List of Juventus F.C. records and statistics

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Juventus Football Club is an Italian professional association football club based in Turin, Piedmont, that competes in Serie A, the top football league in the country. The club was formed in 1897 as Sport Club Juventus by a group of Massimo D'Azeglio Lyceum young students, and played its first competitive match on 11 March 1900, when it entered the Piedmont round of the IIIº Federal Championship.[1]

This list encompasses the major honours won by Juventus and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The individual records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. The club's players have received, among others, a record twenty five Oscar del Calcio, the awards given by the Italian Footballers' Association (AIC), eight Ballon d'Or awards and four FIFA World Player of the Year awards, more than any other Italian club in both cases.

Honours

File:Juventus Museum - Trophy Room.jpg
A partial view of the club's trophy room with the titles won between 1905 to 2013 at J-Museum.

Italy's most successful club of the 20th century,[2] and the most successful club in the history of Italian football,[3] Juventus have won the Italian League Championship, the country's premier football club competition and organised by Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A (LNPA), a record 33 times and have the record of consecutive triumphs in that tournament (five, between 1930–31 and 1934–35).[4] They have also won the Coppa Italia, the country's primary cup competition, a record ten times, and becoming the first team to retain the trophy successfully with their triumph in the 1959–60 season.[5] In addition, the club holds the record for Supercoppa Italiana wins with seven, the most recent coming in 2015.

Overall, Juventus have won 59 official competitions, more than any other team in the country; 48 in the national First Division, which is also a record, and 11 official international competitions,[6] making them, in the latter case, the second most successful Italian club in European competition.[7] The club is currently fourth in Europe and eighth in the world with the most international titles won officially recognised by their respective continental football confederation and Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA).[8] In 1977, the Torinese side become the first in Southern Europe to have won the UEFA Cup and the first—and only to date—in Italian football history to achieve an international title with a squad composed by national footballers.[9] In 1993 the club won its third competition's trophy, an unprecedented feat in the continent until then and the most for an Italian club. Juventus was, also, the first Italian club to achieve the title in the European Super Cup, having won the competition in 1984, and the first European club to win the Intercontinental Cup, in 1985, since it was restructured by Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol (CONMEBOL)'s organizing committee five years beforehand.[10]

The club has earned the distinction of being allowed to wear three Golden Stars for Sport Excellence (it. Stelle d'oro al Merito Sportivo) on its shirts representing its league victories: the tenth of which was achieved during the 1957–58 season, the twentieth in the 1981–82 season and the thirtieth in the 2013–14 season. Juventus were the first Italian team to have twice achieved the national double thrice (winning the Italian top tier division and the national cup competition in the same season), in the 1959–60; 1994–95 and 2014–15 seasons.

In 1985, Juventus became the first club in the history of European football to have won all three major UEFA competitions, the European Champion Clubs' Cup, the (now-defunct) UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Cup.[11][12][13] After their triumph in the Intercontinental Cup in the same year, Juventus FC also became the first football team ever—remain the only one at present—to have won all possible official continental competitions and the world title.[14][15][16]

Only in the 1910s the club has not won any official competition, a unique case in the country. In terms of overall official trophies won, Juventus' most successful decades were the 1980s and 1990s; in each period the club won eleven competitions.[17]

National titles

Winners (31): 1905; 1925–26;[18] 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; 2004–05 [nb 1]; 2005–06[nb 1]; 2011–12; 2012–13; 2013–14; 2014–15
Runners-up (21): 1903; 1904; 1906; 1937–38; 1945–46; 1946–47; 1947–48; 1952–53; 1953–54; 1962–63; 1973–74; 1975–76; 1979–80; 1982–83; 1986–87; 1991–92; 1993–94; 1995–96; 1999–2000; 2000–01; 2008–09
Winners (10): 1937–38; 1941–42; 1958–59; 1959–60; 1964–65; 1978–79; 1982–83; 1989–90; 1994–95; 2014–15
Runners-up (5): 1972–73; 1991–92; 2001–02; 2003–04; 2011–12
Winners (7): 1995; 1997; 2002; 2003; 2012; 2013; 2015
Runners-up (4): 1990; 1998; 2005; 2014
Winners (1): 2006–07

