Tag: Mancini

  • Mancini to be sued dumping Italy for Saudi job

    Mancini to be sued dumping Italy for Saudi job

    President Gabriele Gravina has revealed the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) is considering suing former Italy coach Roberto Mancini.

    Mancini quit the helm of the Azzurri in August and shortly after it was announced he was taking over the Saudi Arabia national team in a big-money deal.

    Gravina said that a meeting of the FIGC’s federal council had decided to seek legal advice about a possible lawsuit to claim damages.

    Last month it was reported in Italy that his contract until 2027 is worth £21.5million after tax per year.

    He resigned from his role with the Azzurri on August 13, ending a five-year spell in which Italy won Euro 2020 but missed out on qualification for the 2022 World Cup.

    Read Also: Mancini eyes Asian Cup with Saudi Arabia

    Herve Renard stepped down as Saudi Arabia’s coach in March.

    Mancini’s first match in charge of the Saudi team ended in a 3-1 friendly defeat by Costa Rica at St James’ Park.

    He was later prevented from conducting his usual post-match press duties after Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Sport imposed a media blackout.

    Typically, a manager will address both the written and broadcast media after every match regardless of the result, with only exceedingly rare exceptions made.

    As a result of the blackout being imposed, Mancini was barred from discussing the loss on Tyneside. Newcastle United were not involved in the decision.

    Indeed, the silence was instead ordered by the Saudi government, Sky Sports claim.

    Luciano Spalletti, who led Napoli to their first Serie A title in 33 years last season, has replaced Mancini as Italy boss.

  • Mancini eyes Asian Cup with Saudi Arabia

    Mancini eyes Asian Cup with Saudi Arabia

    Roberto Mancini said he hoped to lead Saudi Arabia to Asian Cup victory within months as he signed a multi-million dollar deal, just a fortnight after quitting as Italy coach.

    The former Inter Milan and Manchester City boss held up a green shirt that read “Mancini 2027” after inking a contract to stay with the Green Falcons beyond the next World Cup.

    Mancini, who has insisted that the oil-rich monarchy had “nothing to do” with his shock Italy exit, was reportedly offered more than $25 million to join the big-spending Saudis.

    Read Also; Manchester United rally from two goals down to beat 10-man forest

     “I’m not a magician,” said the Italian, when asked what he could promise the Saudi people – before pledging to go for Asian Cup glory in January-February in Qatar.

     “Our target is to try to win the Asian Cup after 27 years,” he said.

     “We have four months. We have four friendly matches. We have two games for the World Cup (qualifiers) and after we have 20 days to prepare for the Asian Cup.

     “We know that there are many top teams like Japan, like Australia, like (South) Korea. But I’m sure that we’ll go there and we’ll try to win.”

    Mancini, 58, is the latest high-profile acquisition for the world’s top oil exporter which has snapped up some of football’s biggest players in a spree costing hundreds of millions of dollars.

    He arrived in Riyadh just days after Brazilian superstar Neymar was presented to fans in the capital, joining Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and a host of others in the Saudi Pro League.

    Building a credible national team is seen as a major plank of the Saudi football transformation, which is part of ambitious plans to reshape the oil-reliant economy and burnish the ultra-conservative country’s image.

    The Saudis lie 54th  in the world rankings, way below some of their Asian Football Confederation peers. The Saudi women’s team, which played its first games only last year, is 172nd out of 186 teams.

    The Green Falcons, who upset eventual winners Argentina in the group stage at last year’s World Cup, have been without a coach since March, when Herve Renard left to take charge of France’s women’s team.

    Mancini’s resignation from the Italy job came as a major shock, as earlier this month he had been handed responsibility for the country’s Under-21 and Under-20 teams.

    Mancini, who was replaced by former Napoli coach Luciano Spalletti, had a mixed time in his five years with Italy, despite victory at Euro 2020 which seemed to revitalise a troubled football nation.

    But the Azzurri then failed to qualify for last year’s World Cup following a disastrous play-off defeat to North Macedonia, the second straight time they missed the world’s biggest football tournament.

    Mancini won the 1991 Serie A title and four Italian Cups with long-time club Sampdoria, where he starred in attack alongside the recently deceased Gianluca Vialli.

    Once becoming a coach he won three more “Scudetti” at Inter Milan – one assigned to the club in the aftermath of the “Calciopoli” match-fixing scandal – and then lifted the Premier League trophy with Emirati-owned Manchester City in 2012.

    His first match will be a friendly against Costa Rica on September 8 at St James’ Park, home of Newcastle United who, like the four top-spending Saudi clubs, are also owned by Saudi sovereign wealth vehicle the Public Investment Fund.

    Saudi Arabia will also play a friendly against South Korea will be held in Newcastle on September 12.

  • Mancini to be unveiled as Saudi Arabia coach

    Mancini to be unveiled as Saudi Arabia coach

    Just weeks after resigning from the Italy role, Roberto Mancini is set to be announced as the new coach of the Saudi Arabia national team, earning €25m net per year.

    The Saudi authorities have called a press conference in a hotel today at 14.00 GMT).

