EXTREMIST

Luciano Moggi

1937 - Today

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Luciano Moggi (Italian pronunciation: [luˈtʃaːno ˈmɔddʒi]; born 10 July 1937) is a former Italian association football administrator who was a club executive for Roma, Lazio, Torino, Napoli, and Juventus. During his career, he led them to win six Serie A (five with Juventus and one with Naples), three Coppa Italia (with Roma, Torino, and Juventus), five Supercoppa Italiana (four with Juventus and one with Napoli), one UEFA Champions League, one Intercontinental Cup, one UEFA Super Cup, one Intertoto Cup (all with Juventus), and one UEFA Cup (with Napoli). He has since become a freelance journalist, commentator, and TV guest. In May 2006, Moggi was involved in the sports scandal that became known as Calciopoli, which remains a much debated and controversial topic due to the one-sided focus on Juventus and Moggi, an issue that was cited in the sentence of the first-instance trial held in Naples. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Luciano Moggi is the 163rd most popular extremist (down from 161st in 2019). (down from 2,173rd in 2019)

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Among EXTREMISTS

Among extremists, Luciano Moggi ranks 163 out of 283Before him are Elisabeth Becker, Peter Sutcliffe, Anatoly Onoprienko, Samuel Little, Charles Whitman, and Sam Giancana. After him are Andrew Cunanan, Richard Chase, Nancy Spungen, Cleveland Torso Murderer, Mary Bell, and Eugène Terre'Blanche.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1937, Luciano Moggi ranks 199Before him are Lusine Zakaryan, Richard Bright, Robert Gallo, Petar Radaković, Gordon Milne, and Chris Bristow. After him are Dyan Cannon, Milutin Šoškić, Ted Nelson, Moshood Abiola, Gaston Roelants, and Tom Stoppard.

Others Born in 1937

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