Football Club Internazionale Milano, commonly referred to asInternazionale (pronounced[internattsjoˈnaːle]) or simplyInter (Italian pronunciation:['inter]), and colloquially known asInter Milan in other countries, including English-speaking countries,[5] is an Italian professionalfootballclub based inMilan,Lombardy. Inter is the only Italian team to have always participated in the top division of Italian football since its debut in 1909 and the only one that has never been relegated inSerie B. Since 1947, Inter has shared theSan Siro stadium withAC Milan—the club from which it originally split. The San Siro is the largest stadium in Italy, with a capacity of 75,817.[6] The long-standing rivalry between the two clubs, known as theDerby della Madonnina, is one of the most widely followed derbies in world football.[7]
Founded in 1908 following a schism within the Milan Foot-Ball and Cricket Club (now AC Milan), Inter won its first championship in 1910. Since its formation, the club has won 37 domestic trophies, including 20league titles, nineCoppa Italia, and eightSupercoppa Italiana. From 2006 to 2010, the club won five successive league titles, equaling the all-time record at that time.[8] They have won theEuropean Cup/Champions League three times, their latest win in 2010 completed an unprecedented Italianseasonal treble, with Inter winning the Serie A and the Coppa Italia the same year.[9] The club has also won threeUEFA Cups, twoIntercontinental Cups, and oneFIFA Club World Cup. Inter is the only Italian club that won at least an official trophy in every decade since the foundation of the club in 1908.[10]
"Questa notte splendida darà i colori al nostro stemma: il nero e l'azzurro sullo sfondo d'oro delle stelle. Si chiamerà Internazionale, perché noi siamo fratelli del mondo."
"This wonderful night will give us thecolours of our crest: black and blue against a backdrop of stars. It shall be called International, because we are brothers of the world."
The club was founded on 9 March 1908 asFootball Club Internazionale, when a group of players left the Milan Cricket and Football Club (nowAC Milan) to form a new club because they wanted to accept more foreign players.[16] The name of the club derives from the wish of its founding members to accept foreign players as well as Italians.[17] The club won its first championship in 1910 and its second in 1920.[18] The captain and coach of the first championship winning team wasVirgilio Fossati,[19] who was later killed in battle while serving in the Italian army during World War I.[20]
In1922, Inter was at risk of relegation to theSecond Division ofNorthern League, but they remained in the top league after winning two play-offs.
Six years later, during the Fascist era, the club merged with theUnione Sportiva Milanese and, for political reasons, was renamedSocietà Sportiva Ambrosiana.[21] During the 1928–29 season, the team wore whitejerseys with a red cross emblazoned on it; the jersey's design was inspired by the flag and coat of arms of the city of Milan.[22] In 1929, the new club chairman Oreste Simonotti changed the club's name toAssociazione Sportiva Ambrosiana and restored the previous black-and-blue jerseys; however, supporters continued to call the teamInter, and in 1931, new chairman Pozzani succumbed to shareholder pressure and changed the name toAssociazione Sportiva Ambrosiana-Inter.
Giuseppe Meazza still holds the record for the most goals scored in a debut season in Serie A, with 31 goals in his first season (1929–30).
Inter won its third championship titles in 1930 with the Hungarian coachArpad Weisz in the first ever edition ofSerie A, and the fourth in 1938 with former playerArmando Castellazzi as a 33 years old coach, that set the record for the youngest coach ever to win the national title that lasts to this day. Inter also got their firstCoppa Italia (Italian Cup) in1939 with the decisive goal in the final scored by Olympic gold medal andtop scorer in 1936 OlympicsAnnibale Frossi. Inter main star and the captain of the team in this period wasGiuseppe Meazza, one of the greatest Italian player of all time with twoWorld Cup won with the National team and the greatest scorer in Inter history with 284 goals, and after whom theSan Siro stadium is officially named after his death in 1980. 38 goals scored by Meazza in 39 matches in 1929-1930 is a seasonal record in Inter history still unbeaten today. Inter ended also three consecutive times in 2nd place between 1933 and 1935; in those years many South Americans of Italian origin arrived inMilan to circumvent the regime's rules that prohibit the hiring of foreign players: Uruguayan players like World Cup Winner in1930Hector Scarone andErnesto Mascheroni and alsoRicardo Faccio andFrancesco Frione, and Argentinian likeAttilio Demaría that stayed 10 seasons with the club. A fifth championship followed in 1940, that ended a decade dominated by three teams: Inter,Bologna and the historic rivalJuventus, while AC Milan didn't win a title for 44 years from 1907 to 1951 and didn't win a single derby for a record 17 matches from 1928 to 1938.
After the end of World War II, the club's name changed back to its original one, Internazionale,[2] and it come close to win Serie A title in two occasions, one in the last season ofGrande Torino in 1949, against whom Inter were the last team to face them on 30 April 1949 five days before theSuperga air disaster, and in 1951 for just one point, with the contribution of great players acquired by presidentCarlo Masseroni in these years, likeGino Armano,Amedeo Amadei, the first Dutch player in club historyFaas Wilkes and the HungarianIstván Nyers fromStade Français; Inter will win its sixth championship in 1953 and its seventh in 1954, for the first time in two consecutive years, coached byAlfredo Foni and led by two of the most prolific strikers in club history: István Nyers andBenito Lorenzi with the SwedishLennart Skoglund that completed the offensive trio. One of the crucial matches of the 1954 Scudetto was the direct clash for the title, that saw Inter victory over Juventus for 6-0, the club's biggest victory in theDerby d'Italia.
In May 1955,Angelo Moratti became the new owner of Inter, and in the first years of his presidency got disappointing results despite strong players like forwards,Eddie Firmani and the ArgentinianAngelillo who scored an all-time record in a season in Serie A with 18 teams: 33 goals in 33 matches in1958-1959 season, tied also Meazza seasonal record of 38 goals in 39 matches.
In 1960, managerHelenio Herrera joined Inter fromBarcelona and in his first season as a coach in Milan, after having led the table for most of the season, lost the title in the last games of the season, with the infamous episode during Juventus–Inter held in Turin in April 1961 when the match was stopped after 30 minutes when Juventus supporters invaded the pitch, with Inter being awarded the game 2–0. Then, after two months, in June before the last decisive match of Serie A with the two teams tied in first place, theItalian Football Federation, presided by Juventus presidentUmberto Agnelli, decided that the match between the two teams had to be replayed after the last game scheduled for the season; with Inter loss and a draw for Juventus, the following match became useless and in open contestation Angelo Moratti ordered Herrera to put the Inter youth team against the Turinese squad: the match ended 9–1 for Juventus, with the only goal scored for Inter by an 18-year-old, the son ofValentino Mazzola,Sandro Mazzola who later would become one of the greatest legends in the history of the club.
