logo
Inzaghi leaves Inter after Champions League debacle

Inzaghi leaves Inter after Champions League debacle

Yahoo2 days ago

Simone Inzaghi has left as coach of Inter Milan following their 5-0 record defeat by Paris Saint-Germain in Saturday's Champions League final.
Inter, who won Serie A last season, also saw Napoli steal their domestic crown.
Advertisement
A club statement on Tuesday said the decision was mutual.
"The time has come for me to say goodbye to this club after a four-year-long journey, throughout which I gave my all," Inzaghi said.
"Every day, my first and last thought was always about Inter. It was then reciprocated with professionalism and passion by the players, leaders, and every single one of the club's employees."
The 49-year-old also led Inter to the 2023 Champions League final but they again lost to Manchester City, albeit only by a 1-0 scoreline.
Inzaghi has been linked in the media with a huge three-year deal at Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal. He could take over before the Club World Cup in the United States starts on June 14. They face Real Madrid in their opener on June 18.
Advertisement
Inter are also in the revamped tournament and must find a new coach before their first group game against Monterrey on June 17.
Como's Spanish boss Cesc Fàbregas, who had been linked with RB Leipzig, is seen by Italian media as the favourite to take over at the Nerazzurri.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says
Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Spain will stick to 2% of GDP defence spending goal, defence minister says

MADRID (Reuters) -Spain stands by its defence spending target of 2% of GDP, Spanish Defence Minister Margarita Robles said on Thursday, as pressure grows from NATO leadership and the United States for the Mediterranean country to increase it. "We think that this 2% is enough to meet the responsibilities we have committed to," Robles said. Spain will not veto a NATO decision to raise the defence spending target during a summit to be held later this month in The Hague, she said. "What is important is that each country is able to meet the objectives it has set itself," she added. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced in April a plan to increase military spending by 10.5 billion euros ($11.99 billion) this year, bringing forward to this year a goal to meet the 2% of GDP target from its previously self-imposed deadline of 2029. Despite the new plan Spain, which spent just 1.3% on defence in 2024, the lowest among NATO members, is under pressure to spend even more. European defence commissioner Andrius Kubilius said on May 3 Spain ought to raise spending to 3% of GDP. ($1 = 0.8755 euros)

Daywatch: A Venezuelan poet's fight to stay
Daywatch: A Venezuelan poet's fight to stay

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Daywatch: A Venezuelan poet's fight to stay

