Blocco-Juve
Blocco-Juve (Italian pronunciation: [ˈblɔkko ˈjuːve], Juve Block), also known as Blocco Juventus,[1][2][3] (pronounced [ˈblɔkko juˈvɛntus], Juventus Block) was the nickname of the group of Juventus FC players called up to have been the backbone to the Italy national football team managed by Enzo Bearzot to win the 1982 FIFA World Cup Final and reached the semifinals of the 1978 FIFA World Cup and in the 1980 European Championship.
With this group the side managed by Giovanni Trapattoni dominated the Italian football and had one of the best teams in Europe and the world since the second half of the 1970s to the first half of the 1980s,[4] winning amongst others six national championships, two Italian Cups and all international club competitions (world record),[5] and included Dino Zoff, Claudio Gentile, Gaetano Scirea, Antonio Cabrini, Marco Tardelli, Roberto Bettega and Paolo Rossi.
Players
[edit]Notable Italy players during their careers at Juventus in this time period.
- Pietro Anastasi
- Romeo Benetti
- Roberto Bettega
- Antonio Cabrini
- Franco Causio
- Antonello Cuccureddu
- Giuseppe Furino
- Claudio Gentile
- Francesco Morini
- Paolo Rossi
- Gaetano Scirea
- Luciano Spinosi
- Marco Tardelli
- Dino Zoff
See also
[edit]- Italy national football team
- Juventus F.C. and the Italy national football team
- Juventus F.C. in European football
- Nazio-Juve
- List of players to have won all international club competitions
- List of players to have won the three main UEFA club competitions
Footnotes and references
[edit]- ^ "Mondiali Memories, Argentina 1978: Bearzot builds a reputation". www.channel4.com. 3 April 2009.
- ^ "Cabrini: "What I most felt was relief"". www.fifa.com. 15 June 2008. Archived from the original on 23 September 2008. See also:
"Bearzot: "Football is first and foremost a game"". www.fifa.com. 15 June 2008. Archived from the original on 18 January 2008. - ^ "Italia-Inghilterra nella storia" (in Italian). www2.raisport.rai.it. 8 October 1997. Archived from the original on 11 December 2008. Retrieved 3 April 2009. See also:
"Quando il mondo è azzurro" (PDF) (in Italian). Il Giornale. 10 July 2006.[permanent dead link ] - ^ "Os Esquadrões: Juventus" [The Greatest Teams: Juventus]. Placar (in Portuguese). No. 1064. October 1991. pp. 32–35. ISSN 0104-1762.
pt: Merecidamente, a Velha Senhora era campeã do mundo, um título sob medida para o melhor time da primeira metade da década de [19]80.
[[...] Deservedly, the Old Lady were world champions, a title tailored to the best team of the first half of the [19]80s.] - ^ Which includes all official international competitions recognized by one of the six continental football confederations and the Intercontinental Cup / FIFA Club World Cup. See: "List of UEFA club competitions". uefa.com. Archived from the original on 31 January 2010. Retrieved 21 August 2006.
Bibliography
[edit]- Giacone, Gianni (1993). Juve Azzurri - I bianconeri che hanno fatto grande la Nazionale (in Italian). Hurrà Juventus - Fabbri Editori.
- Tavella, Renato (2001). Dizionario della grande Juventus. Dalle origini ai nostri giorni (in Italian). Newton Compton. ISBN 88-8289-639-0.
- Juventus FC
- History of the Italy national football team
- Nicknamed groups of association football players
- 1977–78 in Italian football
- 1978–79 in Italian football
- 1979–80 in Italian football
- 1980–81 in Italian football
- 1981–82 in Italian football
- 1982–83 in Italian football
- 1983–84 in Italian football
- 1984–85 in Italian football
- Italy at the 1978 FIFA World Cup
- Italy at the 1982 FIFA World Cup
- Italy at UEFA Euro 1980