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TURIN - Allianz Stadium (41,507)

2M views 4K replies 562 participants last post by  IThomas 
#1 · (Edited by Moderator)

Juventus FC

35x League: (record)
1905, 1926, 1931, 1932, 1933,
1934, 1935, 1950, 1952, 1958,
1960, 1961, 1967, 1972, 1973,
1975, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1982,
1984, 1986, 1995, 1997, 1998,
2002, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2014,
2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019

13x Cup: (record)
1938, 1942, 1959, 1960, 1965,
1979, 1983, 1990, 1995, 2015,
2016, 2017, 2018

8x Supercup: (record)
1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2012,
2013, 2015, 2018

2x UEFA Champions League:
1985, 1996

1x UEFA Cup Winners' Cup:
1984

3x UEFA Europa League:
1977, 1990, 1993

2x UEFA Super Cup:
1984, 1996

2x FIFA Club World Cup:
1985, 1996















 
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#60 ·
This is another stadium in Torino, not Stadio Olimpico.
 
#56 ·
Funny stadium, but to my opinion it does not fit the biggest club in Italy. Nothing special about it.
Offcourse it is an improvement for Juventus, but compared with clubs like Valencia, Shaktar Donetsk, Zaragoza and others it is nothing special.
No for me Juventus is way up there and this stadium somewhere in the middle. The two don't combain mop
 
#57 ·
but it fits for its ridiculous supporters. when you are such a great club, you may expect that the supporters fill up the stadium. even in a CL game it wasnt full. last game against Ajax there where 3000 juve supporters. big club.. whohoow.
nope, juve is nothing to me, AC Milan is the biggest club from Italy. and than you can say 'but juve has supporters from all over the country, who must travel far and CL games are allways in the evening and they all have to work next day'. yeah, but where are those in normal games?
 
#71 · (Edited)
bla bla bla...... but with Juventus Ajax loses every time :D

ps: Juve supporters are the majority not only in Italy (around 14M), but also in Europe (24M, more than other european club).

Does the stadium have a moat around it?

Those bridges are draw-bridges obv.
i'll reply in the next post.... it seems that the stadium cover will be very very different.....

This is another stadium in Torino, not Stadio Olimpico.
no no... it's the same stadium. Former "Stadio Comunale" = New "Stadio Olimpico" = stadium which hosted Torino 2006 cerimonies = stadium without run truck or other atlethic facilities.







Actually "Stadio Primo Nebiolo" (former "Stadio Ruffini") is the Turin Athletic Venue, capacity 10.000.










Did the Delle Alpi ever hold an Athletics event?
Yes, Golden Gala in 1991. Attendance 50.000!!! (astonishing....)

but read (and look) to next post....
 
#66 ·
Googled it and the very first sentence is "The Delle Alpi stadium didn't have a warm up track and it was therefore impossible to arrange International Athletic Grand Prix there".
Don't know how reliable the source is but it rings true.

The new one looks ok. Not great. Small and unimaginative design but definately better than the old one.
 
#68 ·
Well, I totally agree that 40,000 is absolutely sub-optimal for a team like Turin FC..... 66,000 should be the minimum (like Bayern Munich's Allianz Arena)......

the only reason why the might calculate with less spectators is

a) they intend to stay in Serie B
b) they know there'll be more corruption scandals coming up (and therefore disgruntling fans and sponsors)
c) all of the above

Cheers.
 
#82 ·
Well, I totally agree that 40,000 is absolutely sub-optimal for a team like Turin FC..... 66,000 should be the minimum (like Bayern Munich's Allianz Arena)......
new Delle Alpi will be Juventus' one, not Torino's!
 
#70 ·
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2007/02/14/afx3425094.html

AFX News Limited
Juventus plan to rebuild stadium gets approval from city of Turin

02.14.07, 4:31 AM ET

MILAN (AFX) - Juventus Football Club SpA said the city of Turin has approved plans to rebuild the club's Delle Alpi stadium in Turin.

Juventus, a unit of IFIL SpA, said the government and the football federation FIGC have also agreed to offer financial breaks for a loan of 120 mln eur to build the stadium if Italy wins its bid to host the 2012 European Football Championship.

According to a recent newspaper report, the club wants the government and FIGC to pay the interests on the loan, which could amount to a total of 40-50 mln eur over 20 years.

