ACF Fiorentina–Juventus FC rivalry

Rivalry between two Italian football clubs
ACF Fiorentina–Juventus FC rivalry
Fiorentina
Juventus
First meeting7 October 1928
Divisione Nazionale
Juventus 11–0 Fiorentina
Latest meeting7 April 2024
Serie A
Juventus 1–0 Fiorentina
StadiumsStadio Artemio Franchi (Fiorentina)
Allianz Stadium (Juventus)
Statistics
Meetings totalOfficial matches: 192
Unofficial matches: 1
Total matches: 193
Most winsOfficial matches: Juventus (91)
Unofficial matches: Fiorentina (1)
Total matches: Juventus (91)
Largest victoryJuventus 11–0 Fiorentina
Divisione Nazionale
(7 October 1928)
Fiorentina
Juventus

The ACF Fiorentina–Juventus FC rivalry is an inter-city football rivalry contested between Florence-based Fiorentina and Turin-based Juventus. Unlike most other football derbies, this one is borne not out of geographical proximity (such as the Derby della Madonnina); political differences (El Clásico); or longstanding competitiveness (Liverpool–Manchester United rivalry), but rather is a development from the latter decades of the 20th century based on local patriotism, or campanilismo, bitterness and accusations of 'thievery'.[1][2]

The rivalry has been fuelled by their controversial meetings in cup finals, and competition in the transfer market.[3] A player transferring from one club to the other, especially from Florence to Turin, is usually branded a 'traitor' by fans.

Juventus is the most successful team in Italian football, winning 36 league titles, 14 Coppa Italia titles and nine Supercoppa Italiana titles, all national records. Fiorentina, meanwhile, has won two league titles, six Coppa Italia titles, and one Supercoppa Italiana.

Background

To some extent the rivalry has its origins in the fans of the local teams in Tuscany, as in many other areas of Italy, growing tired of seeing people from their towns heading off to support the country's most successful teams, primarily Juventus.[4] Like many of Europe's biggest clubs, the Bianconeri have attracted followers from far and wide, but the Renaissance town of Florence remained true to Fiorentina.[5] In addition to this and the typical aspect of pride between the residents of two important cities, Juventus had beaten Fiorentina 11–0 in their first league meeting in 1928, a humiliating result which had not been forgotten by either set of fans despite the passage of time.[6] They also contested the 1960 Coppa Italia final, won by Juve.

1981–82 Serie A title

In 1980, Fiorentina was bought by Flavio Pontello, a man from a rich house-building family who had aspirations to bring the Viola its third title and built the team around Italian star, Giancarlo Antognoni. On the final day of the 1981–82 Serie A season, with both teams competing for the national championship, a series of debatable decisions in two different matches intensified the rivalry.[1][6] Heading into the last game, both teams were level on 44 points at the top of the table; Fiorentina went to relegation-threatened Cagliari, who needed a point to survive, while Juventus headed to Catanzaro, in seventh position with nothing to play for. Fiorentina had a goal disallowed for a push on the opposing goalkeeper as Cagliari managed to play out a 0–0 draw to steer clear of relegation.[2][3] In Calabria, Catanzaro were denied a penalty while Juventus were awarded one, from which they scored to win 1–0 and claim their 20th scudetto[1] In the aftermath, Fiorentina's playmaker Giancarlo Antognoni famously remarked, 'Ci hanno rubato il titolo', meaning 'They have stolen the title'.[1][7] The Viola tifosi soon coined a saying, 'meglio secondo che ladri', meaning 'better to be second than thieves'.[2]

1989–90 UEFA Cup final

Juventus won two more championships in the 1980s, while Fiorentina had inconsistent fortunes. In 1985, Fiorentina bought Roberto Baggio, an 18-year-old striker, from Vicenza, for 2.7 billion lire (£1.5 million).[8] Considered one of the leading players of the league, he led Fiorentina to the final of the 1989–90 UEFA Cup, setting up the first all-Italian final in the history of the tournament against their arch-nemesis Juventus. Both sides had had close encounters with German teams in the semi-finals, Fiorentina beating Werder Bremen on away goals, and Juventus pipping 1. FC Köln 3–2.

