Juventus roll the dice after costly Motta flop

Bologna's Italian-Brazilian coach Thiago Motta reacts after receiving a red card during the Italian Serie A football match between AC Milan and Bologna at the San Siro Stadium, in Milan on January 27, 2024. Italian giants Juventus on June 12, 2024 named Thiago Motta as their new coach, replacing Massimiliano Allegri who was sacked last month. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP)
Juventus have
decided to gamble on their short-term future after dumping Thiago Motta in the
hope of securing a spot in next season's Champions League and attracting a big
name who can put right some costly mistakes.
Motta fell
victim on Sunday to poor results and a strained relationship with both club
management and his expensively assembled squad, all of which had the "Old
Lady" of Italian football once again in turmoil.
Former Italy
international Motta was supposed to be the key addition to Juve's move away
from a recent past filled with mishaps, scandal and heavy financial losses when
he arrived in July.
He was a new
face for a new-look Juve who in recent seasons had suffered the ignominy of a
points deduction for transfer offences and then Paul Pogba's doping ban soap
opera, all as the Milan teams, Napoli and even provincial upstarts Atalanta
stole the limelight from Italy's biggest club.
Tasked with
making Juve a more dynamic, modern team after the stodgy football of
Massimiliano Allegri, Motta was heavily backed to the tune of over 200 million
euros ($217 million) in a squad rebuild after arriving on a high from taking
Bologna into the Champions League.
Such were the
positive vibes around Turin last summer that Juve were tipped to challenge
champions and fiercest rivals Inter Milan for the Serie A title, a prediction
which looked accurate after they began the season with two thumping 3-0 wins
over Como and Verona.
But the promised
on-pitch revolution never came, with a series of uninspiring performances and
the two most expensive summer signings -- midfielders Teun Koopmeiners and
Douglas Luiz -- failing to justify the over 100 million euros invested in
buying them from Atalanta and Aston Villa.
Early
elimination from the Champions League, an embarrassing exit from the Italian
Cup at the hands of lowly Empoli and their two most recent thumpings by
Atalanta and Fiorentina (4-0 and 3-0 respectively) meant Motta likely wouldn't
have lasted the summer even if he had made it to the end of the season.
Motta's reign
ended with Juve sitting one point outside the top four and below his former
club Bologna, who under Vincenzo Italiano may be the team to finish in Italy's
fourth and final spot in Europe's top club competition.
The Juve
hierarchy have also damaged relations with supporters after the way the
dismissal was handled, exactly a week after the heavy defeat at Fiorentina
prompted sporting Cristiano Giuntoli to insist that Motta was part of a
"long-term project".
His replacement
Igor Tudor, a nomadic coach who spent the bulk of his playing career at Juve,
now has the task of getting Champions League qualification and the guaranteed
millions that would put back in the club's coffers.
Tudor is set to
take his first training session on Tuesday afternoon ahead of the visit of
Genoa on Saturday, but he won't be in charge come the start of next season and
is putting himself in the shop window after agreeing to lead Juve until the end
of the current campaign.
The former
Croatia midfielder is on the face of it an odd choice of interim coach as he
has been out of work since last summer after fulfilling the same temporary role
at Lazio following the resignation of Maurizio Sarri.
But Juve's hand
was forced as two of their reported targets, club legend Antonio Conte and Gian
Piero Gasperini, are engaged in the league title race with Napoli and Atalanta,
while Roberto Mancini wanted Champions League qualification rewarded with a
guaranteed contract renewal.
Juve are hoping
that one of those three, but in particular Conte, will be able to lead another
revamp and reclaim their place as Italy's top team.
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