Alvaro Morata has refused to discuss whether his extra-time Coppa Italia winner could prove his last goal for Juventus.

The Spain hitman climbed off the bench to sink Milan 1-0 in Rome on Saturday night, securing Juventus an historic second consecutive domestic double.

Juve became the first side in the history of Italian football to land back-to-back Serie A and Coppa Italia doubles, with Morata settling a drab affair in extra time.

The 23-year-old blasted home Juan Cuadrado’s cross in his first meaningful contribution just minutes after joining the Stadio Olimpico fray, but later batted off questions about his future.

“It’s not my last game of the season as I have to play in the Euros,” Morata told reporters.

“I have to make the most of my current form and not even think about the future.”

Real Madrid have been rumoured to be considering exercising their buy-back option on the striker, perhaps with a view to selling him on at a profit, while Arsenal have also been linked with a summer move for the eight-cap Spain striker.

Morata insisted he must concentrate on his Euro 2016 commitments before resolving his long-term future however, preferring instead to focus on the accurate pre-match prediction of friends and family.

“On Friday my friends said I’d come off the bench and score, so they were right,” said Morata.

“This was a good day, my father and friends were in the stands.

“We have to compliment Milan, as they put in a fine performance and made it really difficult for us, but it’s the result that counts.”

Juve’s victory also ensured Milan failed to qualify for European competition for the third year running. Sassuolo will enter next season’s Europa League, their first ever foray into continental competition.

Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri said his team had found the last few weeks heavy going, having wrapped up the Serie A title with three games to spare.

“It wasn’t easy for the players because they’d basically been without much motivation for the last few weeks and needed to get their minds back in the right place to win,” he said.

Cristian Brocchi, Milan’s fifth coach in the last three seasons and whose future is uncertain, praised his side’s performance, a sharp contrast to his fierce criticism after they lost 3-1 at home to Roma in their final league game.

“This time I saw a bit of my influence in this team,” he said.

“I saw the right mindset and right attitude. We were punished by an episode. They have great players, that’s football.”

Riccardo Montolivo insisted Milan deserved to win, but was left to lament poor finishing in defeat.

“If this was a boxing match we’d have won on points,” Montolivo said.

“Unfortunately, you need that final moment to finish off chances and we lacked that against Juve. If we had played this way throughout the season it would have been a very different campaign.”

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.