The Official Biography of Diego

By: roberto | June 22nd, 2009

First of all my heart goes out to those of you who’ve been waiting awhile for this piece. Truth be told, every time I started it I got carried away watching You Tube videos of him from adoring Werder Bremen fans with everything from Tina Turner to Autobahn inspired trance soundtracks. Their admiration for this guy is truly something to behold. Finally though following alongside the post on our mercato arrivals, we now present the first official biographical post on our newest signing, Diego Ribas da Cunha.

Born on the 28th of February 1985 in Sao Paolo, the Brazilian began his career at Comercial FC Ribeirao Preto at age 5. He then moved to Paulistinha Sao Carlos before he joined FC Santos, a popular domestic outfit and the hometown club of Pele, in 1996 at the ripe age of 12. He made his first team debut four years later, and by 18 years old he wore the captain’s armband guiding his side to two Brazilian titles in 2002 and 2004. Pele later described the teenage sensation as a “worthy successor”.

Taking a jump across the pond in search of something more, Diego joined the popular Portuguese side FC Porto in 2004 for € 8 million as a replacement for the Barcelona-bound Deco. Cue the speed bump. Reports suggest the then Porto coach, Co Adriaanse, was unhappy with the defensive effort of his midfielder which eventually led Diego to lose his regular first-team place. After two years of the on again off again routine, Porto sold him to Germany’s Werder Bremen in May 2006 for only € 6 million. Talk about good career moves.

While playing in the Bundesliga under the keen eye of long time Werder Bremen player and now coach Thomas Schaaf, Diego’s potential was finally being tapped by employing him in an attacking-minded formation. Schaaf decided to give the playmaker as much of a creative role as he could handle, and the young Brazilian responded in kind. For three seasons he led the northern German side to new heights domestically and internationally including a German League Cup title, a German Cup title, and two praiseworthy runner-up performances in both the UEFA Cup and Bundesliga competitions. Bayern Munich President and German football legend, Franz Beckenbauer recently praised him as “a player who can make the crucial difference”.

Then, on the 26th of May 2009, Juventus announced that an agreement with Werder Bremen for the acquisition of the player’s rights had been finalized. The five-year contract, effective July 1st 2009, will be paid in three installments: € 14 million on 1st July 2009, € 5.5 million on 1st July 2010, and € 5 million on 1st July 2011, totaling € 24.5 million with an additional € 2.5 million in performance incentives. Finally after a two-year courtship, Die Grün-Weißen’s favorite son was now apart of our big family.

In the last two seasons our Old Lady has had her fair share of memorable performances, some worth mentioning more than others. The “others” in this case were those tormenting instances when our attack couldn’t muster enough creativity through the middle when we desperately needed to. In fact, during Ranieri’s tenure we were practically toothless in that respect. Now with the addition of Diego, our side can finally boast about a “crucial difference” in our opponent’s final third again.

What excites me about him as a player is his hunger for the ball and his physical presence while on it. From the dozen or so Werder Bremen games I’ve watched, ever since rumours of Juventus’ interest in him began two years ago, he consistently displayed a unique attacking talent for the game. While employing the same flair and technique one would expect from an attacking midfielder born in Brazil, Diego exhibits an unusually large sense of strength and determination most of his countrymen typically don’t share.

As a result, adjusting to Italian football shouldn’t be a problem (ahem, Tiago), especially after Ferrara’s already confirmed we’ll be employing a system similar to the one Diego enjoyed in Germany. “Diego will be accommodated with a different system to the one used in the last two years, but it would be wrong to build a team around him. He is a great champion, but the individual must be at Juve’s disposal. After all, if Diego is missing then we cannot be without a Plan B. It will be a 4-3-1-2 system, but that can be changed to 4-3-2-1 or 4-2-3-1 depending on the circumstances. With the characteristics of the players we have right now, I’d say 4-3-1-2 is the best solution.”

With so many talented youngsters ready to make their impressions with Juventus on the highest of stages, the future of our club has never looked brighter. Next season we’ll be ushering in a new era of football, one year before the completion of the Delle Alpi re-construction. Therefore along with a brand new stadium all of Europe can envy, we’ll have a style of play that’ll be sought after just the same.

