Paulo Dybala hat den italienischen Rekordmeister Juventus Turin zurück in die Erfolgsspur geführt.
Drei Tore des Argentiniers sorgten fünf Tage nach dem ernüchternden 0:3 zum Auftakt der Champions League beim FC Barcelona für ein 3:1 (1:0) bei US Sassuolo. Mit dem vierten Sieg im vierten Spiel zog Juventus mit Inter Mailand an der Tabellenspitze nach Punkten gleich.
Dybala, der sein 100. Pflichtspiel für Turin bestritt, traf in der 16., 49. und 63. Minute. Für den 23-Jährigen waren es die Treffer Nummer 50 bis 52 im Trikot der alten Dame sowie seine Saisontore Nummer sechs bis acht in der Serie A.
Paulo Dybala marked his 100th Juventus appearance with a sensational hat-trick as the Serie A champions claimed a 3-1 win at Sassuolo.
The Argentina international produced a superb performance at MAPEI Stadium on Sunday to inspire his side to a fourth victory in four league games and return to the top of the table.
Sassuolo had not lost at home since April but their chances of springing a surprise were dealt a blow just 16 minutes in, as Dybala brilliantly swept home his 50th goal for the club.
The 23-year-old scored five goals in his first three league games and struck again shortly after the interval to put Juve in control, expertly prodding home from a Juan Cuadrado pass.
Matteo Politano hit back two minutes later, scoring from close range after the returning Giorgio Chiellini prevented Claud Adjapong's effort from crossing the line, but a sublime Dybala free-kick made the points safe.
Juve climb back above Inter, who are also on 12 points following Saturday's win over Crotone, while Sassuolo remain just a point above bottom-club Benevento.
Andrea Consigli was twice called upon to keep out Juve in the first 10 minutes, making a flying save to his right to deny Miralem Pjanic before reacting superbly to block Gonzalo Higuain's volley from close range.
But Consigli was powerless to stop Dybala putting the visitors ahead in the 16th minute. Fit-again forward Mario Mandzukic sent a low pass into Dybala's path and the Argentina star swept a curled first-time strike into the bottom-right corner from 20 yards out.
Sassuolo looked bright going forward, with Politano testing Gianluigi Buffon, but they looked exposed to the Juve counter-attack and a better finish from Higuain after Dybala and Cuadrado combined would have made it 2-0 before the break.
The home side finished the half in encouraging fashion but, four minutes after the restart, they were undone by more Dybala brilliance.
Cuadrado fed the forward just inside the penalty area and, when it looked as though he had no route to goal, he produced an impudent toe-poke finish into the bottom-right corner.
The visiting fans were in full voice but Sassuolo hit back two minutes later, Politano converting from point-blank range after Adjapong had prodded the ball beyond Buffon at the keeper's right-hand post and forced Chiellini to cover on the line.
The resistance was short-lived, though. Having earned a free-kick 20 yards out, Dybala stepped up and whipped a fine finish past Consigli to complete his hat-trick just past the hour mark.
Blaise Matuidi went close with a volley and Cuadrado saw a late chance for a fourth deflected over, but the day belonged to Dybala, who was replaced to a standing ovation in the closing minutes after taking his tally to the season to 10 goals in six appearances in all competitions.
Ok, non è Messi e forse non lo sarà mai. Ok, la bocciatura di Barcellona ha avuto un che di impietoso. Ma questo resta pur sempre un gioiello abbagliante, soprattutto dentro alla vetrina italiana. Nei campi di casa nostra Dybala è un inno alla bellezza, sembra un adulto nel campetto dei bambini: il sinistro tagliente da fuori area nel primo tempo, la puntata di sinistro in stile futsal più la solita dolce punizione nel secondo hanno steso il Sassuolo, ma sono le ennesime genialate in questo inizio di Serie A. Alla centesima presenza in bianconero, le reti numero 50, 51 e 52 da quando Paulo ha abbracciato Madama: in questo campionato fanno già otto, dieci se si aggiunge la Supercoppa. Ben oltre i numeri, c’è il talento, pungolato anche dalle critiche eccessive post Camp Nou: le prossime notti europee diranno in che posizione metterlo nel ranking dei fuoriclasse internazionali. Il sospetto, però, è che in tempi rapidissimi ne scalerà parecchie. La Juve si appende mani e piedi a lui per ottenere la quarta vittoria e riagganciare all’ora di pranzo l’Inter. Gli applausi al Mapei Stadium, quando a dieci minuti lascia il campo a Bernardeschi, sono talmente fragorosi da coprire anche qualche cattivo pensiero sulla difesa bianconera: continua a prendere gol, anche in un pomeriggio placido di fine estate.
