Michel Platini, one of the greatest players in Juventus’s storied history, has delivered a characteristically regal and affectionate assessment of the club’s current situation — mixing fierce loyalty with a grounded acceptance that even the most decorated clubs must endure difficult periods.
Speaking at the 21st edition of the Fondazione Vialli e Mauro Golf Cup at the Royal Park I Roveri in Fiano Torinese — a charitable event held in support of research into ALS — the Frenchman known simply as “Le Roi” addressed both Juventus’s recent struggles and the club’s deeper identity.
“As Long as I Am Alive, Nobody Touches Juventus”
Platini’s affection for the club that defined the peak of his playing career was unmistakable. “As long as I am alive, nobody touches Juventus,” he declared. “The club is the Agnelli family.” It is a statement that cuts to the heart of what Juventus means to those who have worn the black and white at the highest level — an institution defined not merely by its trophy cabinet but by a dynasty, a tradition, and a sense of identity that transcends any single season.
On the club’s recent failure to qualify for the Champions League and the broader turbulence of recent years, Platini offered a perspective shaped by decades of experience at the top of the game. A club of Juventus’s stature, he acknowledged, cannot always win everything — but the implication was clear: this, too, shall pass.
No Return to an Institutional Role
Platini also addressed, with characteristic directness, the perennial speculation about whether he might one day return to Juventus in a formal capacity. At 70 years old, his answer was unambiguous. “I was clear about this some time ago — I am not thinking about it, I am not aspiring to it. At seventy, I still have projects to develop in my own world, but no more institutional roles or anything similar at a football club.”
It is the definitive closing of a door that supporters have occasionally imagined reopening. But in the warmth and conviction of his words about the club — the insistence on its identity, the certainty of its return — Platini offered something perhaps more valuable than any formal role could provide: the perspective of a man who has seen Juventus at their very best, and has no doubt they will be there again.