The final was to be played over two legs, with the first leg to be held in Turin, while the second was held in Stadio Partenio in Avellino – Fiorentina's home stadium was under renovation for the 1990 FIFA World Cup, and the fixture was originally moved to the Stadio Renato Curi in Perugia, fairly close to Florence, but was then moved further away as punishment for supporters having staged a pitch invasion during the Werder Bremen tie.[3] Avellino, despite being in Southern Italy, was a town with many fans of the Bianconeri and this concerned the Viola supporters. However, worries turned to anger when, with the score tied 1–1 in Turin, officials missed an apparent push by Juventus' Pierluigi Casiraghi on Fiorentina's Celeste Pin, allowing Angelo Alessio's deflected shot to fire the home side in front.[3][6] Juventus ended up winning 3–1, and during the post-match interview, Pin was heard shouting 'ladri' (thieves) at Juventus' manager Dino Zoff.[5] Between the two legs, Juventus' goalkeeper Stefano Tacconi reminded Fiorentina that, while they might win the war of words, his side would win on the pitch. The second leg ended 0–0, and Juventus became the first Italian team (sixth across Europe) to win two UEFA Cup titles.[2]

Transfer of Roberto Baggio

Pontello was suffering from economic difficulties by this time, and was considering the sale of the club's prized asset: Roberto Baggio. Juventus were the club willing to pay a then world-record fee of 25 billion lire (£8 million), the world record transfer for a footballer at the time.[9] His transfer led to severe riots in the streets of Florence and fans laid siege to the club's headquarters;[6] reports described bricks, chains and Molotov cocktails being thrown. In the two days following the transfer, Pontello was forced to take refuge in the Stadio Artemio Franchi, while 50 injuries and nine arrests were recorded. Baggio was called a 'traitor', but he still held the city of Florence and its football team close to his heart. On his return to his former home, he refused to take a penalty awarded to Juventus[3] and was seen embracing a Viola scarf thrown by the Florentine supporters while waving it in the direction of the Curva Fiesole, the stronghold of the club's ultras.[5][2] While this endeared him to the Fiorentina followers, it caused a rift between him and Juventus supporters.[6]

1990s and 2000s

Fiorentina were relegated in 1993, and although they made it back the very next year, the rivalry took on a somewhat one-sided dimension in the following years. Both sides had scandals to deal with in the 2000s, as Fiorentina declared bankruptcy in June 2002 and was re-established by the della Valle brothers in August 2002 as Associazione Calcio Fiorentina e Fiorentina Viola, playing in Serie C2, the fourth tier of Italian football. Former Juventus player, Angelo di Livio, was the only player to remain at the club as they returned to top-flight football in two years. Both teams, among others, were implicated in the 2006 Calciopoli scandal, which relegated Juventus to Serie B, and revoked their last two titles. Fiorentina meanwhile were given a 15-point penalty applied to the next season.

In 2012, the hierarchies of the two clubs clashed after Juventus made a late bid to hijack Fiorentina's pursuit of Dimitar Berbatov.[3] In the end, the Bulgarian snubbed both clubs for Fulham, but this did not stop the Fiorentina owners from claiming their rivals 'knew nothing of the values of honesty, fair play and sporting ethics.'[1][2]

