Tag: Inter Milan

  • New Inter Boss Antonio Conte promises to deliver

     

    Former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte has been appointed head coach at Inter Milan and the club chose to unveil him with a bizarre video.

    The 49-year-old has finally returned to management having been sacked by the Blues at the end of the 2017-18 season.

    Inter chose to make the announcement on Friday morning with a strange short film that they posted on their Twitter account.

    It begins with some ominous music and then cuts to Conte sitting in the back of a car as he is driven through the city of Milan.

    ‘Finally, it’s time to get back to it. I have many reasons to do so, perhaps even too many,’ Conte says over the top of the journey through Milan.

    ‘And just as many challenges are ahead of me I can’t wait. With its fans who will be wondering why me exactly? ‘Because we share the same ambitions, fearlessness, hunger and determination. Now it’s my turn.’

    Inter Chief Steven Zhang then appears on screen and looks out of his office window to see Conte’s car pull up and the door open.

    The screen then turns black before Conte says: ‘I’m here, Inter’ as the video comes to an end.

    Conte spent two years at Stamford Bridge, winning the Premier League in his first season and the FA Cup in his final match in charge in May 2018.

    The Italian replaces the sacked Luciano Spalletti at the San Siro after the Nerazzurri finished fourth in Serie A this season, 21 points behind champions Juventus.

    Ex-Italy boss Conte will be charged with closing the gap on his former side, which he led to three league titles in three seasons as manager between 2011 and 2014.

    ‘A new chapter in my life is beginning, I’m really excited,’ said Conte on Inter’s official website following the announcement.

    ‘Through my work, I’ll try to repay all of the trust that the president and directors have placed in me.

    ‘I have chosen Inter because of the club it is, because of the project’s sound basis and how ambitious it is. Because of Inter has got  history.

    ‘I was struck by the club’s transparency and the desire to bring Inter back to where it belongs.’

     

     

     

     

     

  • Antonio Conte demands £9m for Inter Milan top job

     

    Former Chelsea coach Antonio Conte is willing to take over the reins at Inter Milan on the proviso they make him the highest paid manager in the Serie A.

    Conte, 49, is on the lookout for a new job after sitting out this season following his sacking by Chelsea in the summer.

    The Italian has been linked with several top clubs but Inter are stepping up their interest in the former Juventus and Italy manager.

    Inter president Steven Zhang has reportedly told general manager Beppe Marotta to bring Conte to the San Siro at all costs.

    However, Conte has doubts about returning to Italy after enjoying his two-year spell in England so is making hefty demands.

    Conte is demanding to be paid a £9million annual salary after tax which would make him the highest earner among his Serie A managerial rivals.

    If Inter give Conte what he wants then he would earn £2.5m more than Juventus’ Massimiliano Allegri, who is currently Serie A’s highest-paid manager.

    Inter will have to shell out £21.5m if they are to sack current boss Luciano Spalletti.

    Spalletti, whose current deal runs out in 2021, could lose his job despite his side being in third spot with seven games to go.  Despite their league position, Inter are 27 points behind league leaders Juventus. Conte who handled the Italian national team from 2014 to 2016 coached Juventus for two years just before taking over the national team. He has coached eight club sides with Chelsea as the only one outside Italy.

    While at Chelsea he became the first manager in history to win three consecutive Premier League Manager of the Month awards (October, November and December) in 201

    On 12 May 2017, Conte’s Chelsea side defeated West Bromwich Albion 1–0 away, with a late goal from substitute Michy Batshuayi, and secured the points required to win the 2016–17 Premier League title with two matches to spare.

    On 19 May 2018, Conte led Chelsea to a 1–0 victory over Manchester United in the 2018 FA Cup Final.

  • Inter Milan slam £68million price tag on Mauro Icardi

     

    Inter Milan have ‘named their price of £68million’ for wantaway striker Mauro Icardi with Real Madrid retaining an interest.

    The Argentine forward has not featured for Inter in more than a month due to an ongoing row over contract negotiations.

    And according to Spanish outlet AS, Madrid chiefs reportedly spoke to their counterparts at Inter last week where the price the La Liga side needed to pay this summer became clear.

    Icardi played no part in Sunday’s 3-2 win over city rivals AC Milan at the San Siro and continues to be an isolated member of Luciano Spalletti’s squad.

