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Wikipedia

Umberto Agnelli

Umberto Agnelli (Italian: [umˈbɛrto aɲˈɲɛlli]; 1 November 1934 – 27 May 2004) was an Italian industrialist and politician. He was the third son of Virginia (born Donna Virginia Bourbon del Monte) and Edoardo Agnelli, and the youngest brother of Gianni Agnelli.[1][2]

Umberto Agnelli
Agnelli in 1970
Member of the Senate of the Republic
In office
5 July 1976 – 19 June 1979
ConstituencyRome
President of FIGC
In office
10 August 1959 – 7 August 1961
Preceded byBruno Zauli
Succeeded byGiuseppe Pasquale
Personal details
Born(1934-11-01)1 November 1934
Lausanne, Switzerland
Died27 May 2004(2004-05-27) (aged 69)
Venaria Reale, Italy
NationalityItalian
Political partyChristian Democracy
Spouses
  • Antonella Bechi Piaggio
    (m. 1959; div. 1974)
  • Allegra Caracciolo di Castagneto
    (m. 1975)
Children5, including Giovanni Alberto and Andrea
Parents
RelativesAgnelli family
Alma materUniversity of Catania
OccupationHead of Fiat S.p.A. and Juventus F.C.

Agnelli served as a CEO of Italian carmaker Fiat from 1970 to 1976.[3] After the death of his brother, he was briefly chairman of the Fiat Group until his death, aged 69, in 2004.[4] He was also chairman and later honorary chairman of Juventus, the football team long-associated with Fiat and the Agnelli family, and was for a time the president of the Italian Football Federation. He was a Christian Democracy member of the Senate of the Republic from 1976 to 1979.[1] In 2015, he was posthumously inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame.[5]

Early life edit

Agnelli was born in Lausanne, Switzerland,[6] on 1 November 1934, as the youngest of seven children.[7] After the premature deaths of his parents, Edoardo Agnelli and Virginia Bourbon del Monte in two unrelated accidents, he was raised by his older brother Gianni Agnelli. He graduated in law at the University of Catania. Like his brother and his grandfather, Giovanni Agnelli, who cofounded Fiat S.p.A. in 1899,[8][9] he also carried out his military service at the Pinerolo Cavalry Application School.[10]

Career edit

 
Agnelli with his first wife at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome

Agnelli was chairman of Fiat France from 1965 to 1980, chief executive officer of Fiat from 1970 to 1976 and its vice president from 1976 to 1993. He was chairman of Fiat Auto from 1980 to 1990,[11] and was a member of the International Advisory Board from 1993 to 2004. He was also chairman of Juventus between 1956 and 1961 and was honorary chairman from 1970 to 2004.[1] He led the club to become the most successful in Italian football.[12]

Engaged for a long time in the Fiat restructuring process, with the simultaneous opening towards foreign capital and markets, Agnelli and his family were listed 278th in the 2003 Forbes ranking of the richest people in the world, with an estimated net worth of around US$1.5 billion. Although he was a senior executive at Fiat, Agnelli was sidelined from taking a leadership role by his older brother,[13] whom he had supported for a long time in the management of the family company even if often forced to remain on the bench for financial power games, until the latter's death in 2003.[14][15][16]

From 2003 to 2004, Agnelli took over as chairman of the Fiat Group. Compared to the past, he decided to change his strategy by concentrating all Fiat resources on the car and turning to an external manager, Giuseppe Morchio, to whom he would entrust the leadership of the company.[17] The Agnelli family's management was described as progressive and paternalistic.[18]

Starting in the 1980s and accelerating into the 1990s, when the company was struggling,[19] Agnelli was the architect of Fiat's diversification.[20] The Fiat Group controlled several Italian newspapers and publishers in addition to the Fiat car firms and Juventus. Agnelli was in the process of restoring Fiat's fortunes, following a period in which the company's balance sheet, market share, and share value had all been in decline in the company's worst financial crisis,[21] when he suddenly died of lung cancer after 18 months in control.[22][23][24] Despite this, Forbes estimated that he was the world's 68th richest man with an approximate net worth of US$5.5 billion. He was a member of the Steering Committee of the Bilderberg Group.[25]

Juventus F.C. edit

Elected in 1955 by a council of members, including his older brother, who was president of the club, he became the youngest person to assume the highest managerial position in the history of Juventus. His management was characterized by the signings of important players, such as John Charles and Omar Sívori, who proved to be decisive for the conquest of three Serie A championships and two consecutive Italy Cups from 1958 to 1961.[26][27] Before he died, Agnelli was instrumental in signing Fabio Capello as Juventus coach in 2004.[28] He also had transformed the club into a modern publicly-listed company with important investment projects.[29] After leaving the presidential role in 1962, Agnelli remained tied to Juventus. In 1994, he took over the management activities previously carried out by his brother, exerting greater influence on the club as honorary president during the following decade, a period in which the club won another five Serie A titles, one more Italy Cup, four Italian Super Cups, one Intercontinental Cup, one UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Intertoto Cup, and one UEFA Super Cup, for a total of 19 trophies in 18 years. By virtue of the sporting successes achieved during his managerial sporting career, Agnelli was jointly inducted by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) and the Coverciano Football Museum Foundation into the Italian Football Hall of Fame in 2015.[30]

In 1999, Juventus improved their own record of having won all five major UEFA competitions by winning the Intertoto Cup, the next year was voted the seventh best of the FIFA Club of the Century and in 2009 was placed by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics second in the European best club of the 20th-century ranking, the highest for an Italian club in both; by the early 2000s, the club had the third best revenue in Europe at over €200 million. This all changed when, three years after his death, Calciopoli controversially hit the club,[31][32][33] which was demoted to Serie B for the first time in its history despite the club being acquitted and the leagues were ruled to be regular;[34][35] it was his son, Andrea Agnelli, who built the club back up in the 2010s.[36] When Agnelli died in 2004, Juventus had won the 2001–02 Serie A, the club's 26th scudetto, at the last matchday,[37][38][39] and had reached the 2003 UEFA Champions League final, the club's four UEFA Champions League final in seven years, three of which were achieved consecutively; those in 1997, against Borussia Dortmund,[40][41] and in 1998, against Real Madrid,[42] were lost out controversially.[43] In the words of Fulvio Bianchi, early 2000s Juventus were "stronger than all those that came after, and had €250 million in revenue, being at the top of Europe, and 100 sponsors. It took ten years to recover and return to the top Italians, not yet Europeans: now the club makes over €300 million, but in the meantime Real, Bayern, and the others have taken off."[44]