Late 2010s and 2020s

History repeated itself for Fiorentina in the summer of 2017, with the della Valle brothers looking to sell the club but with no takers. Many top players, including Matías Vecino, Gonzalo Rodríguez, Borja Valero, and Ciprian Tătărușanu were released or sold as the owners wanted to recoup funds rather than invest in the club. They wished to renew the contract of local star, Federico Bernardeschi, but he was unwilling to renew his deal with Fiorentina and instead secured a transfer to rivals Juventus for €40 million on a five-year deal.[10][11] Fans responded with vulgar banners saying "A chi non piacerebbe sputarti in faccia... Bernardeschi gobbo di merda", which translates to "Who wouldn't like to spit in your face, Bernardeschi you shitty hunchback".[12] On 9 February 2018, Bernardeschi returned to Florence, receiving vulgar insults throughout the match. He scored a free kick in the second half to silence the crowd.[13] Due to his departure, Fiorentina looked to build their squad around their new academy recruit, Federico Chiesa, who had played in the Fiorentina system since 2007. However, in 2020, Chiesa followed Bernardeschi to Turin on loan (with an obligation to buy worth €50 million) and was met with banners calling him despicable and a traitor.[14][15] In the January transfer window in 2022, young Fiorentina striker Dušan Vlahović's contract was set to expire in the summer of 2023, and with his unwillingness to sign a new deal, was transferred to Juventus for €75 million. Fiorentina president, Rocco Commisso, who wanted to transfer the striker abroad, slammed Vlahović and his agents saying "It was clear he already had a deal ... He said no to every offer. I went to England many times, each time he said no ... he wanted to ruin Fiorentina".[16] As with the previous transfers, various insulting banners were put out by the Fiorentina fans, this time with a stronger, more-threatening tone.[17][18]

Official matches

  • SF = Semi-finals
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • R16 = Round of 16
  • R32 = Round of 32
  • GS = Group stage
  • R1 = Round 1
  • R2 = Round 2

