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Internazionale
FC Internazionale Milano 2021
Full name Football Club Internazionale Milano S.p.A.
Nickname(s) I Nerazzurri (The Black and Blues)
La Beneamata (The Cherished One)
Il Biscione (The Big Grass Snake)
Baüscia (Boasters in Lombard language)
Short name Inter
Founded 9 March 1908
Ground Giuseppe Meazza
(Capacity: 80,018)
Owner Suning Holdings Group (68.55%)
LionRock Capital (31.05%)
Pirelli (0.37%)
Other shareholders (0.03%)
Chairman Flag of China Steven Zhang
Manager Flag of Italy Simone Inzaghi
Current League Serie A 
2023–24 Serie A, 1st (champions)
Website Club home page
Inter 2024-25 homeInter 2024-25 awayInter 2024-25 third
Football current event Current season

Football Club Internazionale Milano, commonly referred to as Internazionale or simply Inter, and colloquially known as Inter Milan outside of Italy, is a professional Italian football club based in Milan, Lombardy. They are the only club to have spent their entire history in the top flight of Italian football, known as Serie A, which started in 1929–1930.

Internazionale have won 30 domestic trophies, including the league 18 times, the Coppa Italia seven times and the Supercoppa Italiana five times. From 2006 to 2010, the club won five successive league titles, equalling the all-time record. They have won the Champions League three times; two back-to-back in 1964 and 1965 and then another in 2010; the second most of any Italian club after their local rivals A.C. Milan. The last completed an unprecedented (for an Italian team) continental treble with the Coppa Italia and the Scudetto. The club has also won three UEFA Cups, two Intercontinental Cups and one FIFA Club World Cup.

Inter's home games are played at San Siro, also known as the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza. The stadium, which is shared with rivals Milan, is the largest in Italian football, with a total capacity of 80,018. Milan are considered one of their biggest rivals, and matches between the two teams are called Derby della Madonnina, which is one of the most followed derbies in football. As of 2010, Inter is the second-most supported team in Italy, and the eighth most supported team in Europe. The club is one of the most valuable in Italian and world football. It was a founding member of the now-defunct G-14 group of Europe's leading football clubs as well as its replacement, the European Club Association.

History[]

The Early Years[]

Inter was founded in March 1908 under the name of Foot-Ball Club Internazionale, by a group of visionaries who wished to give foreigners a chance to play football alongside Italians. Its founding fathers split from the Milan Cricket and Football Club (A.C. Milan), thus creating a fierce rivalry that is still present a century later.

From the club’s onset, it was open to accepting foreigners, hence the name of Internazionale. The Club won its first Scudetto in 1910 under the direction of their captain Virgilio Fossati, who would subsequently perish in World War One.

Their second title would come ten years later in 1920 but then the club was thrown into turmoil by the fascist regime led by Benito Mussolini. The regime’s hard-line tactics forced the club to merge with Milanese Unione Sportiva and the club won its third Scudetto under the name of Ambrosiana Inter in 1930.

A fourth league title followed eight years later due to the brilliance of striker Giuseppe Meazza. Meazza played for the Nerazzurri for 13 years and is still the club's record goalscorer with 245 goals in 350 appearances. He was later immortalized when the stadium at San Siro was renamed after him one year after his death.

Inter’s fifth Scudetto was won in 1940 and a few months after the Second World War ended, the club re-emerged under the name of Internazionale. They won back-to-back championships in 1953 and 1954, before entering the golden age of their history, remembered as the era of La Grande Inter.

La Grande Inter[]

President Angelo Moratti ushered in a new glorious era in the 1960s in which one of the greatest teams in European club football history was created. Led by Coach Helenio Herrera, Inter won three league titles in 1963, 1965 & 1966 while also capturing two straight European, and Intercontinental Cups in 1964 & 1965.

Herrera was a strict disciplinarian who ruled with an iron fist. Nicknamed 'Il Mago', The Magician, he was years ahead of his time and was a pioneer in revolutionizing the Catenaccio tactical system. In Herrera's model of the defensive formation, a sweeper was added to the back-line. The Argentine also stressed the importance of fitness and diets in the ever evolving game of football.

This glorious Inter team included some of the all-time greats of European football - Giacinto Facchetti, Sandro Mazzola, Luis Suarez and Mario Corso to name just a few.

