Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Juventus F.C. had a special season, in which it took its last sanctionated league title for the better part of the decade. Despite this, the club mourned the death of its patriarch Gianni Agnelli, and even though his brother Umberto took over the lead of the club, he was also ageing. On the field, the side coached by Marcello Lippi had a relatively slow start, before pulling away from Inter, Milan and Lazio, who all were in title contention for the better part of the season. Juventus took the wind out of Inter's sails with a 3–0 victory in March, and from there nobody could touch the side. Its title, however, was to be tainted three years later, when Calciopoli broke, with Juve as the worst sinners. It got to keep the 2002 and 2003 titles by the virtue of no evidence of cheating in those years. In 2003, Luciano Moggi's reputation was at its peak, and Juventus looked set to continue dominating Serie A in years to come.