VECCHIE CERTEZZE — Il ritorno delle vecchie certezze, con Mandzukic e Cuadrado di nuovo ai lati di questo magnifico Dybala nel quadrilatero offensivo: ecco la buona notizia per il mondo Juve. In fondo, a Barcellona la mancata reazione era figlia anche delle troppe assenze. Invece, con il solito spartito, si suona un’altra sinfonia: Pjanic e Matuidi sono rapidi nel fraseggio stretto e lesti nell’allargare il campo da Lichtsteiner e Alex Sandro. Il francese, poi, è un acquisto azzeccatissimo per capacità tattica, carisma e abitudine alla lotta. Così la palla si muove rapida, come “garba” ad Allegri, ma oltre ai meriti bianconeri molto incide (in negativo) questo nuovo, sbiadito Sassuolo. Lascia troppi spazi per far giocare i palleggiatori juventini, è stranamente basso nell’attesa di recuperare e ripartire. Su questo campo la Juve aveva visto le streghe più volte ai tempi dei ritmi vertiginosi di Di Francesco e anche oggi certi piccolissimi pericoli Bucchi li crea quando i suoi alzano i ritmi. Certo, il gol di Politano, figlio soprattutto di uno scivolone di Lichtsteiner e preso subito dopo il 2-0 della Joya, non è una buona notizia per la Juve: i gol subiti in sei partite ufficiali sono nove, cifra cospicua e preoccupante per le abitudini della casa. Alla fine dei conti, però, la Juve ha vita facile e la grandinata non arriva solo per un po’ di imprecisione sotto porta e per la scarsa vena del Pipita, un po’ nervoso e ancora lontano dalla migliore forma. Allegri aveva motivato il centravanti argentino con parole miratissime dopo la mancata convocazione argentina, ma serve altro tempo per tornare ai vecchi fasti. In discussione non è certo l’efficacia sotto porta, ma la reattività, lo scatto quando le difese si stringono su di lui. Recuperasse anche il vero Higuain, la Juve potrebbe tornare di buon umore anche in Europa. In fondo, ogni giudizio passa da lì: qui basta (e avanza) il gioiello col dieci sulle spalle.
Gianluigi Buffon revidiert seine Meinung zum Videobeweis in der Serie A. Für den Torhüter von Juventus Turin wird das Spiel zu oft unterbrochen.
Der Kapitän von Juventus Turin und der italienischen Nationalmannschaft, Gianluigi Buffon, hat den Einsatz des Videobeweises seit Beginn der Serie-A-Saison kritisiert.
"Ich dachte, dass der Videobeweis nur in eklatanten Fällen verwendet werden würde. Dabei wird er übertrieben genutzt. Das ist falsch", schimpfte der 39-Jährige, der sich über zu viele Spielunterbrechungen beklagte.
Dabei hatte sich Buffon anfangs positiv über die Einführung des Video-Assistenten zur Unterstützung des Schiedsrichters ausgesprochen. Juves Coach Massimiliano Allegri zeigt sich gelassener. "Man muss mit dem System Geduld haben. Man braucht eine Eingewöhnungszeit. Auch die Schiedsrichter arbeiten, um die Situation zu verbessern", betonte Allegri.
Der Trainer vom FC Genua, Ivan Juric, der das Duell gegen Juventus am Samstagabend 2:4 verloren hat, sieht die Lage anders. "Ich mag den Videobeweis. Meiner Ansicht nach wird er das Spiel verbessern und mehr Fairness garantieren. Am Ende wird das Spielergebnis immer gerechter sein", sagte Juric.
Dejavu, autogol goffi e triplette, fallacci e raffinatezze, ma soprattutto lunghi minuti davanti a un monitor: in un sabato di ordinaria follia, Marassi non si è annoiato per la tempesta di emozioni. Alla fine dei conti, la Juve ha avuto il merito e la forza di riprendere una gara che sembrava morta e sepolta già prima di cominciare. Ma le meraviglie di Dybala e la perla di Cuadrado non possono nascondere sotto al tappeto la montagna di polvere accumulata a inizio partita. È l’ennesimo inizio-shock regalato al Genoa: in attesa delle fine del mercato, trascina molti interrogativi in casa bianconera.
