Juventus Primavera Continues Viareggio Defense

By: agiamba | February 9th, 2010
   

If you haven’t heard of the Torneo di Viareggio, smack yourself upside the face. Like the Toulon tournament for national teams, the Viareggio classic is one of the most prestigious world competitions for youth teams. Held in Marcello Lippi’s hometown, this is the 62nd annual tournament, always held during Carneval season. In recent years, Juve have dominated the tournament, confirming the tremendous talent our Primavera holds. We have been in the finals 5 of the last 7 tournaments, with our most recent win being last season. And perhaps you should pay even more attention this year, as while the senior team sucks it up, the Primavera is romping to victory, with 11 goals scored and 0 conceded in the group stages.

The tournament is an invitational, with 48 teams competing. The first section is the group stages, 12 groups divided into two sections, A and B. The winners of each group, and the 4 best runners-up enter into a 16-team playoffs. Most Serie A teams have a team in the tournament, many Serie B, and a few Serie C, Serie D, and Eccelenza representatives. The tournament also invites many worldwide teams, like Chivas, Red Bull NY, Spartak Moscow, Gremio, Maccabi Haifa, and Anderlecht of Belgium. After the jump, a review of the Primaveras completed games.

viareggio1
The ragazzi celebrating last year’s Viareggio triumph.

GROUP STAGE:
Juventus 3-0 Lega Warsaw (February 1st, 2010)

SUMMARY: Juventus started off from where they finished the last edition triumphantly. Then it was Sampdoria in the final, now it is a clear success against the Polish team of Lega Warsaw, who quickly conceded to the power of the bomber Immobile, at the 2nd minute with a header from an Esposito cross. The Bianconeri were clearly superior on the technical field, such as Belcastro and more disciplined in a center-midfield formed by Marrone and Giandonato. Excellent, also the goalkeeper Pinsoglio who stopped the Polish attack, saving a penalty at the end of first half. Immobile again struck with a double with a penalty in the 44th minute after an excellent move from Belcastro. There was a bit of trouble in the 2nd half, after a red card to Marrone in the 53rd minute, who stopped a Polish counter-attack by fouling the last man on Kosecki who has heading towards the goal. Some risks with the cross from Lisowski (60th minute) but the Bianconeri attacked again, with Esposito hitting the post in the 67th minute and then the third goal came with a great header from Alcibiade, a central defender with very good confidence in front of goal. (82nd minute)

GOALS: 1′ pt. Immobile (J), 44′ Immobile [rig.] (J); 37′ st. Alcibiade (J).

JUVENTUS: (4-2-3-1): Pinsoglio 7; Bamba 6.5, Alcibiade 7, De Paola 6, Serino 6.5; Marrone 6.5, Giandonato 6.5; Esposito 6.5, Belcastro 7, Yago 6.5 (9’ st. Boniperti 6); Immobile 7 (29’ st. Albertazzi 6). (A disposizione: Kirev, Romano, Silvestri, Fischnaller, Pirrotta, Ferrero). All. Bruni 7.

NOTES: Around 800 in attendance; 8′ st. sent off Marrone (J) for foul on the last man; Yellow cards issued to De Paola (J), Bamba (J), Giandonato (J), Koziara (L), Wolski (L), Lisowski (L); 12 Corners for Juventus, 7 to Lega Warsaw.

12
Former Primavera players Luca Castiglia and Lorenzo Ariaudo celebrating the 2009 win

Juventus 4-0 Vicenza (February 3rd, 2010)

SUMMARY: Juventus marched on in their defense of the Viareggio Cup; After the victory against Lega Warsaw, it was Vicenza next to fall to the powerful blows of the Bianconeri. The game result was never in doubt, there were no problems for Juventus to bring home the 3 points against a Vicenza who started well, but were clearly inferior to Bruni’s boys. It only took a few minutes for Juventus to demonstrate their intentions, in the 6th minute Belcastro was found in the penalty box from a great pass from Immobile and made no errors, burying it diagonally. It wasn’t enough, as Juventus continued to attack, with Pirrotto blasting a venomous shot from the edge of the box, though Vicenza’s keeper Pampaloni responded well. The second goal, however, arrived in the 30th minute and Ciro Immobile scored it, who put his head to a perfect assist from Esposito.

The game didn’t change in the 2nd half, Juventus continued to dominate and scored the 3rd goal with a personal goal from Belcastro, who did well to spread the ball with a precise diagonal shot in the 52nd minute. The win was confirmed by Fischnaller in the 72nd minute, who just came on a few minutes earlier. Yago’s umpteenth cross was met by Fischnaller with a great turning header. It finished with the Bianconeri victory, who left the field met by applause from the public watching the game. Many players looked excellent out there: Other than Immobile of course, Yago and Esposito played very well, and Bamba, the fullback of the defense, who did very well defending but also contributed much in attack with his pace. Another impressive young player was Luca Belcastro, who scored a double today and had many great plays, both on the wing as well as in center-midfield. He had excellent technical skills, and excellent vision for passing.

