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Juventus
Juventus FC 2017 icon
Full name Juventus Football Club S.p.A.
Nickname(s) La Vecchia Signora (The Old Lady)
Founded 1897
Ground Juventus Stadium
(Capacity: 41,507)
Owner Flag of Italy Agnelli family (through Exor S.p.A)
Chairman Flag of Italy Gianluca Ferrero
Manager Flag of Italy Thiago Motta
Current League Serie A 
2022–23 Serie A, 7th
Website Club home page
Juventus 2024-25 homeJuventus 2024-25 awayJuventus 2024-25 third
Football current event Current season

Juventus Football Club S.p.A. commonly referred to as Juventus and colloquially as Juve, are a professional Italian association football club based in Turin, Piedmont. The club is the third oldest of its kind in the country and has spent the majority of its history, with the exception of the 2006–07 season, in the top flight First Division (known as Serie A since 1929).

Founded in 1897 as Sport Club Juventus by a group of young Torinese students, among them, who was their first president, Eugenio Canfari, and his brother Enrico, author of the company's historical memory; they are managed by the industrial Agnelli family since 1923, which constitutes the oldest sporting partnership in Italy, thus making Juventus the first professional club in the country. Over time, the club has become a symbol of the nation's culture and italianità ("Italianness"), due to their tradition of success, some of which have had a significant impact in Italian society, especially in the 1930s and the first post-war decade; and the ideological politics and socio-economic origin of the club's sympathisers. This is reflected, among others, in the club's contribution to the national team, uninterrupted since the second half of the 1920s and recognised as one of the most influential in international football, having performed a decisive role in the World Cup triumphs of 1934, 1982 and 2006. The club's fan base is larger than any other Italian football club and is one of the largest worldwide. Support for Juventus is widespread throughout the country and abroad, mainly in countries with a significant presence of Italian immigrants.

Juventus is historically the most successful club in Italian football and one of the most laureated and important globally. Overall, they have won fifty-five official titles on the national and international stage, more than any other Italian club: a record thirty-six league titles, a record thirteen Italian cups, a record eight national super cups, and, with eleven titles in confederation and inter-confederation competitions (two Intercontinental Cups, two European Champion Clubs' Cup/UEFA Champions Leagues, one European Cup Winners' Cup, a record three UEFA Cups, one UEFA Intertoto Cup and two UEFA Super Cups) the club currently ranks fourth in Europe and eighth in the world with the most trophies won.

In 1985, under the management of Giovanni Trapattoni, who led the Torinese team to thirteen official trophies in ten years until 1986, including six league titles and five international titles; Juventus became the first club in the history of European football to have won all three major competitions organised by the Union of European Football Associations: the European Champions' Cup, the (now-defunct) Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Cup (the first Italian and Southern European side to win the tournament). After their triumph in the Intercontinental Cup the same year, the club also became the first in football history—and remains the only one at present—to have won all possible official continental competitions and the world title. According to the all-time ranking published in 2009 by the International Federation of Football History and Statistics, an organization recognised by FIFA, based on clubs' performance in international competitions, Juventus were Italy's best club and second in Europe of the 20th century.

Players[]

First-team squad[]

As of 27 January 2025
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Flag of Italy Mattia Perin
2 DF Flag of Portugal Alberto Costa
3 DF Flag of Brazil Bremer
4 DF Flag of Italy Federico Gatti
5 MF Flag of Italy Manuel Locatelli (captain)
7 FW Flag of Portugal Francisco Conceição (on loan from Porto)
8 MF Flag of Netherlands Teun Koopmeiners (vice-captain)
9 FW Flag of Serbia Dušan Vlahović
10 FW Flag of Turkey Kenan Yıldız
11 FW Flag of Argentina Nico González (on loan from Fiorentina)
12 DF Flag of Portugal Renato Veiga (on loan from Chelsea)
14 FW Flag of Poland Arkadiusz Milik
15 DF Flag of France Pierre Kalulu (on loan from AC Milan)
16 MF Flag of United States Weston McKennie
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF Flag of Montenegro Vasilije Adžić
18 MF Flag of Brazil Arthur Melo
19 MF Flag of France Khéphren Thuram
20 FW Flag of France Randal Kolo Muani (on loan from Paris Saint-Germain)
21 MF Flag of Italy Nicolò Fagioli
22 FW Flag of United States Timothy Weah
23 GK Flag of Italy Carlo Pinsoglio
26 MF Flag of Brazil Douglas Luiz
27 DF Flag of Italy Andrea Cambiaso
29 GK Flag of Italy Michele Di Gregorio (on loan from Monza)
32 DF Flag of Colombia Juan Cabal
37 DF Flag of Italy Nicolò Savona
40 DF Flag of Sweden Jonas Rouhi
51 FW Flag of Belgium Samuel Mbangula