    He is expected to sign a four-year contract to 2027, which according to La Gazzetta dello Sport will earn him circa €25m per year with no taxes.

    Read Also:21 players to make Saudi Arabia Pro League move

    Saudi Arabia will host the Asian Cup in January 2027, a tournament they have not won since 1996.

    The CT sensationally quit the Azzurri on August 13, which in turn was just nine days after he had been named co-ordinator of the Italy Under-21 and Under-20 teams too.

    Although he insisted that the offer from Saudi Arabia had nothing to do with his decision, there have been reports on Sportitalia that negotiations started over a month ago.

    His debut will be in England, when the Green Falcons face Costa Rica in a friendly at Newcastle’s St. James Park on September 8, then the same venue against South Korea on September 12.

    Mancini was replaced on the Italy bench by Luciano Spalletti.

  • Zenit appoint Italian coach Mancini

    Russian Premier League side Zenit St Petersburg on Thursday appointed Italian Roberto Mancini as manager in their quest to claw their way back after a third-place league finish.

    “Zenit football club welcomes Roberto Mancini to Saint Petersburg and wishes him success as manager of the white-and-blues,” the club wrote on its website.

    Zenit have signed a three-year deal with the 52-year-old coach, who won three consecutive Italian Serie A titles with Inter Milan in 2006-08 and led Manchester City to the English Premier League title in 2012.

    The club said the agreement includes the option of an extension for two more years.

    No financial details of the deal were disclosed but rumours have swirled in the Russian press that Mancini will pocket around five million euros a year as Zenit manager.

    The Saint Petersburg outfit, backed by state-owned gas giant Gazprom, sacked Romanian coach Mircea Lucescu last week after a disappointing third-place league finish saw them miss out on Champions League football next season.

    AFP

  • Mancini hoping for resurgence

    Mancini hoping for resurgence

    Inter Milan coach Roberto Mancini hopes Sunday’s 3-0 home triumph over Palermo will be a turning point in their season.

    Inter Milan coach Roberto Mancini hopes Sunday’s 3-0 home triumph over Palermo will be a turning point in their season.

    The Nerazzurri had won just one of their previous six league games heading into the encounter at the San Siro.

    The victory halted a three-match losing run for Inter and lifted them to ninth in the Serie A table.

    “We hope the patient (Inter) has finally healed,” Mancini told his club’s official website. “But we must continue to train hard.

    “We played a great game against Palermo and things are starting to turn for the better for us.”

    Inter had lost their previous two league games, a 1-0 defeat to Torino followed by a 3-1 loss at Sassuolo, to pile the pressure on Mancini, who replaced the sacked Walter Mazzarri in November.

    “It’s clear that when you win, things seem different,” Mancini said. “But the fact is that we had done well in other games before this one.

    “The only difference is that we won against Palermo.

    “I believe in recent weeks we have done better than our results suggested and I’m sorry for my players because I really have seen them work hard in training.

    “We still have to improve.”

    Inter are 13 points adrift of third-place Napoli, who hold the last Champions League qualifying spot.

    The Nerazzurri travel to Bergamo on Sunday to face Atalanta, before taking on Celtic in Glasgow in the Europa League last 32 first leg on February 19.

  • Mancini seeks Richards reunion

    Mancini seeks Richards reunion

    Inter Milan have started talks with Fiorentina about a potential deal for Micah Richards.

    The 26-year-old is on loan from Manchester City and played for the Premier League champions in the Community Shield against Arsenal.

    The Italians have been checking to see if this will count as a competitive match, so it potentially could scupper the deal under FIFA’s three club rule.

    Richards was a 76th minute substitute in that game, replacing Antonio Kolarov.

    Inter are languishing in tenth in Serie A under manager Roberto Mancini, who returned for his second tenure as manager in November.

    And Mancini knows all about Richards’ capabilities having managed him at Manchester City.

    The defender has impressed during his 11 appearances for La Viola.

  • ‘Balotelli must grow up if I get Italy job’ —Mancini

    ‘Balotelli must grow up if I get Italy job’ —Mancini

    Roberto Mancini says he “loves” Mario Balotelli but admitted he must “grow up” after revealing his desire to become Italy boss.

    Mancini left his post at Galatasaray at the end of the season, after guiding the club to a second-place finish in his sole campaign at the helm of the Super Lig outfit.

    Despite signing a two-year contract extension ahead of the World Cup, Italy’s first-round exit prompted Cesare Prandelli to depart as national team boss, and he has since taken up the role vacated by Mancini in Istanbul.

    That move has paved the way for Mancini to take over as Italy head coach, and the former Manchester City and Inter boss would be humbled to be offered the job.

    “Italy would be an honour for me,” he told Corriere dello Sport. “No one called me but I would be proud.[The] FIGC [Italian Football Association] need serious and competent men.”

    He added: “The national team were too old? The age does not matter.

    “I love [Mario] Balotelli, but he must grow up. With [Marco] Verratti and [Ciro] Immobile, the team can be reconstructed.”

    Mancini worked with Balotelli during spells as Inter and Manchester City boss, but on both occasions the pair became embroiled in heated disputes over the striker’s disciplinary issues.