Regardless of one other harrowing defeat, Thiago Motta has no plans to evacuate, and Juventus aren’t planning to wield the axe simply but.
The Bianconeri have been hoping to bounce again from their humiliating 0-4 demolition by the hands of Atalanta on the earlier weekend, however Fiorentina ended up piling extra distress on their most hated rivals by placing three unanswered objectives previous an virtually unrecognizable crew, missing high quality, character and willpower.
After the competition, Motta insisted he doesn’t plan to take the straightforward approach out, however is hellbent on staying and attempting to show the tide in his favour.
“We have to enhance how we deal with difficulties, as a result of on the first signal of a troublesome state of affairs we battle to react, and this occurred once more at the moment. We’d like stability, each in defence and in assault, and we’ve got to work to regain the solidity we had earlier than,” he informed the press after the competition (by way of the membership’s official web site).
“Leaving? It could be too simple, and I by no means select the straightforward approach out. Our purpose stays Champions League qualification, we’ll discover a option to get again to profitable methods from our subsequent recreation.”
Furthermore, Juventus Soccer Director Cristiano Giuntoli selected to vary his behavior by talking after the match, and he insisted the crew should stay united below Motta’s tutelage.
(Picture by Francesco Pecoraro/Getty Photos)
Now this example begs the next query: Why have Juventus determined to stay with an under-fire supervisor who has clearly misplaced the plot?
Nicely, in response to a number of sources within the Italian media, together with Tuttosport, the reply is relatively easy: Cash!
As everyone knows by now, the Bianconeri aren’t having fun with their most affluent years, neither from a sporting nor financial perspective. And whereas Motta’s first season in Turin has been depressing by all means, at the very least his wages stay reasonably priced, particularly in comparison with these of his predecessor, Max Allegri.
Nonetheless, sacking the 42-year-old would require a sure exit bundle for him and his squad, whereas a good alternative would virtually definitely command bigger wages.
Now one may argue that lacking out on the Champions League can be much more expensive, however that isn’t how the administration is viewing it, at the very least for now.