|
INTER MILAN
|
|
|
| Full name |
Football Club Internazionale Milano SpA |
| Nickname(s) |
Nerazzurri (the
Black-Blues)
La Beneamata (the Cherished)
Il Biscione (the Big Grass Snake) |
| Founded |
9 March 1908 |
| Ground |
Stadio Giuseppe Meazza,
Milan, Italy
(Capacity: 82,955) |
| Chairman |
Massimo Moratti |
| Head Coach |
José Mourinho |
| League |
Serie A |
| 2007-08 |
Serie A, 1st |
Inter Milan
Fixtures
Will appear here when released
- Fixtures
- In
the Last 225 Euromillions Draws E-Lottery Members Have Won
- History
- La
Grande Inter
- Dark
times
- Resurrection
- Squad
- Presidential
history
- Managerial
history
- Colours,
badge and nicknames
- Supporters
and rivalries
- Honours
Inter Milan's NEW Kit Will appear Here when
Released
Football Club Internazionale Milano,
commonly referred to as simply Internazionale, Inter
or Inter Milan, is an Italian professional football club based in
Milan,
Lombardy, founded in 1908. The club are the only side in Italian football to have
spent their entire history in the top tier (Serie A). Internazionale,
who play in black and blue striped shirts with white shorts (but in the
past, often in black shorts), have sixteen Serie A titles to their
name; only their rivals Juventus and A.C. Milan have won more.
Including the Coppa Italia and the Italian
Super Cup, Inter have a total of 25 trophies won in Italy.
Outside of their homeland, the club have also had
success in European and World tournaments; they won the European Cup in
two successive finals during 1963–64 and 1964–65. They have also won
the UEFA Cup three times and the World Club Championship twice.
Additionally, Inter was one of founding members of the G-14, a group
that formerly represented eighteen of the largest and most prestigious European
football clubs.
Inter play their home games at the Stadio
Giuseppe Meazza,
also known as San Siro. The ground, which they share with rivals AC
Milan, is the largest in Italian football, with a total capacity of
82,955.
History
The club was founded on March 9, 1908 as
Internazionale FBC Milano, following a "schism" from the Milan Cricket
and Football Club (43 members). A group of Italians and Swiss
(Giorgio Muggiani, a painter who also designed the club's logo,
Bossard, Lana, Bertoloni, De Olma, Enrico Hintermann, Arturo
Hintermann, Carlo Hintermann, Pietro Dell'Oro, Hugo and Hans Rietmann,
Voelkel, Maner, Wipf, and Carlo Ardussi) were unhappy about the
domination of Italians in the AC Milan team, and broke away from them,
leading to the creation of Internazionale. From the beginning, the club
was open to foreign players and thus lived up to its founding name. The
club won its very first Scudetto (championship) in
1910 and its second in 1920. The captain and coach of the first Scudetto
was Virgilio Fossati, who was killed in World War I.
In 1922 Inter were in Group B of the Serie A and came in last place
after picking up only 11 points in the season. The last place team of
each group was to be automatically relegated. The second last place
teams were placed in a pre-relegation 'salvation' tournament. Inter and
La Gazzetta dello Sport's editor (Colombo) petitioned the FIGC to allow
Inter to participate in Serie A the following year as a year in Serie B
would have been financially detrimental. The FIGC saved Inter some
weeks prior to the season starting by allowing them to remain in Serie
A in 1923. Venezia,
who had come in 3rd last in Group B ahead of Inter, were relegated in
Inter's place. In 1928, during the Fascist era, the club was forced to
merge with the Milanese Unione Sportiva and was renamed Ambrosiana SS
Milano.
They wore white shirts around this time with a red cross emblazoned on
it. This shirt design was inspired by the flag and coat of arms of the
city of Milan, which in turn is derived from the flag of the patron
saint of Milan, St. Ambrose and dates back to the 4th century AD. The
new upcoming President Oreste Simonotti decided to
change name to A.S. Ambrosiana
in 1929. However, supporters continued to call the team "Inter," and in
1931 new president Pozzani caved to shareholder pressure and changed
the name to AS Ambrosiania-Inter.
Their first Coppa Italia (Italian Cup) was won in
1938-39, led by the great legend Giuseppe Meazza, after whom the San
Siro stadium is officially named, and a fifth league championship
followed in 1940, despite an injury to Meazza. After the end of World
War II the club re-emerged under a name close to their original one,
Internazionale FC Milano, which they have kept ever since.