European titles

Winners (2): 1984–85; 1995–96
Runners-up (6): 1972–73; 1982–83; 1996–97; 1997–98; 2002–03; 2014–15
Winners (1): 1983–84
Winners (3): 1976–77; 1989–90; 1992–93
Runner-up (1): 1994–95
Winners (1): 1999
Winners (2): 1984; 1996

World-wide titles

Winners (2): 1985; 1996
Runners-up (1): 1973

Other honours

Awards and recognitions

National

1958; 1982 and 2014
1939
1997; 1998; 2012; 2013 and 2014
1985; 1996 and 2013
  • Awarded as Piedmont's Sports Team of the Year by the Unione Stampa Sportiva Italiana (USSI): 2[40][41]
2012 and 2013

International

23 December 2000
10 September 2009
for 3 years since the institution of the ranking on 2007
1993 and 1996
January 2004, September 2005, January 2012 and December 2012
  • Awarded as World's Sports Team of the Year by the Association Internationale de la Presse Sportive (AIPS): 2[46]
1984–85 e 1985–86 seasons
  • Nominated Champion of the Century in Italian football and second most successful club of the 20th century by the Brazilian sports magazine Placar[47]
November 1999
March 2014
1985
1977 and 1990
2005
16 times since the institution of the ranking on 1991
for 7 seasons since the institution of the ranking on 1979

Other

  • Gianni Brera Award to the Sports Personality of the Year: 1[55]
2013

Achievements

As one of the most successful sportive clubs in Italy and the world, Juventus Football Club have received during their history of important national and international special recognitions, among them:

  • Medaglia di Bronzo al Valore Atletico: 1935
received on 7 July 1935 from the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) in recognition to the fifth consecutive Serie A title won (Italian record).[56]
  • Stella d'oro al Merito Sportivo: 1966
received on 22 June 1967 from the CONI in recognition for the club's outstanding contribution to the Italian sport.[57]
  • Collare d'oro al Merito Sportivo: 2001
received on 10 November 2004 from the Italian National Olympic Committee in recognition for the club's contribution to the Italian football and sport.[58][59]
received on 12 July 1988 at Geneva (Switzerland) by the Union of European Football Associations in recognition for the club's triumph in the all three major UEFA competitions (European record).[60][61]

Individual records

Appearances

Appearances in competitive matches

  • Most appearances in total – 705 Alessandro Del Piero (1993–2012).
  • Most Serie A appearances – 478, Alessandro Del Piero (1993–2012).
  • First Juventus player to play for Italy – Giovanni Giacone (Rome, 28 March 1920: Italy 0–3 Switzerland).
  • Youngest player to play for the club - Pietro Pastore, 15 years; 222 days.
  • Oldest player to play for the club - Dino Zoff, 41 years; 86 days.
  • Most appearances in total with Italy – 154, Gianluigi Buffon (1997–present).
  • Most appearances in total for a manager – 596, Giovanni Trapattoni (1976–1986 & 1991–1994).
  • Most Serie A appearances for a manager – 402, Giovanni Trapattoni (1976–1986 & 1991–1994).