GOALS: 7′ pt. Belcastro (J), 30′ Immobile (J); 8′ st. Belcastro (J), 28′ Fischnaller (J).

JUVENTUS- (4-2-3-1): Pinsoglio; Bamba, Silvestri, De Paola, Serino; Alcibiade, Pirrotta (19′ st. Fischnaller); Esposito (30′ st. Boniperti), Yago, Belcastro; Immobile (14′ st. Terrazzino). (Available- Kirev, Romano, Ferrero, Crivello, Giovinco, Libertazzi). Coach; Bruni.

FRANCE SOCCER CHAMPIONS LEAGUE
Immobile, who has played in the Champion’s League, is the Viareggio top-scorer currently with 6 goals. He won the Golden Boot last year.

Juventus 4-0 Livorno (February 5th, 2010)

In the Torneo Viareggio, there was a preview of the two teams who battled at the Armando Picchi in Livorno, the teams of Zaccheroni and Cosmi. It was less interesting than the battle of the senior teams, as the Juventus coach, Bruni, almost already assured of finishing first, changed almost all of his starters, except for the center-back Alcibiade, though who played as a midfielder, since Marrone and Giandonato were called up to train with the senior team. It didn’t start out so positively for Juventus, as Simeoni, a left-winger for Livorno, messed up a perfect opportunity, after a very big error from Kirev, who came out for the ball and missed it. The rest of the first half was relatively boring, with two defensive lines playing very high, plenty of offside calls made, though a good performance from Ceccherini, a central midfielder born in 1992, who anticipated well, passed well, though left the pitch in the 56th minute because of injury.

What changed the match was a error from Conti, similar to that of Kirev, though Fischnaller played like a true poacher, inbetween Oussou and Ceccherini, finished well. The second half was all Juventus; Libertazzi doubled the scoreline in the 76th from an assist from Alcibiade, in the 80th minute Fischnaller doubled his tally with a brilliant solo move, and in the 81st minute, Belcastro closed out the match scoring the 4th goal. In the 68th minute, Juventus player Pirotta was sent off for a 2nd yellow card, at the same time Livorno’s coach Ruotolo was sent off for his protests to the referee. In the stands was Alessio Secco, watching the game before traveling to Livorno for the match of the senior team.

POST-GAME COMMENTS:

Juventus Coach Luciano Bruni- “I wanted to experiment a bit, and give some time to a few players who have played little or none, to give them time to prove themselves. I had the response from them that I wanted, though we played well, there is always something to improve. Alcibiade played excellently, he gave me his availability to play this 3rd match, and played with dignity and awareness. First position in the group is the award to start the tournament for us, but it’s not enough for us to be content with that, it is not in our DNA. I hope to see a few players physical conditions improve, and whoever we play next, might seem simple, but we will not underestimate them. It will not be easy to recover physical energy quickly, since we saw our players played 90 minutes in the rain, though with our mentality, winning will always help. To change, we need to calm our nerves a bit, as we had our 2nd player sent off in 3 games.

Gennaro Ruotolo: “I’m not sure why I was sent off, because I was limiting myself to chatting a bit and asking for explanations from the linesman. I can’t say that the referees really convinced me, but to send me off in our last match doesn’t really make sense. The game was changed from some of our errors, it seemed to me that up until this incident, we were playing better and we were getting close to taking the lead. I am happy with the performance of my players, who played with dignity. We leave the tournament with our heads held high, despite the heavy defeats we have had, in a group that had some of the strongest European teams; Lega Warsaw, and Juventus who are the strongest youth team in the world.

GOALS: 41′ pt. Fischnaller; 31′ st. Libertazzi (J), 34′ Fischnaller (J), 35′ Belcastro (J)

JUVENTUS: (4-2-3-1): Kirev; Romano, Crivello (29′ st. Serino), Alcibiade, Ferrero Silvestri, Fischnaller, Pirrotta, Libertazzi, Giovinco (26’ st. Belcastro), Boniperti. (Available: Piccolo, De Paola, Bamba, Yago, Immobile, Terrazino, Esposito). Coach; Bruni.

Notes: Sent off 23′ st. Pirrotta (J) and Ruotolo (L).