La
Grande Inter
Following the war, Inter won their sixth
championship in 1953 and
the seventh in 1954. Following these titles, Inter were to embark upon
the best years of their history, affectionately known as the era of La
Grande Inter (The Great Inter). During this period with
Helenio Herrera
as head coach, the club won 3 league championships in 1963, 1965 and
1966. The most famous moments during this decade also include Inter's 2
back-to-back European Cup wins. In 1964, Inter won the first of those
tournaments, playing against the famous Spanish club Real Madrid. The next
season, playing in their home stadium, the San Siro, they defeated
two-time former champions Benfica.
Following the golden era of the 1960s, Inter
managed to win their
eleventh league title in 1971 and their twelfth in 1980. Inter were
defeated for the second time in five years in the final of the European
Cup, going down 0-2 to Johan Cruijff's Ajax
Amsterdam in 1972. During the 1970s and the 1980s, Inter
also added two Coppa Italias to their tally in 1977-78 and 1981-82.
Led by the German duo of Andreas Brehme and Lothar
Matthäus, and Argentine Ramon Diaz, Inter captured the 1989 Serie A
championship. Fellow German Jürgen Klinsmann and the Italian Supercup
were added the following season but to little avail as Inter did not
manage to defend their title.
Dark
times
The 1990s were a period of disappointment. Whilst
their great rivals
AC Milan and Juventus were achieving success both domestically and in
Europe, Inter were left behind, with some mediocre positions in the
standings, their worst finishes being in 1993-94
when they were just 1 point from relegation. Nevertheless, they
achieved some European success with 3 UEFA Cup victories in 1991, 1994
and 1998.
With Massimo Moratti's takeover from Ernesto Pellegrini in 1995 Inter
were promised more success with many high profile signings such as
Ronaldo, Christian Vieri and Hernán Crespo, with Inter twice breaking
the world record transfer fee in this period.[citation needed]
€19.5 million for Ronaldo from FC Barcelona in 1997 and 31 million €
for Christian Vieri from Lazio
in 1999. However the 1990s remained a decade of disappointment and is
the only decade in Inter's history in which they did not win a single
Italian Serie A championship. For Inter fans it was difficult to
identify who in particular might be to blame for these troubled times
and this led to some icy relations between president, managers and even
some individual players.
Inter chairman Massimo Moratti later became a
target for the fans, especially when he sacked much-loved coach Luigi
Simoni
after only a few games into the 1998/99 season, after having just
received the Italian Manager of the Year award for 1998 the day before
Massimo Moratti
decided to end his contract. In the 1998/99 season Inter failed to
qualify for any European competition for the first time in almost 10
years, finishing in a poor eighth place.
In the 1999/00 season, Massimo Moratti made some
major changes, once again with some high-profile signings. A major coup
for Inter was the appointment of former Juventus manager Marcello
Lippi.
Inter were seen by the majority of the fans and press to have finally
put together a winning formula. Other signings included Italian and
French legends Angelo Peruzzi and Laurent Blanc together with other
former Juventus players Christian Vieri and Vladimir Jugovic.
Inter were also seen to have an advantage in this season as they had no
European "distraction". Once again they failed to win the elusive
Scudetto. However they did manage to come close to their first domestic
success since 1989 when they reached the Coppa Italia final only to be
defeated by Lazio allowing them to win the Scudetto
and domestic cup double.
The following season more disaster struck. Inter
impressed in the
Supercoppa Italia match against Lazio and took the lead through new
signing Robbie Keane
– however, they lost 4-3. Overall, though, they were looking good for
the season that was about to start. What followed was another
embarrassment, as they were eliminated in the preliminary round of the
Champions League by Swedish club Helsingborgs IF. Alvaro Recoba
was given the opportunity to draw the sides level with a last-minute
penalty, yet he missed, hitting the post, and Inter found themselves
back at square one as Marcello Lippi, the manager at the time, was
sacked after only a single game of the new season following Inter's
first ever Serie A defeat to Reggina.
Throughout this period, Inter suffered mockery from their neighbours AC
Milan; Milan were having a period of success both domestically and in
Europe. They also seemed to be suffering from a series of non-ending
defeats at the hands of their city rivals, including a 6-0 defeat in
the 2000/01 season. Marco Tardelli,
chosen to replace Lippi, failed to improve results, and is remembered
by Inter fans as the manager that lost this match. Other members of the
Inter squad during this period that suffered were the likes of
Christian Vieri and Fabio Cannavaro, both of whom had their restaurants
in Milan vandalised after defeats against AC Milan.