Some observers allege that Calciopoli and its aftermath were a dispute within Juventus and between the club's owners that came after the deaths of Umberto and Gianni Agnelli,[45] including Franzo Grande Stevens and Gianluigi Gabetti who favoured Agnelli's grandson, John Elkann, over his nephew as chairman,[46] and wanted to get rid of Luciano Moggi, Antonio Giraudo,[47][48] and Roberto Bettega, whose shares in the club increased.[49] Whatever their intentions, it is argued they condemned Juventus: first when Carlo Zaccone, the club's lawyer,[50] agreed for relegation to Serie B and point-deduction, when he made that statement because Juventus were the only club risking more than one-division relegation (Serie C), and he meant for Juventus (the sole club to be ultimately demoted) to have equal treatment with the other clubs;[51] and then when Luca Cordero di Montezemolo retired the club's appeal to the Regional Administrative Court of Lazio,[52] which could have cleared the club's name and avoid relegation, after FIFA threatened to suspend the FIGC from international play,[53] a renounce for which then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter was thankful.[54][55]

Several observers, including former FIGC president Franco Carraro, argue that had Agnelli been alive, things would have done different, as the club and its directors would have been defended properly, which could have avoided relegation and cleared the club's name much earlier than the Calciopoli trials of the 2010s. It is argued that Agnelli would have taken the same tougher stance of his son.[36] Moggi, one of the two Juventus directors involved in the scandal,[56][57] said that Calciopoli only happened because "l'Avvocato Agnelli and il Dottor Umberto died",[58] and had the two Agnellis not died, "nothing [of this farce] would have happened."[59][60] According to observers, Juventus was weak after the deaths of the Agnelli, with Moggi saying this "made us orphans and weak, it was easy to attack Juve and destroy them by making things up."[61][62] According to critics, Juventus bothered because they won too much under Agnelli. Then-CONI president Gianni Petrucci said "a team that wins too much is harmful to their sport."[63]

Politics edit

 
Agnelli (right) with his older brother, Gianni Agnelli, in 1965

Politically, the Agnelli family sought to create a non-ideological, centrist political formation of Atlanticist and pro-European persuasion that sought a modernising, internationalist capitalism in contrast to the left and opposed to the populist, nationalist, or fascist right.[64] In the 1970s, Agnelli was elected a member of the Senate of the Republic for Christian Democracy (DC). This came after the DC won over a struggle in which Gianni Agnelli would be present in the Italian Republican Party list for the 1976 Italian general election, a move that could have cost them about one million votes. In turn, the DC obtained the candidacy of Agnelli as a senator, a position he held until 1979. He took his role seriously, and he held a conference of DC senators in Rome to discuss the renewal of the party; in response, he was admonished.[65]

Personal life and death edit

Agnelli's life was beset by an unusual amount of tragedy and bereavement.[66] His father, Edoardo Agnelli, perished in an air crash when he was one year old; his mother, Virginia Bourbon del Monte, died in a car accident in 1945 when he was 11 years old.[1][2][67] His nephew, Edoardo Agnelli, committed suicide in 2000.[68]

In 1959, Agnelli married a cousin of his sister-in-law Marella Agnelli, the heiress Donna Antonella Bechi Piaggio, from the well-known business family of Piaggio that created Vespa, who later married a distant maternal relative of Allegra Caracciolo, Uberto Visconti di Modrone. Agnelli and Bechi Piaggio had three sons but their first, twin boys, died shortly after birth. The third son was Giovanni Alberto Agnelli,[69] who grew up to be the head of the maternal family-firm Piaggio, and was being groomed to succeed at Fiat but died of cancer at the age of 33 in 1997.[70][71][72] After he divorced from his wife, Agnelli married Donna Allegra Caracciolo di Castagneto in 1974.[1] She is the first cousin of Agnelli's sister-in-law Marella Caracciolo di Castagneto, also the wife of Agnelli's brother. The ladies come from a noble family dating back to the Kingdom of Naples that has, among others, the titles of nobility of Prince of Castagneto and Duke of Melito. From his second marriage came two children, who were named Andrea (born 1975) and Anna (born 1977).[73] His son, Andrea Agnelli, later followed in his footsteps by becoming chairman of Juventus in 2010.[74][75]

Suffering from lung cancer, which became public only a month before his death after a Financial Times report,[76] Agnelli spent his last days assisted by his wife and two children at their residence in La Mandria,[77] which included La Mandria Regional Park, in the Venaria Reale area, where he died on 27 May 2004,[78] fifteen days before the death of his nephew, Prince Egon von Fürstenberg. His last public appearance had taken place on 26 April, when his wife was awarded an honorary degree in veterinary medicine by the University of Turin.[79] Agnelli's worsening health conditions prevented him from attending the Fiat shareholders' meeting on 11 May.[80][81]

