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The contemptuous judgment of the authoritarian English newspaper. The international consideration of the Master’s degree begins to crack
Suddenly, in the middle of a piece that spoke in great detail about how soccer tactics adapted to the crisis by exhuming the old bolt, The Guardian writes:
“Juventus, having invested a fortune in an essentially immobile striker and then hurting themselves by appointing a rookie coach …”
A judgment thrown there, perfectly derogatory, almost gratuitous. The Guardian’s opinion, in fact one of its columnists, Jonathan Wilson, is as follows:
Juve, who spent a fortune to buy an essentially immobile forward (we’re supposed to be talking about Morata …), became self-disabled by choosing a rookie coach. Literal. And it’s not the first time. The consideration of Pirlo the Master, at an international level, begins to crack.
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