Helenio Herrera, the most successful coach in club's history, guided Inter for a record 9 seasons
After his first season in Milan, Herrera brought with him for a record fee of 25 million pesetas[24] Spanish midfielderLuis Suárez who won theEuropean Footballer of the Year in 1960 for his role in Barcelona'sLa Liga/Fairs Cup double.[25] Herrera would transform Inter into one of the leading teams in Europe that would win three Serie A titles in four years, twoEuropean Cups and twoIntercontinental Cups in a row.[26] He modified a 5–3–2 tactic known as the "Verrou" ("door bolt"), which created greater flexibility for counterattacks.[27] Thecatenaccio system was invented by an Austrian coach,Karl Rappan.[28] Rappan's original system was implemented with four fixed defenders, playing a strict man-to-man marking system, plus aplaymaker in the middle of the field, who plays the ball together with two midfieldwings. Herrera would modify it by adding a fifth defender, thesweeper or libero, behind the twocentre backs. The sweeper orlibero, who acted as the free man, would deal with any attackers who went through the twocentre backs.[29] Inter finished third in the Serie A in his first season, second the next year and first in his third season. Then followed a back-to-backEuropean Cup victory in 1964 and 1965, earning him the title "il Mago" ("the Wizard").[29] The core of Herrera's team were the goalkeeperGiuliano Sarti, thefull-backsTarcisio Burgnich andGiacinto Facchetti,Armando Picchi the sweeper, Suárez the playmaker, the BrazilianJair the right winger,Mario Corso the left winger andSandro Mazzola, who played on the inside-right.[30][31][32][33][34]
After the Serie A title won in the previous season, in 1964 Inter reached theEuropean Cup Final by beatingBorussia Dortmund in the semi-final andPartizan in the quarter-final.[35] In the final inPraterstadion,Vienna, they metReal Madrid, a team that had reached seven out of the nine finals to date.[35] Mazzola scored two goals and one fromMilani in a 3–1 victory, becoming also the first ever team to win the tournament without losing a single game.
The team also won theIntercontinental Cup; after having lost the first match in Argentine againstIndependiente 1–0, Inter won second leg 2–0 in San Siro with goals from Mazzola and Corso, in the third decisive match played at theSantiago Bernabeu, Inter won in extra-time with a goal from Mario Corso, the first Italian club to win the trophy and become club world champion.
In 1964, Inter added other important playersAngelo Domenghini,Gianfranco Bedin and another SpanishJoaquín Peiró, who played with consistency and was decisive in European Cup where three foreign players could play at the same time, while in Serie A only two were allowed to play.
Sandro Mazzola played for the highly successful Inter team remembered by the name of "La Grande Inter" in the 1960s, he spent all of his 17 career seasons from 1960 to 1977 with Inter shirt.
A year later, after have defeatedLiverpool in the semi-final second leg 3–0 recovering from a 3–1 defeat atAnfield, with Facchetti scoring the decisive goal, Inter repeated the feat by beating two-time winnerBenfica in thefinal held at home, from a Jair goal, and then again beat Independiente in theIntercontinental Cup with a 3–0 win in San Siro, with two goals from Mazzola and one from Peirò, and a draw in Argentine, becoming the first European team to win two times in a row the competition. Inter came close to winning theTreble for the first time in European football history that year, after having also won theSerie A title, but lost theCoppa Italia final against Juventus in a game played in the last days of August 1965.
Facchetti was voted second in1965 Ballon d'Or rankings, just missing out the chance to become the first defender to win the award.
Inter again reached semi-finals of theEuropean cup in 1966, but this time lost against a Real Madrid team that would go on to win the tournament, while in national championship Herrera's squad won the tenth scudetto in club history, the firstStar.
At the end of the season, Moratti signed two of the greatest players of all time:Franz Beckenbauer[36] andEusebio;[37] but, after1966 World Cup when Italian National Team was eliminated by North Korea, the Italian Federation decided to block new signings of foreign players, a ban which lasted until 1980; thus, the contracts with the two players were cancelled.
In 1967, after Inter eliminated Real Madrid in quarter-finals, with Suárez and Jair injured, Inter lost the European Cup final inLisbon 2–1 toCeltic; a week later, despite the first position, with a lost againstMantova in the last match of the championship, Inter lost also the Serie A title and, a week later, the Coppa Italia semi-final againstPadova, putting an end de facto to the Grande Inter cicle with the first season without trophy since 1961–1962.[38] During that year, the club changed its name toFootball Club Internazionale Milano, and in 1968 after 13 yearsAngelo Moratti sold the team toIvanoe Fraizzoli, and also Helenio Herrera left the team.
A line-up of F.C. Internazionale Milano during the Scudetto winning 1970–71 season
Following the golden era of the 1960s, Inter managed to win their eleventh league title in1971 under the coachGiovanni Invernizzi who took over the job during the season with the team that made a great comeback after have had a difficult start, with 23 consecutive matches without a loss, withRoberto Boninsegna, one of the greatest strikers in club history, who led the league with 24 goals in that seasons and repeated the feat the following season with 22.[39] Inter reached for the second time in five years the European Cup final in1972 after have defeteadBorussia Mönchengladbach,Standard Liège and Celtic in the semi-final, with a team which still featured Facchetti, Mazzola, Burnich, Jair, Bedin and Corso (the latter who could not play in the remain matches of the competition for disqualification after the red card at the end of the first match against Mönchengladbach) and also a youngGabriele Oriali. The final held inRotterdam saw the victory for 2–0 ofJohan Cruyff'sAjax that won the trophy for the second consecutive season.
Roberto Boninsegna scored 173 goals in 285 matches for Inter, still holds the all-time Serie A record of 19 consecutive penalties scored
The return of Helenio Herrera in 1973 as Inter coach lasted only 16 matches, for a heart attack that obliged him to leave the coaching job. Mazzola retired in 1977 and Facchetti, the last member of La Grande Inter, retired in 1978 as the most prolific defender in the history of Serie A with 59 goals scored and after having won the last trophy of his career, the Coppa Italia.
Inter won their twelfth scudetto in1980, the last one won in the history of Serie A by a team composed entirely of Italian players, and also added two to its Coppa Italia tally, in1977–78 (with the future captainGraziano Bini who scored the decisive goal in the final against Napoli) and in1981–82, both under coachEugenio Bersellini.Alessandro Altobelli, who later became the all-time leading scorer in Coppa Italia and in International competition for the club and played for Inter for 11 seasons, scored 209 goals, second only to Giuseppe Meazza. Altobelli also scored three goals against Juventus in a 4-0 victory on 11 November 1979, a feat which was repeated again five years later on the same day on 11 November 1984, with the same result, this time with the first two goals in Serie A forKarl-Heinz Rummenigge.
