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Carlos Tevez in the form to fire Juventus past Fiorentina and into Coppa Italia final

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Adam Bate looks at how former West Ham, Manchester United and Manchester City forward Carlos Tevez has found his best form for Juventus this season...

“I always say that the school could have taught me little, but the street taught me a lot.”

When Carlos Tevez joined Juventus in the summer of 2013 claiming that his “cycle” at Manchester City had come to an end, it was tempting to lump the Argentine forward into the same bracket as other fading forces who have headed to Serie A in recent years. And yet, despite having turned 31 in February, Tevez the street-fighter is arguably in the form of his career.

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Top scorer

He is currently the top scorer in Serie A with 17 goals so far this season and is playing a key role as Juventus close in on a fourth title in a row, which would earn Tevez a second winners' medal since he swapped England for Italy.  

From his superb solo effort against Parma in November when he sped past the defence with gusto that belied his age, to his cheeky second against Verona in January, Tevez’s quality in front of goal has been high. Away from the league, there was a Super Cup brace in December and three goals across two Champions League legs against Borussia Dortmund to fire Juve into the quarter-finals.

Carlos Tevez of Juventus celebrates the opening goal during the UEFA Champions League Group A match between Juventus and Malmo
Image: Carlos Tevez is currently the top goalscorer in Serie A with 17 goals for Juventus

Even aside from the goals, that old resilience remains. The statistics show Tevez is among the top 10 strikers in Italy when it comes to keeping hold of the ball. “He defends the ball so well,” says fellow Juve forward Fernando Llorente. “He might be small in stature, but even the best defenders have difficulty getting the ball off him.”

All in all, 24 players have played for both clubs, including Carlos Tevez, Peter Schmeichel and Andy Cole. The latest to do so is Owen Hargreaves.
Image: The main man in Manchester

Those tigerish tendencies will never go away and Tevez has added more to his game too. Perhaps inspired by inheriting Alessandro Del Piero’s famous No 10 shirt, he also ranks second in Serie A for assists and is among the top 10 chance creators in the division. That’s been an aspect of his game that has improved this season under new coach Massimiliano Allegri.

Positional discipline

Under predecessor Antonio Conte, positional discipline was imperative. The way the coach praised him for switching to the left last season following Gigi Buffon’s red card against Lazio was indicative of the qualities that Conte admired. “He’s a model athlete,” said the now Italy boss. “He has the right mentality and it's a pleasure to see him training.”

Head coach FC Juventus Antonio Conte, Carlos Tevez and Mirko Vucinic during the TIM Supercup match against Lazio in August 2013
Image: Antonio Conte was impressed by Carlos Tevez's dedication in training last season

But it’s the arrival of Allegri that has offered the opportunity for Tevez to play a little more off the cuff. “With him I have more freedom on the pitch,” he said, quoted in Tuttosport. The Champions League stats show that he’s having a greater percentage of his touches outside the final third this season, playing in support of either Llorente or Alvaro Morata and thriving in this deeper role.

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Tevez's goal against Malmo

As a result, we’re getting chance to see a different side to Tevez. It’s a facet of his game encouraged by those early days in another famous No 10 shirt – Diego Maradona’s number at Boca Juniors. It was there Tevez seemed to embody the Argentine ideal of the urchin-footballer. “The player of the people,” as a match announcer at the Copa America in 2011 once introduced him.

'Very professional'

No wonder Argentine newspaper Clarin went with the headline ‘Tevez does a Maradona’ after that goal against Parma. In Italy, it turns out you can teach an old dog new tricks. “The training is very different from England, Brazil and Argentina,” he told El Pais last month. “Here they are very professional. They live because of and for football. In England, I was already in my house by noon.”

Carlos Tevez and Massimiliano Allegri head coach of Juventus during the Serie A match between SSC Napoli and Juventus FC in January 2015
Image: Massimiliano Allegri has formed a good relationship with Carlos Tevez by giving him more freedom

The contrast is not restricted to the training ground either. “Here it is very tactical,” he added. “They play with very tight defences; five men behind the ball. In England it is very rare to see five-man defences and in Spain too. Here this is normal. It is difficult to score goals.”

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Despite these claims, it’s not immediately obvious that scoring is any trickier from Tevez’s goal return. He has 25 goals this season in all competitions - the first time he's hit that mark since the season in which Mark Hughes departed the Etihad Stadium. A lot has gone on since then and Tevez admits he’s become “more professional” since embarking upon his Italian adventure.

While it might seem incongruous that the man who plays like he’s from the streets is now strutting his stuff in the league that he told La Gazzetta dello Sport in January remains “the university of football”, Tevez is graduating with first-class honours.

Watch the Coppa Italia semi-final second leg between Juventus and Fiorentina live on Sky Sports 5 HD from 7.40pm on Tuesday.

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