All seasons completed only one first round
With a total of 115 goals in 200 competitive games (goal ratio: 0.57), Baggio is currently 9th in Juventus Turin's record goalscorers list. Although Juve's offensive was strengthened by new signings Gianluca Vialli, Fabrizio Ravanelli and Andreas Möller, Baggio achieved his personal best of 30 goals in all competitions. Lippi wanted to give the team more variability and give the offensive more independence from Baggio, who he used in his new 4-3-3 formation in an unfamiliar position as a left winger. The following season (1996/97) was disastrous for the defending champions, as Milan got into a sporting crisis under the new coach Óscar Tabárez and even found themselves fighting relegation at times. When Tabárez resigned in December 1996, he was replaced by former Italy coach Arrigo Sacchi, who just a few months earlier had not nominated Baggio for the European Championship squad. As a younger brother, Hibito was born on September 17, 1996. Baggio played his first game in this competition on September 11, 1996 against FC Porto. He scored twice against his former club AC Milan on April 19, 1998 (final score 3-0), beginning an impressive streak of 8 goals in the last five games of the season. The in-form Baggio proved to be the match winner in the semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain with three goals and also proved his class with a decisive brace in the finals against Borussia Dortmund (3:1 and 3:0).
In the penultimate group game of the Champions League (25. November 1998) Baggio secured his side a place in the quarter-finals with a brace in a 3-1 home win over Real atletico de madrid jersey. At the end of the season, Milan finished a disappointing 11th place and were eliminated early in the UEFA Champions League preliminary round. The long-spurned Baggio showed his professional spirit as the Nerazzurri scored two goals and provided an assist in a 3-1 win to qualify for the Champions League. After the season, the contract negotiations between Baggio and manager Roberto Bettega as well as honorary president Umberto Agnelli failed because Juventus wanted to halve the salary of their star, who was considered one of the best paid footballers in the world. Consequently, after what was an outstanding 1993 season for him, Baggio received the Ballon d'Or as Europe's footballer of the year and FIFA's World Footballer award. In the 4-0 win against Genoa in 1893, he scored on 31. October 1993 a hat-trick, including his 100th goal in Serie A and on 5 December 1993 he played his 200th league game. Juventus also won the Coppa Italia (Baggio did not play in the finals) and reached the final of the UEFA Cup, but missed out on the "small" treble by losing to AC Parma. In the Coppa Italia finals, Inter Milan had against Lazio Rome was left behind (2:1, 0:0) and missed the title.
Juventus Turin returned to the top flight of Serie A and finished runners-up in the 1991/92 season behind the overwhelming AC Milan. In the Coppa Italia finals, Juve lost to AC Parma (1-0 and 0-2). In the following 1992/93 season, Baggio, who had been appointed as the new team captain by Trapattoni, presented himself in absolute top form and he played arguably the best football of his career. In just 17 appearances, Baggio helped his side win the league with 8 goals and 7 assists – the first Scudetto for Juventus since 1986. In the decisive 4-0 win over AC Parma on 21 May 1995, Baggio had provided three assists. Baggio scored Milan's first goal in a 2-1 home win over Udinese Calcio on Matchday 2. As an outward sign of the new beginning, he first cut off his iconic pigtails and although Baggio was the big star of the club, he was much less in the interest of the sports press in tranquil Bologna than in Milan or Turin.
Either he wasn't even in the squad or he only made sporadic appearances as a substitute, which is why Baggio only scored his first goal of the season on Matchday 18 in a 2-1 win over Hellas Verona. Because of the scandal from the Juve game, Baggio was no longer in the squad for the last two match days. Baggio feared that under Capello he would finally be discarded and that he would not be able to recommend himself for the upcoming 1998 World Cup in France due to a lack of match practice. The points achieved by the player are subtracted from the 301 or 501 points. Six points were awarded for first place, four points for second place, two points for third place, and one point for fourth place in the tournament. In his fourth season with the Old Lady, Baggio missed out on the title and Juventus finished runners-up, three points behind AC Milan. Three of the 16 teams come from the Autonomous Community of Castile and León, two each from Cantabria, Catalonia and the Valencian Community; one team each comes from Andalusia, Aragon, Basque Country, Galicia, Castile-La Mancha, La Rioja and Navarra. ↑ Study from Luxembourg: Sports muffle overshadow king football. ↑ AC Milan v Torino, 17. 02.2020 – Serie A – match report.