Honours edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Chapman, Giles (29 May 2004). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 19 December 2007. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  2. ^ a b Popham, Peter (29 May 2004). "Agnelli family's grip on the Fiat steering wheel loosens with the death of Umberto". The Independent. Archived from the original on 22 April 2013. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  3. ^ "Umberto Agnelli's Fiat: More Trucks". The New York Times. 17 October 1976. p. 123. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  4. ^ "Fiat chairman Umberto Agnelli dies of cancer". Irish Examiner. 28 May 2004. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  5. ^ "Hall of fame, 10 new entry: con Vialli e Mancini anche Facchetti e Ronaldo". La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian). 27 October 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
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  31. ^ Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (15 April 2010). Il processo illecito (PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. pp. 9–10. Retrieved 24 January 2023 – via Ju29ro. The Juventus defence, among other things, objects that a sum of several Articles 1 (unfair and dishonest sporting conduct) cannot lead to an indictment for Article 6 (sporting offence), using for example the metaphor that so many defamations do not carry a murder conviction: an unimpeachable objection. ... Hence the grotesque concept of 'standings altered without any match-fixing'. The 'Calciopoli' rulings state that there is no match-fixing. That the league under investigation, 2004–2005, is to be considered regular. But that the Juventus management has achieved effective standings advantages for Juventus FC even without altering the individual matches. In practice, Juventus was convicted of murder, with no one dead, no evidence, no accomplices, no murder weapon. Only for the presence of a hypothetical motive.
  32. ^ Garganese, Carlo (17 June 2011). "Revealed: The Calciopoli evidence that shows Luciano Moggi is the victim of a witch-hunt". Goal.com. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  33. ^ Ingram, Sam (20 December 2021). "Calciopoli Scandal: Referee Designators As Desired Pawns". ZicoBall. Retrieved 24 January 2023. FIGC's actions in relegating Juventus and handing the title to Inter Milan were somewhat peculiar. Of course, Moggi and Juventus deserved punishment; that is not up for dispute. However, the severity of the ruling and the new location for the Scudetto was unprecedented and arguably should never have happened. The final ruling in the Calciopoli years later judged that Juventus had never breached Article 6. As a result, the Serie A champions should never have encountered a shock 1–1 draw away to Rimini in the season's curtain-raiser. Nor should they have trounced Piacenza 4–0 in Turin or handed a 5–1 thrashing away to Arezzo in Tuscany. The findings stated that some club officials had violated Article 6, but none had originated from Juventus. FIGC created a structured article violation with their decision-making. This means that instead of finding an Article 6 breach, several Article 1 violations were pieced together to create evidence damning to warrant relegation from Italy's top flight. Article 1 violations in Italian football usually command fines, bans, or points deductions, but certainly not relegation.
  34. ^ Beha, Oliviero (7 February 2012). . Tiscali (in Italian). Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2023. ... the motivations in 558 pages are summarized as follows. 1) Leagues not altered (therefore leagues unjustly taken away from Juve...), matches not fixed, referees not corrupted, investigations conducted incorrectly by the investigators of the Public Prosecutor's Office (interceptions of the Carabinieri which were even manipulated in the confrontation in the Chamber). 2) The SIM cards, the foreign telephone cards that Moggi has distributed to some referees and designators, would be proof of the attempt to alter and condition the system, even without the effective demonstration of the rigged result. 3) Moggi's attitude, like a real 'telephone' boss, is invasive even when he tries to influence the [Italian Football Federation] and the national team, see the phone calls with Carraro and Lippi. 4) That these phone calls and this 'mafia' or 'sub-mafia' promiscuity aimed at 'creating criminal associations' turned out to be common practice in the environment as is evident, does not acquit Moggi and C.: and therefore here is the sentence. ... Finally point 1), the so-called positive part of the motivations, that is, in fact everything is regular. And then the scandal of 'Scommettopoli' [the Italian football scandal of 2011] in which it's coming out that the 2010–2011 league [won by Milan] as a whole with tricks is to be considered really and decidedly irregular? The Chief Prosecutor of Cremona, Di Martino, says so for now, while sports justice takes its time as always, but I fear that many will soon repeat it, unless everything is silenced. With all due respect to those who want the truth and think that Moggi has objectively become the 'scapegoat'. Does the framework of information that does not investigate, analyse, compare, and take sides out of ignorance or bias seem slightly clearer to you?
  35. ^ Rossini, Claudio (5 March 2014). "Calciopoli e la verità di comodo". Blasting News (in Italian). Retrieved 24 January 2023. Juventus have been acquitted, the offending leagues (2004/2005 and 2005/2006) have been declared regular, and the reasons for the conviction of Luciano Moggi are vague; mostly, they condemn his position, that he was in a position to commit a crime. In short, be careful to enter a shop without surveillance because even if you don't steal, you would have had the opportunity. And go on to explain to your friends that you're honest people after the morbid and pro-sales campaign of the newspapers. ... a club has been acquitted, and no one has heard of it, and whoever has heard of it, they don't accept it. The verdict of 2006, made in a hurry, was acceptable, that of Naples was not. The problem then lies not so much in vulgar journalism as in readers who accept the truths that are convenient. Juventus was, rightly or wrongly, the best justification for the failures of others, and it was in popular sentiment, as evidenced by the new controversies concerning 'The System.' But how? Wasn't the rotten erased? The referees since 2006 make mistakes in good faith, the word of Massimo Moratti (the only 'honest'). ... it isn't a question of tifo, but of a critical spirit, of the desire to deepen and not be satisfied with the headlines (as did Oliviero Beha, a well-known Viola [Fiorentina] fan, who, however, drew conclusions outside the chorus because, despite enjoying it as a tifoso, he suffered as a journalist. He wasn't satisfied and went into depth. He was one of the few).