  Fiorentina win   Draw   Juventus win

Season[19] Competition Date Home team Result Away team
1928–29 Divisione Nazionale 7 October 1928 Juventus
11–0
Fiorentina
10 February 1929 Fiorentina
0–4
Juventus
1931–32 Serie A 24 January 1932 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
12 June 1932 Juventus
2–2
Fiorentina
1932–33 Serie A 8 January 1933 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
28 May 1933 Juventus
5–0
Fiorentina
1933–34 Serie A 5 November 1933 Juventus
5–0
Fiorentina
18 March 1934 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
1934–35 Serie A 3 February 1935 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
2 June 1935 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
1935–36 Serie A 3 November 1935 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1 March 1936 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
Coppa Italia QF 24 May 1936 Juventus
1–3
Fiorentina
1936–37 Serie A 10 January 1937 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
16 May 1937 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
1937–38 Serie A 24 October 1937 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
16 May 1938 Juventus
5–2
Fiorentina
1939–40 Serie A 22 October 1939 Juventus
3–2
Fiorentina
25 February 1940 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
Coppa Italia SF 9 June 1940 Fiorentina
3–0
Juventus
1940–41 Serie A 19 January 1941 Juventus
2–3
Fiorentina
4 May 1941 Fiorentina
5–0
Juventus
Coppa Italia R16 18 May 1941 Fiorentina
5–3
Juventus
1941–42 Serie A 26 October 1941 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
15 February 1942 Juventus
4–2
Fiorentina
1942–43 Serie A 3 January 1943 Juventus
5–2
Fiorentina
18 April 1943 Fiorentina
3–4
Juventus
1946–47 Serie A 13 October 1946 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
9 March 1947 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
1947–48 Serie A 11 January 1948 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
6 June 1948 Fiorentina
2–4
Juventus
1948–49 Serie A 26 September 1948 Juventus
3–2
Fiorentina
16 January 1949 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
1949–50 Serie A 11 September 1949 Juventus
5–2
Fiorentina
15 January 1950 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
1950–51 Serie A 15 October 1950 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
25 February 1951 Juventus
5–0
Fiorentina
1951–52 Serie A 30 September 1951 Fiorentina
0–2
Juventus
2 March 1952 Juventus
4–0
Fiorentina
1952–53 Serie A 12 October 1952 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
22 February 1953 Juventus
8–0
Fiorentina
1953–54 Serie A 27 September 1953 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
14 February 1954 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1954–55 Serie A 17 October 1954 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
6 March 1955 Juventus
4–1
Fiorentina
1955–56 Serie A 2 October 1955 Juventus
0–4
Fiorentina
26 February 1956 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
1956–57 Serie A 27 January 1957 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
16 June 1957 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
1957–58 Serie A 15 December 1957 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
4 May 1958 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
1958–59 Serie A 2 November 1958 Fiorentina
3–3
Juventus
22 March 1959 Juventus
3–2
Fiorentina
Coppa Italia QF 10 June 1959 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
1959–60 Serie A 8 November 1959 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
27 March 1960 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
Coppa Italia Final 18 September 1960 Juventus
3–2 (a.e.t.)
Fiorentina
1960–61 Serie A 23 October 1960 Fiorentina
3–0
Juventus
5 March 1961 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
Coppa Italia SF 10 May 1961 Fiorentina
3–1
Juventus
1961–62 Serie A 19 November 1961 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
18 March 1962 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
1962–63 Serie A 30 September 1962 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
3 February 1963 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
1963–64 Serie A 6 October 1963 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
23 February 1964 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
1964–65 Serie A 8 November 1964 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
21 March 1965 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
1965–66 Serie A 14 November 1965 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
27 March 1966 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
1966–67 Serie A 2 October 1966 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
12 February 1967 Juventus
4–1
Fiorentina
1967–68 Serie A 26 November 1967 Juventus
2–2
Fiorentina
17 March 1968 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
1968–69 Serie A 19 January 1969 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
11 May 1969 Juventus
0–2
Fiorentina
1969–70 Serie A 30 November 1969 Juventus
2–0
Fiorentina
22 March 1970 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
1970–71 Serie A 24 January 1971 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
23 May 1971 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
1971–72 Serie A 16 January 1972 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
21 May 1972 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1972–73 Serie A 3 December 1972 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
7 April 1973 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
1973–74 Serie A 20 January 1974 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
12 May 1974 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
1974–75 Serie A 19 January 1975 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
11 May 1975 Fiorentina
4–1
Juventus
1975–76 Serie A 19 October 1975 Juventus
4–2
Fiorentina
22 January 1976 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1976–77 Serie A 12 December 1976 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
10 April 1977 Fiorentina
1–3
Juventus
Season Competition Date Home team Result Away team
1977–78 Serie A 23 October 1977 Juventus
5–1
Fiorentina
26 February 1978 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1978–79 Coppa Italia R1 3 September 1978 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