All-time top 10 appearances

As of 10 January 2016 (Competitive matches only):

Name Period Games
1 Italy Alessandro Del Piero 1993–2012 705
2 Italy Gianluigi Buffon 2001– 560
3 Italy Gaetano Scirea 1974–1988 552
4 Italy Giuseppe Furino 1969–1984 528
5 Italy Roberto Bettega 1971–1983 481
6 Italy Dino Zoff 1972–1983 476
7 Italy Giampiero Boniperti 1946–1961 460
8 ItalySandro Salvadore 1963–1974 450
9 ItalyFranco Causio 1968 & 1971–1981 447
10 ItalyAntonio Cabrini 1977–1989 440

bold signifies current Juventus player

Goalscorers

Goalscorers in competitive matches

All-time top 10 goalscorers

As of May 2012 (All competitive matches):

Name Period Goals
1 Italy Alessandro Del Piero 1993–2012 290
2 Italy Giampiero Boniperti 1946–1961 182
3 Italy Roberto Bettega 1970–1983 178
4 France David Trezeguet 2000–2010 171
5 ArgentinaItaly Omar Sívori 1957–1965 167
6 Italy Felice Placido Borel II 1932–1941
1942–1946
157
7 Italy Pietro Anastasi 1968–1976 131
8 Denmark John Hansen 1948–1954 124
9 Italy Roberto Baggio 1990–1995 115
10 Italy Federico Munerati 1922–1933 114

bold signifies current Juventus player

Juventus’ top league goalscorers in a single season

Since the Serie A era. (All competitive matches):

Name Season Goals
1 Ferenc Hirzer 1925–26 35
2 Felice Placido Borel II° 1932–33 29
3 Felice Placido Borel II° 1933–34 31
4 Giampiero Boniperti 1947–48 27
5 John Hansen 1951–52 30
6 John William Charles 1957–58 28
7 Omar Enrique Sívori 1959–60 27
8 Roberto Bettega 1979–80 16
9 Michel Platini 1982–83 16
10 Michel Platini 1983–84 20
11 Michel Platini 1984–85 18
12 David Trezeguet 2001–02 24
13 Alessandro Del Piero 2007–08 21

Individual recognitions

UEFA Golden Player Award 1955–2005

Country Player
Belarus Sergeij AlejnikovGP
Denmark Michael LaudrupGP
Italy Dino ZoffGP
San Marino Massimo BoniniGP
Wales John William CharlesGP

France Football's European Footballer of the Year

Year Player
2003 Pavel Nedvěd
1998 Zinedine Zidane
1993 Roberto Baggio
1983, 1984, 1985 Michel Platini
1982 Paolo Rossi
1961 Omar Enrique Sívori

* Juventus is the European team with the most players recognized with the Golden Ball Award (6 players in 8 times).

FIFA World Player Award

Year Player
2006 Fabio Cannavaro
1998; 2000 Zinedine Zidane
1993 Roberto Baggio

World Soccer's World Football Player of the Year Award

Year Player
2006 Fabio Cannavaro
2003 Pavel Nedvěd
1998 Zinedine Zidane
1995 Gianluca Vialli
1993 Roberto Baggio
1984; 1985 Michel Platini
1982 Paolo Rossi

* Juventus is the European team with the most players recognized with the World Soccer Player of the Year Award (7 players in 8 times).

Golden Foot International Football Award

Year Player
2007 Alessandro Del Piero
2004 Pavel Nedvěd

Serie A Italian Footballer of the Year

Year Player
2008 Alessandro Del Piero
2006 Fabio Cannavaro
1998 Alessandro Del Piero

Serie A Foreign Footballer of the Year

Year Player
2005 Zlatan Ibrahimović
2003 Pavel Nedvěd
2002 David Trezeguet
1997; 2001 Zinedine Zidane

Serie A Footballer of the Year

Year Player
2015 Carlos Tevez
2014 Andrea Pirlo
2013 Andrea Pirlo
2012 Andrea Pirlo
2006 Fabio Cannavaro
2003 Pavel Nedvěd
2002 David Trezeguet
2001 Zinedine Zidane

Serie A Goalkeeper of the Year

Player Count Year
Gianluigi Buffon 8 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012, 2014, 2015

Serie A Coach of the Year

Coach Year
Massimiliano Allegri 2015
Antonio Conte 2014
Antonio Conte 2013
Antonio Conte 2012
Fabio Capello 2005
Carlo Ancelotti 2001
Marcello Lippi 1998
Marcello Lippi 1997