Inter fans' protests throughout this period ranged
from vandalism to
banners being unfurled in the stadium to protest against certain
players. In some cases fans arranged for the Curva Nord, a section of
the stadium to be empty for entire matches. Inter were in this period
often deemed to be one of the favourites for the championship. This led
to a popular AC Milan
chant against Inter – "Luglio Agosto" (July and August); this was
because during the summer months according to the press Inter had won
the championship before it had even begun, only for them not to realise
their promise.
In 2002, not only did Inter manage to make it to
the Uefa cup
semi-finals, they were also only 45 minutes away from capturing the
Scudetto, when they needed to maintain a one-goal advantage over SS Lazio
at Rome's Olimpico stadium. This was the last match of the season, and
Inter were top of the Serie A table at kick-off. However, a defeat
would see Juventus,
who were second, or even AS Roma,
in third place, take the title from them, should these sides win. As a
result, some SS Lazio
fans were actually openly supporting Inter during this match, as an
Inter victory would prevent their bitter rivals AS Roma from winning
the championship. Inter were 2-1 up after only 24 minutes. SS Lazio
equalised during first half injury time and then scored two more goals
in the second half to clinch victory that eventually saw Juventus win
the championship after their 2-0 victory away to Udinese.
2002/03 saw Inter take a respectable second place
and also managed to make it to the 2003
Champions League semi finals against AC Milan. Although
they drew on aggregate 1-1 with AC Milan, Inter lost on the away goals rule. It was
another disappointment but they were finally on the right track.
However, once again Massimo Moratti's impatience
got the better of him, Hernán Crespo was sold after just one season,
and Hector Cuper
was fired after only a few games. Alberto Zaccheroni stepped in, a
life-long Inter fan but also the man who had been in charge of SS Lazio's
4-2 win over Inter in 2002 - the fans were sceptical. Zaccheroni
brought nothing new to the side, apart from two fantastic wins over Juventus 3-1 in Turin and
3-2 at the San Siro and the season was again nothing special. They were
eliminated from the UEFA Champions League in the first round after
finishing 3rd in the group. Furthermore, they only just managed to
qualify for the Champions League by finishing in 4th place, only a
point ahead of Parma A.C..
Inter's only saving grace in 2003/04 was the arrival of Dejan Stankovic and Adriano
in January 2004, both solid players that filled the gap left by the
departures of Hernán Crespo and Clarence Seedorf.
Resurrection
On June 15, 2005, Inter won the Coppa Italia,
defeating AS Roma in the two-legged final 3-0 on aggregate (1-0 win in
Milan and 2-0 win in Rome) and followed that up on 20 August 2005, by
winning the Supercoppa Italiana
after an extra-time 1-0 victory against original 04-05 Serie A
champions Juventus (before being stripped of this title). This Super
Cup win was Inter's first since 1989, coincidentally the same year
since Inter last won the Scudetto before 2006. On 11 May 2006, Inter
retained their Coppa Italia trophy by once again, defeating AS Roma
with a 4-1 aggregate victory (A 1-1 scoreline in Rome and a 3-1 win at
the Giuseppe Meazza, San Siro).
Inter were awarded the 2005-06 Serie A
championship as they were the
highest placed side in the season's final league table after points
were stripped from Juventus and AC Milan - both sides being involved in
the match fixing scandal that
year. On 14 July 2006, The Italian Federal Appeal
Commission found Serie A clubs Juventus, Lazio, Fiorentina, Reggina and
AC Milan
guilty of match-fixing and punished the 5 clubs involved, although all
charges were later reduced to some extent. As a result, with the
relegation of Juventus Turin to Serie B
(for the first ever time in their history) and the 8-point deduction
for city rivals AC Milan, Inter became favorites to retain their Serie
A title for the upcoming 2006-07 Serie A season.
During the season, Inter went on a record-breaking
run of 17 consecutive victories in Serie A, starting on September 25
2006 with a 4-1 home win over Livorno, and ending on February 28, 2007,
after a 1-1 draw at home to Udinese. The 5-2 away win at Catania on
February 25 2007 broke the original record of 15 matches held by both Bayern Munich & Real Madrid from the "Big
5" (the top flight leagues in England, Italy, Spain, France &
Germany). The run lasted for almost 5 months and is among the best in
European league football, with just Benfica
(29 wins), Celtic (25 wins) and PSV Eindhoven (22 wins) bettering it.
Inter's form dipped a little as they recorded 0-0 and 2-2 draws against
relegation-battlers Reggina and slumping to Palermo
(respectively), the latter game featuring a second-half comeback after
Palermo went up 2-0 at halftime. They could not keep their invincible
form up near the end of the season as well, as they lost their first
game of the domestic season to Roma in the San Siro 3-1 thanks to two
late Roma goals. Inter had enjoyed an unbeaten Serie A run for just
under a year.
On April 22, 2007 Inter were crowned Serie A
champions for the second consecutive season after defeating Siena 2-1
at Stadio Artemio Franchi. Italian World Cup winning defender Marco
Materazzi scored both goals in the 18th and 60th minute, with the
latter being a penalty. Inter started the 2007–08 season
with the goal of winning both Serie A and UEFA Champions League. The
team started well in the league, topping the table from the first round
of matches, and also managed to qualify for the Champions League
knockout stage; however, a late collapse leading to a 2-0 defeat with
10 men away to Liverpool
on February 19 in the Champions League thrwew into question Mancini's
future at Inter, and domestic form took a sharp turn of fortune with
the team failing to win in the three following Serie A games (drawing
with Sampdoria and major league opponents Roma, before losing away to
Napoli,
their first domestic defeat of the season. After being eliminated by
Liverpool in the Champions League, Mancini then announced his intention
to leave his job, only to change his mind the following day.
An improvement in results then gave Inter the
chance to wrap up their scudetto race twice, but a defeat to city
rivals A.C. Milan and a home draw against Siena
catapulted AS Roma to within just 1 point of Inter going into the final
round of the Championship. Inter then managed to win at Parma thanks to
two goals by Swedish striker Zlatan
Ibrahimovic, who had recovered from a knee injury just in
time.
Following this win, the club however decided to sack Mancini on May
29, citing his declarations following the Champions League defeat to
Liverpool as the reason. On June 2 Inter announced on their official
website that they had appointed former Chelsea boss José Mourinho as
new head coach, with Giuseppe Baresi as his assistant. This makes
Mourinho the only foreign coach in Italy for the forthcoming season.
Other
historical information
Inter have never been relegated
from the Italian top flight in their entire history, which dates back
all the way to 1908; a fact Nerazzurri fans hold in high regard. By
comparison, AC Milan have been relegated twice, despite winning one
more scudetto. As of 2007, following Juventus'
relegation to Serie B for the 2006-07 season following the "Calciopoli"
scandal Inter remain the only Italian club that holds this honour, and
its century in the top flight (counting the upcoming season) is one of
the longest unbroken runs of any club in the world.
The current president and owner of Inter is
Massimo Moratti. His father, Angelo Moratti, was the president of Inter
during the club's golden era of the 1960s.
Squad
Players
| No. |
|
Position |
Player |
| 1 |
 |
GK |
Francesco Toldo |
| 2 |
 |
DF |
Iván Córdoba (Vice-captain) |
| 4 |
 |
DF |
Javier Zanetti (Captain) |
| 5 |
 |
MF |
Dejan Stanković |
| 6 |
 |
MF |
Maxwell |
| 7 |
 |
MF |
Luís Figo |
| 8 |
 |
FW |
Zlatan Ibrahimović |
| 9 |
 |
FW |
Julio Cruz |
| 11 |
 |
MF |
Luis Jiménez (on loan from
Ternana) |
| 12 |
 |
GK |
Júlio César |
| 13 |
 |
DF |
Maicon |
| 14 |
 |
MF |
Patrick Vieira |
| 15 |
 |
MF |
Olivier Dacourt |
| 16 |
 |
DF |
Nicolás Burdisso |
|
|
| No. |
|
Position |
Player |
| 18 |
 |
FW |
Hernan
Crespo (on loan from Chelsea) |
| 19 |
 |
MF |
Esteban Cambiasso |
| 21 |
 |
MF |
Santiago Solari |
| 22 |
 |
GK |
Paolo Orlandoni |
| 23 |
 |
DF |
Marco Materazzi |
| 24 |
 |
DF |
Nelson Rivas |
| 25 |
 |
DF |
Walter Samuel |
| 26 |
 |
DF |
Cristian Chivu |
| 28 |
 |
MF |
Maniche (on loan from
Atlético Madrid) |
| 29 |
 |
FW |
David Suazo |
| 30 |
 |
MF |
Pelé |
| 31 |
 |
MF |
César |
| 45 |
 |
FW |
Mario Balotelli |
|
Out on loan
| No. |
|
Position |
Player |
| 10 |
 |
FW |
Adriano (at São Paulo) |
| 20 |
 |
MF |
Álvaro Recoba (at Torino) |
| 71 |
 |
GK |
Enrico Alfonso (at Venezia) |
|
 |
MF |
Attila Filkor (at Grosseto)[9] |
|
 |
MF |
Tijani Belaid (at Slavia Praha) |
|
 |
MF |
Ibrahim Maaroufi (at FC Twente) |
|
 |
FW |
Jonathan Biabiany (at Modena F.C.) |
|
 |
DF |
Simone Fautario (at A.C.
Pistoiese) |
|
 |
FW |
Filippo Mancini (at Manchester
City) |
|
 |
FW |
Goran Slavkovski (at Sheffield
United[10]) |
|
 |
FW |
Domenico Germinale (at Cittadella) |
|
 |
DF |
Andrea Mei
(at Chievo) |
Non-playing
staff
| Position |
Staff |
| Head Coach |
José Mourinho |
| Assistant Coach |
Giuseppe Baresi |
| Technical Assistant |
Andre
Villas Boas |
| Goalkeeper Coach |
Silvino Louro |
| Masseurs/Physiotherapists |
Rui
Farias |
| Director in charge of transfers |
Marco Branca |
Transfer Market Consultant
First-Team Representative |
Gabriele Oriali |
Retired
numbers
3 – Giacinto Facchetti, left fullback, 1960–1978 (posthumous
honor)
Presidential
history
Inter have had numerous presidents over the course
of their history,
some of which have been the owners of the club, others have been
honorary presidents, here is a complete list of them.
| Name |
Years |
| Carlos Bayona |
1908–1909 |
| Ettore Strauss |
1909–1910 |
| Carlo De Medici |
1910–1912 |
| Emilio Hirzel |
1912–1914 |
| Luigi Ansbacher |
1914 |
| Giuseppe Visconti
Di Modrone |
1914–1919 |
| Giorgio Hulss |
1919–1920 |
|
|
| Name |
Years |
| Francesco Mauro |
1920–1923 |
| Enrico Olivetti |
1923–1926 |
| Senatore Borletti |
1926–1929 |
| Ernesto Torrusio |
1929–1930 |
| Oreste Simonotti |
1930–1932 |
| Ferdinando Pozzani |
1932–1942 |
| Carlo Masseroni |
1942–1955 |
|
|
| Name |
Years |
| Angelo Moratti |
1955–1968 |
| Ivanoe Fraizzoli |
1968–1984 |
| Ernesto Pellegrini |
1984–1995 |
| Massimo Moratti |
1995–2004 |
| Giacinto Facchetti |
2004–2006 |
| Massimo Moratti |
2006–present |
|
Managerial
history
In Internazionale's history, 55 coaches have
coached the club. The first manager was Virgilio Fossati and the
current manager is José Mourinho, who was appointed on 2 June 2008.
Helenio Herrera
had the longest reign as Internazionale coach, with 9 years (8
consecutive) in charge, and is the most successful coach in Inter
history with 3 Scudetto,
2 UEFA Champions League and 2 Intercontinental Cup wins.
| Name |
Nationality |
Years |
| Virgilio Fossati |
 |
1909–1915 |
Nino Resegotti
Francesco Mauro |
 |
1919–1920 |
| Bob Spotishwood |
 |
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 |
 |
1940 |
| Italo Zamberletti |
 |
1941 |
| Ivo Fiorentini |
 |
1941–1942 |
| Giovanni Ferrari |
 |
1942–1945 |
| 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 |
|
|
| Name |
Nationality |
Years |
| 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 |
| 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 |
 |
1999 |
| Luciano Castellini |
 |
1999 |
| Roy Hodgson |
 |
1999 |
| Marcello Lippi |
 |
1999–2000 |
| Marco Tardelli |
 |
2000–2001 |
| Héctor Raul Cúper |
 |
2001–2003 |
| Corrado Verdelli |
 |
2003 |
| Alberto Zaccheroni |
 |
2003–2004 |
| Roberto Mancini |
 |
2004–2008 |
| José Mourinho |
 |
|
|
Colours,
badge and nicknames
Previous badge.
For the majority of their history Inter have worn
black and blue
stripes. When the club was first founded in 1908, black was chosen to
represent night and blue was chosen to represent the sky. After a
merger in 1928 with Unione Sportiva Milanese, Inter
changed its name to Ambrosiana SS Milano and its
colours to a white shirt with a red cross on top of it, the new colours
represented the flag of Milan. After
World War II
the club changed their name and their colours back to the original
incarnation, Inter continue on with the black and blue stripes to this
day, leading to the nickname nerazzurri. The
Milanese flag kit has been revived occasionally as an away kit however.
One of the nicknames of Inter is I
biscione which means "the big grass
snake". It was chosen because in Milanese heraldry the
snake is historically important; it features on the coat of arms of the
House of Sforza (who ruled over Italy from Milan during the Renaissance
period), the city of Milan, the historical Duchy of Milan (a four
hundred year state of the Holy Roman Empire) and Insubria (a historical
regional area which the city of Milan falls within).
Supporters
and rivalries
Inter created
display in their curva at the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza.
Inter is the third most supported football club in
Italy according to an August 2007 research by Italian newspaper La
Repubblica. Historically the largest section of Inter fans
from the city of Milan, have been the middle-class bourgeoisie
Milanese, while AC Milan fans are typically working-class and a
significant portion are migrants from Southern
Italy.
The traditional ultras group of Inter is Boys
San,
they hold a significant place in the history of the ultras scene in
general due to the fact that they are one of the oldest; founded in
1969. Politically
the ultras of Inter are usually considered right-wing, as thus
they have good relationships with Verona and Lazio. As well
as the main group Boys San, there are four more
significant groups; Viking, Irriducibili,
Ultras, and Brianza Alcoolica.
 Inter fans celebrating in 2007.
Inter have several rivalries, two of which are
highly significant in Italian
football; firstly they participate in the inter-city Derby
della Madonnina with AC Milan, the rivalry has existed ever
since Inter splintered off from Milan in 1908. The name of the derby
refers to the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose statue atop the Milan
Cathedral
is one of the city's main attractions. The match usually creates a
lively atmosphere, with numerous (often humorous or offensive) banners
unfolded before the match. Flares are commonly present, but they also
led to the abandonment of the second leg of the 2004–05 Champions League
quarterfinal matchup between Milan and Inter on April 12, 2005, after a
flare thrown from the crowd by an Inter supporter struck Milan keeper
Dida on the shoulder.
The other most significant rivalry is with
Juventus,
the two participate in the Derby d'Italia. Up until
the 2006 Serie A match-fixing
scandal, which saw Juventus relegated, the two were the
only Italian clubs to have never played below Serie A. Notably the two
sides are the most supported in Italy, the rivalry has intensified
since the later part of the 1990s. Clubs such as Bologna, Atalanta and
Roma are also considered to be amongst their rivals.
Honours
National
titles
Serie A:
-
- Champions (16): 1909–10;
1919–20; 1929–30; 1937–38; 1939–40;
1952–53; 1953–54; 1962–63; 1964–65; 1965–66; 1970–71; 1979–80; 1988–89;
2005–06; 2006–07; 2007-08
- Runners-up (14):
1932–33; 1933–34; 1934–35; 1940–41; 1945–46; 1948–49; 1950–51; 1961–62;
1963–64; 1966–67; 1969–70; 1992–93; 1997–98; 2002–03
Coppa Italia:
-
- Champions (5): 1938–39;
1977–78; 1981–82; 2004–05; 2005–06
- Runners-up (6): 1958–59;
1964–65; 1976–77; 1999–00; 2006–07; 2007–08
Supercoppa Italiana:
-
- Champions (3): 1989; 2005; 2006
- Runners-up (2): 2001; 2007
International
titles
The following titles include only those which are
recognised by UEFA and FIFA.
European
titles
UEFA Champions League (former European
Cup):
-
- Champions (2): 1963–64; 1964–65
- Runners-up (2): 1966–67; 1971–72
UEFA Cup:
-
- Champions (3): 1990–91;
1993–94; 1997–98
- Runners-up (1): 1996–97
Mitropa Cup:
-
World-wide
titles
Intercontinental Cup: [19]
-
- Champions (2): 1964; 1965

Italian Football
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