List of Inter Milan managers

Football Club Internazionale Milano is an Italian association football club based in Milan, Lombardy. The club was formed on 9 March 1908 to allow the foreign players to play in Italy.[1] Inter played its first competitive match on 10 January 1910 against their cross-town rivals Milan, in which they lost 3–2.[2] The club won its very first title in 1910 – the 1909–10 Italian Football Championship. In total, the club has won 18 league titles along with seven Coppa Italia and five Supercoppa Italiana. They have also been crowned champions of Europe on three occasions by winning two European Cups back-to-back in 1964 and 1965 and then another in 2010. The club experienced the most successful period in their history from 2006 to 2010, in which it won five successive league titles, equaling the all-time record at that time,[3] by adding three Italian Cups, three Italian Supercups, one UEFA Champions League and one FIFA Club World Cup. During the 2009–10 season, Inter under José Mourinho become the first and only Italian team to win the Treble and the second team to win five trophies in a calendar year.

Helenio Herrera and Roberto Mancini are the most successful managers in terms of number of trophies won. Helenio Herrera won three Serie A titles, two European Cups and two Intercontinental Cups. Herrera is also the club's longest-serving manager with nine seasons, eight of which were consecutive. Roberto Mancini won three Serie A titles, two Coppa Italia and two Supercoppa Italiana.

List of managers

 
Name Nationality Years
Virgilio Fossati 1909–1915
Nino Resegotti
Francesco Mauro
1919–1920
Bob Spottiswood 1922–1924
Paolo Schiedler 1924–1926
Árpád Weisz 1926–1928
József Viola 1928–1929
Árpád Weisz 1929–1931
István Tóth 1931–1932
Árpád Weisz 1932–1934
Gyula Feldmann 1934–1936
Albino Carraro 1936
Armando Castellazzi 1936–1938
Tony Cargnelli 1938–1940
Giuseppe Peruchetti
|Italo Zamberletti
1940-1941
Ivo Fiorentini 1941–1942
Giovanni Ferrari 1942–1943
Carlo Carcano 1945–1946
Nino Nutrizio 1946
Giuseppe Meazza 1947–1948
Carlo Carcano 1948
Dai Astley 1948
Giulio Cappelli 1949–1950
Aldo Olivieri 1950–1952
Alfredo Foni 1952–1955
Aldo Campatelli 1955
Giuseppe Meazza 1955–1956
Annibale Frossi 1956
Luigi Ferrero 1957
Giuseppe Meazza 1957
Jesse Carver 1957–1958
Giuseppe Bigogno 1958
Aldo Campatelli 1959–1960
Camillo Achilli 1960
Giulio Cappelli 1960
Helenio Herrera 1960–1968
Alfredo Foni 1968–1969
Heriberto Herrera 1969–1971
Giovanni Invernizzi 1971–1973
Enea Masiero 1973
Helenio Herrera 1973
Enea Masiero 1974
 
Name Nationality Years
Luis Suárez 1974–1975
Giuseppe Chiappella 1976–1977
Eugenio Bersellini 1977–1982
Rino Marchesi 1982–1983
Luigi Radice 1983–1984
Ilario Castagner 1984–1986
Mario Corso 1986
Giovanni Trapattoni 1986–1991
Corrado Orrico 1991
Luis Suárez 1992
Osvaldo Bagnoli 1992–1994
Giampiero Marini 1994
Ottavio Bianchi 1994–1995
Luis Suárez 1995
Roy Hodgson 1995–1997
Luciano Castellini 1997
Luigi Simoni 1997–1998
Mircea Lucescu 1998–1999
Luciano Castellini 1999
Roy Hodgson 1999
Marcello Lippi 1999–2000
Marco Tardelli 2000–2001
Héctor Cúper 2001–2003
Corrado Verdelli 2003
Alberto Zaccheroni 2003–2004
Roberto Mancini 2004–2008
José Mourinho 2008–2010
Rafael Benítez 2010
Leonardo 2010–2011
Gian Piero Gasperini 2011
Claudio Ranieri 2011–2012
Andrea Stramaccioni 2012–2013
Walter Mazzarri 2013–2014
Roberto Mancini 2014–2016
Frank de Boer 2016
Stefano Vecchi 2016
Stefano Pioli 2016–2017
Stefano Vecchi 2017
Luciano Spalletti 2017–2019
Antonio Conte 2019–