Juventus Next Gen and Youth Sector[]

As of 04 September 2024
Main article:Juventus FC Youth Sector
No. Pos. Nation Player
36 FW Flag of Italy Lorenzo Anghelè
38 GK Flag of Italy Giovanni Daffara
41 DF Flag of Spain Javier Gil
42 DF Flag of Uruguay Alfonso Montero
43 MF Flag of Italy Augusto Owusu
No. Pos. Nation Player
44 FW Flag of Italy Diego Pugno
45 MF Flag of Greece Christos Papadopoulos (on loan from Genoa)
46 MF Flag of Italy Filippo Pagnucco
47 DF Flag of Italy Niccolò Rizzo

Out on loan[]

As of 24 January 2025
No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Flag of Italy Giovanni Garofani (at Monopoli until 30 June 2025)
GK Flag of Italy Stefano Gori (at Spezia until 30 June 2025)
GK Flag of Italy Matteo Fuscaldo (at Empoli until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Mattia De Sciglio (at Empoli until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Portugal Tiago Djaló (at Porto until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Uruguay Facundo González (at Feyenoord until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina Tarik Muharemović (at Sassuolo until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of France Jean-Claude Ntenda (at SPAL until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Luca Pellegrini (at Lazio until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Daniele Rugani (at Ajax until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Serbia Filip Kostić (at Fenerbahçe until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Italy Nicolò Ledonne (at Giana Erminio until 30 June 2025)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Flag of Italy Fabio Miretti (at Genoa until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Italy Hans Nicolussi Caviglia (at Venezia until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Belgium Joseph Nonge (at Servette until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Norway Martin Palumbo (at Avellino until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Italy Nicolò Rovella (at Lazio until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Italy Alessandro Sersanti (at Reggiana until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Nikola Sekulov (at Sampdoria until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Leonardo Cerri (at Carrarese until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Mattia Compagnon (at Catanzaro until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Ukraine Andriy Firman (at Sion until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Emanuele Pecorino (at Frosinone until 30 June 2025)

Club alumni[]

Former players[]

Main article: Juventus FC players

Managers[]

Main article: Juventus FC managers

Honours[]

Juventus FC honours
Type Competition Titles Seasons
Domestic Italian Football Championship /
Serie A
36 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, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20
Serie B 1 2006–07
Coppa Italia 13 1937–38, 1941–42, 1958–59, 1959–60, 1964–65, 1978–79, 1982–83, 1989–90, 1994–95, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18
Supercoppa Italiana 8 1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2018
Continental European Cup/UEFA Champions League 2 1984–85, 1995–96
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1 1983–84
UEFA Cup 3 1976–77, 1989–90, 1992–93
European Super Cup/UEFA Super Cup 2 1984, 1996
UEFA Intertoto Cup 1 1999
Worldwide Intercontinental Cup 2 1985, 1996
  Record

External links[]

Juventus FC 2017 icon
Juventus Football Club
Current seasonPlayersManagersStatisticsHonoursJuventus Next GenJuventus Stadium

History: Seasons
Former Stadiums: Stadio Olimpico (2006–2011), Stadio Delle Alpi (1990–2006), Stadio Comunale (1933–1990), Campo Juventus (1922–1933), Stadio di Corso Sebastopoli (1909–1922), Stadio Motovelodromo Umberto I (1905–1906)

