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After 21 goals in 10 U15 games, 24 in 26 for the U17’s, six in 10 for Grosso’s Primavera and 10 in 21 games for Italy’s national youth sides Moise Kean has turned some heads around Europe. He made his first start for Juventus’ under-19’s against Bari in mid-September despite having only turned 16 in February but he outclassed the opposition and scored a fine goal to win the game. The team is coached by 2006 World Cup winner Fabio Grosso, who has seen him rise through the ranks and has promoted him despite his young age.

He is the talk of the town around Italy and has been compared to Mario Balotelli although only for his ability and not for his off field antics and after scoring in each of his two UEFA Youth League group stage games this season, a competition he also starred in last season while only 15, and in all three U19 matches, Kean is in Juventus’ full squad. This has come at an opportune moment as Juventus are enduring something of an injury crisis in attack what with Mario Mandzukic and Marko Pjaca out with serious injuries so Max Allegri has only Gonzalo Higuain and Paulo Dybala available.

Kean’s scoring record is quite remarkable and doesn’t seem to drop off even as he is progressed further and further. He was quoted as saying that shooting, heading and pace are his best strengths so it’s not surprising that he scores a lot but his physical presence is also a major contributing factor to this. 6ft tall and already remarkably muscular, he has everything needed to lead the line at youth level, though Grosso has occasionally deployed him on the flank. In either role his running, control and desire to get into the box make him a nightmare for defenders, with most young full-backs lacking anything near the speed or power to prevent him bursting beyond them and causing problems.

Time will only tell if he can take the pressure of first team football, playing alongside superstars such as Higuain but if he has the right people around him and looks to learn from his peers the future can only be bright. His crossing has often lacked accuracy and his final pass and decision making needs improvement and as he gets older, he’ll come across higher quality defenders who will match his strength, meaning his decision-making will need to improve as he will have less time to play his game.

Juventus’ history of developing and bringing players through into the first team is basically non-existent in recent times what with Claudio Marchisio being the only example of such a thing happening in the past few decades. A few others such as Sebastian Giovinco and Paolo De Ceglie made a few appearances, but Kean is certainly the hope for Juventus to break this worrying trend. The club’s sporting director Fabio Paratici and director general Beppe Marotta are unsurprisingly eager to tie Kean down to a permanent contract in order to fend off interest from Europe’s elite but wherever he ends up he is likely to be a future star.

About the author – Liam Bailes

Liam has been a football fanatic since the early 1990s and continues to be delighted by the sport today. He follows the 5 big European leagues as well as the npower championship and major cup competitions both domestically and internationally. He is an FA level 2 coach and loves to be involved with football at every opportunity.

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Juventus-Challenge-for-Scudetto

Juventus are not used to losing matches in Serie A. The Bianconeri, Italy’s most successful and well-supported club, have won the last four league titles on the peninsula and were widely backed to secure a fifth consecutive championship this term.

Things did not begin well for Max Allegri’s side, however. A shock opening-day loss at home to Udinese was not the start to the season most people envisaged, with a subsequent defeat to Roma and draw with Chievo leaving Juventus with just one point from their opening three matches.

The departure of Arturo Vidal (to Bayern Munich), Andrea Pirlo (New York City) and Carlos Tevez (Boca Juniors) – all key figures in last season’s domestic double and run to the Champions League final – clearly had an effect, but injuries and a loss of form suffered by many of the players who remained also proved costly early on. A 2-0 win at Genoa hinted that the worst was behind Juventus, but a subsequent 1-1 draw at home to Frosinone and 2-1 defeat against Napoli left the Old Lady in the bottom half of the table and Allegri scratching his head.

Fortunately for the Turin-based giants, that setback at the Stadio San Paolo looks to have been the nadir. Juve have won four of their six Serie A encounters since then, with a 0-0 draw with Inter at San Siro in October also going down as a positive result.

Indeed, there is now hope that a title challenge may not be out of the question after all. Juventus currently find themselves nine points behind Inter and Fiorentina at the top but, with important players finding form and the squad continuing to gel, a fifth successive Scudetto remains a realistic enough target.

What makes the title race in Italy so intriguing this year is that there is no team without flaws: Inter are severely lacking in creativity; Roma look shaky at the back; Fiorentina do not possess much strength in depth; Napoli are heavily reliant on Gonzalo Higuain; and Milan simply lack the requisite quality all over the pitch to compete at the very top of the table.

Where Juventus have a clear advantage is in their experience of winning trophies. Gianluigi Buffon, Patrice Evra, Giorgio Chiellini, Claudio Marchisio, Stephan Lichtsteiner, Andrea Bazargli, Mario Mandzukic, Leonardo Bonucci and Sami Khedira are all vastly experienced professionals, while even younger players such as Paul Pogba, Alex Sandro and Alvaro Morata know what it is like to compete for major honours. As the season grows older and the race for silverware intensifies, it could be that factor that makes the difference.

Juventus, though, know that they cannot afford another major blip between now and the campaign’s end; falling significantly more than nine points behind the summit would make the task of finishing top of the pile once more extremely difficult indeed.

In a way, then, the pressure remains on Juventus despite the fact that many onlookers now consider Roma, Inter and Napoli the three favourites. Max Allegri’s side may not be the pacesetters this year, but they will certainly not give up their crown without a fight.

About the Author – Greg Lea

Freelance football writer. Work published by FourFourTwo, The Guardian, World Soccer, Goal, The National, Squawka, Eurosport, The Blizzard + others.

Twitter @GregLeaFootball

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