The 184th Derby D’Italia in Serie A history takes place on Sunday with Juventus hosting Inter at the Juventus Stadium.
Thiago Motta's Bianconeri lie fifth in Serie A on 43 points, while Inter are second, with 54 points.
The two sides have already met once this season, with a topsy-turvy 4-4 draw at the San Siro.
Old Juve takes a look back at some of the best matches over the years between the two famous clubs.
10. Juventus 2 - 0 Inter Milan (Prima Categoria - November 1909)
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We will start at the beginning with the first ever Derby D’Italia. Inter were founded in 1908 after a group of players left the Milan Cricket and Football Club (now AC Milan), after a schism in the club over wanting to accept more foreign players.
The new club took the name Internazionale from the desire of its founding members to accept foreign players as well as Italians. The two sides first met on Saturday 11 November 1909 at the Campo di Corso Sebastopoli in Turin. An Ernesto Borel brace saw Juve win the first battle in a war that has raged for over a century.
9. Inter Milan 1 - 2 Juventus (Serie A - March 2008)
Two years after Juventus were relegated to Serie B and stripped of their last two Serie A titles, these rivals locked horns in league action in a tense clash at the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza.
Alessandro Del Piero assisted both goals, providing two brilliant flicks for Mauro Camoranesi and David Trezeguet to score. Maniche pulled one back for the Nerazzurri, but the post would save the day for Juve late on for a statement victory away from home.
8. Inter Milan 2 - 3 Juventus (Serie A - January 2018)
Douglas Costa gave Juve an early lead, before Inter midfielder Matías Vecino was sent off for a reckless tackle on Mario Mandzukic.. Mauro Icardi drew Inter level in the second half with a deft header, then Andrea Barzagli turned Ivan Perisic’s cross into his own net to make it 2-1 Inter with 25 minutes left.
Juan Cuadrado eventually forced Milan Skriniar into a remarkable own goal in the 87th minute, before Gonzalo Higuaín nanbed a winner two minutes later from a Paulo Dybala free-kick.
7. Inter Milan 1 - 1 Juventus (Serie A - October 2002)
It was the late, late show as two stoppage time goals saw the sides have to settle for a share of the spoils. Goalless after 90 minutes were on the clock, Inter defender Francesco Coco fouled Alessandro Del Piero in the box. Del Piero dusted himself down and scored what looked like being the winner.
Antonio Conte and Domenico Morfeo were then sent off for their punch-up and more drama followed when Inter snatched an equaliser. Inter 'keeper Francesco Toldo went up for a corner and set up Christian Vieri's 95th minute equaliser.
6. Juventus 3 - 0 Inter Milan (Serie A - March 2003)
Juventus got a dream start inside the Stadio delle Alpi, taking the lead after just four minutes. Pavel Nedved whipped a dangerous ball into the box that Inter 'keeper Francesco Toldo parried the ball onto the back of Andres Guglielminpietro and into the net for an unfortunate own goal.
Juve doubled their lead in the last 15 minutes of the opening half, with Nedved’s daisy-cutter evading Toldo to make it 2-0. Mauro Camoranesi slotted home from close range to give the Bianconeri a three point Serie A lead over Inter en route to claiming their 27th Scudetto.
5. Juventus 2 - 1 Inter Milan (Serie A - December 2009)
This clash was heated before kick-off, with the ultras pelting the Inter team bus with eggs as it arrived in Turin. The match had more cards than Alessandro Del Piero’s mantelpiece at Christmas, with seven yellows and a red card brandished to Inter boss Jose Mourinho in the first half for arguing with the referee.
Inter's Thiago Motta showed his fiery side in exchanges with Juve 'keeper Gianluigi Buffon. Giorgio Chiellini gave Juve a 20th-minute lead following a goalmouth scramble. Samuel Eto'o levelled matters six minutes later. On the hour-mark the brilliance of Claudio Marchisio, who lost his marker before firing home, was enough to give Juve maximum points.
4. Juventus 9 - 1 Inter Milan (Serie A - June 1961)
Juve’s highest margin of victory against Inter. The teams tackled each other in April 1961 but Inter were awarded a 2-0 forfeit win after it was abandoned due to a pitch invasion and Juve’s fans getting the blame. This decision was overturned, one day before the final round of Serie A games, with the match replayed.
Inter president Angelo Moratti ordered coach Helenio Herrera to field their De Martinoselection – their youth club featuring only players aged 19 or younger – in protest. Omar Sivori equalled Silvio Piola’s record of scoring six goals in a single Serie A match. An own goal from Francesco Riefolo along with strikes from Bruno Nicole and Bruno Mora gave Juve a haul of nine goals, with a Sandro Mazzola penalty the only consolation for Inter.
3. Inter Milan 1 - 3 Juventus (Serie A - April 1992)
This game would be synonymous with one man, Roberto Baggio, who was volved in all three Juve goals. The first came from the penalty spot, after Paolo Di Canio was brought down in the box. The second strike was a sumptuous piece of skill, dancing through the defence before a final one-two with Pierluigi Casiraghi on the edge of the box ended with delicately into the back of the net.
Baggio broke the offside trap in the second half, before pulling the ball back for Salvatore Schillaci to hit home. A Davide Fontolan goal for Inter was a mere consolation for the hosts whose defence included Giuseppe Bergomi, Andreas Brehme and Ricardo Ferri.
2. Juventus 1 - 0 Inter Milan (Serie A - April 1998)
A victory over Juve on January 4th had put Inter, and star signing Ronaldo, in the driver’s seat with a four-point advantage over Juve before four losses in their next ten games. This meant by the time of this “winner takes all” clash at the Stadio delle Alpi, they trailed Juve by a point. In essence, whoever won this match would win the title.
Alessandro Del Piero. slotted home on 21 minuutes. Del Piero was awarded a spot-kick, which he fluffed. His tussle with Taribo West infuriated Inter coach Gigi Simoni so much that the referee sent him to the stands, and Inter president Massimo Moratti left the stadium in disgust. Three days later, the Italian Parliament was suspended after Domenico Gramazio of the far-right National Alliance party had to be held back as he tried to confront former Juve player-turned-politician Massimo Mauro.
1. Juventus 1 - 0 Inter (Coppa Italia Final - August 1965)
After the departure of “Il Trio Magico” (Giampiero Boniperti, Omar Sivori and John Charles), Juventus’ place at the top of the Calcio tree in the 1960s was taken by “Il Grande Inter” and their modified 5–3–2 “Verrou” tactic. Inter had won back-to-back Serie A titles and European Cups in 1964 and 1965 and were looking to become the first side in Europe to complete the League-Cup-European Cup treble when they faced Juventus in the Coppa Italia final at the Stadio Olimpico.
Juve capitalised on an uncharacteristic Inter mistake on he quarter-of-an-hour mark to make it 1-0. Inter 'keeper Giuliano Sarti picked up the ball, only to bump into Inter midfielder Gianfranco Bedin and spill titl. Juve winger Giampaolo Menichelli got to the loose ball first and fired home for the only goal of the game. The imperious Inter side were denied the treble, with Juve claiming their fifth Coppa Italia in the process.