In this period, AC Milan were relegated two times inSerie B, the first time in 1980 for implications involved in theTotonero scandal and then again after the team ended its1981–82 campaign in third-last place.
In 1981, Inter reached for the sixth time in six participations the semi-final of theEuropean Cup, this time against Real Madrid, a classic match,[40] and who they would encounter again in three different European competitions throughout the 1980s: inUEFA Cup Winners' Cup quarter-finals in 1983 and inUefa Cup semi-finals in 1985 and 1986.
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge considered one of the greatest player in the world and one of the five Germans who played for Inter in the 80's
Giuseppe Bergomi, the youngest player to make his professional debut in first team in the history of the club at 16 years old, one month and eight days in January 1980, remained at Inter for all his career for a record 20 seasons, till the end of 1998-1999 season. Bergomi with Oriali, Altobelli,Gianpiero Marini andIvano Bordon were part of Italy squad that won1982 FIFA World Cup.
Led by the German duo ofAndreas Brehme andLothar Matthäus, withAldo Serena top scorer in Serie A with 22 goals, ArgentineRamón Díaz andNicola Berti, Inter, coached byGiovanni Trapattoni, captured the1989 Serie A championship setting many record, the so called “Scudetto dei Record”: ended with an all-time record for most points in Serie A history with 18 teams with 58 points out of 68, 26 victories out of 34 matches, the best offence and the best defense, with an 11 point margin overMaradona's Napoli and 12 point margin over AC Milan, coached bySacchi (with two points per victory, rule that lasted until the end of 1993-1994 season). Inter were unable to defend their title in the following season in a very competitive Serie A that saw six different teams win in seven years, and despite adding fellow GermanJürgen Klinsmann to the squad and winning their firstSupercoppa Italiana at the start of the season.
Mixed fortunes (1991–2004)
The 1990s were disappointing years in terms of victories, while their great rivals, Milan and Juventus, achieved successes mainly at a domestic level in Serie A, and also winning the renamedUEFA Champions League once each.
Inter enjoyed little success in the domestic league standings, their worst coming in1993–94 when they finished in thirteenth position, just one point above the relegation zone. Nevertheless, they achieved prestigious European success, with threeUEFA Cup victories out of four finals, in 1991, 1994 and 1998.
After the win of the1990 World Cup ofWest Germany led by three Inter players, Matthews was awarded theBallon d'Or and ended 1990–1991, his most prolific season in career, with 23 goals, including six in1991 UEFA Cup, the first European trophy since the Grande Inter period; Trapattoni left the team after five seasons. At the end of1991, Mattheus was awarded also with the first everFIFA World Player of the Year.
In 1992, after a disappointing season, to replace the three German players that left in the summer and with the new coachOsvaldo Bagnoli, Inter signed important players like the future Ballon d'OrMatthias Sammer,Rubén Sosa andIgor Shalimov, the first Russian player in club history; others were ultimately less successful, like the formerEuropean Golden Boot winnerDarko Pancev andSalvatore Schillaci; Inter ended the season in second place behind AC Milan, coached byFabio Capello.
In the following season, Inter acquired from AjaxWim Jonk andDennis Bergkamp that, with eight goals in the competition, led Inter to their second victory inUEFA Cup, despite the worst result in club history in Serie A.
However, the 1990s remained the only decade in Inter's history, in which they did not win a single Serie A championship. This persistent lack of success led to poor relations between the fanbase and the chairman, the managers and even some individual players.
In the 1996–1997 season, Inter reached a thirdUEFA Cup final, losing this time on penalties in the second leg at the Giuseppe Meazza againstSchalke 04, withRoy Hodgson resigning shortly afterwards. In the 1997–1998 season, with the acquisition of theEuropean Golden Shoe and later Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year winnerRonaldo, under coachLuigi Simoni, Inter had won their thirdUEFA Cup inParis, beating Lazio 3–0, with goals fromIvan Zamorano, Zanetti and Ronaldo, and nearly won Serie A title, with many controversial refereeing decisions.[42] This culminated in the decisive match against Juventus in Turin, with Inter only one point behind with four games left, when referee didn't give a penalty toRonaldo, but a few seconds later, gave a penalty to Juventus; this generated a turmoil on the pitch and a big scandal. The referee sent off Simoni, and president Moratti left the building shortly afterwards, saying to journalists: “I’m not sticking around just to be made fun of”.[43][44]At the end of 1998, Inter was ranked byIFFHS asBest Club in the World for that year.
Moratti later became a target of the fans, especially when he sacked the much-loved coach Simoni after a few games into the 1998–99 season, five days after Inter defeated Real Madrid 3–1 at San Siro in Champions League group stage, with two goals fromRoberto Baggio, and having just received theItalian manager of the year award for 1998 the day before being dismissed. That season, despite four coaching changes, Inter reached the Champions League quarter-finals, where they were eliminated by Manchester United, who would go on to win the trophy that year; Inter failed to qualify for any European competition for the first time in seven years, finishing in eighth place.
Ronaldo's first season with Inter ended with 34 goals scored in 47 matches.
The following season, in 1999–2000, Moratti appointed former Juventus managerMarcello Lippi, and signed players such asAngelo Peruzzi,Laurent Blanc,Iván Córdoba,Clarence Seedorf from Real Madrid and also Vieri andJugović; he also sold other important players, likeDiego Simeone,Youri Djorkaeff,Aron Winter andGianluca Pagliuca. The team came close to their first domestic success since 1989 when they reached theCoppa Italia final, only to be defeated by Lazio, in a match remembered for the second severe injury to the right knee of Ronaldo, who was returning after five months of inactivity, and which would keep him out for more than a year and a half.
Inter's misfortunes continued the following season, losing the2000 Supercoppa Italiana match against Lazio 4–3, after initially taking the lead through new signingRobbie Keane. They were also eliminated in the preliminary round of theChampions League by Swedish clubHelsingborg, withÁlvaro Recoba missing a crucial late penalty. Lippi was sacked after only a single game of the new season, following Inter's first-ever Serie A defeat toReggina.Marco Tardelli, chosen to replace Lippi, failed to improve results and is remembered by Inter fans as the manager who lost 6–0 in the city derby against a weak AC Milan, who finished the season in sixth place behind Inter, who finished in fifth.