Good morning, Chicago. When Oriette D'Angelo, in the fifth year of her doctorate program at the University of Iowa, found out that President Donald Trump had plans to revoke her temporary protected status, she told her friends she would mail them her notebooks of poems if she had to go back to Venezuela. They asked her why. 'It would be almost impossible to start over,' she said. She'd put years into her degree in Spanish and Portuguese, only to have it threatened by Trump's immigration agenda. D'Angelo, 34, came to Chicago on a student visa over a decade ago, seeking professional opportunities and escape from a crumbling infrastructure and violence in her home country. In recent months, however, a string of executive orders and court decisions on the legality of these orders has left her in an uncomfortable state of limbo, grasping for loopholes that might let her continue her academic research and writing. As a student who researches and writes poems about themes of dictatorship, she is heartened by the separation of powers in the United States, but said the federal government's often contradictory language in this moment feels dangerous. 'Venezuelans are being categorized as bad,' she said. 'But I want to stay here professionally. I want to finish my dissertation. I want to follow the right path.' Read the full story from the Tribune's Nell Salzman. Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including how Meta is using an Illinois nuclear plant to meet AI demand, a former aldermanic candidate winning $1.4 million in a defamation suit and Tribune film critic Michael Phillips' review of the 'John Wick' spinoff 'Ballerina.' Today's eNewspaper edition | Subscribe to more newsletters | Asking Eric | Horoscopes | Puzzles & Games | Today in History President Donald Trump is resurrecting the travel ban policy from his first term, signing a proclamation last night preventing people from a dozen countries from entering the United States. In another sign of escalating tension over President Donald Trump's immigration policies, community organizers, protesters and several Chicago aldermen clashed with federal agents yesterday as they detained immigrants outside a U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement office on the Near South Side. Ramon Morales Reyes, 54, appeared virtually before a Chicago immigration judge yesterday following his arrest in Milwaukee on May 21. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had announced the arrest, which occurred after he dropped his child off at school, saying Morales Reyes had written a letter threatening to kill Trump and would then 'self-deport' to Mexico. But the claim started to unravel as investigators talked to Morales Reyes, who doesn't speak English fluently, and obtained a handwriting sample from him that was different from the handwriting in the letters, according to court documents. Constellation Energy Corp. has agreed to sell power from an Illinois nuclear plant to Meta Platforms Inc. as artificial intelligence sends power demand soaring. The parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp signed a 20-year contract to buy 1,121 megawatts from the Clinton plant starting in mid-2027, when a state subsidy expires, according to a statement. Constellation, the biggest U.S. nuclear operator, and Meta didn't provide financial details. South Side Ald. Lamont Robinson's campaign and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle's 4th Ward Democratic Organization are on the hook for $1.475 million in punitive damages over what a Cook County jury found were defamatory mailers and text messages during the 2023 aldermanic campaign. A 10-year-old girl was on a call on the Snapchat social media platform when she and her older sister were fatally stabbed by her brother last week in Streamwood, Cook County prosecutors alleged yesterday. Jalonie Jenkins, 25, is charged with murder in the slayings of Janiya Jenkins, 21, and Eyani Jones, 10, in their home in the 1600 block of McKool Avenue on May 28. Police sought him for several days before he was arrested Sunday in Downers Grove. Plumes of smoke are blanketing large swaths of the U.S. and parts of Europe, which presents risks for those breathing it. The Midwest, Northeast and Great Lakes regions of the U.S. have 'very unhealthy' air quality, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, and experts say people should take precautions. Every day last season, after Jaquan Brisker was sidelined with a concussion, the Chicago Bears safety told his mother, Mijohni, he was OK. Something clearly was amiss, however, as weeks of missed games turned into months and Brisker ultimately never returned to the field, missing the final 12 games after a vicious shot in an Oct. 6 victory over the Carolina Panthers. The Chicago Sky are set to make history Saturday when they face the Indiana Fever at the United Center — the first professional women's basketball game played in the 31-year-old arena. But one of the marquee matchups of this WNBA season took a hit when the Fever announced May 26 that Caitlin Clark would be out at least two weeks because of a lingering left quadriceps strain. The new 'John Wick' spinoff 'Ballerina' is recommendable, -ish, primarily for the way Anjelica Huston, as the Russian mob boss, makes a meal out of a single-syllable word near the end, delivered after a pause so unerringly timed it's almost too good for this world, writes Tribune film critic Michael Phillips. We don't deserve it. This fifth and fairly diverting movie in the assassin's-revenge franchise is not much interested in what anyone has to say — although Keanu Reeves says what little he has to say in rivetingly off-human ways — but Huston blurts her game-over syllable with the 'oh, fine' authority of an acting titan. What feels especially timely right now, as the Trump administration sues sanctuary cities, bans transsexual people from serving in the military, all but shutters American borders to migrants, destroys diversity programming at every level and decimates federal support for libraries and the arts? These exhibitions do.

Dortmund bring back loanee Coulibaly earlier than planned
Dortmund bring back loanee Coulibaly earlier than planned

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Dortmund bring back loanee Coulibaly earlier than planned

SBorussia Dortmund's Soumaila Coulibaly (l) and Marcel Sabitzer fight for the ball during a training camp. Borussia Dortmund have brought back the loaned defender Coulibaly a few weeks before originally planned, the Bundesliga club said in a statement on Thursday. David Inderlied/dpa Borussia Dortmund have brought back the loaned defender Soumaila Coulibaly a few weeks before originally planned, the Bundesliga club said in a statement on Thursday. The player was expected to stay at French side Brest until the end of the month. Advertisement But Coulibaly is back in Dortmund and started recovery training as he's been out of action since March due to adductor problems. If he's fit in time, he can take part in the Club World Cup in the United States on June 14-July 13. Dortmund start their campaign against Brazilian side Fluminense on June 17.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store