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  38. ^ Mocciaro, Gaetano (5 May 2019). "5 maggio 2002, l'Inter perde lo scudetto all'ultima curva. Juve campione". TuttoMercatoWeb (in Italian). Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  39. ^ Morrone, Daniel V. (5 May 2020). "Il cinque maggio". L'Ultimo Uomo (in Italian). Sky Sport Italia. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  40. ^ Censoni, Mattia (27 May 2020). "Uno schiaffo in faccia a tutti gli antijuventini! Altro che favoriti: l'elenco dei 10 'furti' storici subiti dai bianconeri". Tribuna.com. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  41. ^ Barillà, Carmelo (27 May 2020). "Borussia Dortmund-Juventus, finale maledetta: i bianconeri soccombono tra legni, gol annullati e rigori negati". CalcioWeb. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  42. ^ "Lippi: Mijatovic's goal in 1998 Champions League final was definitely offside". Marca. 20 May 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  43. ^ "Gli arbitri buttano fuori la Juventus: moviola in campo subito!". Tuttosport (in Italian). Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  44. ^ Vignati, Alessandro (17 July 2016). "Fulvio Bianchi: 'La Juve e la Figc e quello Scudetto del 2006...'". TuttoMercatoWeb (in Italian). Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  45. ^ Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (15 April 2010). Il processo illecito (PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. pp. 48–49. Retrieved 26 February 2023 – via Ju29ro. [p. 48] Corrado De Biase, the head of the investigations office at the time of the [1980s] betting scandal from 1980, ... about Juventus and the work of Zaccone, its lawyer: 'I can't know why the Juventus owners has moved in a certain way, but I would say, 99%, that the affair was skilfully managed by the leaders of the Turin club, starting with the request from Zaccone, who left everyone stunned. Zaccone isn't incompetent, as many believe, but he was only an actor in this story.' ... The point that makes me think that Zaccone acted on input from the owners is another, namely the way in which the top management of Juventus moved, with that fake appeal to the TAR. How, I wonder, you dismiss the directors, practically pleading guilty, then you watch inert and impassive a media and judicial destruction against your club and then you're threatening to resort to the TAR? It's the concept of closing the barn when the oxen have fled, if you think about it. ... [p. 50] I, on my own, can only reiterate the concept already expressed: a penalty of 8/10 points, a fine, and a ban of Moggi and Giraudo for 10/12 months, this was the appropriate penalty in my opinion. Any parallel with the story of 1980 is unthinkable: here there're no traces of offence, nor of money or checks. The environmental offence isn't a crime covered by any code, unless we're talking about air pollution.'
  46. ^ "Gianluigi Gabetti, financial advisor to the Agnelli family, dies at 94". La Stampa. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  47. ^ "Processo a Calciopoli, il verdetto non assolve". La Repubblica (in Italian). 31 October 2008. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  48. ^ "Elkann, Zaccone, Montezemolo: spiegate". Ju29ro (in Italian). 7 April 2010. Retrieved 21 February 2023.
  49. ^ Coccia, Pasquale (18 January 2020). "Il contado tifa per la zebra". Il manifesto (in Italian). Retrieved 26 February 2023. De Luna: We consulted the company financial statements, and noted the escalation of the emoluments that Moggi, Giraudo, and Bettega received. We don't have certain elements to be able to say that at that moment there was an attempt to take over Juventus, but those figures are impressive. Furthermore, there are some anomalies of the Agnellis which leave the door open to this type of hypothesis. The Calciopoli investigation was born out of a Turin investigation by the prosecutor Guariniello on the Juventus doping case, [in which] the interceptions of Moggi's conversations with the referees emerge. Guariniello sends the files to the boss Maddalena, notes that there are no crimes from a criminal point of view, but perhaps from a sporting point of view. Maddalena keeps the files for three months, then sends them to the [Italian] Football Federation. This period lasts a little over a year. Do you really [want to believe] that Juve didn't know what was going on? I have the impression that the Agnelli family took advantage of this opportunity to stop an attempt to take over the Moggi-Giraudo-Bettega company.
  50. ^ "L'avvocato Zaccone: 'Tifo Toro, ma ho difeso la Juve in Calciopoli. Mi hanno pagato bene...'". La Repubblica (in Italian). 19 September 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2023 – via TuttoMercatoWeb.com.
  51. ^ "Calciopoli, anche il legale bianconero è possibilista: 'Se ci sono novità e la Juve me lo chiede, riapriamo il processo'". Goal.com. 6 April 2010. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  52. ^ Cambiaghi, Emilio; Dent, Arthur (15 April 2010). Il processo illecito (PDF) (1st ed.). Stampa Indipendente. pp. 48–49. Retrieved 26 February 2023 – via Ju29ro. '... [p. 48] First you let yourself be massacred without lifting a finger, you have the title disassigned, you have the calendars drawn up for the European championships and cups, and then you threaten to go to the TAR, trumpeting everything in the newspapers? It looks much like a political move to appease the wrath of the fans, I think. If Zaccone, who is a man of value and experience, would have had the mandate to avoid the disaster he would have moved in a different way, in the sense that he would have pointed out these 'anomalies' in the time between the trial and the announcement of the verdicts. That, in fact, was the right moment to threaten to appeal to the TAR, when the sentences had not yet been written, but had to be done in camera caritatis, asking for a meeting with [p. 49] Ruperto, Sandulli, and Palazzi, and not in front of the journalists of La Gazzetta dello Sport. ... Please note that I'm not discussing the high strategy of the forensic art, but the basic principles, the ABC of the profession, the things that are taught to the boys who come to the studio to do a traineeship: if you, the defence attorney, think you have weapons to play, you ask for a meeting with the judge and the public prosecution, in the period between the trial and the verdict, and point out that, if the response is judged too severe, you will use them. And here there were weapons in industrial quantities. Then, in the face of a fait accompli, who takes the responsibility of stopping a machine that grinds billions of euros, so as to be the sixth industry in the country?'
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Further reading edit

