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Juventus Football Club is an Italian professional association football club based in Turin, Piedmont that competes in Serie A, the top football league in the country.The club was formed in 1897 as Sport Club Juventus by a group of Massimo d'Azeglio Lyceum young students and played its first competitive match on 11 March 1900, when it entered the Piedmont round of the third Federal Championship.
End of loan to play for Juventus Next Gen [54] 1 July 2024: DF: Pedro Felipe: 19 Palmeiras: €0.3M Renewal of loan until June 2025 with option to buy for €2.3M, to play for Juventus Next Gen [55] 1 July 2024: MF: Nicolò Ledonne: 20 Pianese: N/A End of loan to play for Juventus Next Gen [56] 1 July 2024: MF: Daouda Peeters: 25 Südtirol: N/A
The history of Juventus F.C. covers over 120 years of association football from the club based in Turin, Italy, and established in 1897 that would eventually become the most successful team in the history of Italian football and amongst the elite football clubs of the world. [1] Iuventūs is Latin for "youth". [2]
Nicola Calzaretta (2014), I colori della vittoria (in Italian), Goalbook Edizioni,Pisa,2014, ISBN 978-88-908115-9-3 Carlo F. Chiesa., Il grande romanzo dello scudetto. . Ventitreesima puntata: regno sabaudo tricolore, da Calcio 2000, febbraio 2004, pp. 9
Juventus Football Club finished second in Serie A following the 1995-96 season and regained the European Cup trophy after 11 years, winning the Champions League final against Ajax 4–2 on penalties in Rome.
All or Nothing: Juventus features a turbulent season for the club. [3] Despite winning two trophies, the 2020–21 Coppa Italia and the 2020 Supercoppa Italiana, newly appointed coach Andrea Pirlo failed to lead the club to the tenth Serie A title in a row and was knocked out in the round of 16 of the Champions League by Porto.
Juventus just came up short in Serie A for the second year in a row. Unlike in 2000, it did not have matters in its own hands prior to the final game of the season, and even though Juventus fended off Atalanta 2–1 at home, Roma beat Parma 3–1, which meant the title landed with a Roman club for the second year running.
The first organized groups of Juventus Football Club supporters were established in the middle of the 1970s. The first two groups were called Venceremos and Autonomia Bianconera, and both were on the political left. [1] In 1976 the first two groups of ultras were founded, Fossa dei Campioni and Panthers. [citation needed]