Serie A 7 January 1979 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
29 April 1979 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
1979–80 Serie A 6 January 1980 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
11 May 1980 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
1980–81 Serie A 1 February 1981 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
24 May 1981 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
1981–82 Serie A 29 November 1981 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
4 April 1982 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
1982–83 Serie A 10 October 1982 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
20 February 1983 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
1983–84 Serie A 27 November 1983 Fiorentina
3–3
Juventus
1 April 1984 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
1984–85 Serie A 16 December 1984 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
28 April 1985 Juventus
1–2
Fiorentina
1985–86 Coppa Italia R1 4 September 1985 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
Serie A 1 December 1985 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
6 April 1986 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
1986–87 Serie A 12 October 1986 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1 March 1987 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
1987–88 Serie A 17 January 1988 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
15 May 1988 Juventus
1–2
Fiorentina
1988–89 Serie A 15 January 1989 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
28 May 1989 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
1989–90 Serie A 6 September 1989 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
17 January 1990 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
UEFA Cup 2 May 1990 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
16 May 1990 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
1990–91 Serie A 2 December 1990 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
6 April 1991 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
1991–92 Serie A 1 September 1991 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
26 January 1992 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
1992–93 Serie A 6 December 1992 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
25 April 1993 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
1994–95 Serie A 4 December 1994 Juventus
3–2
Fiorentina
29 April 1995 Fiorentina
1–4
Juventus
1995–96 Serie A 19 November 1995 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
24 March 1996 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
1996–97 Serie A 29 September 1996 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
23 February 1997 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
1997–98 Serie A 5 October 1997 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
Coppa Italia QF 7 January 1998 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
20 January 1998 Juventus
0–0
Fiorentina
Serie A 22 February 1998 Fiorentina
3–0
Juventus
1998–99 Serie A 13 December 1998 Fiorentina
1–0
Juventus
25 April 1999 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
1999–2000 Serie A 19 December 1999 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
22 April 2000 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
2000–01 Serie A 7 January 2001 Juventus
3–3
Fiorentina
11 May 2001 Fiorentina
1–3
Juventus
2001–02 Serie A 19 December 2001 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
16 February 2002 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
2004–05 Serie A 10 November 2004 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
9 April 2005 Fiorentina
3–3
Juventus
2005–06 Coppa Italia R16 1 December 2005 Fiorentina
2–2
Juventus
Serie A 4 December 2005 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
Coppa Italia R16 10 January 2006 Juventus
4–1
Fiorentina
Serie A 9 April 2006 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
2007–08 Serie A 7 October 2007 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
2 March 2008 Juventus
2–3
Fiorentina
2008–09 Serie A 31 August 2008 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
25 April 2009 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
2009–10 Serie A 17 October 2009 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
6 March 2010 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
2010–11 Serie A 27 November 2010 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
17 April 2011 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
2011–12 Serie A 25 October 2011 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
17 March 2012 Fiorentina
0–5
Juventus
2012–13 Serie A 25 September 2012 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
9 February 2013 Juventus
2–0
Fiorentina
2013–14 Serie A 20 October 2013 Fiorentina
4–2
Juventus
9 March 2014 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
Europa League R16 13 March 2014 Juventus
1–1
Fiorentina
20 March 2014 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
2014–15 Serie A 5 December 2014 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
Coppa Italia SF 5 March 2015 Juventus
1–2
Fiorentina
7 April 2015 Fiorentina
0–3
Juventus
Serie A 29 April 2015 Juventus
3–2
Fiorentina
2015–16 Serie A 13 December 2015 Juventus
3–1
Fiorentina
24 April 2016 Fiorentina
1–2
Juventus
2016–17 Serie A 20 August 2016 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
15 January 2017 Fiorentina
2–1
Juventus
2017–18 Serie A 20 September 2017 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
9 February 2018 Fiorentina
0–2
Juventus
2018–19 Serie A 1 December 2018 Fiorentina
0–3
Juventus
20 April 2019 Juventus
2–1
Fiorentina
2019–20 Serie A 14 September 2019 Fiorentina
0–0
Juventus
2 February 2020 Juventus
3–0
Fiorentina
2020–21 Serie A 22 December 2020 Juventus
0–3
Fiorentina
25 April 2021 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
2021–22 Serie A 6 November 2021 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
Coppa Italia SF 2 March 2022 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
20 April 2022 Juventus
2–0
Fiorentina
Serie A 21 May 2022 Fiorentina
2–0
Juventus
2022–23 Serie A 3 September 2022 Fiorentina
1–1
Juventus
12 February 2023 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina
2023–24 Serie A 5 November 2023 Fiorentina
0–1
Juventus
7 April 2024 Juventus
1–0
Fiorentina