CRONACA — "Bisogna fare meglio dello scorso anno dove abbiamo preso 3 gol in 27 minuti", disse Max alla vigilia. Allegri è accontentato: due gol in un amen, sette minuti di follia in un inizio irreale con Lazovic che asfalta Sandro e autogol dopo 18 secondi di Pjanic; poi nuovo rigore con Var, secondo in due giornate contro i bianconeri (stavolta, però, c’è il millimetrico fuorigioco di Galabinov, non notato dalla tecnologia, che rende sbagliata la decisione). A procurarlo e realizzarlo proprio il carrarmato bulgaro che bullizza Rugani per tutto il primo tempo. Non bastasse, in mezzo c’è pure un miracolo di Perin su tentato autogol di Gentiletti: troppo e tutto insieme, impossibile dare ordine razionale al caos. Eppure, ormai quando la Signora passa da qua, da questo stadio vestito da rossoblù, il copione è lo stesso. Prende tutto il vento in faccia, fatica a respirare, ma stavolta non annega, anzi rimette ossigeno nei polmoni con il gol del 2-1 di Dybala su assist di Pjanic.
RIMONTA — A questo punto, a differenza dell’anno passato, ci sarebbero i presupposti per una rimonta più rapida. In realtà, spesso la Juve è bucata in mezzo da un Grifone arrembante nelle ripartenze, neanche fosse il 2016. Certe voragini impongono ad Allegri di rimescolare le carte spesso: si usa un nuovo 3-4-3 da combattimento, avanzando Sandro e sfruttando la buonissima vena dalla Joya. Perin, però, mura tutto e ai bianconeri serve un’altra Var, la prima pro-Juve, per rimettere in piedi la gara. Stavolta sono necessari più secondi per decidere, ma nessun dubbio sul fallo di mano volontario di Lazovic su destro di Mandzukic. Così, prima di chiudere un pazzo primo tempo, Dybala dal dischetto segna il suo quinto gol in tre partite ufficiali.
SECONDO TEMPO — Nella ripresa la gara ritrova misura e ragione: c’è un più di ordine nel ritorno al 4-2-3-1 bianconero. E c’è pure meno ardore genoano: Juric, abituato a squadre sporche e cattive, si era quasi stupito alla vigilia di avere un team "intelligente ed elegante". Il problema è che a ritmi umani come quelli del secondo tempo la Juve fa valere la qualità e l’innesto di Matuidi dà i chili che mancavano in mezzo. All’inizio Allegri era rimasto fedele alle abitudini, alla tradizionale prudenza nella gestione dei nuovi, ma col francese c’è ben altra solidità. A completare la rimonta, però, è una connection inattesa: Mandzukic fa il “verticalizzatore” e Cuadrado lo stoccatore. Il colombiano salta un uomo e la mette all’incrocio: un anestetico sul match. Barzagli è poi chiamato a sigillare la difesa e Juric affida la speranza a un Laxalt ispirato e all’ingresso di Lapadula, juventino di nascita e di cuore. Ma a prendersi gli applausi finali è sempre Dybala, che dopo la prima tripletta bianconera si porterà a casa la palla: un giorno, continuando così, ne avrà in mano una tutta d’oro. Per il momento, si può limitare ad essere il nuovo leader tecnico di questa squadra. Ma da solo non basterà sempre: Marassi ha detto quanto sia urgente un nuovo colpo dietro e in mezzo.
Paulo Dybala scored his first Serie A hat-trick as Juventus came from two goals down to defeat Genoa 4-2 in an action-packed clash at Stadio Luigi Ferraris.
Juve found themselves 2-0 behind after just seven minutes, but Dybala's double pulled them level and the Argentine put the gloss on things with an excellent third that took his Serie A tally to 50 following Juan Cuadrado's effort.
An own goal from Miralem Pjanic just 18 seconds into his 50th appearance for the club got Juve off to a terrible start and matters were made worse when Andrej Galabinov scored a penalty after referee Luca Banti used VAR to look at Daniele Rugani's challenge on the Bulgarian.
It was the second time in as many matches Massimiliano Allegri's side found themselves on the wrong side of a spot-kick decision based on video technology, but the system worked in their favour after Dybala had got them going with an instinctive finish.
Banti deemed Darko Lazovic to have handled a shot from Mario Mandzukic after watching a replay and Dybala restored parity from 12 yards deep in first-half stoppage time.