  • Ferrante, Marco (2007). Casa Agnelli. Storie e personaggi dell'ultima dinastia italiana (in Italian). Milan: Mondadori. ISBN 978-88-04-56673-1.
  • Friedman, Alan (1988). Agnelli and the Network of Italian Power. London: Mandarin Paperback (Octopus Publishing Group). ISBN 0-7493-0093-0.
  • Galli, Giancarlo (2003). Gli Agnelli. Il tramonto di una dinastia (in Italian). Milan: Mondadori. ISBN 88-04-51768-9.
  • Mola di Nomaglio, Gustavo (1998). Gli Agnelli. Storia e genealogia di una grande famiglia piemontese dal XVI secolo al 1866 (in Italian). Turin: Centro Studi Piemontesi. ISBN 88-8262-099-9.
  • Ori, Angiolo Silvio (1996). Storia di una dinastia. Gli Agnelli e la Fiat. Rome: Editori Riuniti. ISBN 88-359-4059-1.

External links edit

umberto, agnelli, italian, umˈbɛrto, aɲˈɲɛlli, november, 1934, 2004, italian, industrialist, politician, third, virginia, born, donna, virginia, bourbon, monte, edoardo, agnelli, youngest, brother, gianni, agnelli, agnelli, 1970member, senate, republicin, offi. Umberto Agnelli Italian umˈbɛrto aɲˈɲɛlli 1 November 1934 27 May 2004 was an Italian industrialist and politician He was the third son of Virginia born Donna Virginia Bourbon del Monte and Edoardo Agnelli and the youngest brother of Gianni Agnelli 1 2 Umberto AgnelliAgnelli in 1970Member of the Senate of the RepublicIn office 5 July 1976 19 June 1979ConstituencyRomePresident of FIGCIn office 10 August 1959 7 August 1961Preceded byBruno ZauliSucceeded byGiuseppe PasqualePersonal detailsBorn 1934 11 01 1 November 1934Lausanne SwitzerlandDied27 May 2004 2004 05 27 aged 69 Venaria Reale ItalyNationalityItalianPolitical partyChristian DemocracySpousesAntonella Bechi Piaggio m 1959 div 1974 wbr Allegra Caracciolo di Castagneto m 1975 wbr Children5 including Giovanni Alberto and AndreaParentsEdoardo AgnelliVirginia Bourbon del MonteRelativesAgnelli familyAlma materUniversity of CataniaOccupationHead of Fiat S p A and Juventus F C Agnelli served as a CEO of Italian carmaker Fiat from 1970 to 1976 3 After the death of his brother he was briefly chairman of the Fiat Group until his death aged 69 in 2004 4 He was also chairman and later honorary chairman of Juventus the football team long associated with Fiat and the Agnelli family and was for a time the president of the Italian Football Federation He was a Christian Democracy member of the Senate of the Republic from 1976 to 1979 1 In 2015 he was posthumously inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Juventus F C 4 Politics 5 Personal life and death 6 Honours 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editAgnelli was born in Lausanne Switzerland 6 on 1 November 1934 as the youngest of seven children 7 After the premature deaths of his parents Edoardo Agnelli and Virginia Bourbon del Monte in two unrelated accidents he was raised by his older brother Gianni Agnelli He graduated in law at the University of Catania Like his brother and his grandfather Giovanni Agnelli who cofounded Fiat S p A in 1899 8 9 he also carried out his military service at the Pinerolo Cavalry Application School 10 Career edit nbsp Agnelli with his first wife at the 1960 Summer Olympics in RomeAgnelli was chairman of Fiat France from 1965 to 1980 chief executive officer of Fiat from 1970 to 1976 and its vice president from 1976 to 1993 He was chairman of Fiat Auto from 1980 to 1990 11 and was a member of the International Advisory Board from 1993 to 2004 He was also chairman of Juventus between 1956 and 1961 and was honorary chairman from 1970 to 2004 1 He led the club to become the most successful in Italian football 12 Engaged for a long time in the Fiat restructuring process with the simultaneous opening towards foreign capital and markets Agnelli and his family were listed 278th in the 2003 Forbes ranking of the richest people in the world with an estimated net worth of around US 1 5 billion Although he was a senior executive at Fiat Agnelli was sidelined from taking a leadership role by his older brother 13 whom he had supported for a long time in the management of the family company even if often forced to remain on the bench for financial power games until the latter s death in 2003 14 15 16 From 2003 to 2004 Agnelli took over as chairman of the Fiat Group Compared to the past he decided to change his strategy by concentrating all Fiat resources on the car and turning to an external manager Giuseppe Morchio to whom he would entrust the leadership of the company 17 The Agnelli family s management was described as progressive and paternalistic 18 Starting in the 1980s and accelerating into the 1990s when the company was struggling 19 Agnelli was the architect of Fiat s diversification 20 The Fiat Group controlled several Italian newspapers and publishers in addition to the Fiat car firms and Juventus Agnelli was in the process of restoring Fiat s fortunes following a period in which the company s balance sheet market share and share value had all been in decline in the company s worst financial crisis 21 when he suddenly died of lung cancer after 18 months in control 22 23 24 Despite this Forbes estimated that he was the world s 68th richest man with an approximate net worth of US 5 5 billion He was a member of the Steering Committee of the Bilderberg Group 25 Juventus F C editElected in 1955 by a council of members including his older brother who was president of the club he became the youngest person to assume the highest managerial position in the history of Juventus His management was characterized by the signings of important players such as John Charles and Omar Sivori who proved to be decisive for the conquest of three Serie A championships and two consecutive Italy Cups from 1958 to 1961 26 27 Before he died Agnelli was instrumental in signing Fabio Capello as Juventus coach in 2004 28 He also had transformed the club into a modern publicly listed company with important investment projects 29 After leaving the presidential role in 1962 Agnelli remained tied to Juventus In 1994 he took over the management activities previously carried out by his brother exerting greater influence on the club as honorary president during the following decade a period in which the club won another five Serie A titles one more Italy Cup four Italian Super Cups one Intercontinental Cup one UEFA Champions League one UEFA Intertoto Cup and one UEFA Super Cup for a total of 19 trophies in 18 years By virtue of the sporting successes achieved during his managerial sporting career Agnelli was jointly inducted by the Italian Football Federation FIGC and the Coverciano Football Museum Foundation into the Italian Football Hall of Fame in 2015 30 In 1999 Juventus improved their own record of having won all five major UEFA competitions by winning the Intertoto Cup the next year was voted the seventh best of the FIFA Club of the Century and in 2009 was placed by the International Federation of Football History amp Statistics second in the European best club of the 20th century ranking the highest for an Italian club in both by the early 2000s the club had the third best revenue in Europe at over 200 million This all changed when three years after his death Calciopoli controversially hit the club 31 32 33 which was demoted to Serie B for the first time in its history despite the club being acquitted and the leagues were ruled to be regular 34 35 it was his son Andrea Agnelli who built the club back up in the 2010s 36 When Agnelli died in 2004 Juventus had won the 2001 02 Serie A the club s 26th scudetto at the last matchday 37 38 39 and had reached the 2003 UEFA Champions League final the club s four UEFA Champions League final in seven years three of which were achieved consecutively those in 1997 against Borussia Dortmund 40 41 and in 1998 against Real Madrid 42 were lost out controversially 43 In the words of Fulvio Bianchi early 2000s Juventus were stronger than all those that came after and had 250 million in revenue being at the top of Europe and 100 sponsors It took ten years to recover and return to the top Italians not yet Europeans now the club makes over 300 million but in the meantime Real Bayern and the others have taken off 44 Some observers allege that Calciopoli and its aftermath were a dispute within Juventus and between the club s owners that came after the deaths of Umberto and Gianni Agnelli 45 including Franzo Grande Stevens and Gianluigi Gabetti who favoured Agnelli s grandson John Elkann over his nephew as chairman 46 and wanted to get rid of Luciano Moggi Antonio Giraudo 47 48 and Roberto Bettega whose shares in the club increased 49 Whatever their intentions it is argued they condemned Juventus first when Carlo Zaccone the club s lawyer 50 agreed for relegation to Serie B and point deduction when he made that statement because Juventus were the only club risking more than one division relegation Serie C and he meant for Juventus the sole