Head-to-head ranking in Serie A (1930–2023)

P. 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9
10 10 10 10
11 11
12 12 12 12 12 12
13 13 13 13 13 13
14
15
16 16 16 16 16
17 17 17
18
19
20 20

Total: Fiorentina with 10 higher finishes, Juventus with 73 higher finishes, and 2 equal finishes (as of the end of the 2022–23 season). No head-to-heads in six seasons, since Fiorentina and Juventus were in Serie B respectively in five and one (2007) of those.

Notes:

Statistics

As of 7 April 2024
Total matches
played
Juventus
wins
Draws Fiorentina
wins
Juventus
goals
Fiorentina
goals
Divisione Nazionale 2 2 0 0 15 0
Serie A 170 83 53 35 272 177
Total (league) 172 85 53 35 287 177
Coppa Italia 16 6 4 6 26 25
UEFA Cup 4 2 2 0 5 2
Total (official) 193 93 59 41 319 204
Other meetings 1 0 0 1 0 1
Total 193 93 59 41 319 205

Players who have played for both clubs

As of January 2022

Transferred before the 1981–82 season

Player Years at Fiorentina[a] Years at Juventus[b] Direct Ref.
Sergio Cervato 1948–1959 1959–1961 Yes [20]
Antonello Cuccureddu 1981–1984 1969–1981 Yes [20]
Kurt Hamrin 1958–1967 1956–1957 No [20]
Enzo Robotti 1957–1965 1956–1957 Yes [20]
Giuliano Sarti 1954–1963 1968–1969 No [20]

Transferred after the 1981–82 season

Player Years at Fiorentina[c] Years at Juventus[d] Direct Ref.
Alberto Aquilani 2012–2015 2010–2011 No [20]
Roberto Baggio 1985–1990 1990–1995 Yes [2][3][20][21]
Federico Balzaretti 2007–2008 2005–2007 Yes [20]
Federico Bernardeschi 2014–2017[e] 2017–2022 Yes [10]
Valeri Bojinov 2005–2006 2006–2007 Yes [20]
Giorgio Chiellini 2004–2005 2005–2022 Yes [3][20][21]
Federico Chiesa 2016–2020 2020– Yes [20]
Juan Cuadrado 2012–2015 2015–2023 Yes [20][21]
Claudio Gentile 1984–1987 1973–1984 Yes [20]
Angelo di Livio 1999–2005 1993–1999 Yes [3][21]
Marco Marchionni 2009–2012 2006–2009 Yes [22]
Enzo Maresca 2004–2005 2000–2004 Yes [21]
Felipe Melo 2008–2009 2009–2013 Yes [3][20][22][21]
Fabrizio Miccoli 2004–2005 2002–2004 Yes [20][21]
Adrian Mutu 2006–2011 2005–2006 Yes [20]
Neto 2011–2015 2015–2017 Yes [20][21]
Paulo Sousa 2015–2017[f] 1994–1996 No [21]
Marco Storari 2008–2009 2010–2015 No [20]
Luca Toni 2005–2007
2012–2013[g]
2011–2012 Yes [20]
Moreno Torricelli 1998–2002 1992–1998 Yes [3][21]
Pietro Vierchowod 1981–1982 1995–1996 No [20]
Christian Vieri 2007–2008 1996–1997 No [20]
Dušan Vlahović 2018–2022 2022– Yes [20]
Cristiano Zanetti 1993–1996
2009–2011[h]
2006–2009 Yes [20]
  1. ^ Single spell as a player unless otherwise stated.
  2. ^ Single spell as a player unless otherwise stated.
  3. ^ Single spell as a player unless otherwise stated.
  4. ^ Single spell as a player unless otherwise stated.
  5. ^ Senior years; played in Fiorentina's youth system from 2003.
  6. ^ As manager.
  7. ^ Two spells
  8. ^ Two spells

Trophies

Team Major domestic International Grand total
SA CI SCI National Total CL CWC EL USC UIC IC FCWC International Total
Juventus 36 14 9 59 2 1 3 2 1 2 11 70
Fiorentina 2 6 1 9 1 1 10

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Fiorentina Club Focus: Anatomy of a rivalry". Forza Italian Football. 6 February 2013. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Hodges-Ramon, Luca (13 January 2017). "Fiorentina v Juventus: a rivalry stoked by 'theft', Roberto Baggio and machine guns". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
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