    Madrid, back under the management of Zinedine Zidane, are still looking to bolster their attack having felt the effects of losing Cristiano Ronaldo to Juventus last summer.

    Eden Hazard is of interest to Real but with the long-term future of striker Karim Benzema unclear, Icardi, given his current exile at Inter, remains a firm target

    Zidane bowed out first time round having won three consecutive Champions League titles but knows he needs to make wholesale changes to an ageing squad and a goalscorer is high on his priority list with Icardi fitting the description.

    Icardi was stripped of the Inter captaincy back in February and has not played since as his future continues to remain a source of constant debate in Italy.

    Having held the captaincy for three years before the latest exile, there is a growing sense the club and player will separate come the summer window.

    His lack of playing time has also seen him overlooked by the national team for the latest batch of matches.

    The AS report continues that while Icardi is a key striker target, so is Tottenham forward Harry Kane, although that is a deal that would cost considerably more than £68m.

     

     

     

  • Inter Milan suspend midfielder Nainggolan for disciplinary reasons

    Inter Milan midfielder Radja Nainggolan was suspended by his club for disciplinary reasons on Sunday.

    The development capped an unhappy year which also saw the Belgian call time on his international career after missing the Russia 2018 World Cup.

    Inter Milan’s decision means Nainggolan, who was also dropped by AS Roma at the start of this year, will miss Wednesday’s match when third-placed Inter host second-placed Napoli in Serie A.

    “FC Internazionale Milano can confirm that Radja Nainggolan has been temporarily suspended from football activity for disciplinary reasons,” said the club in a statement, without giving further details.

    Italian media said Nainggolan had arrived late for a training session.

    The combative 30-year-old was signed from AS Roma in the summer for 38 million euros ($43.19 million) plus Nicolo Zaniolo, but he has not made the expected impact.

    The midfielder missed Inter Milan’s first two league matches of the season through injury, but he scored on his debut in a 3-0 win over Bologna.

    He suffered another injury in the 1-0 derby win over AC Milan and, although he quickly recovered, it flared up again.

    That was during the UEFA Champions League defeat at Tottenham Hotspur when he was substituted before half-time.

    Nainggolan was dropped and fined by AS Roma in January after posting an Instagram video of himself drinking and smoking at a New Year’s Party.

    After returning to the side, he helped AS Roma to reach the UEFA Champions League semi-finals.

    But there was more disappointment when he was left out of Belgium’s FIFA World Cup squad to Russia 2018 by coach Roberto Martinez.

    That prompted Nainggolan to end his international career and blame Martinez’s decision on a personality clash.

    Nainggolan was also upset at the way he was treated by AS Roma, saying in an interview this month that he was “bitter” that the club had wanted to sell him.(Reuters/NAN)

  • Ronaldo hospitalised in Ibiza with pneumonia

    Former Brazil and Real Madrid great Ronaldo Nazario is currently in hospital in Ibiza recovering from pneumonia, local media said on Sunday.

    Newspaper Diario de Ibiza said the two-time Ballon d’Or winner and 2002 World Cup Golden Boot winner is currently in the intensive care unit at the private Policlinica Nuestra Senora del Rosario hospital.

    Sources told Diario de Ibiza that Ronaldo was recovering well.

    The hospital could not immediately be reached by Reuters for comment.

    Ronaldo, who was on holiday in Ibiza when he was taken ill, retired from football in 2011 following a hugely successful career.

    He featured stints at PSV Eindhoven, Barcelona, Inter Milan, AC Milan, Brazilian sides Corinthians and Cruzeiro as well as Real Madrid, where he is a club ambassador.

    He won two La Liga titles with Real, the UEFA Cup with Inter and lifted the World Cup in 1994 and 2002 with Brazil, also reaching the tournament’s final in 1998.

    He picked up the Ballon d’Or award for the best player in the world in 1997 and 2002.

  • Not Playing with Ronaldo the only Regret – Totti

    Not Playing with Ronaldo the only Regret – Totti

    Former Roma Captain, Francesco Totti has revealed that not playing together with Ronaldo De Lima remains the only regret of his career.

    The 41-year-old hung up his boots in May – putting an end to 25-year playing career with boy hood club, Roma.

