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Inzaghi eyeing Champions League glory and legend status at Inter Milan



Simone Inzaghi reacts during match. —AFP/File
Simone Inzaghi reacts during match. —AFP/File

MILAN: Simone Inzaghi is on the verge of becoming a true Inter Milan great as he leads his team to the Champions League final with another chance for an era-defining triumph to make up for the pain of conceding the Serie A title to Napoli.

Inter have become one of Europe’s top teams under Inzaghi and reaching the final of the continent’s leading club competition for the second time in three seasons is a testament to the impressive job he has done since taking charge in 2021.

The 48-year-old has had to navigate off-field turbulence and serious financial problems which have left Inter with a transfer budget which is a fraction of the what nouveau riche clubs like Saturday’s opponents Paris Saint-Germain have at their disposal.

But he will contest this weekend’s showdown with Qatari-backed PSG with potentially a better chance of winning the Champions League than he did in Istanbul in 2023, when Inter were narrowly beaten by possibly Pep Guardiola’s best-ever Manchester City team.

Last season’s league title, the first of Inzaghi’s coaching career, was immediately followed by an enforced takeover by US investment firm Oaktree after previous owners, China’s Suning, failed to repay a debt worth around 395 million euros ($448 million).

And there was little in the way of summer investment for an ageing team which features veterans like 37-year-old Francesco Acerbi and Henrikh Mkhitaryan, who is one year Acerbi’s junior.

Piotr Zielinski and Mehdi Taremi were both free transfers, second-choice goalkeeper Josep Martinez cost around 13 million euros, and January signing Nicola Zalewski came on loan from Roma.

None of those four have become first picks for Inzaghi with Taremi netting twice all season, both goals being late penalties in 4-0 wins over Red Star Belgrade and Lecce.

The lack of quality beyond the first XI, particularly in attack, and a gruelling Champions League campaign has taken its toll on Inter.

The biggest prize in club football would sit pride of place among the honours already won by Inzaghi at Inter — one Serie A title, three Italian Cups and three Italian Super Cups.

Inzaghi had a lower-key playing career than his elder sibling Filippo, who was a prolific goalscorer for AC Milan and Juventus, a two-time European champion and World Cup winner.


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