Juventus F.C.

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Juventus F.C.
Full name Juventus Football Club SpA
Founded 1897
Ground Juventus Stadium
(capacity: 41,000)
Chairman Andrea Agnelli
Manager Antonio Conte
League Serie A
2011/12 Serie A, Champions

Juventus F.C. is an Italian football club.

The club plays in Serie A. It was started in 1897 and its home stadium is the Juventus Stadium in Turin.

The club is the most successful team in the history of Italian football. Overall, the club have won 51 official trophies, more than any other team in the country; 40 in Italy, which is also a record, and 11 in European and world competitions. The Old Lady is the third most successful club in Europe and the sixth in the world with the most international titles officially recognised by one of the six continental football confederations and FIFA.

The club was the first Italian to win the UEFA Cup. In 1985, Juventus, the only team in the world to have won all official international cups and championships became the first club in the history of European football to have won all three major UEFA club competitions.

In Italy, Juventus is the club which has the biggest fan base, having also one of the largest numbers of supporters in the world, with a total of 170 million Juventus supporters (Italian "tifosi") worldwide. The club is a founding member of the European Club Association, which was formed after the dissolution of the G-14, a collection of Europe's most elite clubs. The Torinese side is also recognized for its huge contribution to the Italian national team.

Based on the findings of a survey of companies Demos & Pi (September 2010), Juventus appears to be the team with the highest number of supporters in Italy, having received the preference of 29% of the sample . It is also among the teams with the highest number of supporters worldwide are approximately 180 million supporters, according to a report from the German market research company Sport + Markt AG Sports in August 2005

Contents

Name [change]

  • 1897-1998 S.C. Juventus
  • 1899-1937 F.B.C. Juventus
  • 1937-1943 Juventus
  • 1943-1945 Juventus-Cisitalia
  • 1945-present Juventus F.C.

Honours [change]

  • Italian Football Championship / Serie A : 30
    • 1905, 1925/26, 1930/31, 1931/32, 1932/33, 1933/34, 1934/35, 1949/50, 1951/52, 1957/58, 1959/60, 1960/61, 1966/67, 1971/72, 1972/73, 1974/75, 1976/77, 1977/78, 1980/81, 1981/82, 1983/84, 1985/86, 1994/95, 1996/97, 1997/98, 2001/02, 2002/03, 2004/05, 2005/06, 2011/12
  • Italian Cup : 9
    • 1937/38, 1941/42, 1958/59, 1959/60, 1964/65, 1978/79, 1982/83, 1989/90, 1994/95
  • Italian Super Cup : 4
    • 1995, 1997, 2002, 2003
  • Intercontinental Cup / FIFA World Club Cup : 2
    • 1985, 1996
  • European Champions Clubs' Cup / UEFA Champions League : 2
    • 1984/85, 1995/96
  • UEFA Cup Winner's Cup : 1
    • 1983/84
  • UEFA Cup : 3
    • 1976/77, 1989/90, 1992/93
  • UEFA Intertoto Cup : 1
    • 1999
  • UEFA Super Cup : 2
    • 1984, 1996

League position [change]

Season League Position
2000/01 Serie A 2nd
2001/02 Serie A Champions
2002/03 Serie A Champions
2003/04 Serie A 3rd
2004/05 Serie A Champions
2005/06 Serie A Champions
2006/07 Serie B Champions
2007/08 Serie A 3rd
2008/09 Serie A 2nd
2009/10 Serie A 7th
2010/11 Serie A 7th
2011/12 Serie A Champions

Former position [change]


Notable players [change]

Chairman [change]

In more than 110 years of corporate history, at the helm of Juventus 23 presidents have come and gone and two management committees . The first president was Eugenio Canfari Juventus, one of the founding members .

The longest period in office was dominated by Giampiero Boniperti, at the helm of Juventus for 19 years from 1971 to 1990 [117]; Boniperti, like its successor Caissotti di Vittorio Chiusano, president from 1990 to 2003, boasts the largest trophy the history of the club .

The businessman Umberto Agnelli, who became chairman less than 21 years of age, in 1955, was the youngest to hold this office . Also noteworthy is the presidencies of the Swiss Alfred Dick and Giuseppe Hess and Frenchman Jean-Claude Blanc, the only non-Italian to become presidents of the club . In particular, Dick was the President of the Bianconeri's first championship (1905).

Currently the contractor is in charge of Turin Andrea Agnelli, who was elected president April 28, 2010 by the shareholders at the club

References [change]