IERI… OGGI… DOMANI… SEMPRE JUVE!!!



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    Displaying the most recent 25 comments from a total of 67 comments.
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  • alessio |  June 23rd, 2009 at 2:00 pm

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    He was replaced to a degree by the other wingers in the club and his performances in the 2nd half of the season were generally not as good as his previous loan spell. He’s rusty…still a few years from a Juve return.

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  • Neo |  June 23rd, 2009 at 7:33 pm

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    Gio thinks the club are underestimating his qualities…

    http://www.giovinco.fansitehost.org/2009/06/juventus-dont-understand-my-true-value/

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  • Sam |  June 24th, 2009 at 3:33 am

  • Calisi |  June 24th, 2009 at 6:51 am

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    Looks like more and more that De Ceglie will go under coownership with Udinese for us to get D’Agostino rather than him going to Napoli.

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  • Stasio |  June 24th, 2009 at 7:54 am

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    If your runnning a 4-3-1-2 system whats the line up gonna look like?

    - Buffon
    - Grosso-Canna-GC-De Ceglie
    - Camronesi-Sissoko-Gionvinco
    - Diego
    - Amuari-Del Piero

    Were is Marchisio gonna fit on a regular basis or Gionvinco specially if they get D’agsostino and what about Tiago who sucks imo

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  • DonMichele |  June 24th, 2009 at 8:24 am

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    I rememeber seeing Bochetti in the Toulon tourny last year and he seemed rash…Looks like he matured quite well.

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  • alex |  June 24th, 2009 at 8:24 am

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    marchisio is about 20 times better than sissoko will ever be. hes the most complete midfielder ive seen in a long time and i dare say hes going to be better than de rossi…

    when you think about it what the fuck is secco doing? he spent 20m on diego when you have giovinco, cannavaro is past it and he has let criscito go who is going to be the best left back in the world at some point hes that good!

    if giovinco rots on the bench again it will be disgusting the kid is an incredible talent and showed it every time he played last season

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  • alessio |  June 24th, 2009 at 11:10 am

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    Stasio a 4-3-1-2 would be wingerless, so no Gio on the left and most likely no Camo on the right. If D’Agostino comes in, it’d be something like Marchisio-Sissoko-D’Agostino, with Zanetti, Tiago, and Camo as subs.

    Looks like Criscito is on the way out, albeit on co-ownership. What’s the point? If we have no intention of bringing him back to base, sell him.

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  • alessio |  June 24th, 2009 at 12:24 pm

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    USA 2-0 Spain.

    I am stunned.

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  • Nnahoj |  June 24th, 2009 at 1:24 pm

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    If that report is true, then this is a bad move on Juve’s part. If he goes on to be the tits for Genoa, then we’d have to splash the cash to sign him back from Genoa, similar to what happened with De Ceglie. And for what? An aging Grosso (who I rate, but still) or a totally shite Dossena? Ridiculous!

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  • Weston |  June 24th, 2009 at 1:32 pm

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    giovinco and marchisio need to start together every Juventus game for us to be succesfull. i do not want d’agostino if it would mean for either one of them to leave or be benched, but all three of them together would be beyond fantastic.

    @calisi, i thought the de ceglie co-ownership deal already went thru. alessio?

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  • Weston |  June 24th, 2009 at 1:32 pm

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    ps. USA! USA!

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  • roberto |  June 24th, 2009 at 3:40 pm

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    Let’s say, for conversation sake, next season two or maybe three of our strikers are temporarily sidelined with injuries. If that’s the case Ciro can play a 4-2-3-1 with Giovinco and Camoranesi alongside Diego backed up by Sissoko and Marchisio or either Poulsen and Zanetti. Or let’s say we have a little shortage in the middle of the park, we can shift to the 4-3-1-2 like everyone’s discussing here. It’s kinda flexible when you think about it, and only possible when you’ve got the option of a Giovinco and a Diego together on a roster.

    Howard looked good out there for the States,
    Watch out Brazil!