The squad could have even secured more success but for a couple of near-misses. They lost in a Scudetto play-off to Bologna in 1964 and were runners-up to Celtic in the final of the 1967 European Cup. Setting record after record, they also went more than three years without losing a home game between 1964 and 1967.

Trapattoni Years[]

Following this golden era, Inter went on to win another Scudetto in 1971 and 1980 before another great team was assembled under another legendary Coach Giovanni Trapattoni. Inter stormed to their 13th Serie A title in 1989, winning an incredible 26 of their 34 games.

During Trapattoni's tenure, the Nerazzurri possessed the German triumvirate of Brehme, Klinsmann and Mattheus, as well as defensive great Giuseppe Bergomi. Nicknamed 'The Uncle', Bergomi played for Inter for almost two decades from 1980 to 1999 and is the club's record appearance holder with 519. A Supercup victory to start the ensuing season reflected that good times were ahead for the club in the 1990s but this was the start of a Scudetto drought that would last for seventeen years.

The Domestic Drought[]

Inter won three UEFA Cup titles in 1991, 1994 and 1998 but the decade will be remembered for domestic failure and constant underachievement. The 1990s were the only decade in Inter’s history that they did not win at least one Scudetto while their rivals, AC Milan and Juventus flourished in both domestic and European competitions.

Inter hold the honorable distinction of being the only club to have never been relegated from Serie A but that feat was almost relinquished when they finished just one point from the relegation zone in 1994.

Massimo Moratti, the oil tycoon and son of the great Angelo Moratti, took over the club in 1995 and immediately invested hundreds of millions of his own money in a bid to bring back the glory years. This led to the high-profile purchases of the likes of Ronaldo, Christian Vieri and Hernan Crespo.

Moratti almost brought a Scudetto to the Nerazzurri faithful in 1998 but could not overtake Juventus after a season-long duel. A title-decider at the Delle Alpi when Juventus won 1-0 in controversial circumstances proved to be crucial.

May 5, 2002 is a day that will forever live in infamy for Inter supporters. Hector Cuper's men just needed to win their last game of the season away at Lazio to finally re-capture the Scudetto but despite twice leading, the team collapsed in the second-half, losing 4-2 and handing the title to Juventus.

The Scudetto At Last[]

Inter were awarded the Scudetto in 2006 as a result of the Calciopoli scandal that rocked Italian football. Juventus were relegated to the Serie B and stripped of their title, while AC Milan received a points deduction penalty that ultimately gave Inter their first title in 17 years.

It was a bittersweet moment for the club and its supporters as they wished that the Scudetto could have been won on the field instead of in the courtroom. The following year, Coach Roberto Mancini led his team to a record of 17 consecutive Serie A victories on the way to their 15th Scudetto.

The club set a plethora of records on the way and won the title with five games to spare, yet critics and pundits point out that, due to Juventus' relegation and Milan's points penalty, it was a weakened Serie A. This season the club is celebrating its centenary year and are donning a new white jersey with a red cross to honour its rich 100 years of history.

Players[]

First-team squad[]

As of 11 September 2024
No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Flag of Switzerland Yann Sommer
2 DF Flag of Netherlands Denzel Dumfries
6 DF Flag of Netherlands Stefan de Vrij
7 MF Flag of Poland Piotr Zieliński
8 FW Flag of Austria Marko Arnautović
9 FW Flag of France Marcus Thuram
10 FW Flag of Argentina Lautaro Martínez (captain)
11 FW Flag of Argentina Joaquín Correa
12 GK Flag of Italy Raffaele Di Gennaro
13 GK Flag of Spain Josep Martínez
15 DF Flag of Italy Francesco Acerbi
16 MF Flag of Italy Davide Frattesi
17 MF Flag of Canada Tajon Buchanan
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Flag of Turkey Hakan Çalhanoğlu
21 MF Flag of Albania Kristjan Asllani
22 MF Flag of Armenia Henrikh Mkhitaryan
23 MF Flag of Italy Nicolò Barella (vice-captain)
28 DF Flag of France Benjamin Pavard
30 DF Flag of Brazil Carlos Augusto
31 DF Flag of Germany Yann Bisseck
32 DF Flag of Italy Federico Dimarco
36 DF Flag of Italy Matteo Darmian
42 DF Flag of Argentina Tomás Palacios
95 DF Flag of Italy Alessandro Bastoni
99 FW Flag of Iran Mehdi Taremi

Other players under contract[]

As of 30 August 2024
No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Flag of Romania Ionuț Radu