Juventus FC 2017 icon
Juventus FC squad - 2024–25

Szczęsny · De Sciglio · Bremer · Gatti · Locatelli · Danilo (c) · Chiesa · Vlahović · 10 Pogba · 11 Kostić · 12 Alex Sandro · 13 Huijsen · 14 Milik · 15 Yıldız · 16 McKennie · 17 Iling-Junior · 18 Kean · 20 Miretti · 21 Fagioli · 22 Weah · 23 Pinsoglio · 24 Rugani · 25 Rabiot · 27 Cambiaso · 36 Perin · 41 Nicolussi ·

Manager:  Flag of Italy Thiago Motta
Juventus FC 2017 icon
Juventus FC 2017 icon
Juventus FC seasons
2015–16 · 2016–17 · 2017–18 · 2018–19 · 2019–20 · 2020–21 · 2021–22 · 2022–23 · 2023–24 · 2024–25 ·
Juventus Football Club - Managers

Károly (1923–26) • Viola (1926–28) • Aitken (1928–30) • Carcano (1930–35) • Bigatto (1935) • Rosetta (1935–39) • Caligaris (1939–41) • Munerati (1941) • Ferrari (1941–42) • Monti (1942) • Borel (1942–46) • Cesarini (1946–48) • Chalmers (1948–49) • Carver (1949–51) • Bertolini (1951) • Sárosi (1951–53) • Olivieri (1953–55) • Puppo (1955–57) • Broćić (1957–59) • Depetrini (1959) • Cesarini (1959–61) • Parola (1961) • Gren & Korostelev (1961) • Parola (1961–62) • Amaral (1962–64) • Monzeglio (1964) • Herrera (1964–69) • Carniglia (1969–70) • Rabitti (1970) • Picchi (1970–71) • Vycpálek (1971–74) • Parola (1974–76) • Trapattoni (1976–86) • Marchesi (1986–88) • Zoff (1988–90) • Maifredi (1990–91) • Trapattoni (1991–94) • Lippi (1994–99) • Ancelotti (1999–2001) • Lippi (2001–04) • Capello (2004–06) • Deschamps (2006–07) • Corradini (2007) • Ranieri (2007–09) • Ferrara (2009–10) • Zaccheroni (2010) • Delneri (2010–11) • Conte (2011–14) • Allegri (2014–19) • Sarri (2019–20) • Pirlo (2020–21) • Allegri (2021–24) • Monteroc (2024) • Motta (2024–)

Juventus matches - 2024–25
2024–25 Serie A
2024–25 Coppa Italia
2024 Supercoppa Italiana
2024–25 UEFA Champions League
2025 FIFA Club World Cup
Italian Football Championship and Serie A winners
Italian Football Championship
Genoa (1898; 1899; 1900) · Milan (1901) · Genoa (1902; 1903; 1904) · Juventus (1905) · Milan (1906; 1907) · Pro Vercelli (1908; 1909) · Internazionale (1909–10) · Pro Vercelli (1910–11; 1911–12; 1912–13) · Casale (1913–14) · Genoa (1914–15) · Internazionale (1919–20) · Pro Vercelli (1920–21; 1921–22 (CCI)) · Novese (1921–22 (FIGC)) · Genoa (1922–23; 1923–24) · Bologna (1924–25) · Juventus (1925–26) · no winner (1926–27); Torino (1927–28) · Bologna (1928–29)
Serie A winners
Ambrosiana (1929–30) · Juventus (1930–31; 1931–32; 1932–33; 1933–34; 1934–35) · Bologna (1935–36; 1936–37) · Ambrosiana-Inter (1937–38) · Bologna (1938–39) · Ambrosiana-Inter (1939–40) · Bologna (1940–41) · Roma (1941–42) · Torino (1942–43; 1945–46; 1946–47; 1947–48; 1948–49) · Juventus (1949–50) · Milan (1950–51) · Juventus (1951–52) · Internazionale (1952–53; 1953–54) · Milan (1954–55) · Fiorentina (1955–56) · Milan (1956–57) · Juventus (1957–58) · Milan (1958–59) · Juventus (1959–60; 1960–61) · Milan (1961–62) · Internazionale (1962–63) · Bologna (1963–64) · Internazionale (1964–65; 1965–66) · Juventus (1966–67) · Milan (1967–68) · Fiorentina (1968–69) · Cagliari (1969–70) · Internazionale (1970–71) · Juventus (1971–72; 1972–73) · Lazio (1973–74) · Juventus (1974–75) · Torino (1975–76) · Juventus (1976–77; 1977–78) · Milan (1978–79) · Internazionale (1979–80) · Juventus (1980–81; 1981–82) · Roma (1982–83) · Juventus (1983–84) · Hellas Verona (1984–85) · Juventus (1985–86) · Napoli (1986–87) · Milan (1987–88) · Internazionale (1988–89) · Napoli (1989–90) · Sampdoria (1990–91) · Milan (1991–92; 1992–93; 1993–94) · Juventus (1994–95) · Milan (1995–96) · Juventus (1996–97; 1997–98) · Milan (1998–99) · Lazio (1999–2000) · Roma (2000–01) · Juventus (2001–02; 2002–03) · Milan (2003–04) · no winner (2004–05) · Internazionale ((2005–06 unofficial); 2006–07; 2007–08; 2008–09; 2009–10) · Milan (2010–11) · Juventus (2011–12; 2012–13; 2013–14; 2014–15; 2015–16; 2016–17; 2017–18; 2018–19; 2019–20) · Internazionale (2020–21) · Milan (2021–22) · Napoli (2022–23) · Internazionale (2023–24) ·
Italian Cup winners

