Victories, points and records: 300 Serie A games in charge for Simone Inzaghi
Team
— Mar 4th 2024A special night for the Nerazzurri boss, who reached a prestigious milestone in the game against Genoa
A historic evening for Simone Inzaghi as the Nerazzurri coach took charge of his 300th game in Serie A against Genoa, a prestigious achievement to be closely looked at. The coach from Piacenza has in fact earned the highest number of wins in 300 games in Serie A: with 179 successes to his name, Inzaghi surpasses Carlo Ancelotti and Massimiliano Allegri in this special ranking. Since his debut in the dugout in the Italian league, Inzaghi has collected the most wins in Serie A, over 20 more than any other coach in this period. TOP 10 - WINS AFTER 300 GAMES IN CHARGE Simone Inzaghi 179 victories Carlo Ancelotti 172 Massimiliano Allegri 171 Maurizio Sarri 165 Helenio Herrera 164 Giovanni Trapattoni 160 Roberto Mancini 158 Fabio Capello 158 William Garbutt 142 Antonio Conte 138 Árpád Weisz 138
VICTORIES AND POINTS WON AVERAGE
Simone Inzaghi is the seventh coach in the history of Serie A in achieving at least 70 victories with two different teams (Inter and Lazio), after Fabio Capello (Roma and AC Milan), Gian Piero Gasperini (Atalanta and Genoa), Giovanni Trapattoni (Inter and Juventus), Massimiliano Allegri (Juventus and Milan), Nereo Rocco (AC Milan and Padova) and Nils Liedholm (AC Milan and Roma). Inzaghi is also the seventh coach to have taken charge of at least 100 Serie A games for Inter: out of these, he is also the coach with the best points average (considering always getting three points for a win).
Head Coach | W | D | L | Games | Average points* |
Helenio Herrera | 159 | 80 | 45 | 284 | 1.96 |
Roberto Mancini | 126 | 58 | 33 | 217 | 2.01 |
Giovanni Trapattoni | 87 | 44 | 31 | 162 | 1.88 |
Eugenio Bersellini | 62 | 60 | 28 | 150 | 1.64 |
Árpád Weisz | 76 | 31 | 29 | 136 | 1.90 |
Alfredo Foni | 66 | 38 | 28 | 132 | 1.79 |
Simone Inzaghi | 71 | 15 | 17 | 103 | 2.21 |
* always three points for a win
RECORD-BREAKING RHYTHM
This season, Inter are maintaining a very high level of performance and results. Simone Inzaghi became the third coach to register an unbeaten run of at least 20 matches with Inter in Serie A from the 1980s to today, after Roberto Mancini (who managed it three times) and Antonio Conte. With the win over Genoa, this streak extended to 21 games. Furthermore, Inzaghi became the first Inter manager in the Club's history to have won every one of the first nine matches played in a single calendar year in Serie A. Thanks to results this season, Simone Inzaghi is also the second Inter coach to have won 23 of the Nerazzurri's first 27 matches played in a single Serie A season, after Roberto Mancini in 2006/07 (always 23 out of 27) .
ATTACK AND DEFENCE
Simone Inzaghi is the first coach in Nerazzurri history to see his team score in at least 25 matches in a row in Serie A: this run is still ongoing, with Inter having reached 35 after the game at San Siro against Genoa. Simone Inzaghi is the second coach to have led Inter to scoring at least four goals in four consecutive Serie A fixtures under him: the games were against Roma, Salernitana, Lecce and Atalanta, all played in February 2024. Before him, only Árpád Weisz, in 1930, had achieved this. Inter have registered 17 clean sheets in 27 league matches this campaign: only two teams in the history of Serie A have done better after 27 games in a single season: AC Milan (18 in 1987/1988 and 20 in 1993/94) and Juventus (18 in 2017/18). This is a record for Inter.
FIVE TROPHIES
Simone Inzaghi è l'allenatore che ha sollevato il trofeo in più finali nella storia dell'Inter tra tutte le competizioni (dal 1929/30): il tecnico piacentino ha vinto 3 finali di Supercoppa Italiana e 2 di Coppa Italia, superando così Helenio Herrera e Roberto Mancini (entrambi a quota quattro).
Simone Inzaghi is the coach to have lifted the most number of trophies in Inter's history across all competitions (since 1929/30): the coach from Piacenza has won three Supercoppa Italiana finals and two Coppa Italia finals, thus surpassing Helenio Herrera and Roberto Mancini (both with four).