    Totti, who hold some tinge of sadness for not playing with the former Real Madrid and Inter Milan striker believes that he would have made Ronaldo a better player.

    According to the former Roma Captain, Ronaldo Delima would have scored more goals if they had played together.

    Totti, as quoted by as.com: “That would have been a dream for both of us. He scored a lot of goals but with me playing just behind him, I’m sure he would have scored a lot more”,

    “I’ve always said it – the only thing I regret about my career was not having got to play with Ronaldo.

    The former Italy international also described Italy, who are four time Champions of the World Cup absence from the next year’s mundial as a ‘Shock’ to the footballing world and said to watch the mundial next year would be strange.

    He added, “Like every other Italian, I never thought for a second that we might not get through the qualifying rounds.

    “It was a big shock to the world of football. Watching the World Cup on television is going to be very strange.”

    Totti on Ronaldo, Messi and Federeer

    Totti said that out of current stars he prefers Lionel Messi to Cristiano Ronaldo, and singled out tennis champion Roger Federer as his sporting hero, who “does not even sweat when he plays.”

     

  • Inter Milan table  £12.5m-a-year contract for Conte

    Inter Milan table  £12.5m-a-year contract for Conte

     

    Chelsea manager and league title chasing Antonio Conte is wanted by Italian giants Inter Milan

    Inter, owned by the Chinese retail giants Suning, are preparing a contract offer for Conte thought to be worth up to £12.5million a year to lure him back to Italy.

    They are also in the process of recruiting a new technical staff which features several of his trusted former colleagues.

    Among them include Walter Sabiatini, the former sporting director of Roma, who has been confirmed as Inter’s technical co-ordinator. Conte was keen for Sabiatini to be involved on his backroom team at Chelsea but did not get his wish last summer.

    Inter, who sacked manager Stefano Pioli this week, are also trying to bring back Gabriele Oriali, a former player and sporting director, who worked closely with Conte when he was in charge of the Italy team.

    They also want Dario Baccin, a respected scout and former team-mate of Conte, and Cristian Sellini, a youth team coach at Genoa, who worked with Conte at Siena and Juventus.

    As part of talks to lure these coaches, Inter have made a point of telling them that they are serious about bringing Conte to the San Siro.

    They are also promising funds to build a team capable of taking Inter back to the top of Italian football.

    Conte has two years left on his £6.5m-a-year contract at the Bridge and Roman Abramovich will offer him improved terms which will catapult him into the top tier of world coaches when the Premier League title is won.

    In his first season in English football, Conte has eclipsed Jose Mourinho, Pep Guardiola, Arsene Wenger and Jurgen Klopp, four coaches who are all paid higher salaries.

    Despite the Suning takeover there remain some doubts about exactly how much money the Chinese investors are willing to sink into Inter.

    Conte is excited by the challenge of another attack on the Champions League and Chelsea are preparing for a heavy summer of activity in the transfer market.

    Conte is demanding much greater control over transfers in and out at Chelsea which Abramovich is unwilling to agree to.

    He has also been keen to replace Coach Steve Holland, who will leave to join England at the end of the season, with another of his trusted Italian friends Oriali among the candidates.

    Abramovich has always insisted upon a thread of continuity running through the coaching staff.

    Steve Clarke and Holland survived managerial changes and the Chelsea owner would prefer another club appointment.

  • Yaya Toure hints on leaving Man City

    Yaya Toure has hinted that he has already received offers to move to Inter Milan.

    According to his agent, Dimitri Seluk, the Ivorian International is set to reunite with Roberto Macini.

    Ivory Coast international’s representative says he has already received offers for the 32-year-old and has hinted at a move to Inter to be reunited with Roberto Mancini.

    Seluk confirmed that Yaya Toure will definitely leave this summer, “ Yaya Toure will definitely leave this summer, I can calmly confirm that” he reiterated.

     

    Toure deals with Man City will expire at the end of next season and he has yet to agree a new contract at the Etihad Stadium.

  • I’m happy Jose  Mourinho hasn’t changed

    I’m happy Jose Mourinho hasn’t changed

    Chelsea striker is delighted by his reunion with former Inter Milan manager at Stamford Bridge and thinking positive about Cameroon’s World Cup play-off. By Ian Hawkey.