Cuadrado beat Mattia Perin to put the visitors ahead for the first time and Dybala beat the goalkeeper with a sweet near-post strike to ensure Juve escaped with a second win from as many Serie A matches.
An electric start saw Genoa take a surprise lead in the opening minute, Goran Pandev's cross from the right ending up in the back of the net after Giorgio Chiellini deflected it onto Pjanic.
Perin produced a sensational save to stop Santiago Gentiletti heading into the back of his own net and Genoa had a chance to move two up when referee Banti used VAR to award them a penalty for Rugani's tackle from behind on Galabinov.
Stephan Lichtsteiner was booked for his protests, with the Genoa forward having appeared to be offside from Adel Taarabt's touch, but Galabinov was unforgiving and fired his spot-kick down the middle.
Juve, without injured midfielder Claudio Marchisio, did not dwell on the setback and halved the deficit when Dybala met Pjanic's cutback with a cool, first-time finish beyond Perin in the 14th minute.
As Genoa looked to threaten on the break they came under pressure and Perin produced a remarkable double save to keep out Dybala and Mandzukic in quick succession.
Juve were not to be denied an equaliser before the break, though. Banti used the VAR system again to penalise Lazovic for blocking a shot from Mandzukic with his arm and Dybala drilled the resultant spot-kick into the top-right corner.
Allegri's side struggled to create and, after Blaise Matuidi replaced Sami Khedira to offer some additional dynamism in midfield, Juve breached the Genoa defence again in the 62nd minute when Cuadrado beat Diego Laxalt and picked out the top-left corner.
Rodrigo Bentancur made his Juve debut as a replacement for Pjanic before Gianluigi Buffon – named UEFA Goalkeeper of the Year in midweek – kept out Raffaele Palladino in the 84th minute.
Dybala made the scoreline more flattering by arrowing a low shot in at the near post in the 92nd minute, his landmark goal coming in fine fashion.
Juventus goalkeeper Gigi Buffon wants to be drawn in the same Champions League group as Celtic this week – so he can experience the “electric atmosphere” of Parkhead again.
The Italy international has visited Celtic’s stomping ground twice during his glittering career, first in 2001 and then again in 2013.
However, it appears the veteran shot-stopper wants another taste before he hangs up his gloves at the end of this season.
Speaking via the Daily Record, Buffon mentioned Celtic Park alongside the Camp Nou, Old Trafford and the Bernabeu.
He said, “Playing in the Champions League allows you to experience some of the most exciting stadiums in Europe and when you are younger you take that for granted as there are many more opportunities ahead of you.
“But as you get old you realise there are things you perhaps won’t experience again.”
The 39-year-old added, “I want to test myself at the Bernabeu and Camp Nou again, I want to play another special evening game at Old Trafford. I want to experience the electric atmosphere of Celtic Park once more.
Alessandro Murgia came off the bench to snatch Supercoppa Italiana glory as Lazio secured a breathless 3-2 win over Juventus amid remarkable late drama at the Stadio Olimpico.
The hosts, playing in the showpiece by virtue of their 2-0 loss to Juve in May's Coppa Italia final, appeared to be cruising to victory by the same margin thanks to a double from Ciro Immobile.
The one-time Juventus youngster built upon 23 Serie A goals in his maiden season at Lazio by winning and converting a first-half penalty and expertly dispatching a header nine minutes after the interval.
Juventus offered little sign of mustering a response until Paulo Dybala scored a magnificent free-kick in the 85th minute and the Argentina forward converted from 12 yards in stoppage time after Adam Marusic felled Alex Sandro.
But two other Lazio substitutes would give far more impressive accounts of themselves as Jordan Lukaku stormed down the left flank and allowed Murgia to add a final twist, condemning Juve to a third Supercoppa reverse in the past four seasons.
Juventus laid siege to the Lazio area during the early stages, Thomas Strakosha keeping out Juan Cuadrado's close-range attempt with his legs when he should have had no chance to prevent a goal from Alex Sandro's cutback.
It proved an eventful opening for the Albania goalkeeper, who got down sharply to deny Dybala and Gonzalo Higuain, and Lazio rewarded him by gaining a foothold in the contest.
Giorgio Chiellini – playing without his old ally Leonardo Bonucci in the Juventus defence – made a brilliant last-ditch tackle to thwart Immobile but the same player sprung the Serie A champions' backline in the 31st minute and was brought down by Gianluigi Buffon.