The new stadium would have a capacity of 40,000 and comprise a shopping mall, offices, leisure facilities, restaurants and a conference centre.

If Italy is not successful in its bid, the Delle Alpi stadium will be restructured at a cost of 18 mln eur, Juventus said.

Juventus said it has mandated its CEO Jean-Claude Blanc to present the documentation in support of the Italian bid for Euro 2012 as regards the Turin venue by Feb 15.

The final decision on who will host Euro 2012 will be taken by Europe's governing soccer body UEFA on April 18.

The Delle Alpi stadium is owned by the city of Turin. Juventus has a long-term lease of 99 years to manage the ground.
 
#75 ·
The "olimpico" stadium where Juventus and Turin are playing this year is the third in ravanellidiciamo post no. 24. It has 25/30000 seats.

Juventus used to play in the "stadio delle alpi" (70000 seats), built for Italia'90 world cup
.


if Italy gets euro 2012 they'll build a new stadium over the "stadio delle alpi". otherwise, they'll just restructure it (it has to be adapted to the new italian rules 4 soccer arenas)
 
#76 ·
The smallness isn't what's wrong with this stadium so much as the lack of style. Italy is the home of Ferrari,Armani and all that stuff. It looks very basic for a club that regards itself as one of the top 3 or 4 clubs in the world.The stadium in Genoa of a similiar size was built back in 1990 and looks better.
 
#86 ·
i think its a solid stadium for Juve one of the biggest clubs in the world, idunno why they cant support a 60 000 seat stadium but whatever, ive juve played out of, toronto,new york, la, chicago, montreal, london, beijing, they could sell out because there is huge fan bases everyhwere but torino, why not move the team. also where does juve get their money without the fans, obviously sponsoring and championsleague, but i dont understadn why a team with little fan base in italy is so big everywhereelse but italy
 
#88 ·
^^^^^^^^^

It is quite simple really. In Turin, historically Torino was the "great" club until that plane crash in the 40's.

Don't forget Juventus is the "boss'" club also, so everyone go against them.

Juve should move to San Siro, everyone knows there are far more Juventus supporters in Milan than in Torino.
 
#89 ·
ok Torino Calcio between '42 and '49 was a legend, but don't forget that Juventus is the first football club born in Turin, and still till '49 had won 7 italian titles (5 consecutives between '31 and '35!!!).

-it's true that in Turin we have half Juve and half Toro supporters.
-it's true that the majority of supporters of Toro are Turin "native", instead of Juve supporters who are largerly coming from the big migrations in 60s and 70s from South Italy;
-it's true that in Milan 1/3 are AC Milan supporters, 1/3 Internazionale supporters, and 1/3 Juve supporters.

BUT TURIN IN THE ONLY AND UNIQUE JUVENTUS' HOME

Juventus is tied with the history of the city and most of all to Fiat and Giovanni Agnelli, its president for almost a century, who represents with no doubt the Turin's entrepreneurship and spirit.
 
#91 ·
What are the average attendances for this season?

It might be the fourth time that Torino has posted larger attendances over a season.

Juve should play out of San Siro and let dispersed Juve fans from all Italy come to Milano. It is not far to travel from Torino to Milano. Long term there are more benefits to play out of Milano.
 
#92 ·
probably u did not understand that the Juventus is Turin and Turin its Juventus.

Milan had in the last century perodically stole a lot of economic and cultural activities to Turin, only because of its better geographical position, nothin more.

It could sound stupid (and probably it is) , but a football club in Italy is somethin important for the city which it represents.

Juventus is an important piece of the history of the city in the last century. It represents also (if you want) a sort of "revenge" agants the richer Milan which is only able to copy and stole Turin's creativity.

So, NEVER IN MILAN. Or the last stupid dream of Turin's people will definetely die.
 
#93 ·
^^^^^^^^^^

We never, seriously thought Juve would contemplate leaving Turin.

Simply from a business point of view, it would be better on the surface.

I am sure Inter and Milan would never allow Juve to move onto their patch even if the owners of the club were hell bent on it.
 
#97 ·
^^ Because Juve is a massive club and most other big clubs in Europe are building stadiums with atleast 60k.
Im also sure that the attendance figures will go up once Juve has a proper football stadium.
 
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