    It is just after half-term in the club shop at Stamford Bridge, and a proud father is buying replica jerseys for his children. It is a hefty order. He asks for home and away shirts, bearing the forenames of each child, all four of them, aged between six and the early teens. The dad arranges to have them dispatched to his workplace, Chelsea’s Surrey training ground.

    Because Samuel Eto’o arrived in London late in the transfer window, there have been things to catch up on, such as the children’s new blue tops, familiarising himself with a new leaague, and a language which Eto’o, who comes from the French-speaking part of Cameroon, has never needed to perfect until now. His first two months in the Premier League have left him, he says, “generally quite happy”, though he feels English football has not yet seen the best of him.

    He, and Chelsea, would anticipate more goals, for a start. The most consistently brilliant centre-forward of the first decade of the 21st century is accustomed to accumulating more than one every five starts, his record so far for Chelsea. At Barcelona, he averaged three in every four La Liga games; at Inter Milan, a goal every other Serie A match; the same in Russia, from where Chelsea recruited him after two seasons with Anzhi Makhachkala.

    But he gleefully points out he is already the owner of one significant milestone, thanks to his goal against Cardiff City. “I’m happy,” he smiles, “because, even coming in late, I was still the first of Chelsea’s strikers to score this season in the Premier League. That gave me a thrill.”

    If that suggests a competitive edge to Eto’o’s relationship with Fernando Torres, whose celebrated return to form only yielded his first league goal six days ago, or Demba Ba, it is a healthy joust. He gladly praises Torres, adding only that the idea the Spaniard has suddenly happened on a renaissance is misguided.

    “He has been playing well throughout,” says Eto’o. “The fact is, as all we strikers know, we tend to get judged just on the number of goals. It’s not all about the figures. It’s about how you play for the team, how you help your colleagues, how you work defensively. All that, he’s been doing very well, and the goals come in streaks. They flow for a while, then they go away for a bit.”

    At Newcastle, Torres will probably start, thanks to his performance against Manchester City, and given that Eto’o got the nod for the first XI in midweek in the League Cup.

    Rotation is inevitable “no one signs a contact saying they will always start,” he says but the bench is not Eto’o’s natural, long-term habitat, not unless you rewind 15 years, to his nights of teenaged frustration at Real Madrid, when scant opportunities to jump an illustrious queue of forwards left him miffed.

    The drive that would carry him to landmark achievements after that, to a Copa del Rey win with Real Mallorca, to two Champions League titles and three La Ligas at Barça, and a treble at Jose Mourinho’s Inter, has its springboard in the perception he had been undervalued at Madrid.

    It also comes from a stubborn streak, which Eto’o identifies in his own childhood, the subject of a book he has released, in a rare format for the sporting memoir: comic strip. It is illustrated by his talented compatriot Joëlle Esso, who he sought out because his own children grew up enjoying her work.

    There are to be nine volumes, eventually, the first having concluded when the schoolboy Eto’o returns to Cameroon from Paris, where he had absconded from a junior football tour but had been denied the chance to sign for a French club because he had no residence permit. He touches down in Douala, his home town, ready to redouble his efforts to make a career at the top of the game.

    “I stick at things, will always push myself hard, and little by little I’ll get to where I want to be,” says Eto’o. His first weeks at Chelsea exemplified that. “It can be complicated when you join after the season has begun, because your colleagues have already started implementing the manager’s ideas. I had to adapt to a new country, and a new league.”

    The manager, of course, was familiar, the mutual admiration between Mourinho and Eto’o remains potent. If some senior Chelsea players, like Mourinho himself, see a distinct version of the Portuguese from his 2004 to 2007 Chelsea stint, so does Eto’o, though for different reasons: in the heat of several poisonous Chelsea v