Vado (1922) • Torino (1935–36) • Genoa (1936–37) • Juventus (1937–38) • Ambrosiana-Inter (1938–39) • Fiorentina (1939–40) • Venezia (1940–41) • Juventus (1941–42) • Torino (1942–43) • Lazio (1958) • Juventus (1958–59; 1959–60) • Fiorentina (1960–61) • Napoli (1961–62) • Atalanta (1962–63) • Roma (1963–64) • Juventus (1964–65) • Fiorentina (1965–66) • Milan (1966–67) • Torino (1967–68) • Roma (1968–69) • Bologna (1969–70) • Torino (1970–71) • Milan (1971–72; 1972–73) • Bologna (1973–74) • Fiorentina (1974–75) • Napoli (1975–76) • Milan (1976–77) • Internazionale (1977–78) • Juventus (1978–79) • Roma (1979–80; 1980–81) • Internazionale (1981–82) • Juventus (1982–83) • Roma (1983–84) • Sampdoria (1984–85) • Roma (1985–86) • Napoli (1986–87) • Sampdoria (1987–88; 1988–89) • Juventus (1989–90) • Roma (1990–91) • Parma (1991–92) • Torino (1992–93) • Sampdoria (1993–94) • Juventus (1994–95) • Fiorentina (1995–96) • Vicenza (1996–97) • Lazio (1997–98) • Parma (1998–99) • Lazio (1999–2000) • Fiorentina (2000–01) • Parma (2001–02) • Milan (2002–03) • Lazio (2003–04) • Internazionale (2004–05; 2005–06) • Roma (2006–07, 2007–08) • Lazio (2008–09) • Internazionale (2009–10; 2010–11) • Napoli (2011–12) • Lazio (2012–13) • Napoli (2013–14) • Juventus (2014–15; 2015–16) •

Italian Super Cup winners

Milan (1988) • Internazionale (1989) • Napoli (1990) • Sampdoria (1991) • Milan (1992) • Milan (1993) • Milan (1994) • Juventus (1995) • Fiorentina (1996) • Juventus (1997) • Lazio (1998) • Parma (1999) • Lazio (2000) • Roma (2001) • Juventus (2002) • Juventus (2003) • Milan (2004) • Internazionale (2005) • Internazionale (2006) • Roma (2007) • Internazionale (2008) • Lazio (2009) • Internazionale (2010) • Milan (2011) • Juventus (2012) • Juventus (2013) • Napoli (2014) • Juventus (2015) • Milan (2016) • Lazio (2017) • Juventus (2018) • Lazio (2019) • Juventus (2020) •