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  • alex |  June 25th, 2009 at 6:18 am

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    the worst thing about all this is giovinco is a juventino. the kid is the best young italian player but is not getting a game and then secco brings in diego? i cant understand it. giovinco is your most talented player and should be the 2nd name on the teamsheet after buffon

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  • Jorid |  June 25th, 2009 at 7:46 am

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    “Confermo che Trezeguet resta alla Juventus”. Giovanni Cobolli Gigli si tiene l’attaccante francese, e in ogni caso “se dovesse arrivare una grossa offerta – dice il presidente bianconero all’uscita dalla Lega a Milano – non sarebbe sostituito”.
    In English:
    “I can confirm that Trez will stay at Juventus, and in case we receive a large offer for him he wouldn’t be substituted”
    I hate Gigli’s interviews/press releases, the man never really states anything that sounds “decisive”. It makes me somewhat happy hearing it from him, hopefully Le Roi can stay healthy and he will return 2 be Juve’s and Serie A’s main striker.

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  • alessio |  June 25th, 2009 at 8:27 am

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    Palladino, Mirante, and Lanzafame’s co-ownership deals have been renewed and they will be staying at their respective clubs. No word on Criscito yet.

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  • Jim |  June 25th, 2009 at 9:08 am

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    E’ terminato con un nulla di fatto l’incontro tra l’Udinese e la Juventus per D’Agostino. Le parti, riporta ‘SkySport24′, restano infatti molto distanti (l’Udinese scende massimo a 18 mln di euro, la Juventus offre sui 14 mln di euro) tanto che il ds Alessio Secco sarebbe orientato verso altri obiettivi, Diarra in primis. Non è da escludere, tuttavia, un nuovo vertice tra i due club nei prossimi giorni per il mediano palermitano

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  • Jim |  June 25th, 2009 at 9:10 am

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    il club bianconero offre 14 mln di euro mentre quello friulano ne vuole 20.

    20 seems a little extreme..

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  • alex |  June 25th, 2009 at 9:17 am

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    http://www.tuttomercatoweb.com/napoli/?action=read&idnotizia=35588

    genoa have the best transfer policy in italy. although they will miss thiago motta

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  • Jim |  June 25th, 2009 at 9:23 am

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    crap..

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  • alessio |  June 25th, 2009 at 9:45 am

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    7.5mil in, at least, for co-ownership. Secco did wisely to put his co-ownership price high.

    14mil sounds like a good idea, 20 seems high. Throw in Paolucci to drop it 2-3, and co-ownership of one of our other young players. (Not the 3 Musketeers) Then it’ll be 15 or so, with players to compensate for his departure. D’Agostino is worth it, he would add a whole new dimension to our team and he is a class player. Getting Diarra instead of D’Agostino would be a disaster! GET IT DONE SECCO!!!

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  • Jim |  June 25th, 2009 at 10:24 am

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    haha…totally agree Alessio…

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  • Anthony |  June 26th, 2009 at 2:12 am

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    Secco has improved, but where I think he still went wrong this year was spending 24 million on Diego instead of investing in the defense. We have Giovinco, so its not like we were in desperate need for Diego…although its still great to have a player like him available. Diego is a fantastic, but we could have used that money to sign a world class defender instead of bringing back Cannavaro. We would have had money left over too since I’m sure most defenders wouldn’t cost 24 million…so the extra money could have gone to sign a RB or help with the D’Ago deal. But if the D’Ago deal goes through (without losing vital players) and we sign Grosso…then I’ll definitely give kudos to Secco for a much improved mercato. Too bad Genoa used their co-ownership option on Criscito though…would have been nice to have him back…then we wouldn’t need Grosso.

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  • JP |  June 29th, 2009 at 9:00 pm

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    Another option is to play Giovinco up front in the 4-3-1-2 alongside Amauri. Del Piero is getting old and won’t play every game. I’m not too fond of Amauri/Iaquinta combination so playing Gio next to either of them could be the answer so Gio and Diego can play together.

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  • arbri |  July 1st, 2009 at 8:43 am

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    is wery good diego !

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