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Juventus Next Gen


Juventus Next Gen


Juventus Next Gen (Italian pronunciation: [juˈvɛntus nɛkst dʒɛn]), also known as Juve Next Gen or Juve NG (pronounced [ˈjuːve ˈɛn ˈdʒiː]), is a professional football club based in Turin, Piedmont, Italy, which acts as the reserve team of Serie A club Juventus. They compete in Serie C Group B, and play their home games at the Stadio Giuseppe Moccagatta in Alessandria, a comune about 100 km away from Turin.

Following the reintroduction of reserve teams in Italy, Juventus U23 was formed in 2018 and was registered to Serie C, the third level of the Italian league system. In the first years, the team reached the promotion play-off stages of Serie C, without gaining promotion. In the 2019–20 season, under coach Fabio Pecchia, Juventus U23 won the Coppa Italia Serie C after defeating Ternana in the final. The club changed its name to Juventus Next Gen in 2022. Juventus Next Gen remained the sole Italian reserve team until August 2023 when Atalanta founded its own.

Due to the nature of the club as a reserve team, Juventus Next Gen needs to comply to certain regulations, such as not being eligible for promotion to Serie A and not competing in the Coppa Italia, the major national cup. The club, and in general FIGC's reserve-team project, has faced a lot of criticism, especially from fans of other Serie C teams due to their perceived lack of history.

History

Predecessors (1904–1976)

Reserve teams were introduced in Italy in early 20th century, and played in the Seconda Categoria. On 17 April 1904, the second team of Juventus lost the final 4–0 to Genoa II at the Ponte Carrega field. On 2 April 1905, after a 3–0 away win to AC Milan II, Juventus II obtained the mathematical certainy of first place at the final three-team group stage to win their only Seconda Categoria trophy.

Juventus II also took part in the Campionato De Martino, another league dedicated to reserve teams, until the competition ceased in 1976; they won the 1959–60 edition.

Juventus even had a third team who played friendly matches against local teams, and competed in the Terza Categoria in the early 20th century.

Juventus U23 (2018–2022)

Juventus U23 were founded on 3 August 2018, following the reintroduction of professional reserve teams in Italian football after over 40 years, and was officially admitted to the Serie C championship.

On 21 August, Luca Zanimacchia became the first scorer of the team's history after scoring the only goal in a 1–0 win over Cuneo in the group stage of the Coppa Italia Serie C. Juventus U23's first game in Serie C was a 2–1 away defeat to Alessandria, with Claudio Zappa scoring the team's first league goal. Juventus U23 ended their first season in 12th place with 42 points in 37 games, and were eliminated in the group stage of the Coppa Italia Serie C.

In the 2019–20 season, coached by Fabio Pecchia, Juventus U23 won the Coppa Italia Serie C after beating Ternana 2–1 in the final on 27 June 2020. The club won its first trophy in their second year as a professional club. In August, U19 coach Lamberto Zauli was promoted to U23 level, replacing Andrea Pirlo (who became first-team coach), who had in turn taken Pecchia's place. Zauli coached for the following two seasons; in the last one, his Juventus U23 made their best-ever regular-season score with 54 points.

Juventus Next Gen (2022–present)

On 28 June 2022, Massimo Brambilla was appointed as Juventus U23's coach. On 26 August, the club changed its name to Juventus Next Gen. During the 2022–23 season, Juventus Next Gen failed to qualify for the promotion play-offs, as the team ended the league at the 13th place with 49 points. They also reached the final of the season's Coppa Italia Serie C, which they lost 5–3 on aggregate to Vicenza.

Stadium

Juventus Next Gen does not possess their own stadium, and share the Stadio Giuseppe Moccagatta with Alessandria as their home stadium. Although there had been an agreement among the two parts shortly after Juventus's reserve team's foundation, Alessandria's fans protested to not share their stadium. According to the agreement, Juventus Next Gen fans can sit only in the guests sector. Their players train at the Juventus Training Center in Vinovo.