59341001
Bari striker Nacho Castillo sandwiched between two former Juve youth players.

ROUND OF EIGHT:
Juventus 3-1 Cesena (February 9th, 2010)

With a sumptuous hat trick, Ciro Immobile brought Juventus to the quarterfinals of Viareggio, after the 3-1 victory won against an excellent Cesena. The game opened up in the 38th minute, when Immobile received a long precise pass from Yago, controlled the ball, and beat keeper Teodorani who was coming off his line. Cesena battled hard, and after 4 minutes in the 2nd half, found the tying goal in the 49th minute from Tabanelli, who anticipated everyone at the near post, and turned the ball excellently into the net. Cesena, however, had not yet fully met “Ciro the Great” who scored with a brilliant half-bicycle kick on a corner, putting the ball under the net. He later added to his tally by converting a penalty coolly, won by Yago.

Ciro Immobile was definitely the great protagonist of the game, but many of the Juventus attacks were stamped by the authority of Yago, who returned in January from a loan to Bari. The ex-Barcelona man played at the top of a 3-man Juventus supporting attack, with Esposito and Belcastro, supporting Immobile up top, though there was excellent interplay on the wings. Yago had excellent technical ability, excellent vision, and executed his plays very quickly, there were the most important evidences of his excellent play, as shown by his assist for the first goal. He still needs a bit of continuity, because he sometimes fades out of the play, but it’s an aspect that can certainly be worked on and improved.

POST GAME COMMENTS:

Luciano Bruni: “We knew that the game wouldn’t be the easiest, because Cesena proved in the group stages to be a very well organized side. We had perhaps the luck to go ahead, but then conceded stupidly an equalizer. I liked the courage of the team to press on after conceding. The weather wasn’t exactly optimal. We don’t put limits on this team, and we live game-for-game. We have an excellent squad and the quality still yet to show.

Stefano Protti: “We played a good game. We were able to equalize, but Immobile scored a great goal and we went behind again. We wanted to keep the game in balance, but then there was a penalty given that I didn’t like at all. If we were to play a team a bit inferior, then we’d be able to cope with it, but against Juventus that was not possible. Without the penalty, perhaps we could have played to win, but it closed the match. Fiorentina and Juventus are great teams, Fiorentina is more compact and disciplined, but the Bianconeri have a lot of individual quality that Fiorentina lack.”

GOALS: 40′ pt. Immobile (J); 3′ st. Tabanelli (C), 14′ Immobile (J), 27′ Immobile [rig.] (J).

JUVENTUS: (4-2-3-1)- Pinsoglio, Bamba, Alcibiade, De Paola, Serino, Giandonato, Marrone, Esposito (31’ st. Boniperti), Yago (37’ st. Fischnaller), Belcastro; Immobile (40’ st Libertazzi). Coach; Bruni.

All of the above game statistics is from the Viareggio website, most summaries are from CalcioMercato and have been translated by yours truly. Roma, Inter, Milan, Napoli, and Genoa all fell in this round, so they will not advance to the quarterfinals. The draw has been made, and Juventus will play Sassuolo next.

For more information on some players in the Juventus Primavera, check out this post from a few months ago.


Some Related Juventus Posts:


Category Category: Team News
Tags

   
  • Gaetano
    Lineups for tomorrow??????
  • Robee
    Aah, thanks, I already thought I missed something when Yago got his plastic surgery done. Castillo is less familiar to me. And indeed I can not make Castillo or Yago, out of that :p
  • agiamba
    Robee/ned lowe, correction is in order...that picture is actually not of Yago, even though it's tagged of him by Daylife and he wore #6 for Bari. That is actually of Castillo, the new January signing who took over his number...don't see how the letters on the back of the shirt say either Castillo or Yago, though.

    Neo, I know the writer of that article. He writes quality stuff.

    Jose, Allegri I would compare to Gasparini. Both play attacking football (play to their strengths) and have a pretty good record of developing young players and getting the best out of them. Allegri is particularly a good tactician, he deserves a shot at a big club sometime soon.
  • Neo
  • Jose
    Rumors out there say put Allegri as possible coach of Juventus next season. Does anyone know anything about this guy?. Does he develop youngsters, is he hard like Capello?. Thanks.
  • Robee
    The picture came from the first half of this season, when he was loaned out to Bari, but he played very little, so we called him back.

