Massimiliano Allegri's New Juventus Deal Makes Him Highest Paid Serie A Coach
Massimiliano Allegri has increased his yearly salary from 3.5 million euros to 5 million euros, in the process becoming the highest paid coach in Serie A.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: May 06, 2016 11:38 PM IST
Highlights
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Allegri has been Juventus coach since 2014
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The new deal will make him the highest paid coach in Italy
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He has also coached AC Milan earlier
Massimiliano Allegri has signed a new two-year deal with Juventus that will make him Serie A's highest-paid coach, but only after the club reportedly agreed not to sell Paulo Dybala or Paul Pogba.
Allegri, who has steered the Old Lady of Turin to successive league titles the past two seasons, put pen to paper on Friday.
Amid a lengthy statement that poured plaudits on his achievements over the past two years, Juventus said: "Now he has signed a contract extension for a further two years.
"Massimiliano Allegri will remain with Juventus until June 30, 2018."
The 48-year-old Allegri, who led AC Milan to their last scudetto in 2011, has increased his yearly salary from 3.5m euros to 5m per season, becoming in the process the highest paid coach in Italy's top flight.
Allegri was being linked with a move to Chelsea or Real Madrid but a website report by La Repubblica newspaper claimed Juventus sealed the deal when they agreed to Allegri's specific request on Argentina striker Dybala, who has hit a club-leading 16 goals, and French midfield star Pogba.
It represents an impressive turnaround for Allegri, whose career was up in the air after being sacked by Milan in January 2014 after the team let slip a 3-0 lead against Sassuolo to suffer a 4-3 defeat.
As Milan continue to struggle, Juventus have flourished under the Italian. Last year, he led the Turin giants to their fourth consecutive league title, their first league and Cup double in 20 years and their first Champions League appearance since 2003.
Although outclassed 3-1 by Barcelona in Berlin last May and ousted from Europe's premier club competition by Bayern Munich in a tight, last 16 tie decider earlier this season, Juventus have plenty of faith in Allegri.
John Elkann -- the chairman and CEO of Exor, an investment company owned by the Agnelli family which owns Juventus -- told media: "Last year was a very important one for us under Allegri and this year has confirmed that he is a great coach. Our future lies with him."
Juve's league triumph this season means they equalled their 1935 feat of winning five consecutive titles, and Elkann added: "We've achieved a very important feat of winning five successive titles.
"Even in the difficult times, we believed we could do it. The team showed amazing character and had an extraordinary season."
Allegri has the chance to secure a second consecutive domestic double when Juventus play AC Milan in the final of the Italian Cup on May 21 in Rome.