I am pretty sure he will. As sad as it is, if Juventus is relegated you cant really blame him for leaving because he is a top class goalkeeper and he needs a top class league. He will also be more useful to the national team if he has top calss competition all the time.
Now there is also talks of his involvement in this chaos. If that is true then he should stay and stick it out, pay his debt to the fans.
2006-07-07 12:21:26
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answer #1
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answered by PANCHO 4
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probably if juventus go to serie C or B
2006-07-07 20:11:09
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answer #2
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answered by ..... 3
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Buffon will leave
he mentioned it already to nedved
his likely destinations are milan and arsenal.
2006-07-07 07:38:05
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answer #3
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answered by Ty 3
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No, he won't!! I heard that he will remain in Juventus with Del Piero!!!
2006-07-07 06:57:50
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answer #4
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answered by Bea 4
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Im not sure, but im sure he does not want to play in Serie C
2006-07-07 20:04:54
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answer #5
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answered by yaya 3
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Ciao Juventina-this may be of interest to you...
ROME (AP) - A prosecutor asked a sports tribunal Tuesday to demote Juventus to Italy's lowest professional division, relegate other top soccer clubs and dock points from each as punishment for a "malicious" and "sophisticated" system of match-fixing.
The requests sparked an angry reaction from AC Milan owner and former Italy Premier Silvio Berlusconi, who called them "absurd and out of proportion."
"I am astonished and outraged by the prosecutor's calls. Milan has never had refereeing favors, in fact, on the contrary, it has been a victim of refereeing favors granted to other clubs," he said.
Prosecutor Stefano Palazzi asked the sports tribunal at the Olympic stadium in Rome to demote Juventus to Serie C or lower; strip the team of the Serie A titles it won in the past two seasons; and to relegate AC Milan, Fiorentina and Lazio to Serie B.
Along with the demotions, Palazzi requested the teams be docked points next season: six for Juventus, three for AC Milan, and 15 for Lazio and Fiorentina. He also requested bans for several officials.
Palazzi had said in opening remarks that the managers of the four teams were involved in a "malicious" and "sophisticated" system aimed at influencing referees and match results.
"There is absolutely no other possible interpretation for what has emerged from the investigation," he said.
The four teams and 25 soccer officials - including referees - face charges of match-fixing and disloyalty.
Juventus' former chief executive Antonio Giraudo - who attended Tuesday for the first time since proceedings opened - and ex-general manager Luciano Moggi are at the center of the scandal. The two resigned due to the scandal in May, along with the club's entire board.
Palazzi said Moggi and Giraudo had continuous contact with refereeing officials on secure phone lines and at frequent dinner parties organized to manipulate the refereeing system. Giraudo told the tribunal Tuesday that the dinner parties were merely "social occasions," and that his relationships with federation officials and referees were of a "personal" nature.
The highest-ranking official on trial is former federation president Franco Carraro, who resigned in May after accusations that his organization conferred with Juventus about referees.
Other officials involved include Milan vice president Adriano Galliani, Fiorentina owner Diego Della Valle and Lazio President Claudio Lotito.
Palazzi asked for these officials - except Galliani, who is only accused of disloyalty - to be barred from federation positions for five years, the sports code's maximum. He requested a two-year ban for Galliani.
Palazzi asked for these officials - except Galliani, who is only accused of disloyalty - to be barred from federation positions for five years, the sports code's maximum. He requested a two-year ban for Galliani.
The maximum penalty was also requested for most of the refereeing officials involved, including referee Massimo De Santis, accused of being one of the complacent referees used by Juventus. He was pulled from the World Cup amid the scandal.
De Santis told the court he was never pressured by officials to fix a match, adding that he "never went to dinner parties or made any phone calls."
As the judges heard statements from the accused, Galliani told the tribunal he had never approved or ordered any attempts by Milan officials to influence refereeing appointments. "I have always behaved loyally and correctly in my career as well as in my life," he said.
Also on Tuesday, Juventus coach Fabio Capello resigned and was expected to be named coach of Real Madrid.
2006-07-07 22:00:57
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answer #6
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answered by ontheroadagainwithoutyou 6
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NO , HE STILL PLAYING ON of his same teams for another copule of years. FORZA ITALIA!!!!! HE IS GONNA STAY IN EACH SERIea HE STILL STAYING WITH JUVENTOUS I HEARD HE TURNED DOWN THE OFFER
2006-07-08 02:24:02
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answer #7
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answered by Rocky 2
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No way. He is a Juventino at heart.
2006-07-07 13:36:37
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answer #8
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answered by calcio10 4
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If they get demoted (and they are), there will be a mass exodus of players.
2006-07-07 07:02:08
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answer #9
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answered by achatter77 2
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yes
2006-07-07 20:31:33
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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