After the unfortunate decision to sellAndrea Pirlo to rival AC Milan in the summer of 2001 for 35 billion Italian lira,[45] in the next season with new coachHector Cuper, the acquisition of the second most expensive goalkeeper in the world at that timeFrancesco Toldo,Marco Materazzi and the return after injury of Ronaldo in pair with Vieri (a dream couple that played only 11 matches for a total of 667 minutes in three years, scoring 18 goals[46]), not only did Inter manage to make it to theUEFA Cup semi-finals, but were also only 45 minutes away from capturing theScudetto when they needed to maintain their one-goal advantage away to Lazio. Inter were 2–1 up after only 24 minutes. Lazio equalised during first half injury time, and then scored two more goals by Simeone andSimone Inzaghi in the second half to secure victory that saw Juventus win the championship, Roma ended second and Inter third.[47] After brilliant performances and having won2002 World Cup with Brazil, Ronaldo demanded to be sold toReal Madrid for €45 million, and was replaced byHernan Crespo from Lazio for €40 million. Seedorf was sold to AC Milan andFabio Cannavaro was acquired from Parma.
Walter Samuel "The Wall" has played for Inter from 2005 to 2014, he won the first 10 consecutiveDerby di Milano that he played in Serie A between 2005 and 2012.[48]
The next season, Inter finished as league runners-up, with Vieri that was top scorer ofSerie A with 24 goals in 23 matches, while Crespo set a new record forUCL Group stage, with eight goals in six matches, but missed almost the rest of the season for a severe injury in January. In October 2002, in a home game againstLyon, Inter was defeated for the first time in its history at home inEuropean Cup/UEFA Champions League after 33 matches in 39 years.[49][50] Inter reached2002–03 Champions League semi-finals against AC Milan, that were played also without the injured Vieri, and was eliminated on theaway goals rule with two draw in the same stadium, the San Siro.
After only one season, Crespo was sold toChelsea for 26 million € and was replaced byJulio Cruz fromBologna for 9,5 million €.
The 2003–2004 season started well, with an historic win for Inter and for Italian football in the Champions League atHighbury againstArsenal ofInvincibles with a 3–0 victory, as well as a win againstDinamo Kyiv; but, after a draw against Brescia in Serie A, in October coach Cuper was sacked and was replaced byAlberto Zaccheroni, who couldn't help to avoid the elimination from the Champions League group stage. Despite acquisition in January of strong players likeDejan Stankovic andAdriano, Inter ultimately finished only in fourth place in Serie A. Other members of the Inter "family" during this period who "suffered" were the likes of Vieri and Cannavaro, both of whom had their restaurants in Milan vandalised after the second defeats of the season to theRossoneri 3–2 in February 2004 in Serie A; but the most important was the resignation from presidency by Massimo Moratti in favour ofGiacinto Facchetti in January 2004, that lasted until the premature death of Inter legend in September 2006.
On 11 May 2006, Inter won the Coppa Italia title for the second season in a row after defeatingRoma with a 4–1 aggregate victory (a 1–1 scoreline in Rome and a 3–1 win at the San Siro).[54]
Inter were awarded the2005–06 Serie A championship retrospectively, after title-winning Juventus was relegated for match fixing and illecits involved among others referee designatorsBergamo andPairetto and referees, with their executives Moggi and Giraudo, who were at Juventus since 1994, banned for life from football, and points were stripped also from other clubs involved, including AC Milan, due to the implications inCalciopoli scandal.[55] During the following season, Inter with new players likeMaicon,Maxwell,Patrick Vieira,Zlatan Ibrahimovic and the return of Crespo fromChelsea, went on a record-breaking run of 17 consecutive victories in Serie A, starting on 25 September 2006, with a 4–1 home victory overLivorno, and ending on 28 February 2007, after a 1–1 draw at home toUdinese.[56] On 22 April 2007, Inter won their second consecutiveScudetto—and first on the field since 1989—when they defeatedSiena 2–1 atStadio Artemio Franchi, ended the season with an all time Serie A record of 97 points and an all-time record margin of 22 points over second place Roma.[57]ItalianWorld Cup-winning defenderMarco Materazzi scored both goals.[58]
"...and now together we crown the dream!" Inter supporters during the2010 UEFA Champions League Final at Santiago Bernabéu. In winning the final, Inter became the first and only Italian team to win thetreble.
In this period, Inter also reached two UCL quarter-finals in2005 and2006, and the UCL round of 16 in2007: on the last two occasions, Inter was eliminated via away goals rules byVillarreal andValencia.
Inter started the2007–08 season with the goal of winning both Serie A and the Champions League in the year of the centenary of the foundation of the club. 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 ten men away toLiverpool on 19 February in the Champions League,[59] brought manager Roberto Mancini's future at Inter[60] into question, while domestic form took a sharp turn of fortune, with the team failing to win in the three following Serie A games. After being eliminated by Liverpool in the Champions League, Mancini announced his intention to leave his job immediately, only to change his mind the following day.[61] On the final day of the2007–08 Serie A season, Inter playedParma away, that had to win to not be relegated in Serie B after 18 years; Roma scored in Catania and was in the first place untilZlatan Ibrahimović, ten minutes after having come on to the pitch in the second half, scored two goals and sealed their third consecutive championship.[62][63] Mancini, however, was sacked soon after, due to his previous announcement to leave the club.[64]
On 2 June 2008, Inter appointed formerPorto andChelsea bossJosé Mourinho as the new head coach.[65] In his first season, theNerazzurri won aSuppercoppa Italiana anda fourth consecutive title, though falling in the Champions League in the first knockout round for a third-straight year, losing to eventual finalistsManchester United.[66] In winning the league title, Inter became the first club since 1949 to win the title for four consecutive seasons, and joinedTorino and Juventus as the only clubs to accomplish this feat, as well as being the first club based outsideTurin.
In the summer of 2009, Inter laid the foundation for maybe the greatest single season of its history: after have signedDiego Milito andThiago Motta fromGenoa,Lúcio from Bayern Munich, the club agreed to sell Ibrahimovic to Barcelona in change forSamuel Eto'o plus 49 million euros. The transfer window ended with the signing ofWesley Sneijder from Real Madrid on August 26, who three days later played against AC Milan, a game which ended in 4-0 victory. Inter won the2009–10 Champions League, defeating in round of 16 one of the favourites,Ancelotti's Chelsea, winning both legs, the latter with the first win inStamford Bridge with a goal fromSamuel Eto'o. Then, they beatCSKA Moscow and reigning champions, the Barcelona ofPep Guardiola in the semi-final, with the second leg at theCamp Nou played with ten men for most of the match; they then beatBayern Munich 2–0 in the final in Madrid, with two goals fromDiego Milito.[67] In this season, Chelsea, Barcelona and Bayern all won their domestic championship. Inter also won the2009–10 Serie A title by two points over Roma, the fifth title in a row, and the2010 Coppa Italia by defeating the same side 1–0 in the final.[68] This made Inter the first and only Italian team to win thetreble.[69] At the end of the season, Mourinho left the club to manage Real Madrid;[70] he was replaced byRafael Benítez.