Out on loan[]

As of 11 September 2024
No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Flag of Serbia Filip Stanković (at Venezia until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Argentina Franco Carboni (at Venezia until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Alessandro Fontanarosa (at Reggiana until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Giacomo Stabile (at Alcione until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Italy Francesco Stante (at Pergolettese until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Belgium Zinho Vanheusden (at KV Mechelen until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Nigeria Ebenezer Akinsanmiro (at Sampdoria until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Argentina Valentín Carboni (at Marseille until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Italy Luca Di Maggio (at Perugia until 30 June 2025)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Flag of Serbia Aleksandar Stanković (at Luzern until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of France Issiaka Kamate (at AVS until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Francesco Pio Esposito (at Spezia until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Sebastiano Esposito (at Empoli until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Enoch Owusu (at Novara until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Italy Eddie Salcedo (at OFI until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Senegal Amadou Sarr (at Foggia until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Uruguay Martín Satriano (at Lens until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of Poland Jan Żuberek (at Lecco until 30 June 2025)

Youth sector[]

Main article: Inter Milan Youth Sector

Inter Primavera players that received a first-team squad call-up.

No. Pos. Nation Player
50 DF Flag of Italy Mike Aidoo
52 MF Flag of Italy Thomas Berenbruch

Club alumni[]

Former players[]

Main List of Inter Milan players

Managers[]

Main List of Inter Milan managers

Club honours[]

Domestic league[]

Serie A:

  • Winners (20): 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, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2020–21, 2023–24
  • Runners-up (16): 1932–33, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1940–41, 1948–49, 1950–51, 1961–62, 1963–64, 1966–67, 1969–70, 1992–93, 2002–03, 2010–11, 2019–20, 2021–22

Domestic cup[]

Coppa Italia:

  • Winners (7): 1938–39, 1977–78, 1981–82, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2009–10, 2010–11
  • Runners-up (6): 1958–59, 1964–65, 1976–77, 1999–00, 2006–07, 2007–08

Supercoppa Italiana:

  • Winners (8): 1989, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2021, 2022, 2023
  • Runners-up (4): 2000, 2007, 2009, 2011

European competition[]

  • Winners (3): 1963–64, 1964–65, 2009–10
  • Runners-up (3): 1966–67, 1971–72, 2022–23
  • Runners-up (1): 2010
  • Runners-up (1): 1933

Worldwide competition[]

  • Winners (2): 1964, 1965
  • Winners (1): 2010
  • Intercontinental Supercup:
  • Runners-up (1): 1968

External links[]

FC Internazionale Milano 2021
Inter Milan
Current seasonClub honoursCoaching staffStadio Giuseppe Meazza
History: GeneralSeasons
FC Internazionale Milano 2021
Inter Milan squad - 2024–25

Sommer · Dumfries · De Vrij · Zieliński · Arnautović · Thuram · 10 L. Martínez · 11 Correa · 12 Di Gennaro · 13 J. Martínez · 15 Acerbi · 16 Frattesi · 17 Buchanan · 20 Çalhanoğlu · 21 Asllani · 22 Mkhitaryan · 23 Barella · 28 Pavard · 30 Carlos Augusto · 31 Bisseck · 32 Dimarco · 36 Darmian · 42 Palacios · 95 Bastoni · 99 Taremi ·

Manager:  Flag of Italy Simone Inzaghi
FC Internazionale Milano 2021
FC Internazionale Milano 2021
Inter Milan seasons

2016–17 · 2017–18 · 2018–19 · 2019–20 · 2020–21 · 2021–22 · 2022–23 · 2023–24 · 2024–25 ·

