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Bonucci’s emotional week hits climax with return to Juventus

Italy captain faces club he left in the summer wearing AC Milan’s colours

- IAN HAWKEY

Leonardo Bonucci has had an emotional week already, by his own admission.

He captained Italy at Wembley Stadium on Tuesday night, took the honour conferred by the captain’s armband to heart but conceded that leading his country at a fabled venue carried bitterswee­t feelings.

For the home side, Italy’s 1-1 draw with England was a useful World Cup preparatio­n.

For the Azzurri it was a session in shadow boxing.

“It will hit us in the summer that we are not part of the World Cup,” said Bonucci, one of a number of world-class footballer­s from a great football nation who can still scarcely believe they failed to reach Russia 2018.

Bonucci’s soul will be touched again on Saturday by the sort of forces his tough mask may struggle to conceal.

Bonucci, six times an Italian champion in the colours of Juventus, will lead the opposition into the field at the Juventus stadium in a high-stakes Serie A collision.

It will seem eerie to be there in the colours of AC Milan, up against Juve on their own turf as a member, a figurehead of the club who in many respects are Juve’s fiercest domestic rivals.

Bonucci has thought about this fixture, this return to Turin a great deal since he took the decision, last summer, to move from Juventus to Milan, accept the challenge of leading a new-look rossoneri into a bold, ambitious new era and risk the opprobrium of Juventus supporters and indeed the mild surprise

of long-term colleagues. Juve collected a handsome €42 million (Dh190m) for the transfer of a defender already into his 31st year, a player whose accomplish­ments are spread thick across a broad skill-set: rugged stopper, tackler and man-marker as well as calm, precise passer out from the back.

Last season, Bonucci occasional­ly had the impression his coach at Juventus, Max Allegri, held those qualities as slightly diminished.

The pair had fallouts last season, and being dropped to the bench for an Uefa Champions League last-16 tie marked a turning point for Bonucci.

He sensed he wanted to move even after, restored to the team, he played in his second European Cup final in two years for Juve, and collected his sixth scudetto on the trot.

He always knew he would be judged at Milan according to precedents.

The list of footballer­s who have crossed the electrifie­d fence between the two most successful Italian clubs of Bonucci’s lifetime has some distinguis­hed names on it.

He himself cited Andrea Pirlo’s switch. Pirlo left Milan, where he had won two European Cups, in 2011, released.

Juve snapped him up, and there he answered emphatical­ly any perception that he, at 32, had passed his peak. Pirlo had left Milan as a Serie A champion. At Juve he won the same title for the next four years.

Allegri himself was the last Milan coach to guide them to the league title.

He now chases his fourth title as Juve’s mastermind, and, should he succeed, this may

well rank as the toughest of them. The champions have trailed a captivatin­g Napoli for the majority of the campaign but leapfrogge­d the challenger­s from the south earlier this month.

Bonucci has fortified himself. “I spent seven great years at Juventus, won a lot with them and went through joy with and sometimes suffered with great colleagues who are still there,” he said to reporters in London while on Italy duty. “It will leave me with strong emotions, in head and heart. It will be intense.”

He will hear some scorn from the crowd, no doubt, and probably some generous acknowledg­ement of his Juve legacy.

There are aspects of Bonucci’s authority the club miss, although Milan will have to scratch very hard to find frailities in Juve’s post-Bonucci defence.

The champions head towards April yet to concede a Serie A goal in all of 2018.

Their clean sheet now spreads over 14 consecutiv­e hours of football.

Only something special, or perhaps just lucky, will pierce it.

It will leave me with strong emotions in head and heart. It will be intense LEONARDO BONUCCI On facing his former club Juventus in the colours of AC Milan

 ?? EPA; Getty ?? Anti-clockwise from the far left: Barcelona fans have had plenty of reasons to cheer Lionel Messi and his teammates. Many are also singing for Andres Iniesta to stay but big money in China is calling. Next up for the Catalans are Sevilla, who are on a...
EPA; Getty Anti-clockwise from the far left: Barcelona fans have had plenty of reasons to cheer Lionel Messi and his teammates. Many are also singing for Andres Iniesta to stay but big money in China is calling. Next up for the Catalans are Sevilla, who are on a...
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