In the summer, Inter sold 20-year-oldBalotelli toManchester City for 29,5 million euros, the second highest for the club at that time.
On 21 August 2010, Inter defeated Roma 3–1 and won the2010 Supercoppa Italiana, their fourth trophy of the year.[71] In December 2010, they claimed theFIFA Club World Cup for the first time after a 3–0 win againstMazembe inthe final, becoming for the third time world champion.[72] However, after this win, on 23 December 2010, due to their declining performance in Serie A, the club fired Benítez.[73] He was replaced byLeonardo the following day.[74] Inter was also ranked for the second time in 2010 asBest Club in the World byIFFHS.
Leonardo started with 30 points from 12 games, with an average of 2.5 points per game, better than his predecessors Benítez and Mourinho.[75] On 6 March 2011, Leonardo set a new Italian Serie A record by collecting 33 points in 13 games; the previous record was 32 points in 13 games, made by Fabio Capello in the 2004–05 season.[76] Leonardo led the club to the quarter-finals of the Champions League, after having defeated Bayern Munich once again in Round of 16, recovering from a 0–1 home defeat with a 2–3 win in Munich, with decisive goals fromSneijder andGoran Pandev, before subsequently losing toSchalke 04;[77] Inter ended the season second in Serie A and won theCoppa Italia title.[78] At the end of the season, however, he resigned,[79] and was followed by new managersGian Piero Gasperini,Claudio Ranieri (who qualified Inter for Round of 16 of UCL) andAndrea Stramaccioni, all hired during the following season. Inter finished sixth place in the championship, ending a Serie A record of ten consecutive qualifications for the Champions League, and their first season without a trophy since 2003–2004.
From 2011 to fulfillUEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations and making the club more economically sustainable, Inter started to decrease dramatically transfers fee and team's salaries (the payrolls was decreased up to one third in two years[80]), sold veterans with higher salaries and replaced them with younger players, that weakened the competitiveness of the team for a number of years: in August 2011, Eto'o was sold toAnzhi; in January 2012, Thiago Motta left forPSG; in the summer of 2012, Julio Cesar, Maicon and Lucio; Sneijder in January 2013.
On 1 August 2012, the club announced that Moratti was to sell a minority stake of the club to a Chinese consortium led byKenneth Huang.[81] On the same day, Inter announced an agreement was formed withChina Railway Construction Corporation Limited for a new stadium project, however, the deal with the Chinese eventually collapsed.[82] The 2012–13 season was the worst in recent club history, with Inter finishing ninth in Serie A and failing to qualify for any European competitions, but it was also notable as the first team to win at the newJuventus Stadium, ending the 49 match unbeaten streak of Juventus in Serie A, with two goals from Milito and one fromRodrigo Palacio.Walter Mazzarri was appointed to replace Stramaccioni as the manager for2013–14 season on 24 May 2013, having ended his tenure at Napoli.[83] He guided the club to fifth in Serie A and to2014–15 UEFA Europa League qualification; after the season, the last players of 2010's treble that remained left the team: Chivu, Samuel, Zanetti, Milito and Cambiasso.
On 15 October 2013, an Indonesian consortium (International Sports Capital HK) led byErick Thohir, Handy Soetedjo andRosan Roeslani, signed an agreement to acquire 70% of Inter shares from Internazionale Holding S.r.l.[84][85][86] Immediately after the deal, Moratti's Internazionale Holding S.r.l. still retained 29.5% of the shares of FC Internazionale Milano S.p.A.[87] After the deal, the shares of Inter was owned by a chain of holding companies, namely International Sports Capital S.p.A. of Italy (for 70% stake), International Sports Capital HK Limited and Asian Sports Ventures HK Limited of Hong Kong. Asian Sports Ventures HK Limited, itself another intermediate holding company, was owned by Nusantara Sports Ventures HK Limited (60% stake, a company owned by Thohir), Alke Sports Investment HK Limited (20% stake) and Aksis Sports Capital HK Limited (20% stake).
Inter lining up before a Europa League match againstDnipro on 18 September 2014
Thohir, who also co-ownedMajor League Soccer (MLS) clubD.C. United andIndonesia Super League (ISL) clubPersib Bandung, announced on 2 December 2013 that Inter and D.C. United had formed astrategic partnership.[88] During the Thohir era the club began to modify its financial structure from one reliant on continual owner investment to a more self-sustainable business model, although the club still breachedUEFA Financial Fair Play Regulations in 2015. The club was fined and received a squad reduction in UEFA competitions, with additional penalties suspended during the probation period. During this time, Roberto Mancini returned as the club manager on 14 November 2014, with Inter finishing eighth. Inter finished2015–2016 season fourth, failing to return to the Champions League.
On 6 June 2016,Suning Holdings Group (via a Luxembourg-based subsidiary Great Horizon S.á r.l.) a company owned byZhang Jindong, co-founder and chairman ofSuning Commerce Group, acquired a majority stake of Inter from Thohir's consortium International Sports Capital S.p.A. and from Moratti family's remaining shares in Internazionale Holding S.r.l.[89] According to various filings, the total investment from Suning was €270 million.[90] The deal was approved by anextraordinary general meeting on 28 June 2016, from which Suning Holdings Group had acquired a 68.55% stake in the club.[91]
The first season of new ownership, however, started with poor performance in pre-season friendlies. On 8 August 2016, Inter parted company with head coach Roberto Mancini by mutual consent over disagreements regarding the club's direction,[92] especially with new signingsJoao Mario for 44,75 million € (the second most expensive player in club history at that time) andGabigol for 29,5 million €. He was replaced byFrank de Boer, who was sacked on 1 November 2016 after leading Inter to a 4W–2D–5L record in 11 Serie A games as head coach.[93] The successor,Stefano Pioli, could not prevent the team from getting the worst group result inUEFA competitions in the club's history.[94] Despite an eight-game winning streak, he and the club parted away before season's end, when it became clear they would finish outside the league's top three for the sixth consecutive season.[95] On 9 June 2017, former Roma coachLuciano Spalletti was appointed as Inter manager, signing a two-year contract,[96] and eleven months later Inter secured aUEFA Champions League group stage spot thanks to a 3–2 victory againstLazio in the final game of2017–18 Serie A.[97][98]Among the best tactical moves from Spalletti, there was the change of position forMarcelo Brozovic who became one of the best defensive midfielders in European football.[99][100]Due to this success, in August the club extended the contract with Spalletti to 2021.[101]
On 4 July 2018, Inter officially signed fromRacing Club de Avellaneda the 20-year-old Argentinian strikerLautaro Martinez for 25 million €, who will later become one of the best and most representative player of the club.
