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Agnelli warns on Premier League dominance as he quits Juventus

Reuters
Updated
Agnelli warns on Premier League dominance as he quits Juventus
Agnelli warns on Premier League dominance as he quits JuventusReuters
Outgoing Juventus Chairman Andrea Agnelli (47), who could face trial over the club's accounting, signed off on Wednesday with a plea for reform of European football to counteract the power of the English Premier League.

As well as leaving Juventus, Agnelli also said he would step down from his board roles at carmaker Stellantis and Exor, the Agnelli family holding company which controls the football club.

Prosecutors in Turin have requested that Agnelli, 11 other people and the club stand trial over allegations of false accounting. Juventus, the most successful club in Italian football history, has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

Agnelli has chaired Juventus since 2010 and was one of the architects of a failed attempt to set up a breakaway European Super League together with other top clubs in 2021.

"I believed and still believe that European football needs structural reforms to tackle the future," he said.

"Otherwise we are heading for inexorable decline for football in favour of a dominant league, the Premier League, which over a few years will attract all the European talent and marginalise the others," he added.

Agnelli is part of the family that founded carmaker Fiat, now part of the Stellantis group, and which has owned Juventus for a century.

Agnelli said his decision to step down from the other boards was made in agreement with Exor boss John Elkann, who is a cousin, and Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares.

"My desire is to want to face the future with a clean slate, to have freedom to think and act. And for this reason it feels like a duty to take a step back from the boards," he said.

Andrea Agnelli retains his role as board member at Giovanni Agnelli B.V., Exor's controlling shareholders, which groups all descendants of Fiat founder Giovanni Agnelli.

NEW BOARD

Gianluca Ferrero, an accountant very close to Elkann, the senior business figure in the Agnelli family, was appointed on Wednesday as the new Juventus chairman.

Agnelli handed him a black and white Juventus shirt, with Ferrero's name and the number one on the back.

The new chairman will head a slimmed-down, five-member board which will immediately have to address the club's legal troubles.

A hearing is scheduled for Friday before sporting authorities on its transfer dealings, which could overturn a previously ruling that cleared it of wrongdoing.

The club is expected to face only a fine if found guilty in that case. However, football authorities are now looking into all documents collected by general prosecutors in Turin, bringing the risk of new cases with potentially heavier sanctions.

The new board will also have to restore the club's financial fortunes, hit by rising costs linked to players' salaries and the coronavirus pandemic. Juventus booked a 238 million euro ($257 million) loss in the year ended last June.