‘Catenaccio’ or ‘The chain’ is a tactical system in football with a strong emphasis on defence. Originating from Italy over 70 years ago, the tactic has been questioned time and again as the hold back strategy.
"In Italy, football is still defensive and individual, whereas in Europe it's necessary to offer a more offensive and collective approach," former Italy coach Arrigo Sacchi wrote in an editorial published in the Gazzetta dello Sport on Thursday.
In both legs, Juventus relied on Cristiano Ronaldo to carry the scoring load and its vaunted defense to keep the opposing strikers in check.
Ronaldo came through with the opening goal in each leg but a fluke equaliser from Ajax in the return match changed the momentum as Ajax went on to a 3-2 aggregate victory.
"Individualism isn't enough," Sacchi said.
Sacchi, a two-time European Cup-winning coach with AC Milan, added that "defenders don't always have to outnumber opponent's strikers" and that Juventus needed "a more optimistic and courageous approach."
Italy has produced elite centre backs for decades and the "BBC" trio of Leonardo Bonucci, Andrea Barzagli and Giorgio Chiellini has played an integral role in Juventus' march to seven straight Serie A titles — with a record-extending eighth championship likely to be celebrated on Saturday if the team can earn a point at home against Fiorentina.
Yet, Juventus have rarely been entertaining to watch over the eight seasons.
First under Antonio Conte and then with Massimiliano Allegri in charge, Juventus have largely sought to drain the energy out of its opponents before striking back for marginal victories.
Meanwhile, all four of the clubs that reached the Champions League semi-finals — Ajax, Tottenham, Barcelona and Liverpool — preach attacking, free-flowing football.
Tottenham edged Manchester City on away goals following a 4-4 aggregate score in the quarter-finals, Barcelona advanced 4-0 over Manchester United and Liverpool crushed Porto 6-1 over two legs.
A lack of goals also contributed to Italy's failure to qualify for last year's World Cup, as did a lack of belief in younger players.
With Roberto Mancini having replaced the fired Gian Piero Ventura as national team coach, he has promoted a new generation of players under-utilized by their clubs.
Players like 19-year-old Roma midfielder Nicolo Zaniolo, who Mancini called up to Italy's squad before he played a single Serie A match; or 19-year-old Juventus striker Moise Kean, who last month became the youngest player to score a goal for the national team in 60 years.
Meanwhile, one of the few times when Juventus were seriously challenged during its eight-year reign at the top of Serie A came last season when Napoli's mesmerising passing game under Maurizio Sarri kept it close right until the end.
"Glory in football is achieved by teams that make beautiful play an integral ingredient," Sacchi said. "A victory is important but it becomes even more so when the show helps achieve the victory."
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