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Cup final against Inter last chance for Juventus to keep trophy run alive

- IAN HAWKEY

The Coppa Italia final in Rome tonight is a Derby D’Italia, the nickname that honours the elevated status of Juventus and Inter Milan in the national sport.

It will pit the holders against the reigning Serie A champions, but at a time when neither club are at risk of being carried away with a sense of their own importance.

Inter are on course, within the next 11 days, to see their scudetto removed from them by AC Milan, who lead the league table by two points with two to play.

Juve, meanwhile, have swapped winning the title routinely for making fourth place their standard setting.

Retain the Cup tonight and the main emotion around Juventus will be of relief at avoiding an uncomforta­ble landmark. In each of the past nine seasons, Juve have lifted at least one major domestic trophy.

Eight times that was the Serie A title; last year it was ‘only’ the

Coppa Italia. As a result of the meagre haul of medals, manager Andrea Pirlo was sacked.

Others departed, too. Last May’s Cup final, a 2-1 victory over Atalanta, featured a fine, curled opening goal from Dejan Kulusevski.

Some determined pressure on the Atalanta defence by Cristiano Ronaldo helped create the chance.

Gianluigi Buffon made a couple of alert saves while the final was evenly poised but could do little when Atalanta’s Ruslan Malinovsky­i steered the equaliser over Rodrigo Bentancur’s attempted block. Kulusevski then set up the winner for Federico Chiesa.

A year on, Ronaldo is at Manchester United, Buffon at Parma, Kulusevski and Betancur at Tottenham Hotspur and Pirlo between jobs, his single season as manager more associated with his failure to maintain Juve’s long record of scudetti than his success at delivering knockout silverware.

Chiesa, the flag-bearer of Juve’s next generation, is

meanwhile injured while Paulo Dybala, 28, and formerly the star-in-the-making for a bright Juventus future, is touch-andgo to make the starting XI.

Dybala’s contract expires next month when he will end his seven-year associatio­n with Juve. His preferred next destinatio­n – a storyline to spice up his bid to add a fifth Coppa to the five Serie A titles he has won with Juve – is Inter.

Dybala was one of the better

performers on Sunday, when Juve lost for the seventh time in the league this season.

They let slip the 1-0 lead Dybala – with a handsome long-range strike – had given them at Genoa, who equalised three minutes from time and snatched the winner deep into stoppage time.

Juve manager Max Allegri said the defeat “made no difference to the league table” and that his substituti­ons and original team selection had been shaped by wanting to rest players for the Cup final.

The loss still left an uncomforta­ble residue. Even though Juventus had already secured a spot in the division’s top four, which means Champions League qualificat­ion, what they cannot now do is finish with a better or equal points total than in 2020-21, when Pirlo achieved fourth place with 78 points – nine more than Juve have now – and was promptly sacked.

What they will certainly not do is reach the same 77 goals for the league campaign as last year. Only Torino in the top half of the table have scored fewer goals than Juventus’s 55.

But then that’s perhaps an inevitable consequenc­e of waving goodbye to Ronaldo, whose three full league campaigns as a Juventus player yielded 81 CR7 goals, 29 of them last term.

Dybala is the club’s leading marksman this season with 15 goals across all competitio­ns.

Juventus may come to miss the Argentine, although so much has been invested in Dusan Vlahovic, signed from Fiorentina for more than €75 million in January, that Dybala is in no doubt about which forward Juventus imagine will be shaping what they hope is a revival.

The cup final is an important night for Vlahovic, 22, too. His brilliant start – a strike on his league debut for Juve, another within a minute of his first Champions League match for them – has given way to a barren run, goalless in his last four appearance­s.

“It’s about finding a balance,” said Allegri of the Serbia centre-forward’s dip in form.

“He needs to balance his energies and tempo in games and learn that he hasn’t failed if he doesn’t score.

“It’s about more than that. I think next season we’ll see improvemen­ts.”

Whether Allegri is the coach supervisin­g those improvemen­ts may depend on Juve grasping their last chance at a medal tonight.

 ?? Getty ?? Juventus forward Paulo Dybala is hoping to move to tonight’s Coppa Italia final opponents Inter Milan
Getty Juventus forward Paulo Dybala is hoping to move to tonight’s Coppa Italia final opponents Inter Milan

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