being
hurled around ignorantly by rival fans. And the animosity grows toward a club
that has won five consecutive Scudetti, and now look completely unstoppable. Is
it fair? Your knee-jerk reaction is no. But when you look at what they have
overcome, how hard they have worked and suffered, it’s absolutely justified.
And instead of being jealous, rivals should be taking notes and doing their
best to narrow the gap. All of this hatred is really much ado about Juve.
Success risen from the ashes |
Ten years ago, Juventus were unfairly relegated to Serie B
in the Calciopoli
scandal. If you haven’t read the newer evidence and transcripts from
court hearings, you’ve missed the whole part where Inter miraculously managed
to have their own phone recordings overlooked and thus went unpunished in the
scandal which was absolutely aided if not orchestrated by them. Yet they took
down their biggest rival, then saw themselves awarded a Scudetto that was
rightfully Juventus’, punished many of their other rivals (including Milan,)
and basically crippled all of Serie A. Just like the infamous doping charges
from the 1990’s which were never proven to be true, Juventus was punished with
relegation despite never having been found guilty of violating Article 6, the
only charge that should have seen them relegated. (And don’t forget the
evidence showed that Milan and Inter should
have been relegated.) This fairy tale that they own the refs has more truth in
all of the other clubs involved with Calciopoli, including Milan, than it does
with Juve.
Meanwhile, Inter capitalized on the scandal, taking Ibra
from Juve as a direct result of the sentencing, amongst others, and in addition
to claiming their paper Scudetto, went on to “win” the treble just three short
years later. Try for a second to imagine what it would like to be Juventus,
falsely relegated, two titles stripped, and those filthy snakes boasting not
only that they’re now the only team that has never been relegated, but that
they had somehow managed to “win” the treble. What would you do? What would
Milan have done?
Andrea Agnelli of the legendary Agnelli family; Pavel Nedved, a club legend; and Giuseppe Marotta getting everything right |
Well, despite being unable to reverse the injustice of their own relegation,
not to mention the credibility of the whole league, Juventus pursued every
legal route to try to set the record straight as best as they could, and still
are, actually. But at the same time, they set a careful course for not just a
comeback, but success. Long-term success. It took time. It took patience. It took planning. It
took building a stadium, something that other clubs struggle to do. But today,
ten years after the injustice of Calciopoli, they stand ready to absolutely decimate
the league, the Coppa Italia, and also with their best chances in a long time
to win the Champions League, too.
If you tell me that you think that they
cheated, that this is not fair, or whatever, my opinion of you will plummet to Neanderthal
levels. So lose the childish taunting, this is real. They have suffered, been
wrongfully punished, struggled for years to get back to the top, and they have
done everything right. They made sacrifices early on to plan and build their
stadium. They have stayed within FFP guidelines, unlike other clubs
(coughRomacoughIntercough). They had a transfer budget every year and they
stayed within it. But they bought carefully and bought well, and their success
is absolutely attributed to both impeccable management and hard work on the
pitch. I’ll give you that they totally did Del Piero wrong, but if anything,
that hurt them, not helped them. And now they've built a squad that not even Allegri can take down. It's actually quite impressive.
While Juve were rising from the ashes, these clowns were sleeping with underage women and singing karaoke with Preziosi |
This bizarre concept of a team being managed well is not
entirely foreign to Serie A. Sassuolo have also done amazing things since
promotion three short years ago with a fraction of the budget that the big
clubs have, finishing an incredible 6th last season. But again, they have
carefully used the funds they have and have bought or loaned both prudently and
well. Compare Sassuolo and Juve to the attention-starved, eccentric/crazy, megalomaniac
Serie A owners like De Laurentis (Napoli), Zamparini (Palermo), Lotito (Lazio),
Ferrero (Sampdoria), Preziosi (Genoa), and Berlusconi. They are more concerned
with their own sound bites, their own agendas, whether political or otherwise,
than they are with running their clubs well and achieving success. Or even just
complaining about Juve instead of copying their game plan. How many times have
we seen the lack of morals of both Berlusconi and Galliani alone impact our
club? (i.e. Galliani’s involvement in Calciopoli.) None of these clubs have the
consistent investment (no matter how small) that is carefully spent, purchasing
the best players for their team instead of what their friend’s team has to
offer or what they can get on a free transfer or who they wanted to sign ten
years ago. None of those owners can get their own stadium built, or are even
really trying.
So is it really Juve that we should be blaming for the
incredibly ridiculous disparity between them and all of the other teams? Try
looking at the other clubs. Not only are Milan awaiting desperate news of a
club sale, we have been drowning in mismanagement for decades. Sure, we won a
bunch of trophies back in the day… the days before FFP and general
accountability, before Berlusconi lost power and started losing his legal
battles, before the financial crisis in Italy, and more. Those trophies were
basically bought. We can’t hate Juve for doing something right. Our hatred
should be towards our own management, against those douchebags Inter, and all
of the other clubs who have not done things right and who have
run the league into the ground.
Allegri: trolling Milan since 2010 |
I mean it’s fine to hate Juventus on gameday, it’s fine to
be insanely jealous of what they’ve accomplished. But don’t ever come here and
accuse them of cheating, doping, or buying refs, because you will look like a
huge douchebag and I will laugh at you hysterically. They have suffered and
worked and sacrificed to get where they are now. With a bench that is better
than any other starting lineup in Serie A. Five consecutive Scudetti and who
knows how many more on the way. The opportunity to dominate even perhaps in the
Champions League. They have earned their way to be able to purchase all of the
players. They have earned their amazing stadium and all that it has brought to
them. The Agnelli family have been shrewd and kept their eyes on the prize
instead of looking for the next microphone in their face or complaining about
how much money they don’t have. They did all of this during Italy’s financial crisis. The same crisis everyone else continues to use as
a scapegoat for their own mismanagement. If any one team can justifiably claim
that the league has been hurt by Calciopoli, it is Juve. All of this
complaining about Juventus’ apocalyptic mercato is being aimed at all the wrong
places. If you don’t like how dominant they’ve become, look at all of the teams
that didn’t
do all the right things. Everything else is just much ado about nothing.
If Milan does anything noteworthy…
or anything at all… I will write about them again… maybe.
This post inspired by the music of The
Last of the Shadow Puppets’ “Bad Habits”
Our next match is a friendly
International Champions Cup
FC Bayern vs. AC Milan
Wednesday, July 27 • 9:00pm EDT
Much Ado About Juve
Reviewed by Elaine
on
12:00 AM
Rating: