Juventus Next Gen-Vicenza, not just a final. A challenge between the football they want and the one that always…

Anyone who knows me knows that I have never been (and never will be) a Second Teams fan. Lega Pro is, at best, “municipal football” and therefore, as you can imagine, a formation already represented in another category within it. However, the reaction of the crowd (more than 21,000 spectators) at the Allianz Stadium in Turin to the final of the first leg of the Coppa Italia was an exceptional setting for the match between juventus next generation And Vicenza Francesco Modesto’s team won 2-1 2′ after the whistle.

So overall the show deserves a finale. And with the addition, for the first time in history, VAR. In short, all is well for 21st century football fans. However, the presence of a “ghost” team that has no roots in the movement continues to feel wrong to me.

Supporters of the second teams are certainly right in saying that over the past few years, thanks first to the under-23 team and then to Next Gen, the Old Lady has had the opportunity to identify young talents such as Miretti, beans, Ealing Junior, Sule and finally, in chronological order, Barrenchea, but are we so sure that the same result would not have been achieved even in a championship dedicated exclusively to the second teams? Where there are both players fired from the A-team lists and the best talent from their academies ready to be challenged by the big names at the first opportunity.

As with any such question, the answer will never come, but I think that both visions deserve the greatest respect. That is why I believe that thanks to the new course in Lega Pro, it is right that Matthew Marani and its employees carefully weigh the pros and cons of every situation they encounter. Knowing perhaps that goes against the ideas of the FIGC President Gabriel Gravina it is not a mortal sin and that the signing of a new collective agreement for TV rights does not depend solely and exclusively on the presence of Juventus, Inter, Milan, Rome, Naples, Lazio and everyone else in the Mini version.

Personally, I will continue on my way. Return to competition at Tognon, home stadium, more beautiful Pordenone after so much wandering around the company of the Lovis family or remembering what has been done over the years South Tyroltoday a revelation in Serie B, in terms of infrastructure on a par withAlbinoLeffe or Casertana, today in LND, but which is one step away from building its own plant. Hoping, however, that historical squares like Sienna don’t lose the use of “francs”. Because the football of the municipalities can be recognized precisely by these things. From commands. From flowers, From stadiums. From emotions. Passed down from generation to generation.

Source: Tutto Mercato Web

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