    And good question here... Why isn't Rossi featuring, is he injured ?
  • ned lowe
    quick observation fellas...that iago pic left me with a couple of questions

    1. the kit he's wearing does'nt look like anything juve have worn recently...do the primavera get different kit designs?
    2. he's being marked by criscito n moretti,both of whom have been senior squad members at genoa for at least three seasons, so how is it that they meet in a primavera game?

    n BTW it seems the Yago kid is sumthin...is it too early to be considering promoting him to the senior side?
  • Vittoria
    Ayub Daud went on loan to Lumezzane in january.
  • I agree with Vercingetorix... In FM you can really develop some of these youngsters into world class players - like Marrone, Daud and Bamba
    Well, Arsene Wenger would have loved to have such pool of talent at his disposal, unlike our senior team coaches :(
  • HolyMann
    well written post Alessio.....gives me hope for the future
  • Vercingetorix
    I hate to admit this, but FM really helps me get to know the primavera...in terms of names, background, positions, etc. I appreciate the 'real world' information though Alessio!
  • ooBia
    Great post alessio. Well, great and sad.

    Juventus Coach Luciano Bruni [after the Juve-Livorno game]: [..] played with dignity [..], says it all to me. The likes of Melo, Amauri and even Grosso are not playing with dignity, they just want to prove the are worth going to South Africa.
  • agiamba
    Fischnaller is on loan until June, a try-before-you-buy if you will, with a clause to sign him in full in the summer. He's only 18, but yes, he's looking good.

    Surprise of Viareggio for Juve thus far has definitely been Belcastro, who is lighting it up in midfield. He's from Calabria, and like many Calabrians has been a Juve fan all his life. He's shown great personality and individual quality thus far, I didn't really know much about him before.
  • agiamba
    It'd be a good game, Giro. Rematch of last year's Primavera final, and the Viareggio champs v. Primavera champs.
  • Sam
    Damn good to here. We just signed Fischnaller didn't we? He seems to be playing well, and Immobile, it's great to hear, we need to develop a good young striker now, it's been a while and considering the shit we are in up front it's really good news.

    And Giro, you wont crush us, you do have a couple of hot-prospects, but it's never going to be a crushing!
  • Giro
    Palermo will crush Juve if we meet in the finals.
  • Nnahoj
    Some good news regarding our senior team; both Camoranesi and Trezeguet are back in training. Not sure how long again either will be out, but at least the dreadful "Amauri show" will soon be on less frequently.
  • Jorid
    ^^^Lol at your name. Caco?!
  • caco
    So you want to see something incredible? See Roma's record this year.
  • Nnahoj
    When you hear about Immobile scoring goals for fun with the youth team, just pisses you off more about Amauri. Why, oh why, don't we just start someone else for at least one game? Just one! Immobile or Paolucci surely can't do any worse than Amauri is currently doing!
  • Random Juve Fan
    How come Fausto Rossi didn't feature in any of the games? Is he currently on loan or injured?
  • Jorid
    You guys remember Fabian Carini? He was a decent young backup GK and the player we exchanged with Inter for Caccavaro joining our team (back in the good old days when he could run at more than 2 mph.)
    Well Carini is playing for Atletico Mineiro in Brazil these days, and he's finally showing his real talent:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
  • Jorid
    Agreed on Immobile. He still has a LONG way to go, but he's talented and I think will definitely be better than past Primavera strikers such as Pasquato, Essabr and maybe even Paolucci. Why he has gotten only about 3 seconds of play time this season is beyond me.
    Also, Fischnaller is not doing too bad for someone who's been playing with the team for just 2 months.
  • agiamba
    Ciro Immobile is currently joint-capocannoniere of Viareggio with 6 goals in 3 games. The other is some young player from Milan, but Milan is knocked out so it should be relatively easy for Ciro to retain his title.

    All the while making me wonder, why the fuck he doesn't get a chance to play?! (Or Paolucci) Remember when he came on against Atalanta? Looked determined, and only in a few minutes had two solid efforts on goal.
  • Marco
    Great thread! Well at least there is an ample supply skilled, young talent available at Juventus for Alessio Secco to sell off for overrated brazilian crap.
  • Siam’ venuti fin qui, siam’ venuti fin qui, per vedere segnare Amauri Immobile!
  • agiamba
    Ayub Daud, one of the heroes of last years Viareggio win, went on loan to Crotone in August, we recalled him this winter because he wasn't playing much. For now, he's back with the Primavera since he's only 19. I think they couldn't register him for the tournament or something.
  • mohd
    this kind of news make me more angrier. but thanks alessio alot for the informative subject. Andby theway where is Daud the Somalian player
  • agiamba
    You can. Some stuff doesn't work, [s] doesn't but [strike] does for some reason...no idea why.
  • balls. "Amauri" was supposed to be crossed out above. I guess we can't pass html code in the comments.
  • Siam' venuti fin qui, siam' venuti fin qui, per vedere segnare Amauri Immobile!
  • agiamba
    Just a translation note, p.t.= primo tempo, first half, s.t= secondo tempo, second half.
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