club to be ultimately demoted to have equal treatment with the other clubs 51 and then when Luca Cordero di Montezemolo retired the club s appeal to the Regional Administrative Court of Lazio 52 which could have cleared the club s name and avoid relegation after FIFA threatened to suspend the FIGC from international play 53 a renounce for which then FIFA president Sepp Blatter was thankful 54 55 Several observers including former FIGC president Franco Carraro argue that had Agnelli been alive things would have done different as the club and its directors would have been defended properly which could have avoided relegation and cleared the club s name much earlier than the Calciopoli trials of the 2010s It is argued that Agnelli would have taken the same tougher stance of his son 36 Moggi one of the two Juventus directors involved in the scandal 56 57 said that Calciopoli only happened because l Avvocato Agnelli and il Dottor Umberto died 58 and had the two Agnellis not died nothing of this farce would have happened 59 60 According to observers Juventus was weak after the deaths of the Agnelli with Moggi saying this made us orphans and weak it was easy to attack Juve and destroy them by making things up 61 62 According to critics Juventus bothered because they won too much under Agnelli Then CONI president Gianni Petrucci said a team that wins too much is harmful to their sport 63 Politics edit nbsp Agnelli right with his older brother Gianni Agnelli in 1965Politically the Agnelli family sought to create a non ideological centrist political formation of Atlanticist and pro European persuasion that sought a modernising internationalist capitalism in contrast to the left and opposed to the populist nationalist or fascist right 64 In the 1970s Agnelli was elected a member of the Senate of the Republic for Christian Democracy DC This came after the DC won over a struggle in which Gianni Agnelli would be present in the Italian Republican Party list for the 1976 Italian general election a move that could have cost them about one million votes In turn the DC obtained the candidacy of Agnelli as a senator a position he held until 1979 He took his role seriously and he held a conference of DC senators in Rome to discuss the renewal of the party in response he was admonished 65 Personal life and death editAgnelli s life was beset by an unusual amount of tragedy and bereavement 66 His father Edoardo Agnelli perished in an air crash when he was one year old his mother Virginia Bourbon del Monte died in a car accident in 1945 when he was 11 years old 1 2 67 His nephew Edoardo Agnelli committed suicide in 2000 68 In 1959 Agnelli married a cousin of his sister in law Marella Agnelli the heiress Donna Antonella Bechi Piaggio from the well known business family of Piaggio that created Vespa who later married a distant maternal relative of Allegra Caracciolo Uberto Visconti di Modrone Agnelli and Bechi Piaggio had three sons but their first twin boys died shortly after birth The third son was Giovanni Alberto Agnelli 69 who grew up to be the head of the maternal family firm Piaggio and was being groomed to succeed at Fiat but died of cancer at the age of 33 in 1997 70 71 72 After he divorced from his wife Agnelli married Donna Allegra Caracciolo di Castagneto in 1974 1 She is the first cousin of Agnelli s sister in law Marella Caracciolo di Castagneto also the wife of Agnelli s brother The ladies come from a noble family dating back to the Kingdom of Naples that has among others the titles of nobility of Prince of Castagneto and Duke of Melito From his second marriage came two children who were named Andrea born 1975 and Anna born 1977 73 His son Andrea Agnelli later followed in his footsteps by becoming chairman of Juventus in 2010 74 75 Suffering from lung cancer which became public only a month before his death after a Financial Times report 76 Agnelli spent his last days assisted by his wife and two children at their residence in La Mandria 77 which included La Mandria Regional Park in the Venaria Reale area where he died on 27 May 2004 78 fifteen days before the death of his nephew Prince Egon von Furstenberg His last public appearance had taken place on 26 April when his wife was awarded an honorary degree in veterinary medicine by the University of Turin 79 Agnelli s worsening health conditions prevented him from attending the Fiat shareholders meeting on 11 May 80 81 Honours edit nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 27 December 1967 82 nbsp Officer Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 1969 82 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic 2 June 1972 82 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Sacred Treasure 1996 82 References edit a b c d e Chapman Giles 29 May 2004 Umberto Agnelli The Independent Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b Popham Peter 29 May 2004 Agnelli family s grip on the Fiat steering wheel loosens with the death of Umberto The Independent Archived from the original on 22 April 2013 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli s Fiat More Trucks The New York Times 17 October 1976 p 123 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Fiat chairman Umberto Agnelli dies of cancer Irish Examiner 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Hall of fame 10 new entry con Vialli e Mancini anche Facchetti e Ronaldo La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italian 27 October 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli s death leaves Fiat in a financial fix Taipei Times 30 May 2004 p 12 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli The Daily Telegraph 1 June 2004 p 12 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Galloni Alessandra 26 January 2003 Fiat Patriarch Umberto sic Agnelli Dies After Months of Illness The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Cowell Alan Sylvers Eric 1 June 2004 International Business Member of the Fiat Board Is Expected To Take Over as the Chief Executive The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Rizzo Renato 20 May 2005 Nizza Cavalleria suona l ora dell ultima carica La Stampa in Italian Archived from the original on 3 May 2010 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Cowell Alan 26 November 1991 Business People Fiat Chief s Brother Viewed as Successor The New York Times p 2 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Baker Al 28 May 2004 Umberto Agnelli Fiat Chairman Dies at 69 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Italy The Other Agnelli Time 5 February 1973 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Tagliabue John 25 January 2002 International Business Agnelli s Brother to Steer Fiat and Holdings The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Dixon Hugo 2 May 2003 Agnelli Plan to Decrease Members Would Hurt Independent Directors The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Hooper Joghn 29 May 2004 Fiat heir whose personal tragedy helped him to the top job The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Mazzuca Alberto 4 March 2021 Gianni Agnelli in bianco e nero Milan Baldini Castoldi pp 261 262 ISBN 978 88 9388 836 3 Retrieved 9 February 2023 via Google Books Smith William D 2 December 1976 Fiat as Run by the Agnellis Is Progressive and Paternal The New York Times p 73 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli 69 Scion of Fiat Dynasty Led Firm s Turnaround Los Angeles Times Associated Press 29 May 2004 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Tagliabue John 19 June 2002 The Agnellis Still Make Fiats Don t They The New York Times p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Death of Umberto Agnelli signals Fiat turning point The Globe and Mail 29 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Baker Al 29 May 2004 Umberto Agnelli Quiet Member of Fiat Dynasty Dies at 69 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Obituary Fiat chairman Umberto Agnelli dies Reuters 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 via WardsAuto Montani GiannI 28 May 2004 Obituary Umberto Agnelli Italy s first family mourns again Reuters Retrieved 9 February 2023 via WardsAuto Bilderberg and the Agnellis Bilderberg Meetings 29 May 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Agnelli succumbs to cancer Inside UEFA UEFA 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli e la prima Grande Juve del dopoguerra Storie di Calcio in Italian 27 November 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2023 L ultimo regalo di Umberto Porto Capello alla Juventus La Repubblica in Italian 29 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli la vita lo sport la politica Corriere della Sera in Italian 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli e Vialli nella Hall of fame della Figc Tuttosport in Italian 27 October 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Cambiaghi