On 26 October 2018,Steven Zhang was appointed as the new president of the club,[102] and on 13 December 2018Giuseppe Marotta officially joined Inter Milan as CEO for sport. On 25 January 2019, the club officially announced that LionRock Capital fromHong Kong had reached an agreement with International Sports Capital HK Limited, in order to acquire its 31.05% shares in Inter and to become the club's new minority shareholder.[103]After the2018–19 Serie A season, despite Inter finishing fourth, Spalletti was sacked.[104]
Renewed successes (2019–present)
On 31 May 2019, Inter appointed formerJuventus and Italian managerAntonio Conte as their new coach, signing a three-year deal;[105] In mid 2019 Inter acquiredRomelu Lukaku fromManchester United for 74 million €, the new most expensive player in the history of the club,Nicolò Barella for 44.5 million € fromCagliari and soldMauro Icardi, one of the best strikers in Italy in the preceding years (two times Serie A top scorer in 2015 and 2018), toParis Saint-Germain for 50 million €.Alessandro Bastoni, who had been acquired fromAtalanta in 2017 at the age of 18 for 31.1 million €, made his debut for Inter in the2019–20 season and withMilan Škriniar andStefan de Vrij formed a strong defensive trio in a 3-5-2 formation that will be the best defense in Serie A in the following years.
A street art mural outside Giuseppe Meazza stadium depicting the clash betweenRomelu Lukaku andZlatan Ibrahimović in a Coppa Italia match played in January 2021, decided by aChristian Eriksen's free kick goal.
Despite the worst result in Champions League group stage in the club's history ending fourth with only six points, after a record 11 consecutive victories since the beginning of the second half of the season[109] and following Inter win in Crotone and Atalanta's draw againstSassuolo on 2 May 2021, Internazionale were confirmed as champions for the first time in eleven years, ending Juventus' run of nine consecutive titles, with Zhang family that became the first foreign ownership to win serie A.[110] However, despite securing Serie A glory, Conte left the club by mutual consent on 26 May 2021. The departure was reportedly due to disagreements between Conte and the board over player transfers.[111][112] In June 2021,Simone Inzaghi was appointed as Conte's replacement.[113] On 6 July 2021 Achraf Hakimi was sold to Paris Saint-Germain for €60 million that was replaced byDenzel Dumfries fromPSV Eindhoven, on 8 August 2021 Romelu Lukaku was sold toChelsea for €115 million, representing themost expensive association football transfer by an Italian football club ever,[114][115] while Eriksen couldn't play anymore in Italy after the cardiac arrest he suffered in European Championship with the implementation of an Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator.[116]Nicolò Barella and Alessandro Bastoni were part of Italian National team that wonUEFA Euro 2020 played in the summer of 2021.
Inter qualified in theUCL Round of 16 for the first time in ten years, but despite the club's first-ever win at Anfield Road thanks to a goal fromLautaro Martínez, they were eliminated by Liverpool. On 12 January 2022, Inter won theSupercoppa Italiana, defeating Juventus 2–1 at San Siro. After conceding a goal to the opponent, Inter equalised with a penalty scored by Lautaro Martínez, and the match finished 1–1 in regulation time. In the last second of the extra time,Alexis Sánchez scored the winning goal, giving Inter the first trophy of the season, also Simone Inzaghi's first trophy as Inter manager.[117] On 11 May 2022, Inter won theCoppa Italia, defeating Juventus 4–2 atStadio Olimpico. After normal time had ended 2–2, with Nicolò Barella andHakan Çalhanoğlu scoring Inter's goals,Ivan Perišić's brace in the extra time gave Inter the win and a second title of the season.[118] The2021–22 Serie A campaign saw Inter finish in second place, being the most prolific attacking side with 84 goals.[119] After the autumn break for the2022 FIFA World Cup won by Lautaro Martinez's Argentina, on 18 January 2023 Inter won theSupercoppa Italiana, defeatingMilan 3−0 atKing Fahd International Stadium, thanks to goals fromFederico Dimarco,Edin Džeko, and Lautaro Martínez.[120]
Inter players line up before a pre-season friendly againstSalzburg in August 2023.
Inter passed again the UCL group stage after having eliminated Barcelona, and then after having defeatedPorto andBenfica, qualified for the semifinals of the competition.On 16 May 2023, Inter defeated archrivals Milan in the semi-finals of2022–23 UEFA Champions League with goals from Džeko andHenrikh Mkhitaryan in the first leg and a goal from Martinez in the second leg, advanced to theChampions League final for the first time since2010. However, they were defeated at theAtatürk Olympic Stadium 1−0 byManchester City after a second half goal from midfielderRodri.[121]
In July 2023, Inter sold for 50 million € goalkeeperAndre Onana to Manchester United, acquired the prior season for free like Hakan Çalhanoğlu in 2021, Henrikh Mkhitaryan in 2022 andMarcus Thuram in 2023.Samir Handanović retired after 11 seasons and 455 appearances for the club and anall-time career record in Serie A history of 26 penalties saved,[122]Brozovic was sold toAl Nassr, Škriniar moved to Paris Saint-Germain on a free transfer, while other players were added to the squad:Davide Frattesi from Sassuolo (33 million €),Benjamin Pavard (30 million €) andYann Sommer (6.9 million €) both from Bayern Munich.
Inter started very well the season with five consecutive win including a 5 to 1 victory over AC Milan, the largest in Milan derby since 2009.In January 2024 Inter won its eighthSupercoppa Italiana and its third consecutive, in a new format with four teams, tying the record set by AC Milan in the 1990s for consecutive wins, after having defeatedLazio 3–0 and then in the final matchNapoli 1–0, with a late goal by Lautaro Martínez. On 22 April 2024, Inter secured their 20th Serie A title[123] and the secondStar by defeating Milan 2–1 at the San Siro in a record sixth consecutiveDerby della Madonnina win[124] in a dominant season ending with 94 points, 19 over second-place Milan. The team had the best attack in the league with 89 goals made and the best defense with only 22 goals conceded, a +67 difference, the best in Serie A since the 1950–1951 season.[125]
Simone Inzaghi coached Inter from 2021 to 2025, he has the record for most win in Champions League and in UEFA competition (25) in Inter history.
On 22 May 2024, Oaktree Capital Management assumed ownership of Inter Milan following the default of Suning Holdings Group on a substantial loan given in May 2021 to the club in order to cover losses incurred during theCOVID-19 pandemic.[126] The firm took control of the club after Suning Holdings Group failed to repay a debt of €395 million ($428 million). This development was confirmed by Oaktree in an emailed statement.[127] As a consequence, the new ownership chose to appoint CEOGiuseppe Marotta as the club's new chairman.
