Roberto Mancini, Claudio Ranieri and more: Stefano Pioli is ninth Inter Milan boss to lose his job since Jose Mourinho’s Treble
INTER MILAN are still trying to find a replacement for Jose Mourinho.
Stefano Pioli was the ninth boss to lose his job at the San Siro giants since the ‘Special One’ left for Real Madrid in 2010.
Mourinho spent just two seasons at Inter, but left an unforgettable mark — winning the Treble in his final campaign.
Keep up to date with ALL the Inter Milan news, gossip and transfers on our club page
Since then, Inter have chopped and changed managers on a regular basis.
Here is ever manager since the current Manchester United boss, with some familiar names in there.
most read in football
Rafa Benitez, 2010
While Mourinho was winning the Treble his arch-nemesis —well, one of them — was facing the chop at Liverpool.
Just five years after winning the Champions League and season after near winning the Premier League, Benitez was out the door following a disastrous campaign which culminated in seventh place finish.
And the difference showed.
Inter had won the past five titles but were 13 points adrift when they beat TP Mazembe to win the Fifa World Club Cup.
In the immediate aftermath of the victory, Benitez demanded backing the transfer market — but was instead shown the door.
Won the Championship this season with Newcastle.
Leonardo, 2010-11
The former AC Milan player and Rossoneri boss was an unpopular appointment.
Amazingly, the Milanese clubs are the only teams the Brazilian has managed in his career.
He memorably back from defeat in the first leg to beat Bayern Munich in the Champions League — while he also won the Italian Cup.
Leonardo guided the club to 2nd place as he recovered impressively from the Benitez debacle.
Gian Piero Gasperini, 2011
A brief but dreadful appointment.
Gasperini was in charge for just three months and was sacked after a winless run which included four defeats.
His highlights include a debut loss to Milan in the Italian Super Cup, defeats against managerless Palermo and Serie A newcomers, Novara, as well as Champions League humbling at home to Trabzonspor.
Gasperini is now showing just what Inter are missing as he has led unfashionable Atalanta into a genuine fight for a place at Europe's top table.
Claudio Ranieri, 2011-12
He was Serie A's go-to man.
Ranieri was the equivalent of Sam Allardyce — and Inter were the 13th side he managed, including Juventus and Roma.
He won Milan derby and led the club the Champions League last-16, where they disappointingly bowed out to Marseille.
However, he failed to last the entire season and was sacked in March after two wins in 13.
But he’s recovered well, it seems.
Andrea Stramaccioni, 2012-13
The Roman was the Inter youth coach, and sat in the big chair at the tender age of 36.
Stramaccioni endeared himself to the Nerazzurri faithful with a derby victory which cost the Rossoneri the title.
Inter looked to have turned a corner when they beat Juventus 3-1 in Turin to end the champions’ 49-match unbeaten run.
However, he led the club to a disappointing ninth-place and was shown the door.
Now at Panathinaikos.
Walter Mazzarri, 2013-14
Worked wonders with Napoli, who he had transformed into a force both in Italy and in Europe.
He won the Coppa Italia and had led the club to runners-up spot in his final season.
Moving to Inter actually looked like a step down at the time — and yet he seriously struggled.
Mazzarri’s popularity was underlined when he kept Javier Zanetti on the bench for the Inter legend’s final Milan derby.
He was sacked at the beginning of the following season with the club in ninth.
Roberto Mancini, 2014-16
The Premier League-winner was Inter boss before Mourinho — and re-hired six years after being sacked.
And actually led the club to the top of the table at Christmas last season.
However, a dreadful second half to the campaign saw the club finish fourth.
Constant disagreements with the owners led to Mancini leaving after a long stand-off in the summer.
Frank De Boer, 2016
He was expected to eventually return the club to its glory days.
De Boer was a long-term appointment and was backed with heavy spending in the summer.
However, seven defeats in 14 games spelt the end.
His relationship with his players deteriorated to the extent that striker Eder snubbed his offer of a handshake as he was substituted against Sampdoria.
Stefano Pioli, 2016-17
Steered the ship well after the disastrous start to the season under De Boer.
Pioli led Inter to victory over Southampton in his first match in charge before winning 11 of the next 14 league games.
But a horror run of just one point in their last six — and that was after blowing a 2-0 lead against AC Milan — saw him sacked with three games left to play.