Club records

First competitive matches

Extreme results since 1900

As of 6 December 2006

Records in the Serie A era

As of May 2014

  • Most points in any 20-team European Domestic League
    • 102 in 38 games (2013–14).
  • Most points in a season:
    • 3 pts for a win: 102 in 38 games (2013–14).
    • 2 pts for a win: 62 in 38 games (1949–50).
  • Victories and defeats:
    • Home victory: 9-1 v Internazionale, 10 June 1961.
    • Away victory: 7-0 v Pro Patria, 5 June 1951.
    • Home defeat: 1-7 v Milan, 5 February 1950.
    • Away defeat: 0-6 v Internazionale, 4 April 1954.
  • Most League victories in a season: 33[69] in 38 games (2013–14).
  • Most Home wins in a season: 19[69] in 19 games (2013–14).
  • Fewest League draws in a season: 3 in 38 games (2013–14).
  • Most League draws in a season: 17 in 34 games (1955–56).
  • Fewest League defeats in a season: 0 in 38 games (2011–12).
  • Most League defeats in a season: 15 in 38 games (1961–62, 2009–10).
  • Most League goals scored in a season (by team): 103 in 38 games (1950–51)
  • Fewest League goals scored in a season (by team): 28 in 30 games (1938–39).
  • Fewest League goals conceded in a season (by team): 14[70] in 30 games (1981–82, 30 games)
  • Most League goals conceded in a season (by team): 56 in 34 games (1961–62).
  • Longest period without conceding a goal: 903 min.[71] (GK: Dino Zoff) begun on 3 December 1972, ended on 18 February 1973
  • Longest sequence of League victories:
    • In a single season: 12,[72] since the 9th to 20th match of the 2013–14 season
    • Overall: 13, since the 32nd match of the 2013–14 season to the 6th match of the 2014–15 season
    • Since the first match in a single season: 9,[73] (2005–06)
  • Longest sequence of unbeaten League matches (consecutive matches):
    • In a single season: 38 (2011–12. With 38 matches in the 2011-12 league season, Juventus finished unbeaten in the league).
    • Overall: 49 (since 38th match of the 2010–11 season to 10th match of the 2012–13 season).
  • Longest sequence of League matches without a victory:
    • In a single season: 8 (1938-39 season and 1955–56 season).
    • Overall: 13 (since the eighteenth to thirty-first match of 1955–56 season and since the 12th to 25th match of the 1961–62 season).
  • Longest sequence of League defeats:
    • Overall and in a single season: 7 (since the third to 28th to 34th match of the 1961–62 season).

Statistics in European competitions[6]

As of 6 December 2006

  • Appearance (Ap): 45
  • Played (Pld): 322
  • Won (W): 182
  • Drawn (D): 62
  • Lost (L): 78
  • Goals scored (GS): 587
  • Goals conceded (GC): 297

Serie A Football Club of the Year

Year
2015
2014
2013
2012

See also

Honours

Statistics and records

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 These titles were revoked through the courts following the Calciopoli Scandal.