The booked veteran goalkeeper guessed correctly but could not get close to Immobile's well-struck effort.
Buffon was soon back in the action as Dusan Basta drilled an effort at him from Sergej Milinkovic-Savic's clever flick before Lucas Leiva sought a rare goal with a fierce long-ranger that was tipped over the bar.
Cuadrado, who was on the receiving end of a robust tackle from Lucas before half-time, saw a shot blocked shortly after the restart but Lazio doubled their lead in the 54th minute.
The Juve backline had lost its shape by the time Marco Parolo floated a cross to the far post and Immobile headed back across Buffon and in.
Immobile might have claimed the matchball when Senad Lulic played him through with an hour played but Buffon sprawled effectively at the forward's feet.
Miralem Pjanic's radar was unusually awry from a promising free-kick situation and Higuain prodded wide from substitute Douglas Costa's cross as the game entered its final quarter.
Buffon had to turn away a stinging Luis Alberto attempt before Dybala showed Pjanic how it was done from 25 yards.
The 23-year-old's viciously swerving strike shattered Lazio's previous calm and Marusic's foul on Alex Sandro was clumsy in the extreme as Dybala converted easily to have seemingly forced extra time.
Sensing their moment slipping by, the hosts released Lukaku to storm down the left flank. Mattia De Sciglio's desperate slide tackle could not contain the Belgian and Murgia steered unerringly past Buffon to spark wild celebrations.
Harry Kane and Christian Eriksen helped Tottenham to a 2-0 win over Juventus but Mauricio Pochettino will have lingering concerns after Kieran Trippier limped off at Wembley.
The England international went down under a tackle from Alex Sandro and was withdrawn before the break, potentially leaving a sizeable hole at right-back following the sale of Kyle Walker to Manchester City.
Despite the setback, Spurs will take plenty of positives from securing a third pre-season victory in a match they largely controlled.
Juve, meanwhile, produced occasional glimpses without ever showing the quality that made them Champions League finalists last term.
Only a superb second-half save from Gianluigi Buffon prevented a heavier margin of victory after Kane and Eriksen scored either side of half-time with a pair of well-taken goals.
Trippier first received attention after getting his leg caught in the turf inside the opening five minutes, although the 26-year-old soon returned to spectacular effect.
Overlapping on the right, he received Moussa Sissoko's pass and delivered a delightful dinked cross for Kane to nod in at the back post.
Juve settled and Paulo Dybala harmlessly guided his side's first attempt over the bar, before Gonzalo Higuain drew a sharp save from Hugo Lloris at close range.
Kane then wasted a clear chance for a second when Buffon's heavy touch created panic but, after Eriksen turned the ball back into the area, the England striker sidefooted his finish straight at the veteran keeper with the goal gaping.
Sissoko went even closer soon afterwards when he was afforded time to size up a shot inside the area, only to see his curling effort come back off the post.
Spurs' impressive half ended on a sour note with Trippier succumbing to his earlier knock and being forced from the pitch.
The Premier League side began the second period in far brighter fashion as Dele Alli slipped Eriksen in behind to make it 2-0 in the 52nd minute, the Dane rounding Buffon and applying a simple finish.
It would have been three had Buffon's fingertips not pushed a Kane drive against the crossbar while Lloris was called upon to tip a Dybala effort around the post.
Massimiliano Allegri made several changes from half-time onwards, introducing the likes of Federico Bernardeschi and Claudio Marchisio, but it was young striker Moise Kean who turned their best chance of the match against the woodwork from point-blank range.
Both sides now await their first competitive matches a week on Sunday as Juve meet Lazio in the Supercoppa Italiana while Spurs travel to Newcastle United for their Premier League opener.
Juventus closed out the International Champions Cup with a penalty shoot-out win over Roma after a 1-1 draw at Gillette Stadium on Sunday.
A first-half goal from Mario Mandzukic was cancelled out by Edin Dzeko with 16 minutes left of the encounter in Massachusetts in a match that offered a glimpse of a potentially engrossing Serie A title battle in the coming season.
Massimiliano Allegri and Eusebio Di Francesco named strong starting line-ups and clear-cut opportunities were scarce in a balanced and often combative encounter.
Mandzukic made the most of his lone chance in the first half with a clinical finish, but only the woodwork denied Kevin Strootman an equaliser early in the second period.
Roma's pressure began to mount in the final half-hour as Juve sat deeper, and Dzeko capitalised on a rare piece of slack marking to tap in a cross from Aleksandar Kolarov.