On 27 November 2022, Juventus Next Gen played exceptionally a match against Mantova at the Juventus Stadium, the first team home ground, in which tickets were free. The match was drawn 2–2, with Simone Iocolano scoring a brace for Juventus Next Gen and was seen by 28,572 fans present at the stadium. On 3 March 2023, the Juventus Stadium also hosted the first leg of the 2022–23 Coppa Italia Serie C final between Juventus Next Gen and Vicenza with an attendance of 21,572 spectators and with Juventus Next Gen losing 2–1.

Regulations

Juventus Next Gen play in the same professional league system as their senior team, rather than a separate league dedicated for youth teams. However, the reserve team may not play in the same division or higher as their senior team, nor in the Coppa Italia, making Juventus Next Gen ineligible for promotion to the Serie A. Should both Juventus and Juventus Next Gen qualify in the same league, the reserve team must play in the league immediately below. In case of relegation to the Serie D, it may not register for this league and their activity is suspended. After one season, it may request the team be registered to the Serie C in case of vacancy. Juventus must pay an annual extraordinary fee of €1.2 million to have the reserve team registered to Serie C. In addition, Juventus may not take part to Lega Pro assemblies.

They may insert a maximum of 23 players in their team sheets. Only four players aged more than 23 when the season started may be inserted in the team sheets. Up to a maximum of seven players who had been registered to a FIGC-affiliated club for less than seven sporting seasons may be included in the match list.

In order to be eligible to play for Juventus Next Gen, players must have not been registered to the 25-man list of Serie A players and must have played at most 50 Serie A matches. Instead, to be eligible to play in promotion play-offs and in relegation play-outs, players must have not played over 25 first-team league matches of at least 30 minutes. If a player is suspended, he is unusable in both the first and reserve teams. Suspensions must be served in the team with whom he committed the infraction.

Reception

Juventus's reserve team and the second-team project itself led by FIGC have faced a lot of criticism. On 28 July 2018, before the team's official foundation, Sicula Leonzio president Giuseppe Leonardo criticised Juventus's choice to form their reserve team by saying: "Reserve teams are a flop, an experiment that does not lead to anywhere. Juventus B are going to be harmful and will distort the championship: they are not a newly promoted team but they are certainly going to be strong, we have seen this in women's football that the Bianconeri don't make a bad impression wherever they put their effort". In August 2018, Sportitalia director Michele Criscitellio criticised the second-team project by stating: "The mission of Juve[ntus] B was to get their youngsters to play and not to take away a place from the Serie C clubs to reach the Serie B. The buying power is so different that there would be no competition. It is pointless to make investments for whoever Juventus will end up in the group".

In December 2018, Pisa's fans attacked Juventus U23 by stating, in an official statement: "B teams are an insult to the dignity of those who consider the Lega Pro their own Serie A", further noting that Pisa should not act as a "sparring partner" for "youngsters without a stadium and history". The fans also defected the two league matches against Juventus U23 in the 2018–19 Serie C. In September 2019, Arezzo's fans flew a banner in front of their bus saying "No to B teams". They too defected the match against them as they had done in April.

In November 2021, Padova's fans considered Juventus U23 a "Super League franchise" and defected the two league matches against them. In July 2022, Lega Serie B president Mauro Balata expressed dissent towards reserve teams playing in Serie B, saying: "Our league embraces big and important cities. If another league wants to continue with this second-team project they can do so, but without affecting our rights and our history. It is not fair".

Players

Current squad

As of 14 February 2024

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Youth sector

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Notable players

As of 26 November 2022

This list includes players that have appeared in at least one top-league and/or senior international game.

Coaching staff

Managerial history

Below is a list of Juventus Next Gen managers from 2018 until the present day.

Season to season

Honours

  • Coppa Italia Serie C
    • Winners (1): 2019–20
    • Runners-up (1): 2022–23

See also

  • Juventus F.C. Youth Sector

Notes

References

Sources

Gravina, Gabriele; Brunelli, Marco (2020). "Comunicato Ufficiale N.24/A" (PDF). FIGC. Retrieved 19 November 2022.

External links

  • Official website
  • Juventus Next Gen at Soccerway

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Juventus Next Gen by Wikipedia (Historical)



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