Statistics

Árpád Weisz, who was later killed at Auschwitz
Giovanni Trapattoni won three trophies with Inter.
Roberto Mancini won three consecutive Serie A titles with Inter in 2006, 2007 and 2008.
José Mourinho, winner of the first Treble in Italian history in the 2009–10 season.
Antonio Conte is the current manager.
As of 10 August 2020
Name Nationality Seasons Matches Wins Draws Losses Win %
Camillo Achilli  Italy 1 30 11 10 9 36.66%
Dai Astley  England 1 25 12 8 5 48.00%
Osvaldo Bagnoli  Italy 2 74 36 24 14 48.64%
Rafael Benítez  Spain 1 25 12 6 7 48.00%
Eugenio Bersellini  Italy 5 207 92 80 35 44.44%
Ottavio Bianchi  Italy 2 48 21 12 15 43.75%
Giuseppe Bigogno  Italy 1 27 16 6 5 59.25%
Aldo Campatelli  Italy 3 53 26 11 16 49.05%
Giulio Cappelli  Italy 3 59 35 14 10 59.32%
Carlo Carcano  Italy 3 74 31 16 27 41.89%
Tony Cargnelli  Austria 2 69 40 14 15 57.97%
Albino Carraro  Italy 1 21 13 5 3 61.90%
Jesse Carver  England 1 40 13 13 14 32.50%
Ilario Castagner  Italy 2 70 37 20 13 52.85%
Armando Castellazzi  Italy 2 72 33 23 16 45.83%
Luciano Castellini  Italy 2 6 2 2 2 33.33%
Giuseppe Chiappella  Italy 2 83 38 27 18 45.78%
Antonio Conte  Italy 1 52 32 12 8 61.54%
Mario Corso  Italy 1 30 13 7 10 43.33%
Hector Cuper  Argentina 3 110 57 31 22 51.81%
Frank De Boer  Netherlands 1 14 5 2 7 35.71%
Gyula Feldmann  Hungary 2 59 28 20 11 47.45%
Giovanni Ferrari  Italy 1 31 15 4 12 48.38%
Luigi Ferrero  Italy 1 23 8 11 4 34.78%
Ivo Fiorentini  Italy 1 31 7 12 12 22.58%
Alfredo Foni  Italy 4 135 66 41 28 48.88%
Virgilio Fossati  Italy 6 110 69 9 32 62.72%
Annibale Frossi  Italy 1 23 8 11 4 34.78%
Gian Piero Gasperini  Italy 1 5 0 1 4 0.00%
Heriberto Herrera  Paraguay 2 56 27 15 14 48.21%
Helenio Herrera  Argentina 9 366 205 93 68 56.01%
Roy Hodgson  England 3 89 40 26 23 44.94%
Giovanni Invernizzi  Italy 3 100 54 26 20 54.00%
Leonardo  Brazil 1 32 22 3 7 68.75%
Marcello Lippi  Italy 2 50 25 11 14 50.00%
Mircea Lucescu  Romania 1 22 7 5 10 31.81%
Roberto Mancini  Italy 6 303 176 78 49 58.08%
Rino Marchesi  Italy 1 47 20 17 10 42.55%
Giampiero Marini  Italy 1 18 6 2 10 33.33%
Enea Masiero  Italy 2 32 15 9 8 46.87%
Francesco Mauro  Italy 1 23 17 5 1 73.91%
Walter Mazzarri  Italy 2 58 25 21 12 43.10%
Giuseppe Meazza  Italy 4 82 37 15 30 45.12%
José Mourinho  Portugal 2 108 68 25 15 62.96%
Nino Nutrizio  Italy 1 19 10 3 6 52.63%
Aldo Olivieri  Italy 2 76 48 13 15 63.15%
Corrado Orrico  Italy 1 23 8 11 4 34.78%
Giuseppe Peruchetti  Italy 1 31 14 7 10 45.16%
Stefano Pioli  Italy 1 27 14 3 10 51.85%
Luigi Radice  Italy 1 41 16 13 12 39.02%
Claudio Ranieri  Italy 1 35 17 5 13 48.57%
Nino Resegotti  Italy 1 23 17 5 1 73.91%
Paolo Schiedler  Italy 2 44 22 6 16 50.00%
Luigi Simoni  Italy 2 73 45 12 16 61.64%
Luciano Spalletti  Italy 2 90 45 26 19 50.00%
Bob Spottiswood  England 2 47 21 11 15 44.68%
Andrea Stramaccioni  Italy 2 65 31 11 23 47.69%
Luis Suárez  Spain 3 76 31 24 21 40.78%
Marco Tardelli  Italy 1 40 15 13 12 37.50%
Istvan Toth  Hungary 1 34 15 8 11 44.11%
Giovanni Trapattoni  Italy 5 230 126 59 45 54.78%
Stefano Vecchi  Italy 1 5 3 0 2 60.00%
Corrado Verdelli  Italy 1 1 0 0 1 0.00%
József Viola  Hungary 1 25 12 3 10 48.00%
Árpád Weisz  Hungary 6 212 110 47 55 51.88%
Alberto Zaccheroni  Italy 1 43 18 14 11 41.86%
Italo Zamberletti  Italy 1 31 14 7 10 45.16%

Trophies

No. Name SA CI SCI UCL EL IC FCWC Total
1 Helenio Herrera3227
Roberto Mancini322
3 José Mourinho21115
4 Eugenio Bersellini123
Giovanni Trapattoni111
6 Tony Cargnelli112
Alfredo Foni2
Rafael Benítez11
9 Armando Castellazzi11
Virgilio Fossati1
Giovanni Invernizzi1
Leonardo1
Gianpiero Marini1
Francesco Mauro1[4]
Nino Resegotti1[4]
Luigi Simoni1
Árpád Weisz1
gollark: https://github.com/jgamblin/Mirai-Source-Code
gollark: I passed it on to someone else, and they said it looked like a variant on the "mirai" botnet thing, which was open-sourced by its creators a few years back.
gollark: Those are some of the random strings in it, I don't know if it uses them at all.
gollark: Here's the script it tries to run.
gollark: However, I *did* run `strings` over them, and they contain what looks like obfuscated data of some sort, HTTP request text which seems to be for spreading the exploit to other stuff, and also seemingly random spammy strings which look like edgy teenagers added them.

References

  1. "Something special? Commemorative 105 patch". Inter.it. 10 March 2013. Archived from the original on 25 June 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  2. "La storia dell'Internazionale". www.enciclopediadelcalcio.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 25 June 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  3. "18° Scudetto: tutti i record dell'Inter". Inter.it (in Italian). 17 May 2010. Archived from the original on 25 June 2017. Retrieved 25 June 2017.
  4. Shared title
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