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
Coppa Italias from 1958 to 1961. Before he died, Agnelli was instrumental in signing
Fabio Capello as Juventus coach in 2004. He also had transformed the club into a modern publicly listed company with important investment projects. 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 Coppa Italia, four
Supercoppa Italianas, 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. 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, 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; it was his son,
Andrea Agnelli, who built the club back up in the 2010s. When Agnelli died in 2004, Juventus had won the
2001–02 Serie A, the club's 26th
scudetto, at the last matchday, 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, and in 1998, against
Real Madrid, were lost out controversially. 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." 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, including
Franzo Grande Stevens and
Gianluigi Gabetti who favoured Agnelli's grandson,
John Elkann, over his nephew as chairman, and wanted to get rid of
Luciano Moggi, Antonio Giraudo, and
Roberto Bettega, whose shares in the club increased. Whatever their intentions, it is argued they condemned Juventus: first when Carlo Zaccone, the club's lawyer, 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; and then when
Luca Cordero di Montezemolo retired the club's appeal to the Regional Administrative Court of Lazio, which could have cleared the club's name and avoid relegation, after
FIFA threatened to suspend the
FIGC from international play, a renounce for which then-FIFA president
Sepp Blatter was thankful. 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 position as his son, but much harder. said that
Calciopoli only happened because "''l'Avvocato
Agnelli and il Dottor'' Umberto died", and had the two Agnellis not died, "nothing [of this farce] would have happened." 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." 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." == Politics ==