Inter Milan - Managers

Fossati (1909–15) • Resegotti (1920–22) • Spottiswood (1922–24) • Scheidler (1924–26) • Weisz (1926–28) • Viola (1928–29) • Weisz (1929–31) • Tóth (1931–32) • Weisz (1932–34) • Feldmann (1934–36) • Carraro (1936) • Castellazzi (1936–38) • Cargnelli (1938–40) • Peruchetti (1940) • Zamberletti (1941) • Fiorentini (1941–42) • Ferrari (1942–45) • Carcano (1945–46) • Nutrizio (1946) • Meazza (1947–48) • Carcano (1948) • Astley (1948) • Cappelli (1949–50) • Olivieri (1950–52) • Foni (1952–55) • Campatelli (1955) • Meazza (1955–56) • Frossi (1956) • Ferrero (1957) • Meazza (1957) • Carver (1957–58) • Bigogno (1958) • Campatelli (1959–60) • Achilli (1960) • Cappelli (1960) • Hel. Herrera (1960–68) • Foni (1968–69) • Her. Herrera (1969–70) • Invernizzi (1970–73) • Masiero (1973) • Hel. Herrera (1973) • Masiero (1974) • Suárez (1974–75) • Chiappella (1976–77) • Bersellini (1977–82) • Marchesi (1982–83) • Radice (1983–84) • Castagner (1984–85) • Corso (1985–86) • Trapattoni (1986–91) • Orrico (1991–92) • Suárez (1992) • Bagnoli (1992–94) • Marini (1994) • Bianchi (1994–95) • Suárez (1995) • Hodgson (1995–97) • Castellini (1997) • Simoni (1997–98) • Lucescu (1998–99) • Castellini (1999) • Hodgson (1999) • Lippi (1999–2000) • Tardelli (2000–01) • Cúper (2001–03) • Verdelli (2003) • Zaccheroni (2003–04) • Mancini (2004–08) • Mourinho (2008–10) • Benítez (2010) • Leonardo (2010–11) • Gasperini (2011) • Ranieri (2011–12) • Stramaccioni (2012–13) • Mazzarri (2013–14) • Mancini (2014–16) • de Boer (2016) • Vecchic (2016) Pioli (2016–17) Vecchic (2017) Spalletti (2017–19) Conte (2019–2021) Inzaghi (2021–)

Coppa Italia winners

Vado (1922) · Torino (1935–36) · Genoa (1936–37) · Juventus (1937–38) · Ambrosiana-Inter (1938–39) · Fiorentina (1939–40) · Venezia (1940–41) · Juventus (1941–42) · Torino (1942–43) · Lazio (1958) · Juventus (1958–59; 1959–60) · Fiorentina (1960–61) · Napoli (1961–62) · Atalanta (1962–63) · Roma (1963–64) · Juventus (1964–65) · Fiorentina (1965–66) · Milan (1966–67) · Torino (1967–68) · Roma (1968–69) · Bologna (1969–70) · Torino (1970–71) · Milan (1971–72; 1972–73) · Bologna (1973–74) · Fiorentina (1974–75) · Napoli (1975–76) · Milan (1976–77) · Internazionale (1977–78) · Juventus (1978–79) · Roma (1979–80; 1980–81) · Internazionale (1981–82) · Juventus (1982–83) · Roma (1983–84) · Sampdoria (1984–85) · Roma (1985–86) · Napoli (1986–87) · Sampdoria (1987–88) · Sampdoria (1988–89) · Juventus (1989–90) · Roma (1990–91) · Parma (1991–92) · Torino (1992–93) · Sampdoria (1993–94) · Juventus (1994–95) · Fiorentina (1995–96) · Vicenza (1996–97) · Lazio (1997–98) · Parma (1998–99) · Lazio (1999–2000) · Fiorentina (2000–01) · Parma (2001–02) · Milan (2002–03) · Lazio (2003–04) · Internazionale (2004–05) · Internazionale (2005–06) · Roma (2006–07) · Roma (2007–08) · Lazio (2008–09) · Internazionale (2009–10) · Internazionale (2010–11) · Napoli (2011–12) · Lazio (2012–13) · Napoli (2013–14) · Juventus (2014–15) · Juventus (2015–16) · Juventus (2016–17) · Juventus (2017–18) · Lazio (2018–19) · Napoli (2019–20) · Juventus (2020–21) · Internazionale (2021–22) · Internazionale (2022–23) · Juventus (2023–24) · TBD (2024–25) ·

Supercoppa Italiana winners

Milan (1988) • Internazionale (1989) • Napoli (1990) • Sampdoria (1991) • Milan (1992; 1993; 1994) • Juventus (1995) • Fiorentina (1996) • Juventus (1997) • Lazio (1998) • Parma (1999) • Lazio (2000) • Roma (2001) • Juventus (2002; 2003) • Milan (2004) • Internazionale (2005; 2006) • Roma (2007) • Internazionale (2008) • Lazio (2009) • Internazionale (2010) • Milan (2011) • Juventus (2012; 2013) • Napoli (2014) • Juventus (2015) • Milan (2016) • Lazio (2017) • Juventus (2018) • Lazio (2019) • Juventus (2020) • Internazionale (2021) • Internazionale (2022) •

