Juventus ambitions intact despite Inter defeat, says Pirlo
Juventus approached Sunday's 2-0 defeat to Inter with the wrong attitude, says coach Andrea Pirlo, whose team are now seven points behind the leaders.
Andrea Pirlo is not about to call time on Juventus' Serie A defence despite fuming at the way they ceded control to Inter in a damaging defeat on Sunday. Juve are now seven points behind leaders Milan and Inter, and could fall 10 points off the pace if the Rossoneri win on Monday.
Juve punished by Vidal and Barella
The Bianconeri lost 2-0 at Inter, who led through Arturo Vidal's header – one of 11 first-half efforts to Juve's three – and netted again seven minutes after the break as Nicolo Barella ran clear. The midfield duo were outstanding, with ex-Juve man Vidal gaining possession nine times as well as having four shots, while Barella created the opener for his team-mate and had three key passes, playing a team-high 41 passes in the opposition half. The Inter pair set a tempo that Juve, coach Pirlo acknowledged, simply did not match.
"We got the attitude wrong from the beginning," Pirlo told Sky Sport. "When you don't have the anger and determination to try to win duels in these matches, it becomes difficult. We were too passive. It's a bad defeat; we didn't expect it. We couldn't have had a worse match than this one, but now we have to raise our heads because we will play a final on Wednesday [the Supercoppa Italiana against Napoli]."
Angry Pirlo
The broadcaster suggested this was the angriest rookie coach Pirlo had been since his appointment, to which he replied: "Yes, because in these matches, you have to have the same desire and the same anger as the opposition in order to be on the same level. Then the qualities of the individuals can make the difference."
Despite his frustration at his players in Juve's first Serie A defeat to Inter in eight matches, Pirlo also accepted responsibility. "The coach is always wrong first of all because it is he who gives the directions," he said. "So I take my responsibility, because if the team did not do what we wanted, it means that they did not understand what we had to do."
Pirlo was a Juve substitute when Vidal's previous Serie A goal in 2015 clinched the Bianconeri's fourth straight title. A further five consecutive championships have followed, but a 10th in a row looks tough now, even if Pirlo is not willing to give up hope. "Our ambitions remain the same," he insisted. "It's a misstep against an important team, but in a long journey there happen to be these missteps."