Juventus won 3-0 at Lecce on Sunday to move to the highest point of Serie An and cut down the shade on an end of the week overwhelmed by bigoted maltreatment focused on Milan goalkeeper Mike Maignan in Udine. With pioneers Bury away in Saudi Arabia planning for their Italian Super Cup last against Napoli on Monday, Juventus and Dusan Vlahovic remained hot at home. Juventus struck multiple times in the final part in Lecce to give mentor Max Allegri his 300th Serie A triumph.
They extended their association unbeaten hurry to 16 matches, winning a fifth in a row and moving to the highest point of the table interestingly since they finished the 2019-20 season as champions.
Vlahovic put Juventus ahead following 59 minutes with an awkward volley that skipped inside the far post.
After nine minutes, Weston McKennie outjumped the home safeguard at the far post. His header was going too far as Vlahovic flicked a boot at it to guarantee the objective.
Vlahovic likewise scored a support on Tuesday against Sassuolo.
Gleison Bremer finished a conclusive triumph with an earnest header a short ways from time.
“We must show restraint against a strong group that is extremely compelling at home, so it’s a significant win for us,” said Vlahovic, who took his association count to 11 this season, one more than in last year’s mission.
“I’m feeling quite a bit better truly, obviously superior to last year, we must continue to go this way,” he said.
Juventus visit Entomb, who are a point behind, on February 4.
AC Milan are seven focuses back in third after they stick from behind to win 3-2 at Udinese on Saturday in a game stopped when Maignan left the field in the primary half following determined bigoted maltreatment.
Maignan said that he had first heard monkey drones when he gathered the ball for his most memorable objective kick, after which he “said nothing”.
“Then, at that point, for the subsequent objective kick they trying again later. I called to the burrow and the fourth authority and I let them know what had occurred. I said that we can’t play in these circumstances.”
The ref Fabio Maresca halted play for a time of five minutes.
“It is not difficult to act in that frame of mind, in the obscurity from the stands,” Maignan composed on X on Sunday.
“The onlookers who were in the stand, who saw everything, who heard everything, except who decided to stay quiet, you are complicit.”
The Italian Football Alliance is expected to settle on Tuesday what discipline to give out to Udinese.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino called for overall arena boycotts for fans and “programmed relinquishes” for groups whose allies throw “despicable” misuse following the episodes.