After Alessio Tacchinardi, Giuliano Giannichedda has also said he's terminating his contract with Juve.
'This is a bit of a sad day for me,' the former Udinese and Lazio player informed Juve Channel.
'I am nearly 33 years old and would like to play on for a while longer. The club was very kind and Tuesday I will be a free agent.'
The Bianconeri are completely revamping their team for the return to the top flight and have brought in midfielders Tiago Mendes, Hasan Salihamidzic and Sergio Almiron.
This will leave precious little space for the old guard and following Tacchinardi's decision to walk away on a free this week, Giannichedda has made a similar choice.
He never quite got a chance to shine in Turin, as his 1st campaign in 2005-06 was marred by injury, then the Bianconeri were demoted as part of the Calciopoli scandal.
'I arrived here in an invincible Juve and my only regret is that my Champions League experience was so brief.'
The future is uncertain for Giannichedda, who has 3 Italy caps to his name, however he was linked with Livorno and his old club Udinese.
He played at the Stadio Friuli for 6 seasons from 1995 to 2001.
03 07 2007
The heir to the Agnelli family that controls Juve warned Tuesday that the club's big spending days were over.
John Elkann, vice-president of the FIAT group and grandson of the late Gianni Agnelli who was Juve's long term president and owner, mentioned in future the club would avoid the huge transfer campaigns of former general director Luciano Moggi and former chief exec Antonio Giraudo.
"Moggi and Giraudo's spending was unsustainable. They made up for it by factoring in the increase in value of players (into the accounts) however it would not go on like that," the 31 year old Elkann informed Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.
Moggi and Giraudo were forced to quit Juve over their involvement in last year's Serie A match fixing scandal.
The club were sent down to the 2nd division Serie B however will be playing top flight football again next season after winning the league.
"Serie B was very hard, a season in Purgatory that nobody liked. It also cost us a lot of money," Elkann continued.
"I think in a sustainable model, costs cannot account for 80 percent of turnover. At Man Utd it accounts for 55 percent."
Elkann's vision of a more financially cautious Juve has not prevented the club being active on the transfer market.
Since winning promotion, the club have brought in Portuguese midfielder Tiago from Olympique Lyon, defender Zdenek Grygera from Ajax and Bosnian midfielder Hasan Salihamidzic from Bayern Munich.