Serie A coaching shuffle gives Ancelotti’s Napoli hope of toppling Juventus

Inter Milan, being remodelled by Antonio Conte, and Paulo Fonseca's AS Roma remain outside contenders to break Junvetus' hold on the Serie A title.

Published : Aug 21, 2019 16:43 IST , MILAN

Napoli head coach Carlo Ancelotti
Napoli head coach Carlo Ancelotti
lightbox-info

Napoli head coach Carlo Ancelotti

As the sole survivor of a coaching shuffle among the leading challengers, Carlo Ancelotti could have the best chance to end Napoli’s 30-year wait for the Serie A title.

Yet Antonio Conte’s arrival at Inter Milan has also raised expectations of an end to Juventus’s long domination in the season that kicks off on Saturday.

Serie A runner-up Napoli has not held the Scudetto aloft since Argentine legend Diego Maradona inspired it to its only titles in 1987 and 1990.

Ancelotti’s campaign begins in Fiorentina on Saturday, after Juventus, now coached by Maurizio Sarri, opens its quest for a ninth consecutive title in Parma.

Chinese-owned Inter Milan has also changed coaches with former Juventus and Chelsea boss Conte back home in Italy. Marco Giampaolo takes over at AC Milan and Paulo Fonseca at Roma.

Sarri came close two years ago when he guided Napoli to runner-up spot, just four points behind Juventus, before moving to Chelsea.

At 60, Sarri returns to Italy to coach Juventus as the champion looks for a new direction despite five trophy-laden seasons under Massimiliano Allegri. The decision by Napoli-native Sarri to move north has hurt in his home town.

“For us Neapolitans, that was a betrayal,” said captain Lorenzo Insigne. “Now we have to try to beat him at all costs.”

Ancelotti embarks on the second year of his three-year contract, and wants silverware this campaign. The 60-year-old has won titles in Europe’s five biggest leagues. His Serie A title came with AC Milan back in 2004.

He arrived in Naples boasting three Champions League trophies from his spells with Milan and Real Madrid, and a Premier League title from his two-year tenure at Chelsea.

The veteran coach insists he has learned from his “transitional” first season. “We drew back the arrow, now we are ready to fire,” he warned.

Ancelotti has bolstered in all areas with the arrival of defender Kostas Manolas, midfielder Elif Elmas and winger Hirving Lozano.

New-look Inter

Inter is being remodelled by former Italy boss Conte, who won three Serie A titles in a row with Juventus from 2012 to 2014, and the Premier League with Chelsea in 2017.

Belgian forward Romelu Lukaku joins from Manchester United with young midfielders Stefano Sensi and Nicolo Barella arriving in the San Siro. Uncertainly remains however over the future of Argentine forward Mauro Icardi amid reported interest from Napoli.

Inter last won the title in 2010 under Jose Mourinho, and opens at home against newly-promoted Lecce on Saturday.

But even amid uncertainty over how Sarri, who could miss the Parma opener with pneumonia, will adapt to life at Juventus, the Cristiano Ronaldo-powered champion remains favourite.

Juventus has spent big with newly-signed Dutch defender Matthijs De Ligt and Turkey’s Merih Demiral. The midfield has been strengthened with PSG’s Adrien Rabiot and former Arsenal star Aaron Ramsey.

Giampaolo takes over at AC Milan who missed out on Champions League qualification.

The only non-Italian involved in this game of musical coaching benches, is Fonseca, working for the first time in Italy at Roma, who finished sixth last season.

Gian Piero Gasperini remains at Atalanta after leading the unheralded team to a Champions League berth with a third-place finish just ahead of Inter on goal difference.

The side from Bergamo opens against SPAL.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment