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Rocco has also been Milan's longest-serving manager, managing the club for 459 matches (323 as head coach and 136 as technical director) in five different spells between 1961 and 1977. Milan's longest-serving manager over a single time-span is, instead, Carlo Ancelotti , whose tenure lasted seven years and 236 days, from 6 November 2001 to 30 ...
Only six managers have won the title with two clubs: Ancelotti with Milan in 2003 and 2007 and Real Madrid in 2014, 2022, and 2024; Ernst Happel with Feyenoord in 1970 and Hamburg in 1983; Ottmar Hitzfeld with Borussia Dortmund in 1997 and Bayern Munich in 2001; José Mourinho with Porto in 2004 and Inter Milan in 2010; Jupp Heynckes with Real ...
The club's first full-time manager. E. The first manager to manage a Spanish club side in European competition and to win a European trophy (1955–56 European Cup). F. Most honours won and longest-serving manager in club history. FIFA. a b c Won FIFA World Coach of the Year/The Best FIFA Football Coach while at Real Madrid.
Following rivals Barcelona's 4–2 defeat to Girona on 4 May, Ancelotti's Real Madrid clinched the league title mathematically; Real Madrid had defeated Cadíz 3–0 the previous day. [210] With his twelfth title for the club overall, he overtook Zidane as the manager with the second–most title victories with Real Madrid, behind only Miguel ...
Milan retained their title with a 1–0 win over Benfica a year later and was the last team to win back-to-back European Cups until Real Madrid's win in 2017. [36] The Milan team of 1988–1990, nicknamed the "Immortals" in the Italian media, [ 37 ] has been voted the best club side of all time in a global poll of experts conducted by World ...
The 2013–14 Serie A season saw the return of club-icon Kaka, joining on a free transfer during the summer transfer window following a poor spell at Real Madrid. Despite this, Milan made a poor start to the season, that saw them lose four of their opening 10 matches, including an opening day loss to Hellas Verona.
The competition was won by Real Madrid, who beat Milan 3–2 in the final, in extra time following a 2–2 draw after 90 minutes. [1] This was Real Madrid's third European Cup title in a row. However, the 1957–58 season was marred by the air disaster in Munich , when eight Manchester United players died on their way home from Belgrade , after ...
The competition was won by Inter Milan, who beat Real Madrid 3–1 in the final at Praterstadion, Vienna, on 27 May 1964. [1] Inter's triumph ensured that Italy became the first country and Milan became the first city with two competition winners. AC Milan were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Real Madrid in the quarter-finals.