Italian Football Championship and Serie A winners
Italian Football Championship
Genoa (1898; 1899; 1900) · Milan (1901) · Genoa (1902; 1903; 1904) · Juventus (1905) · Milan (1906; 1907) · Pro Vercelli (1908; 1909) · Internazionale (1909–10) · Pro Vercelli (1910–11; 1911–12; 1912–13) · Casale (1913–14) · Genoa (1914–15) · Internazionale (1919–20) · Pro Vercelli (1920–21; 1921–22 (CCI)) · Novese (1921–22 (FIGC)) · Genoa (1922–23; 1923–24) · Bologna (1924–25) · Juventus (1925–26) · no winner (1926–27); Torino (1927–28) · Bologna (1928–29)
Serie A winners
Ambrosiana (1929–30) · Juventus (1930–31; 1931–32; 1932–33; 1933–34; 1934–35) · Bologna (1935–36; 1936–37) · Ambrosiana-Inter (1937–38) · Bologna (1938–39) · Ambrosiana-Inter (1939–40) · Bologna (1940–41) · Roma (1941–42) · Torino (1942–43; 1945–46; 1946–47; 1947–48; 1948–49) · Juventus (1949–50) · Milan (1950–51) · Juventus (1951–52) · Internazionale (1952–53; 1953–54) · Milan (1954–55) · Fiorentina (1955–56) · Milan (1956–57) · Juventus (1957–58) · Milan (1958–59) · Juventus (1959–60; 1960–61) · Milan (1961–62) · Internazionale (1962–63) · Bologna (1963–64) · Internazionale (1964–65; 1965–66) · Juventus (1966–67) · Milan (1967–68) · Fiorentina (1968–69) · Cagliari (1969–70) · Internazionale (1970–71) · Juventus (1971–72; 1972–73) · Lazio (1973–74) · Juventus (1974–75) · Torino (1975–76) · Juventus (1976–77; 1977–78) · Milan (1978–79) · Internazionale (1979–80) · Juventus (1980–81; 1981–82) · Roma (1982–83) · Juventus (1983–84) · Hellas Verona (1984–85) · Juventus (1985–86) · Napoli (1986–87) · Milan (1987–88) · Internazionale (1988–89) · Napoli (1989–90) · Sampdoria (1990–91) · Milan (1991–92; 1992–93; 1993–94) · Juventus (1994–95) · Milan (1995–96) · Juventus (1996–97; 1997–98) · Milan (1998–99) · Lazio (1999–2000) · Roma (2000–01) · Juventus (2001–02; 2002–03) · Milan (2003–04) · no winner (2004–05) · Internazionale ((2005–06 unofficial); 2006–07; 2007–08; 2008–09; 2009–10) · Milan (2010–11) · Juventus (2011–12; 2012–13; 2013–14; 2014–15; 2015–16; 2016–17; 2017–18; 2018–19; 2019–20) · Internazionale (2020–21) · Milan (2021–22) · Napoli (2022–23) · Internazionale (2023–24) ·
Italian Cup winners

Vado (1922) • Torino (1935–36) • Genoa (1936–37) • Juventus (1937–38) • Ambrosiana-Inter (1938–39) • Fiorentina (1939–40) • Venezia (1940–41) • Juventus (1941–42) • Torino (1942–43) • Lazio (1958) • Juventus (1958–59; 1959–60) • Fiorentina (1960–61) • Napoli (1961–62) • Atalanta (1962–63) • Roma (1963–64) • Juventus (1964–65) • Fiorentina (1965–66) • Milan (1966–67) • Torino (1967–68) • Roma (1968–69) • Bologna (1969–70) • Torino (1970–71) • Milan (1971–72; 1972–73) • Bologna (1973–74) • Fiorentina (1974–75) • Napoli (1975–76) • Milan (1976–77) • Internazionale (1977–78) • Juventus (1978–79) • Roma (1979–80; 1980–81) • Internazionale (1981–82) • Juventus (1982–83) • Roma (1983–84) • Sampdoria (1984–85) • Roma (1985–86) • Napoli (1986–87) • Sampdoria (1987–88; 1988–89) • Juventus (1989–90) • Roma (1990–91) • Parma (1991–92) • Torino (1992–93) • Sampdoria (1993–94) • Juventus (1994–95) • Fiorentina (1995–96) • Vicenza (1996–97) • Lazio (1997–98) • Parma (1998–99) • Lazio (1999–2000) • Fiorentina (2000–01) • Parma (2001–02) • Milan (2002–03) • Lazio (2003–04) • Internazionale (2004–05; 2005–06) • Roma (2006–07, 2007–08) • Lazio (2008–09) • Internazionale (2009–10; 2010–11) • Napoli (2011–12) • Lazio (2012–13) • Napoli (2013–14) • Juventus (2014–15; 2015–16) •

