Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Spurs stand between Allegri and CL grail

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MASSIMILIA­NO Allegri may be breaking records in Italy but the Juventus coach's quest for the elusive Champions League grail continues today against English side Tottenham Hotspur.

The 50-year-old marked his 200th game in the Juventus dugout with a 2-0 win in Florence on Friday, capping a record breaking three-and-a-half years in Turin.

A surprise replacemen­t for Antonio Conte in July 2014, the former AC Milan boss has won seven consecutiv­e trophies with the Turin giants including the last three Serie A titles.

Italy's national side are in disarray after the four-time winners' humiliatin­g World Cup exit, but Juventus are in fine form under Allegri.

So much so that his name has not only been among those touted as the future Italy boss but as a potential manager of English giants Chelsea and Arsenal.

The six-time defending champions are currently engaged in a gripping battle at the top of the Serie A table with Napoli for the Scudetto.

Juventus have won 11 matches in a row in all competitio­ns, conceding just one goal in 16 games — an all-time club record.

But two Champions League final defeats in the past three editions have dented Allegri's standing.

A 3-1 loss to Barcelona in 2015 was followed by another crushing 4-1 defeat to Real Madrid last year after which Allegri revealed he almost quit.

"I wondered if I should write the final chapter to my story at Juventus," said Allegri at the time, saying that his "love of teaching" had encouraged him to continue.

ASHEVILL — Former world number one Serena Williams said she felt on the “right track” despite a crushing loss in her long-awaited comeback to tennis on Sunday playing alongside big sister Venus in a Fed Cup dead rubber.

The duo, who have combined to win 22 doubles titles, were outgunned by the unheralded Dutch pairing of Lesley Kerkhove and Demi Schuurs who were playing in their first ever outing together.

The Williams lost 6-2, 6-3 with 36-year-old Serena appearing particular­ly slow on her feet and poor in her shot selection after more than a year away from the sport.

"It is truly the joy of my life. I like making players better and smarter. I know I still have a lot to prove. And I know I still have a lot to teach."

Instead he signed a new contract until 2020 and his Champions League quest continues with a last 16, first leg meeting with Mauricio Pochettino's Tottenham.

Taking over from Conte — who went on to coach Italy and Chelsea — could have been a hard act to follow, but Allegri has managed to stamp his mark on the Turin side with even greater success than his predecesso­r.

Conte took Juve to three Serie A titles and oversaw the team's return to the summit of Italian football after the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal of 2006.

Allegri's 200 games in charge may be dwarfed by Giovanni Trapattoni's record 596 but his percentage of wins are in a class of their own – 142 in total – a success rate of more than 70 percent.

Allegri has accumulate­d a 238-point haul in Serie A to overtake the previous records of 234 by Conte and Carlo Carcano back in the 1930s.

He plays down the coach's role, insisting "the players win, I try to do the least damage possible".

But an ageing squad could hamper Allegri's quest for the European title Juventus won in 1985 and 1996.

The team's domination of the Serie A is largely down to the side's formidable defence, commanded by goalkeepin­g legend Gianluigi Buffon (40), who reached a milestone 500 league games on Friday.

Defenders Giorgio Chiellini and Andrea Barzagli are 33 and 36 years old respective­ly, with star striker Gonzalo Higuain a sprightly 30.

Injuries are also a concern with Barzagli and Paulo Dybala in a race against time to be fit, and Juan Cuadrado, Blaise Matuidi and Benedikt Howedes out of action. regain her rhythm.

On Sunday she was happy with the power behind her shots even if her accuracy wasn’t quite where it should be.

“I didn’t expect to have that much power on my serves,” she said. “Even though they didn’t go in, it’s just the start, I feel like that’s a very good step in the right direction.” And she hinted she needed to juggle the demands of motherhood against her career better.

“I didn’t manage my time well,” she said. “This is literally my first time travelling with the baby and everything so I’m gonna try to do better.” — AFP.

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Massimilia­no Allegri

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