The capital city club, who snatched an injury-time winner against Tottenham in their last outing, pushed for a second in the closing stages but youngster Marco Tumminello then missed the crucial spot-kick to hand Juve the win in the shoot-out.
Dzeko should have done more than shin the ball out for a goal kick when picked out in clear space in the Juve box, as Roma began the game looking the more threatening.
Juve began to assume control, with Miralem Pjanic rasping a shot inches wide from the edge of the area, and Mandzukic pounced with his first real opportunity on 29 minutes to give them the lead.
The Croatian raced onto Alex Sandro's curled pass in behind the Roma defence, before rounding goalkeeper Alisson and slotting home, despite the best efforts of the covering Juan Jesus.
Roma responded well after the break, Strootman crashing a strike against the crossbar from 25 yards out before Dzeko forced Gianluigi Buffon into a save with a volley from Radja Nainggolan's cross.
Juve missed a clear chance to double their lead just shy of the hour mark, though. Douglas Costa cut in from the right and drilled low towards the bottom-right corner, and although Alisson spilled the ball into Gonzalo Higuain's path, the Argentina striker could not find a way past the goalkeeper.
Dzeko soon went into the referee's notebook after catching Giorgio Chiellini in the face with his forearm – an incident that prompted a furious reaction from Strootman – before Chiellini himself was booked for hauling down Cengiz Under as the match became increasingly gritty.
But Roma's persistence finally paid off with quarter of an hour to play. Kolarov found space to the left of the penalty area and fired the ball low into the six-yard box, where Dzeko arrived unchallenged to convert past substitute goalkeeper Carlo Pinsoglio.
Allegri introduced €40million signing Federico Bernardeschi for his debut but it was Roma who finished the strongest, although a Kolarov free-kick saved by Pinsoglio was the closest they came to another late winner. Pinsoglio proved the hero as the match went to penalties, as he made a good save to deny 18-year-old Tumminello's opening spot-kick before Costa eventually sealed the 5-4 win.
A second-half brace from Claudio Marchisio helped Juventus to a 3-2 win over Paris Saint-Germain at the International Champions Cup.
Gonzalo Higuain produced a classy finish on the stroke of half-time to give the Serie A champions a lead at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
But a Goncalo Guedes goal, set up by the impressive Angel Di Maria, saw PSG level early in the second half on Wednesday.
Marchisio scored superbly from 20 yards in the 62nd minute, but Javier Pastore levelled once more for PSG.
However, Juve would not be denied a third time as Marchisio converted from the penalty spot for the match-winner in the 89th minute.
Marco Verratti and Di Maria, both linked with moves from PSG, started, while Dani Alves began on the bench for the clash against his former club.
Juve made an energetic start and Paulo Dybala should have opened the scoring in the fourth minute.
The Argentina international cut in from the right before curling a shot just wide as he aimed for the far corner.
PSG slowly built into the clash, Blaise Matuidi squandering a good chance from a cross before Di Maria forced a diving save from Gianluigi Buffon.
Dybala then went close twice approaching the half-hour mark, forcing Alphonse Areola to save a free-kick before curling a set-piece just wide.
PSG forward Edinson Cavani had the ball in the back of the net in the 33rd minute, but it was correctly ruled out for offside.
Juve looked more dangerous throughout the opening 45 minutes and they deservedly went ahead on the stroke of half-time.
Higuain played a one-two with Dybala before clipping a finish past Areola and into the bottom corner to make it 1-0.
Juve made 10 changes at the break – with only Buffon staying on – while PSG introduced eight new substitutes.
It was a frantic start to the second half, Stefano Sturaro almost doubling Juve's lead as he struck the post after a Mattia De Sciglio pass, while Giovani Lo Celso forced Buffon into a save before PSG equalised in the 53rd minute.
Di Maria and Layvin Kurzawa exchanged passes down the left before the former poked a pass to the back post, where Guedes tapped in.
A crucial touch from Buffon denied Jese Rodriguez before Marchisio restored Juve's lead in style.
Kurzawa gave the ball away cheaply and Moise Kean ran at the PSG defence before playing a pass across the area, Marchisio producing a superb first-time finish from 20 yards.
But PSG responded again, a brave Pastore header from a Kurzawa cross making it 2-2 in the 80th minute.
However, Marchisio would score the winner, striking a penalty down the middle after Kean was brought down by Presnel Kimpembe.