Inter Milan began their first season under the new ownership by drawing 2–2 to Genoa.[128] The2024–25 season ultimately proved to be a disappointment for the Nerazzurri as despite looking likely for a treble with a month of the season to go, Inter would finish runner up to Napoli for a point in a tightSerie A season and exit theCoppa Italia in the semi finals after losing to AC Milan who also previously in January came from behind to beat them in theSupercoppa Italiana final. In theChampions League Inter finished fourth in the new league phase ensuring automatic advancement to the round of 16, with only one goal conceded in eight matches, a record in UCL League phase. Inter then beatFeyenoord 4–1 on aggregate in the round of 16, Bayern Munich 4–3 on aggregate in the quarter finals (winning in Munich ending a run of 22 matches in 4 years of unbeaten home run for the German team) and Barcelona in a thrilling 7–6 semi final tie: after a 3–3 in Barcelona in the first leg, a win for 4–3 in San Siro in extra time after being up 2–0, then down 2–3 until the equalizer in the last minutes in regulation time with a goal fromAcerbi and then the decisive goal from Frattesi which meant Inter would make theChampions League final for the seventh time in their history and second time in three seasons. Despite having lost only once in 14 matches in the UCL this season, Inter lost the final 5–0 to Paris Saint-Germain ensuring a first trophy less season since the2019–20 season.
Three days after the final Simone Inzaghi left the club via mutual consent, two weeks before Inter's first game in the inauguralFIFA Club World Cup. Former Inter playerCristian Chivu was appointed as the new head coach.[129]In FIFA Club World Cup played in theUnited States, after a draw againstMonterrey in the first match played at theRose Bowl inPasadena, they won the next two matches at theLumen Field inSeattle: the first against theUrawa Red Diamonds two-one and the second againstRiver Plate two-nil, going through the group in first place, only to be eliminated in the round of 16 of the competition.
1928–29 S.S. Ambrosiana in its white and redCrociata shirt
One of the founders of Inter, a painter named Giorgio Muggiani, was responsible for the design of the first Inter logo in 1908.[130] The first design incorporated the letters "FCIM" in the centre of a series of circles that formed the badge of the club.[130] The basic elements of the design have remained constant even as finer details have been modified over the years. Starting from the1999–2000 season, the original club crest was reduced in size, to create space for the addition of the club's name and foundation year at the upper and lower part of the logo respectively.[2]
In 2007, the logo was returned to the pre-1999–2000 era.[2] It was given a more modern look with a smallerScudetto star and lighter colour scheme.[2] This version was used until July 2014, when the club decided to undertake a rebranding.[131] The most significant difference between the current and the previous logo is the omission of the star from other media except match kits.[132]
Since its founding in 1908, Inter have almost always worn black and blue stripes, earning them the nicknameNerazzurri. According to the tradition, the colours were adopted to represent the nocturnal sky: in fact, the club was established on the night of 9 March, at 23:30; moreover, blue was chosen by Giorgio Muggiani because he considered it to be the opposite colour to red, worn by the Milan Cricket and Football Club rivals.[133][134]
During the 1928–29 season, however, Inter were forced by Fascist regime to abandon their black and blue uniforms. In 1928, Inter's name and philosophy made the ruling Fascist Party uneasy; as a result, during the same year the 20-year-old club was merged withUnione Sportiva Milanese: the new club was namedSocietà Sportiva Ambrosiana after the patron saint of Milan.[135] Theflag of Milan (the red cross on white background) replaced the traditional black and blue.[136] In 1929, the black-and-blue jerseys were restored, and after World War II, when the Fascists had fallen from power, the club reverted to their original name. In 2008, Inter celebrated their centenary with a red cross on their away shirt. The cross is reminiscent of the flag of their city, and they continue to use the pattern on their third kit. In 2014, the club adopted a predominantly black home kit with thin blue pinstripes[137] before returning to a more traditional design the following season.
Animals are often used to represent football clubs in Italy – thegrass snake, calledBiscione, represents Inter.[138][139] The snake is a symbol for the city of Milan, appearing often in Milaneseheraldry as a coiled viper with a man in its jaws. The symbol is present on the coat of arms of theHouse of Sforza (which ruled over Italy from Milan during theRenaissance period), the city of Milan, the historicalDuchy of Milan (a 400-year state of theHoly Roman Empire) andInsubria (a historical region the city of Milan falls within).[138][139] For the2010–11 season, Inter's away kit featured the snake.
The team's stadium is the 75,923 seatSan Siro,[140] officially known as theStadio Giuseppe Meazza after the former player who represented for 14 seasons Inter and for two Milan. The more commonly used name,San Siro, is the name ofthe district where it is located. San Siro has been the home of Milan since 1926, when it was privately built by funding from Milan's chairman at the time, Piero Pirelli. Construction was performed by 120 workers, and took13+1⁄2 months to complete. The stadium was owned by the club until it was sold to the city in 1935, and since 1947 it has been shared with Inter, when they were accepted as joint tenant.
The first game played at the stadium was on 19 September 1926, when Inter beat Milan 6–3 in a friendly match. Milan played its first league game in San Siro on 19 September 1926, losing 1–2 toSampierdarenese. From an initial capacity of 35,000 spectators, the stadium has undergone several major renovations. A major structural renovation was made for the2016 UEFA Champions League Final while another one took place in late 2021 to host theUEFA Nations League final. The stadium is going to be refurbished again in time forMilano Cortina 2026.[141]
Based on the English model for stadiums, San Siro is specifically designed for football matches, as opposed to many multi-purpose stadiums used in Serie A. It is therefore renowned in Italy for its atmosphere during matches, owing to the closeness of the stands to the pitch.
New Milano Stadium
Since 2012, various proposals and projects byMassimo Moratti have alternated regarding a possible construction of a new Inter stadium.[142] Between June and July 2019, Inter and Milan announced the agreement for the construction of a new shared stadium in the San Siro area.[143] In the winter of 2021,Giuseppe Sala, the mayor of Milan, gave official permission for the construction of the new stadium next to San Siro, which is expected to be partially demolished and refunctionalised after the 2026 Olympic Games.[144] In early 2022, Inter and Milan revealed a "plan B" to relocate the construction of the new Milano stadium in theGreater Milan, away from the San Siro area.[145]
According to an August 2024 research byIpsos.,[146] Inter is the second-most supported football club in Italy, only being second toJuventus. In the early years (until the First World War), Inter fans from the city of Milan were typicallymiddle class, while Milan fans were typicallyworking class.[134] DuringMassimo Moratti's ownership, Inter fans were considered to be on the moderate left. At the same time, duringSilvio Berlusconi's reign, Milan fans were viewed as belonging to the centre-right.