Emilio Dent Arthur 15 April 2010 Il processo illecito PDF 1st ed Stampa Indipendente pp 9 10 Retrieved 24 January 2023 via Ju29ro The Juventus defence among other things objects that a sum of several Articles 1 unfair and dishonest sporting conduct cannot lead to an indictment for Article 6 sporting offence using for example the metaphor that so many defamations do not carry a murder conviction an unimpeachable objection Hence the grotesque concept of standings altered without any match fixing The Calciopoli rulings state that there is no match fixing That the league under investigation 2004 2005 is to be considered regular But that the Juventus management has achieved effective standings advantages for Juventus FC even without altering the individual matches In practice Juventus was convicted of murder with no one dead no evidence no accomplices no murder weapon Only for the presence of a hypothetical motive Garganese Carlo 17 June 2011 Revealed The Calciopoli evidence that shows Luciano Moggi is the victim of a witch hunt Goal com Retrieved 23 May 2022 Ingram Sam 20 December 2021 Calciopoli Scandal Referee Designators As Desired Pawns ZicoBall Retrieved 24 January 2023 FIGC s actions in relegating Juventus and handing the title to Inter Milan were somewhat peculiar Of course Moggi and Juventus deserved punishment that is not up for dispute However the severity of the ruling and the new location for the Scudetto was unprecedented and arguably should never have happened The final ruling in the Calciopoli years later judged that Juventus had never breached Article 6 As a result the Serie A champions should never have encountered a shock 1 1 draw away to Rimini in the season s curtain raiser Nor should they have trounced Piacenza 4 0 in Turin or handed a 5 1 thrashing away to Arezzo in Tuscany The findings stated that some club officials had violated Article 6 but none had originated from Juventus FIGC created a structured article violation with their decision making This means that instead of finding an Article 6 breach several Article 1 violations were pieced together to create evidence damning to warrant relegation from Italy s top flight Article 1 violations in Italian football usually command fines bans or points deductions but certainly not relegation Beha Oliviero 7 February 2012 Il caso Moggi e le colpe della stampa non fa inchieste di pende dai verbali non sa leggere le sentenze Tiscali in Italian Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2023 the motivations in 558 pages are summarized as follows 1 Leagues not altered therefore leagues unjustly taken away from Juve matches not fixed referees not corrupted investigations conducted incorrectly by the investigators of the Public Prosecutor s Office interceptions of the Carabinieri which were even manipulated in the confrontation in the Chamber 2 The SIM cards the foreign telephone cards that Moggi has distributed to some referees and designators would be proof of the attempt to alter and condition the system even without the effective demonstration of the rigged result 3 Moggi s attitude like a real telephone boss is invasive even when he tries to influence the Italian Football Federation and the national team see the phone calls with Carraro and Lippi 4 That these phone calls and this mafia or sub mafia promiscuity aimed at creating criminal associations turned out to be common practice in the environment as is evident does not acquit Moggi and C and therefore here is the sentence Finally point 1 the so called positive part of the motivations that is in fact everything is regular And then the scandal of Scommettopoli the Italian football scandal of 2011 in which it s coming out that the 2010 2011 league won by Milan as a whole with tricks is to be considered really and decidedly irregular The Chief Prosecutor of Cremona Di Martino says so for now while sports justice takes its time as always but I fear that many will soon repeat it unless everything is silenced With all due respect to those who want the truth and think that Moggi has objectively become the scapegoat Does the framework of information that does not investigate analyse compare and take sides out of ignorance or bias seem slightly clearer to you Rossini Claudio 5 March 2014 Calciopoli e la verita di comodo Blasting News in Italian Retrieved 24 January 2023 Juventus have been acquitted the offending leagues 2004 2005 and 2005 2006 have been declared regular and the reasons for the conviction of Luciano Moggi are vague mostly they condemn his position that he was in a position to commit a crime In short be careful to enter a shop without surveillance because even if you don t steal you would have had the opportunity And go on to explain to your friends that you re honest people after the morbid and pro sales campaign of the newspapers a club has been acquitted and no one has heard of it and whoever has heard of it they don t accept it The verdict of 2006 made in a hurry was acceptable that of Naples was not The problem then lies not so much in vulgar journalism as in readers who accept the truths that are convenient Juventus was rightly or wrongly the best justification for the failures of others and it was in popular sentiment as evidenced by the new controversies concerning The System But how Wasn t the rotten erased The referees since 2006 make mistakes in good faith the word of Massimo Moratti the only honest it isn t a question of tifo but of a critical spirit of the desire to deepen and not be satisfied with the headlines as did Oliviero Beha a well known Viola Fiorentina fan who however drew conclusions outside the chorus because despite enjoying it as a tifoso he suffered as a journalist He wasn t satisfied and went into depth He was one of the few a b Juventus Fiat Calciopoli e CR7 che guerra tra Andrea Agnelli e John Ellkann Affaritaliani it in Italian 12 November 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Quadarella Francesco 28 December 2018 Ei fu siccome immobile dato il gol della Lazio Catenaccio e Contropiede in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Mocciaro Gaetano 5 May 2019 5 maggio 2002 l Inter perde lo scudetto all ultima curva Juve campione TuttoMercatoWeb in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Morrone Daniel V 5 May 2020 Il cinque maggio L Ultimo Uomo in Italian Sky Sport Italia Retrieved 26 February 2023 Censoni Mattia 27 May 2020 Uno schiaffo in faccia a tutti gli antijuventini Altro che favoriti l elenco dei 10 furti storici subiti dai bianconeri Tribuna com Retrieved 26 February 2023 Barilla Carmelo 27 May 2020 Borussia Dortmund Juventus finale maledetta i bianconeri soccombono tra legni gol annullati e rigori negati CalcioWeb Retrieved 26 February 2023 Lippi Mijatovic s goal in 1998 Champions League final was definitely offside Marca 20 May 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Gli arbitri buttano fuori la Juventus moviola in campo subito Tuttosport in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Vignati Alessandro 17 July 2016 Fulvio Bianchi La Juve e la Figc e quello Scudetto del 2006 TuttoMercatoWeb in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Cambiaghi Emilio Dent Arthur 15 April 2010 Il processo illecito PDF 1st ed Stampa Indipendente pp 48 49 Retrieved 26 February 2023 via Ju29ro p 48 Corrado De Biase the head of the investigations office at the time of the 1980s betting scandal from 1980 about Juventus and the work of Zaccone its lawyer I can t know why the Juventus owners has moved in a certain way but I would say 99 that the affair was skilfully managed by the leaders of the Turin club starting with the request from Zaccone who left everyone stunned Zaccone isn t incompetent as many believe but he was only an actor in this story The point that makes me think that Zaccone acted on input from the owners is another namely the way in which the top management of Juventus moved with that fake appeal to the TAR How I wonder you dismiss the directors practically pleading guilty then you watch inert and impassive a media and judicial destruction against your club and then you re threatening to resort to the TAR It s the concept of closing the barn when the oxen have fled if you think about it p 50 I on my own can only reiterate the concept already expressed a penalty of 8 10 points a fine and a ban of Moggi and Giraudo for 10 12 months this was the appropriate penalty in my opinion Any parallel with the story of 1980 is unthinkable here there re no traces of offence nor of money or checks The environmental offence isn t a crime covered by any code unless we re talking about air pollution Gianluigi Gabetti financial advisor to the Agnelli family dies at 94 La Stampa Retrieved 26 February 2023 Processo a Calciopoli il verdetto non assolve La Repubblica in Italian 31 October 2008 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Elkann