References

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  8. Fourth most successful European club for confederation and FIFA competitions won with 11 titles. Fourth most successful club in Europe for confederation club competition titles won (11), cf. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  14. In addition, Juventus F.C. were the first club in association football history to have won all possible confederation competitions (e.g. the international tournaments organised by UEFA) and remain the only in the world to achieve this, cf. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  17. During the 1980s, Juventus have won four Serie A titles, two Italian Cups, one Intercontinental Cup, one European Champions Clubs' Cup, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, one UEFA Cup and one UEFA Super Cup; meanwhile, in the following decade, the club has won three Italian Championships, one Italian Cup, two Italian Super Cups, one Intercontinental Cup, one UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Cup, one UEFA Intertoto Cup and one UEFA Super Cup.
  18. Up until 1921, the top division of Italian football was the Federal Football Championship, since then, it has been the First Division, the National Division, and the Serie A.
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  22. Up until 1992, the UEFA's premier club competition was the European Champion Clubs' Cup; since then, it has been the UEFA Champions League.
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  24. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
  25. The European Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (1958–1971) was a football tournament organized by foreign trade fairs in European seven cities (London, Barcelona, Copenhagen, and others) played by professional and—in its first editions—amateur clubs. Along these lines, that's not recognised by the Union of European Football Associations as an UEFA club competition. See: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
  29. The UEFA Super Cup 1985 final between the Old Lady and Everton, 1984–85 Cup Winners' Cup winners not played due to the Heysel Stadium disaster. See: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  30. Up until 2004, the main world-wide football club competition was the Intercontinental Champions Clubs' Cup (so called European / South American Cup or Toyota Cup); since then, it has been replaced by the FIFA Club World Cup.
  31. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 32.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  33. The Federal Championship of Prima Categoria (First Category/Division) has been a tournament organized by the Italian Football Federation (FIF) in 1908 equivalent to the Italian Championship of Prima Categoria (the national football championship in these two years).
  34. The Italian Championship of Prima Categoria (First Category/Division) has been a tournament organized by the Italian Football Federation (FIF) in 1909 equivalent to the Federal Championship of Prima Categoria (the national football championship in these two years).
  35. Juventus also has won the Italian-Spanish Friendship's Cup perpetually.
  36. Prize awarded by the DItalian Football Federation (FIGC) board for the record for titles won in the Divisione Nazionale A Championship àt the end of the 1938-39 season, cf. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  43. Periods: 1991–2007 (Juventus rank second in the world); 1991–2008 (rank third in the world) and 1991–2009 (idem). All the results of All-Time Club World Ranking are determined by IFFHS from 1 January 1991, when the Club World Ranking began taking all these details into consideration. See also: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  54. Five-year periods: 1982-1986; 1983-1987; 1984-1988; 1987-1991; 1993-1997; 1995–1999 and 1996-2000, record between Italian clubs and second European record after Real Madrid (9 times in the 1st place). The club coefficient is determined by the results of a club in UEFA club competition in the last five seasons, and the league coefficient. See also:
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  58. The Collare d'Oro al Merito Sportivo or Collare d'Oro per Meriti Sportivi (Golden Collar for Sport Excellence) is the highest prize that the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) has been given since 1995 to Olympic athletes, world champions, winners of special international events and sport clubs with 100 years of activity to have honoured the Italian sport.
  59. CONI's Press Agency ANNO XXX - N. 229. See also: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  62. Join record of Italian football with Julio Libonatti (Torino F.C. 1906) in 1927-28 season and Gunnar Nordahl (A.C Milan) in 1949-50.
  63. Join record in Serie A with Silvio Piola (Pro Vercelli) on 29 October 1933.
  64. Join European record with Josè João Altafini (A.C. Milan 8-0 U.S. Luxembourg, 1962–63 European Cup) and Daniel Fonseca (Valencia 1-5 SSC Napoli, 1992–93 UEFA Cup).
  65. Paolo Rossi (with 6 goals in 1982 and 3 in 1986) and Roberto Baggio (with 2 goals in 1990; 5 goals in 1994 and 2 goals in 1998) are Italy's all-time leading scorers in FIFA World Cups.
  66. Join record of Italian football with Torino F.C. 1906 (1942-43, 1945-46, 1946-47, 1947-48, 1948-49).
  67. 67.0 67.1 The Old Lady has played this match with only ten players in its squad.
  68. Record in Italian football.
  69. 69.0 69.1 Record in Serie A.
  70. Second highest record in Italian football after Cagliari in 1969-70 season (11 goals conceded in 30 games).
  71. Second highest record in Serie A after Sebastiano Rossi (A.C. Milan) in 1992-93 season (929 min.).
  72. Second highest record in Serie A after Internazionale (17) in 2006-07 season.
  73. Second highest record in Serie A after Roma (10) in 2013-14 season.

External links

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