The traditionalultras group of Inter isBoys San; which are one of the oldest Italian ultras groups, being founded in 1969. Politically, one group (Irriducibili) of Inter Ultras are right-wing and this group has relations with the Lazio ultras. As well as the main group (apolitical) ofBoys San, there are five more significant groups:Viking (apolitical),Irriducibili (right-wing),Ultras (apolitical),Brianza Alcoolica (apolitical) andImbastisci (left-wing).
Inter's most vocal fans gather in the Curva Nord, or north curve of the San Siro. This longstanding tradition has led to the Curva Nord being synonymous with the club's most die-hard supporters, who unfurl banners and wave flags in support of their team. Throughout 2024, the Curva Nord (labelled as the "Curva Nord Milano") collaborated withrap duo¥$ (composed ofKanye West andTy Dolla Sign) on multiple occasions, appearing as a choir on the chart-topping hit song "Carnival" (alongside rapping on its chorus) featuringPlayboi Carti andRich the Kid, and on the ¥$ remix of "Like That", featuringFuture andrecord producerMetro Boomin.[147][148]
Scene of a Derby della Madonnina in 1915
Inter have several rivalries, two of which are highly significant inItalian football; firstly, they participate in the intracityDerby della Madonnina withMilan; the rivalry has existed ever since Inter splintered off from Milan in 1908.[134] The name of the derby refers to theBlessed Virgin Mary atop theMilan Cathedral. 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 the2004–05 Champions League quarter-final matchup between Milan and Inter on 12 April, after a flare thrown from the crowd by an Inter supporter struck Milan keeperDida on the shoulder.[149]
The other principal rivalry is with Juventus; matches between the two clubs are known as theDerby d'Italia. Up until the2006 Italian football scandal, which saw Juventus relegated, the two were the only Italian clubs never to have played below Serie A. In the 2000s, Inter developed a rivalry withRoma, who finished as runners-up to Inter in all but one of Inter's fiveScudetto-winning seasons between 2005–06 and 2009–10. The two sides have also contested in five Coppa Italia finals and four Supercoppa Italiana finals since 2006. Other clubs, likeAtalanta andNapoli, are also considered among their rivals.[150] Their supporters collectively go byInteristi, orNerazzurri.[151]
Inter hasnever been relegated from the top flight of Italian football in its entire existence. It is the sole club to have competed inSerie A and its predecessors in every season since its debut in 1909.
Javier Zanetti holds the records for both total appearances andSerie A appearances for Inter, with 858 official games played in total and 618 in Serie A.
Giuseppe Meazza is Inter's all-time top goalscorer, with 284 goals in 408 games.[152] Behind him, in second place, isAlessandro Altobelli with 209 goals in 466 games, andRoberto Boninsegna in third place, with 173 goals over 287 games.
Helenio Herrera had the longest reign as Inter coach, with nine years (eight consecutive) in charge, and is the most successful coach in Inter history with threeScudetti, two European Cups, and twoIntercontinental Cup wins.José Mourinho, who was appointed on 2 June 2008, completed his first season in Italy by winning theSerie A title and the Supercoppa Italiana; in hissecond season he won the first "treble" in Italian history: theSerie A,Coppa Italia and theUEFA Champions League.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Giacinto Facchetti's #3 and Javier Zanetti's #4 are the two numbers retired by Inter
3 –Giacinto Facchetti,left back, played for his entire career at Inter from 1960 to 1978(posthumous honour). The number was retired on 8 September 2006, four days after Facchetti had died from cancer aged 64. The last player to wear the number 3 shirt was Argentinian center backNicolás Burdisso, who took on the number 16 shirt for the rest of the season.[154]
4 –Javier Zanetti,wing-back/full-back, played 858 games for Inter between 1995 and his retirement in the summer of 2014. In June 2014, club chairmanErick Thohir confirmed that Zanetti's number 4 was to be retired out of respect.[155][156]
Inter have varied between 6th and 20th in theDeloitte Football Money League between 1996 and 2025. They currently sit 14th in the 2023–24 season, with €391 million in revenues, split between matchday (€81 million), broadcasting (€198 million) and commercial (€112 million) revenues.[160]
Massimo Moratti took over as president of Inter in 1995, inheriting not just a majority stake but also a legacy passed down from his father, Angelo Moratti. During his tenure, Moratti invested enormous sums of his own wealth to modernize and elevate the club. Estimates suggest he spent between €600 million and €1.5 billion on player transfers alone during his time as majority owner. Marquee signings in the late 90s included Ronaldo and Christian Vieri (for a then-world-record €48 million).[161] Moratti sold a 70% stake to a consortium led by Indonesian businessman Erick Thohir through International Sports Capital for approximately €250 million, valuing the club at around $480 million. Thohir gained majority control, while Massimo Moratti retained a minority stake of around 30%. The deal represented a change of strategy aimed at expanding the club’s presence in Asian markets.[162]
In June 2016, Chinese electronics retailer Suning Commerce Group acquired nearly 70% of Italian football club Inter Milan for €270 million ($307 million), marking the largest takeover of a European football club by a Chinese firm at the time. Thohir retained a minority stake of around 30% and remained club president, while Massimo Moratti, the long-time owner of Inter sold his remaining shares, fully exiting the club. As part of the transaction, Suning also agreed to assume a significant portion of the club’s existing debt.[163]
During the 2020-21 season, the club posted a record loss of €245.6 million (US $285 million) during the COVID interrupted season, the largest ever reported by an Italian club, due to the complete loss of matchday revenue and reduced sponsorship income. As a result, US-based investment firmOaktree Capital Management guaranteed a US$336 million loan to cover operating expenses, the sum payable back plus interest within three years.[164]
On 22 May 2024, Oaktree assumed ownership of the club with Suning missing the deadline on a €395 million debt payment, resulting in Oaktree's right to take control of the club.[165][166]
^"#WisdomWednesday: 9 March 1908".Inter.it. Milan: F.C. Internazionale Milano. 8 March 2017.Archived from the original on 14 April 2024. Retrieved13 April 2024.It will be born here at l'Orologio restaurant, a gathering place for artists. And it will forever be a very talented team. This wonderful night will give us the colours for our crest: black and blue against a backdrop of gold stars. It will be called Internazionale, because we are brothers of the world.
^Gifford, Clive (27 February 2024)."Inter Milan".britannica.com. Encyclopedia Britannica.Archived from the original on 14 February 2024. Retrieved29 February 2024.Inter was formed in 1908 by a breakaway group of players from the Milan Cricket and Football Club (now known as AC Milan) who wanted their club to accept more foreign players
^Guido Guida (27 May 2007)."L'Inter chiude da cannibale" (in Italian). La Gazzetta dello Sport.Archived from the original on 18 April 2023. Retrieved25 March 2024.