    t is just after half-term in the club shop at Stamford Bridge, and a proud father is buying replica jerseys for his children. It is a hefty order. He asks for home and away shirts, bearing the forenames of each child, all four of them, aged between six and the early teens. The dad arranges to have them dispatched to his workplace, Chelsea’s Surrey training ground.
    Because Samuel Eto’o arrived in London late in the transfer window, there have been things to catch up on, such as the children’s new blue tops, familiarising himself with a new leaague, and a language which Eto’o, who comes from the French-speaking part of Cameroon, has never needed to perfect until now. His first two months in the Premier League have left him, he says, “generally quite happy”, though he feels English football has not yet seen the best of him.
    He, and Chelsea, would anticipate more goals, for a start. The most consistently brilliant centre-forward of the first decade of the 21st century is accustomed to accumulating more than one every five starts, his record so far for Chelsea. At Barcelona, he averaged three in every four La Liga games; at Inter Milan, a goal every other Serie A match; the same in Russia, from where Chelsea recruited him after two seasons with Anzhi Makhachkala.
    But he gleefully points out he is already the owner of one significant milestone, thanks to his goal against Cardiff City. “I’m happy,” he smiles, “because, even coming in late, I was still the first of Chelsea’s strikers to score this season in the Premier League. That gave me a thrill.”
    If that suggests a competitive edge to Eto’o’s relationship with Fernando Torres, whose celebrated return to form only yielded his first league goal six days ago, or Demba Ba, it is a healthy joust. He gladly praises Torres, adding only that the idea the Spaniard has suddenly happened on a renaissance is misguided.
    “He has been playing well throughout,” says Eto’o. “The fact is, as all we strikers know, we tend to get judged just on the number of goals. It’s not all about the figures. It’s about how you play for the team, how you help your colleagues, how you work defensively. All that, he’s been doing very well, and the goals come in streaks. They flow for a while, then they go away for a bit.”
    At Newcastle, Torres will probably start, thanks to his performance against Manchester City, and given that Eto’o got the nod for the first XI in midweek in the League Cup.
    Rotation is inevitable  “no one signs a contact saying they will always start,” he says  but the bench is not Eto’o’s natural, long-term habitat, not unless you rewind 15 years, to his nights of teenaged frustration at Real Madrid, when scant opportunities to jump an illustrious queue of forwards left him miffed.
    The drive that would carry him to landmark achievements after that, to a Copa del Rey win with Real Mallorca, to two Champions League titles and three La Ligas at Barça, and a treble at Jose Mourinho’s Inter, has its springboard in the perception he had been undervalued at Madrid.
    It also comes from a stubborn streak, which Eto’o identifies in his own childhood, the subject of a book he has released, in a rare format for the sporting memoir: comic strip. It is illustrated by his talented compatriot Joëlle Esso, who he sought out because his own children grew up enjoying her work.
    There are to be nine volumes, eventually, the first having concluded when the schoolboy Eto’o returns to Cameroon from Paris, where he had absconded from a junior football tour but had been denied the chance to sign for a French club because he had no residence permit. He touches down in Douala, his home town, ready to redouble his efforts to make a career at the top of the game.
    “I stick at things, will always push myself hard, and little by little I’ll get to where I want to be,” says Eto’o. His first weeks at Chelsea exemplified that. “It can be complicated when you join after the season has begun, because your colleagues have already started implementing the manager’s ideas. I had to adapt to a new country, and a new league.”
    The manager, of course, was familiar, the mutual admiration between Mourinho and Eto’o remains potent. If some senior Chelsea players, like Mourinho himself, see a distinct version of the Portuguese from his 2004 to 2007 Chelsea stint, so does Eto’o, though for different reasons: in the heat of several poisonous Chelsea v

  • Joel Obi vows to revive career at Parma

    Joel Obi vows to revive career at Parma

    Joel Obi said he hopes to use his loan move to Parma to relaunch his once promising career and make a return to the Super Eagles.

    Obi, whose career has been hampered by recurring injuries, said he hopes to get more playing time and do well with Parma.

    “Moving to Parma is a good move for me. This will give me chance to play regular football. They actually wanted a permanent deal, but we settled for a loan deal,” MTNFootball.com quoted the Super Eagles midfielder as saying in a chat with Brila FM.

    “I will prove my worth and use my move to Parma to get back to the Eagles. I have not played for a year due to the injury. I am happy with the deal.”

    The left-sided midfielder last featured for Nigeria in November 2011, same year he made his debut against Sierra Leone in Lagos.

    He has not enjoyed regular first-team football action since his return from a long injury lay off.

    He joined Inter Milan in 2010 and has played 38 matches with a goal credited to him.