Zaccone Montezemolo spiegate Ju29ro in Italian 7 April 2010 Retrieved 21 February 2023 Coccia Pasquale 18 January 2020 Il contado tifa per la zebra Il manifesto in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 De Luna We consulted the company financial statements and noted the escalation of the emoluments that Moggi Giraudo and Bettega received We don t have certain elements to be able to say that at that moment there was an attempt to take over Juventus but those figures are impressive Furthermore there are some anomalies of the Agnellis which leave the door open to this type of hypothesis The Calciopoli investigation was born out of a Turin investigation by the prosecutor Guariniello on the Juventus doping case in which the interceptions of Moggi s conversations with the referees emerge Guariniello sends the files to the boss Maddalena notes that there are no crimes from a criminal point of view but perhaps from a sporting point of view Maddalena keeps the files for three months then sends them to the Italian Football Federation This period lasts a little over a year Do you really want to believe that Juve didn t know what was going on I have the impression that the Agnelli family took advantage of this opportunity to stop an attempt to take over the Moggi Giraudo Bettega company L avvocato Zaccone Tifo Toro ma ho difeso la Juve in Calciopoli Mi hanno pagato bene La Repubblica in Italian 19 September 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2023 via TuttoMercatoWeb com Calciopoli anche il legale bianconero e possibilista Se ci sono novita e la Juve me lo chiede riapriamo il processo Goal com 6 April 2010 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Cambiaghi Emilio Dent Arthur 15 April 2010 Il processo illecito PDF 1st ed Stampa Indipendente pp 48 49 Retrieved 26 February 2023 via Ju29ro p 48 First you let yourself be massacred without lifting a finger you have the title disassigned you have the calendars drawn up for the European championships and cups and then you threaten to go to the TAR trumpeting everything in the newspapers It looks much like a political move to appease the wrath of the fans I think If Zaccone who is a man of value and experience would have had the mandate to avoid the disaster he would have moved in a different way in the sense that he would have pointed out these anomalies in the time between the trial and the announcement of the verdicts That in fact was the right moment to threaten to appeal to the TAR when the sentences had not yet been written but had to be done in camera caritatis asking for a meeting with p 49 Ruperto Sandulli and Palazzi and not in front of the journalists of La Gazzetta dello Sport Please note that I m not discussing the high strategy of the forensic art but the basic principles the ABC of the profession the things that are taught to the boys who come to the studio to do a traineeship if you the defence attorney think you have weapons to play you ask for a meeting with the judge and the public prosecution in the period between the trial and the verdict and point out that if the response is judged too severe you will use them And here there were weapons in industrial quantities Then in the face of a fait accompli who takes the responsibility of stopping a machine that grinds billions of euros so as to be the sixth industry in the country Juventus to appeal sentence despite FIFA threats ESPN FC 24 August 2006 Archived from the original on 29 October 2006 Retrieved 25 August 2006 Casula Andrea 9 May 2007 Looking Inter Calciopoli A Juve Fan Wants Justice Goal com Archived from the original on 12 May 2007 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Gregorace Francesco 2 April 2014 Calciopoli Tifosi juventini contro Cobolli Gigli se solo non avesse ritirato il ricorso CalcioWeb in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Ora scopriremo i conti all estero Corriere della Sera in Italian 18 May 2006 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Moggi rivela Galliani fece scoppiare Calciopoli perche Berlusconi mi voleva al Milan Corriere dello Sport in Italian 28 April 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Mensurati Marco 27 March 2015 La Cupola del calcio secondo Carraro Lo scudetto del 98 falsato per la Juve La Repubblica in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Moggi Gianni e Umberto Agnelli non avrebbero permesso la farsa di Calciopoli Ju29ro com in Italian 6 July 2013 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Biscotti Giuseppe 9 March 2020 Moggi Calciopoli Una farsa La Juventus dava fastidio perche vinceva troppo SuperNews in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Cardinali Thomas 7 March 2020 Luciano Moggi a Snaps Calciopoli No Farsopoli Giornalettismo in Italian Retrieved 26 February 2023 Moggi su Calciopoli La morte dell avv Agnelli ci aveva resi orfani e deboli facile attaccare la Juve e distruggerla inventando le cose Arena Calcio in Italian 11 March 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2023 Ciccu Consolato 7 March 2020 Moggi Facile attaccare la Juve dopo la morte di Agnelli Ce l avevano con noi perche vincevamo troppo CalcioWeb Retrieved 26 February 2023 Cingolani Stefano 24 January 2013 Quando Agnelli disse Berlusconi in politica Prende il 3 Linkiesta in Italian Retrieved 7 February 2023 Buttington Ivan 2020 Quando Gianni Agnelli fu costretto a rinunciare al partito Repubblicano Totalita it in Italian Retrieved 7 February 2023 Fiat chief Umberto Agnelli dead at 69 CBC News 28 May 2004 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Francesconi Giovanna 28 November 2022 Virginia Bourbon Del Monte una Agnelli Dimenticata Vanilla Magazine Retrieved 7 February 2023 Fiat chairman Umberto Agnelli dies at 69 Irish Times 28 May 2004 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Cowell Alan Hakim Danny 7 July 2002 Intrigue at the Palazzo Agnelli The New York Times p 1 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Friedman Alan 15 December 1997 Obituary Giovanni Agnelli Fiat Heir 33 Dies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Kline Maureen 15 December 1997 Agnelli Heir Dies Leaving Issue Of Choosing a Successor at Fiat The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Giovanni Agnelli Heir Apparent To Fiat Empire Dies The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Fiat s Agnelli Dead At 69 CBS News 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 La famiglia Agnelli una stirpe di imprenditori Rivista Zoom in Italian 7 September 2020 Retrieved 8 February 2023 La famiglia Agnelli una delle piu grandi dinastie italiane Elle Italia in Italian 11 May 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Delaney Sarah 29 May 2004 Agnelli Family May Step Aside After Death of Fiat Chairman The Washington Post ISSN 2641 9599 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Redmont Dennis 28 May 2004 Fiat Chairman Umberto Agnelli dies of cancer The Independent Retrieved 9 February 2023 Agnelli Fiat s Umberto Dies At 69 Forbes 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Umberto Agnelli Dies Corriere della Sera 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Fiat Chairman Umberto Agnelli dies NBC News Associated Press 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Fiat boss Umberto Agnelli dies BBC News 28 May 2004 Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b c d Zatterin Marco 23 January 2003 Una vita al vertice del gruppo La Stampa in Italian p 5 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Further reading editFerrante Marco 2007 Casa Agnelli Storie e personaggi dell ultima dinastia italiana in Italian Milan Mondadori ISBN 978 88 04 56673 1 Friedman Alan 1988 Agnelli and the Network of Italian Power London Mandarin Paperback Octopus Publishing Group ISBN 0 7493 0093 0 Galli Giancarlo 2003 Gli Agnelli Il tramonto di una dinastia in Italian Milan Mondadori ISBN 88 04 51768 9 Mola di Nomaglio Gustavo 1998 Gli Agnelli Storia e genealogia di una grande famiglia piemontese dal XVI secolo al 1866 in Italian Turin Centro Studi Piemontesi ISBN 88 8262 099 9 Ori Angiolo Silvio 1996 Storia di una dinastia Gli Agnelli e la Fiat Rome Editori Riuniti ISBN 88 359 4059 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Umberto Agnelli Agnelli Umberto at Dizionario Biografico degli italiani by Giuseppe Berta published by the Institute of the Italian Encyclopaedia in 2013 in Italian Geneall net in Italian Umberto Agnelli at Encyclopaedia Britannica in English Umberto Agnelli amp family entry list of The World s Billionaires at Forbes in English Umberto Agnelli Losanna 1934 Torino 2004 at MuseoTorino in Italian Umberto Agnelli at Senato it in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Umberto Agnelli amp oldid 1187242169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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