The Juventus Stadium was opened six years ago today and the statistics show the huge boost it made to their club coffers.

Now named the Allianz Juventus Stadium in a sponsorship deal signed this summer, it is one of the few self-owned arenas in Serie A.

It has hosted 157 Juve games, leading to 125 victories, 27 draws and only five defeats.

The Juventus Stadium was opened six years ago today and the statistics show the huge boost it made to their club coffers.

Now named the Allianz Juventus Stadium in a sponsorship deal signed this summer, it is one of the few self-owned arenas in Serie A.

It has hosted 157 Juve games, leading to 125 victories, 27 draws and only five defeats.

Over six years, the stadium has been at an average of 92 per cent capacity, writes Calcio e Finanza, with a total 5,986,695 tickets sold.

Most notably, in the 2010-11 season at the Stadio Olimpico in Turin, Juve pocketed just under €10m from the gate.

According to Calcio e Finanza, the average revenue from the Juventus Stadium over the last five years was €41m per season.

The average in that period for Milan is €26m, €22m at Inter and €18m for Napoli.

However, when it comes to comparisons with Europe’s biggest clubs, Juventus still fall well short, as Real Madrid, Manchester United, Barcelona and Arsenal make around €119-127m per year from ticket sales.

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