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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 ...
Conte led Juventus to his first three league titles of the 2010s, [21] [22] [23] including an unbeaten league title in 2012 and achieved a record 102 points and 33 wins in the 2013–14 season. [24] Following Conte's resignment, [25] Massimiliano Allegri was appointed as manager [26] and led Juventus to a national double in his first year. [27]
Juventus Football Club (from Latin: iuventūs, 'youth'; Italian pronunciation: [juˈvɛntus]), commonly known as Juventus or colloquially as Juve (pronounced), [5] is an Italian professional football club based in Turin, Piedmont, who compete in Serie A, the top tier of the Italian football league system.
This is a list of Juventus FC honours. ... UEFA Europa League: 3 [5] Winners: 1976–77, ... MLS All-Star Game: (1) 2018; Notes
The next 11 years were also dominated by Juventus and Bologna, when all of the Scudetti were won between the three of them, Juventus winning five times in a row, a record equalled by Grande Torino in 1949, by Internazionale in 2010, and Juventus itself in 2016, until they won again the next season in 2017 to overtake the record at six league ...
Juventus Under manager Antonio Conte, Juventus won the 2011–12 Serie A undefeated, becoming the first team to do so in a 38–game league season in Italy. [7] Overall, in that season the team set a national record of 42 official matches unbeaten including the Italian Cup campaign, in which they reached the final. Finally, Juventus went ...
Juventus, Italy's most powerful soccer club, will be forced to forfeit 15 Serie A points after an Italian court essentially found that it had rigged finances related to transfer deals.
Juventus were also part of the all Italian 2003 UEFA Champions League final but lost out to Milan on penalties after the game ended in a 0–0 draw. At the conclusion of the following season, Lippi was appointed as the Italy national team's head coach, bringing an end to one of the most fruitful managerial spells in Juventus' history.