Other names | Turin Derby, Derby di Torino |
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Location | Turin, Italy |
Teams | |
First meeting | 13 January 1907 Italian Football Championship Torino 2–1 Juventus |
Latest meeting | 11 January 2025 Serie A Torino 1–1 Juventus |
Stadiums | Juventus Stadium (Juventus) Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino (Torino) |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | Official matches: 212 Unofficial matches: 41 Total matches: 253 |
Most wins | Official matches: Juventus (96) Unofficial matches: Torino (17) Total matches: Juventus (112) |
Top scorer | Giampiero Boniperti (14) |
Largest victory | Juventus 0–8 Torino Italian Football Championship (17 November 1912) |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Juventus
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Torino
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The Derby della Mole is the local derby played out between Turin's most prominent football clubs, Juventus and Torino. It is also known as the Derby di Torino or the Turin Derby in English. It is named after the Mole Antonelliana, a major landmark in the city and the architectural symbol of the Piedmontese capital.[1] It is the oldest ongoing meeting between two teams based in the same city in Italian football.[2]
The match between the two clubs represented until the First World War the juxtaposition of two opposing social classes. Juventus, founded in 1897 by students of a prestigious high school in Turin, soon became akin to the bourgeois in the town especially after enduring bond with the Agnelli family, which began in 1923, during which time they were also supported by the aristocracy of the region. Torino instead was born in 1906 from a division within Juventus, at the hands of dissidents who joined forces with another team from the city, Football Club Torinese, who identified with the then-early industrial world. In the 1960s and 1970s, these differences had eased considerably, partly as a result of the great migration to Turin about forty years earlier, but did not disappear: Juventus has since transcended its status as the symbol of the bourgeois and elite class to become a global phenomenon while Torino still largely retains an exclusively local fanbase.[3]
The colours of the two teams also contribute, in small part, to this distinction: the Bianconeri, originally pink and black, adopted their jerseys from Notts County all the way from England,[4][5] while the Granata dusted off the colours of the "Brigade Savoia", that two centuries earlier had liberated the then capital of the Duchy of Savoy.[6][7] Both clubs, however, featured within their emblems a raging bull, taken from the city's coat of arms: Juventus as a bond with their origins, while Torino adopted it as their identity.[3] It was the case until 2017 when Juventus introduced a J-shaped logo and featured the bull no longer.[8]