From 1987 until 1992, Ancelotti played for Milan, and was a key part of the squad that won the Serie 🍐 A title in 1988, consecutive European Cups in 1989 and 1990, two European Super Cups, two Intercontinental Cups and a 🍐 Supercoppa Italiana under manager Arrigo Sacchi.[13] During this time, Milan, under the financial backing of club president Silvio Berlusconi, featured 🍐 players such as Paolo Maldini, Franco Baresi, Mauro Tassotti and Alessandro Costacurta as defenders; Frank Rijkaard, Ruud Gullit and Roberto 🍐 Donadoni as midfielders; and Marco van Basten upfront.[14] One of Ancelotti's most memorable moments with Milan was when he received 🍐 a pass from Ruud Gullit, dribbled around two Real Madrid players and netted a powerful long-range shot during the Rossoneri's 🍐 5–0 thrashing of Real Madrid in the 1989 European Cup semi-finals.[18] He went on to play all 90 minutes in 🍐 Milan's 4–0 win over Steaua București in the final.[19]
On 25 June 2013, Ancelotti became the manager of Real Madrid, replacing 🍐 the departing José Mourinho, and signing a three-year contract.[111][112] He was introduced at a press conference at the Santiago Bernabéu, 🍐 where it was also announced that Zinedine Zidane and Paul Clement would be his assistant coaches. Shortly following his arrival, 🍐 Real Madrid confirmed the signing of Isco for a fee of €24 million, which was followed by the signing of 🍐 Asier Illarramendi for €32 million. Argentinean striker Gonzalo Higuaín left the club for €40 million to Napoli. This, along with 🍐 the sale of Mesut Özil to Arsenal, paved the way for Gareth Bale's signing from Tottenham Hotspur for then-world record 🍐 fee of £86 million (€105M).[113] In Ancelotti's first league game in charge, on 18 August 2013, Real Madrid started the 🍐 season by winning 2–1 at home against Real Betis.[114] Ancelotti eventually deviated from the 4–2–3–1 formation that had been deployed 🍐 by his predecessor José Mourinho, switching instead to a 4–3–3 formation to great effect, in which Argentine winger Ángel Di 🍐 María particularly excelled as a left-sided central midfielder, and played a key role in the club's successes.[115]
Style of management and 🍐 reception [ edit ]
Moving to Chelsea, in the 2009–10 season Ancelotti continued with the 4–4–2 diamond formation used previously at 🍐 Milan, often with Michael Essien or Mikel John Obi in the defensive role, Michael Ballack or Frank Lampard as box 🍐 to box midfielders and Deco in a creative role, with full-backs Ashley Cole and José Bosingwa pushing forward and providing 🍐 width to the narrow midfield. Later in the season the Africa Cup of Nations left Chelsea without strikers Salomon Kalou 🍐 or Didier Drogba (as well as midfielders Essien and Mikel) and harder to play with a 4–4–2, so Ancelotti switched 🍐 to the 4–3–2–1 "Christmas Tree" formation he had also used at Milan, using Joe Cole and Florent Malouda to support 🍐 lone striker Nicolas Anelka. He also used the 4–2–3–1 and 4–3–3 to be less predictable and better use creative players 🍐 like Lampard and Malouda.[198][199][200]
Manager [ edit ]
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With Lazio's Italian ⭕️ Cup triumph last Wednesday evening, Lazio now have 15 club titles: 2 Serie A wins, 7 Italian Cup wins, 4 ⭕️ Italian Super Cup and one UEFA Super Cup. In addition to that, Lazio won the final edition of the UEFA ⭕️ Cup Winners Cup in 1999.