UEFA Champions League winners

1956: Real Madrid • 1957: Real Madrid • 1958: Real Madrid • 1959: Real Madrid • 1960: Real Madrid • 1961: Benfica • 1962: Benfica • 1963: Milan • 1964: Internazionale • 1965: Internazionale • 1966: Real Madrid • 1967: Celtic • 1968: Manchester United • 1969: Milan • 1970: Feyenoord • 1971: Ajax • 1972: Ajax • 1973: Ajax • 1974: Bayern Munich • 1975: Bayern Munich • 1976: Bayern Munich • 1977: Liverpool • 1978: Liverpool • 1979: Nottingham Forest • 1980: Nottingham Forest • 1981: Liverpool • 1982: Aston Villa • 1983: Hamburg • 1984: Liverpool • 1985: Juventus • 1986: Steaua Bucuresti • 1987: Porto • 1988: PSV Eindhoven • 1989: Milan • 1990: Milan • 1991: Red Star Belgrade • 1992: Barcelona • 1993: Marseille • 1994: Milan • 1995: Ajax • 1996: Juventus • 1997: Borussia Dortmund • 1998: Real Madrid • 1999: Manchester United • 2000: Real Madrid • 2001: Bayern Munich • 2002: Real Madrid • 2003: Milan • 2004: Porto • 2005: Liverpool • 2006: Barcelona • 2007: Milan • 2008: Manchester United • 2009: Barcelona • 2010: Internazionale 2011: Barcelona • 2012: Chelsea • 2013: Bayern Munich • 2014: Real Madrid • 2015: Barcelona • 2016: Real Madrid • 2017: Real Madrid • 2018: Real Madrid • 2019: Liverpool • 2020: Bayern Munich • 2021: Chelsea • 2022: Real Madrid • 2023: Manchester City •

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup winners

1961: Fiorentina • 1962: Atlético Madrid • 1963: Tottenham Hotspur • 1964: Sporting CP • 1965: West Ham United • 1966: Borussia Dortmund • 1967: Bayern Munich • 1968: Milan • 1969: Slovan Bratislava • 1970: Manchester City • 1971: Chelsea • 1972: Rangers • 1973: Milan • 1974: Magdeburg • 1975: Dynamo Kyiv • 1976: Anderlecht • 1977: Hamburg • 1978: Anderlecht • 1979: Barcelona • 1980: Valencia • 1981: Dinamo Tbilisi • 1982: Barcelona • 1983: Aberdeen • 1984: Juventus • 1985: Everton • 1986: Dynamo Kyiv • 1987: Ajax • 1988: Mechelen • 1989: Barcelona • 1990: Sampdoria • 1991: Manchester United • 1992: Werder Bremen • 1993: Parma • 1994: Arsenal • 1995: Real Zaragoza • 1996: Paris Saint-Germain • 1997: Barcelona • 1998: Chelsea • 1999: Lazio

UEFA Europa League winners

1972: Tottenham Hotspur • 1973: Liverpool • 1974: Feyenoord • 1975: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1976: Liverpool • 1977: Juventus • 1978: PSV Eindhoven • 1979: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1980: Eintracht Frankfurt • 1981: Ipswich Town • 1982: IFK Göteborg • 1983: Anderlecht • 1984: Tottenham Hotspur • 1985: Real Madrid • 1986: Real Madrid • 1987: IFK Göteborg • 1988: Bayer Leverkusen • 1989: Napoli • 1990: Juventus • 1991: Internazionale • 1992: Ajax • 1993: Juventus • 1994: Internazionale • 1995: Parma • 1996: Bayern Munich • 1997: Schalke 04 • 1998: Internazionale • 1999: Parma • 2000: Galatasaray • 2001: Liverpool • 2002: Feyenoord • 2003: Porto • 2004: Valencia • 2005: CSKA Moscow • 2006: Sevilla • 2007: Sevilla • 2008: Zenit Saint Petersburg • 2009: Shakhtar Donetsk • 2010: Atlético Madrid • 2011: Porto • 2012: Atlético Madrid • 2013: Chelsea • 2014: Sevilla • 2015: Sevilla • 2016: Sevilla • 2017: Manchester United • 2018: Atlético Madrid • 2019: Chelsea • 2020: Sevilla • 2021: Villarreal • 2022: Eintracht Frankfurt • 2023: Sevilla • 2024: Atalanta •

UEFA Intertoto Cup winners
1995: France Bordeaux, France Strasbourg1996: Germany Karlsruhe, Denmark Silkeborg, France Guingamp1997: France Auxerre, France Bastia, France Lyon1998: Italy Bologna, Spain Valencia, Germany Werder1999: Italy Juventus, England West Ham United, France Montpellier2000: Spain Celta, Germany Stuttgart, Italy Udinese2001: France Paris Saint-Germain, France Troyes, England Aston Villa2002: Spain Málaga, Germany Stuttgart, England Fulham2003: Spain Villarreal, Italy Perugia, Germany Schalke 042004: Spain Villarreal, France Lille, Germany Schalke 042005: Germany Hamburg,France Marseille, France Lens2006: England Newcastle United2007: Germany Hamburg2008: Portugal Braga
UEFA Super Cup winners

1972: Ajax • 1973: Ajax • 1975: Dynamo Kiev • 1976: Anderlecht • 1977: Liverpool • 1978: Anderlecht • 1979: Nottingham Forest • 1980: Valencia • 1982: Aston Villa • 1983: Aberdeen • 1984: Juventus • 1986: Steaua Bucharest • 1987: Porto • 1988: Mechelen • 1989: Milan • 1990: Milan • 1991: Manchester United • 1992: Barcelona • 1993: Parma • 1994: Milan • 1995: Ajax • 1996: Juventus • 1997: Barcelona • 1998: Chelsea • 1999: Lazio • 2000: Galatasaray • 2001: Liverpool • 2002: Real Madrid • 2003: Milan • 2004: Valencia • 2005: Liverpool • 2006: Sevilla • 2007: Milan • 2008: Zenit St. Petersburg • 2009: Barcelona • 2010: Atlético Madrid • 2011: Barcelona • 2012: Atlético Madrid • 2013: Bayern Munich • 2014: Real Madrid • 2015: Barcelona • 2016: Real Madrid • 2017: Real Madrid • 2018: Atlético Madrid • 2019: Liverpool • 2020: Bayern Munich • 2021: Chelsea • 2022: Real Madrid • 2023: Manchester City • 2024: Real Madrid •

Intercontinental Cup winners

1960: Spain Real Madrid · 1961: Uruguay Peñarol · 1962: Brazil Santos · 1963: Brazil Santos · 1964: Italy Inter Milan · 1965: Italy Inter Milan · 1966: Uruguay Peñarol · 1967: Argentina Racing · 1968: Argentina Estudiantes de La Plata · 1969: Italy AC Milan · 1970: Netherlands Feyenoord · 1971: Uruguay Nacional · 1972: Netherlands Ajax · 1973: Argentina Independiente · 1974: Spain Atlético Madrid · 1976: West Germany Bayern Munich · 1977: Argentina Boca Juniors · 1979: Paraguay Olimpia · 1980: Uruguay Nacional · 1981: Brazil Flamengo · 1982: Uruguay Peñarol · 1983: Brazil Grêmio · 1984: Argentina Independiente · 1985: Italy Juventus · 1986: Argentina River Plate · 1987: Portugal Porto · 1988: Uruguay Nacional · 1989: Italy AC Milan · 1990: Italy AC Milan · 1991: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade · 1992: Brazil São Paulo · 1993: Brazil São Paulo · 1994: Argentina Vélez Sársfield · 1995: Netherlands Ajax · 1996: Italy Juventus · 1997: Germany Borussia Dortmund · 1998: Spain Real Madrid · 1999: England Manchester United · 2000: Argentina Boca Juniors · 2001: Germany Bayern Munich · 2002: Spain Real Madrid · 2003: Argentina Boca Juniors · 2004: Portugal Porto

Serie A 2024–25
Atalanta · Bologna · Cagliari · Como · Empoli · Fiorentina · Genoa · Hellas Verona · Inter Milan · Juventus · Lazio · Lecce · A.C. Milan · Monza · Napoli · Parma · Roma · Torino · Udinese · Venezia
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