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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
Campionato Italiano di Football: 2 1 0 1 7 3 2 3rd – – – 1902: Campionato Italiano di Football/Piemontese 4 2 1 1 10 5 5 2nd – – – 1902–03: Campionato Italiano di Football: 5 4 0 1 16 5 8 2nd – – – 1903–04: Prima Categoria: 4 2 1 1 7 4 5 2nd – – – 1904–05: Prima Categoria: 4 2 2 0 9 3 6 1st – – – Domenico Donna
A partial view of the club's trophy room with the titles won between 1905 and 2013 at the J-Museum. Italy's most successful club of the 20th century [2] with the most title in the history of Italian football, [3] Juventus have won the Italian League Championship, the country's premier football club competition and organised by Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A (LNPA), a record 36 times and ...
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 did not manage to win the domestic championship for the seventh year in succession, but the legacy of the season was saved when it beat Borussia Dortmund by 3–1 away from home, then 3–0 in Turin, to clinch the 1992–93 edition of the UEFA Cup.
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.
The 2005–06 season was Juventus FC's 108th in existence and 104th consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football before the 2006 Italian football scandal stripped the club of its previous league title, as well as this season's league title, later awarded to Internazionale, and relegated to Serie B.