Calciopoli — Two Scudetti Erased and a Champion Sent to Serie B
In July 2006, weeks after Italy lifted the World Cup in Berlin, the country’s football federation took the most decorated club in its history and sent it to the second division. The Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio (FIGC) found that Juventus, through general director Luciano Moggi, had cultivated a private channel into the body that assigned referees to Serie A matches, and on July 14, 2006, its sporting tribunal stripped the club of the 2004–05 Scudetto, wiped out its 2005–06 title by docking it to last place, relegated it to Serie B, and applied a points penalty for the coming season. It was the first relegation in Juventus’s history, and the verdict — a sporting one, handed down by the federation rather than a court — is the matter of record.
The edge was not a bribed goalkeeper or a thrown game; it was procedural. Italian referees were assigned to matches by two designators, Pierluigi Pairetto and Paolo Bergamo, and the prosecution’s wiretaps captured Moggi treating them less like neutral administrators than like a service he could phone. The scheme manipulated the one variable a club is never supposed to touch — who would officiate its games, and whether those officials understood which way the federation’s favour ran. There was no envelope of cash to a player. The currency was influence, the steering of appointments, and the unspoken pressure on referees who knew the most powerful man in the Italian game was watching.
What unravelled it was Italy’s own justice system, working a different case. Magistrates investigating a football agency had Moggi’s phones tapped, and in May 2006 the transcripts began appearing in the Italian press. Within days Moggi and the Juventus board resigned. The club’s defenders have argued ever since that the punishment was selective — that other clubs, Internazionale among them, escaped because the evidence against them fell outside the statute of limitations — and that complaint has never fully died. But the FIGC’s verdict stood: Inter were awarded the 2005–06 title that Juventus had won on the pitch, the 2004–05 Scudetto was left unassigned, and the record books carry a blank where a Juventus championship used to be.
The criminal courts, working slower and to a higher standard of proof, eventually caught up — and then ran out of time. Moggi was convicted of running a criminal conspiracy at first instance, the sentence was cut on appeal, and in 2015 Italy’s highest court let most of it expire under the statute of limitations while still declining to call him innocent. The sporting sanction, nearly a decade old by then, was the part that lasted.