Italian Super Cup winners

Milan (1988) • Internazionale (1989) • Napoli (1990) • Sampdoria (1991) • Milan (1992) • Milan (1993) • Milan (1994) • Juventus (1995) • Fiorentina (1996) • Juventus (1997) • Lazio (1998) • Parma (1999) • Lazio (2000) • Roma (2001) • Juventus (2002) • Juventus (2003) • Milan (2004) • Internazionale (2005) • Internazionale (2006) • Roma (2007) • Internazionale (2008) • Lazio (2009) • Internazionale (2010) • Milan (2011) • Juventus (2012) • Juventus (2013) • Napoli (2014) • Juventus (2015) • Milan (2016) • Lazio (2017) • Juventus (2018) • Lazio (2019) • Juventus (2020) •

UEFA Champions League winners

1956: Real Madrid • 1957: Real Madrid • 1958: Real Madrid • 1959: Real Madrid • 1960: Real Madrid • 1961: Benfica • 1962: Benfica • 1963: Milan • 1964: Internazionale • 1965: Internazionale • 1966: Real Madrid • 1967: Celtic • 1968: Manchester United • 1969: Milan • 1970: Feyenoord • 1971: Ajax • 1972: Ajax • 1973: Ajax • 1974: Bayern Munich • 1975: Bayern Munich • 1976: Bayern Munich • 1977: Liverpool • 1978: Liverpool • 1979: Nottingham Forest • 1980: Nottingham Forest • 1981: Liverpool • 1982: Aston Villa • 1983: Hamburg • 1984: Liverpool • 1985: Juventus • 1986: Steaua Bucuresti • 1987: Porto • 1988: PSV Eindhoven • 1989: Milan • 1990: Milan • 1991: Red Star Belgrade • 1992: Barcelona • 1993: Marseille • 1994: Milan • 1995: Ajax • 1996: Juventus • 1997: Borussia Dortmund • 1998: Real Madrid • 1999: Manchester United • 2000: Real Madrid • 2001: Bayern Munich • 2002: Real Madrid • 2003: Milan • 2004: Porto • 2005: Liverpool • 2006: Barcelona • 2007: Milan • 2008: Manchester United • 2009: Barcelona • 2010: Internazionale 2011: Barcelona • 2012: Chelsea • 2013: Bayern Munich • 2014: Real Madrid • 2015: Barcelona • 2016: Real Madrid • 2017: Real Madrid • 2018: Real Madrid • 2019: Liverpool • 2020: Bayern Munich • 2021: Chelsea • 2022: Real Madrid • 2023: Manchester City •

UEFA Europa League winners

1972: Tottenham Hotspur • 1973: Liverpool • 1974: Feyenoord • 1975: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1976: Liverpool • 1977: Juventus • 1978: PSV Eindhoven • 1979: Borussia Mönchengladbach • 1980: Eintracht Frankfurt • 1981: Ipswich Town • 1982: IFK Göteborg • 1983: Anderlecht • 1984: Tottenham Hotspur • 1985: Real Madrid • 1986: Real Madrid • 1987: IFK Göteborg • 1988: Bayer Leverkusen • 1989: Napoli • 1990: Juventus • 1991: Internazionale • 1992: Ajax • 1993: Juventus • 1994: Internazionale • 1995: Parma • 1996: Bayern Munich • 1997: Schalke 04 • 1998: Internazionale • 1999: Parma • 2000: Galatasaray • 2001: Liverpool • 2002: Feyenoord • 2003: Porto • 2004: Valencia • 2005: CSKA Moscow • 2006: Sevilla • 2007: Sevilla • 2008: Zenit Saint Petersburg • 2009: Shakhtar Donetsk • 2010: Atlético Madrid • 2011: Porto • 2012: Atlético Madrid • 2013: Chelsea • 2014: Sevilla • 2015: Sevilla • 2016: Sevilla • 2017: Manchester United • 2018: Atlético Madrid • 2019: Chelsea • 2020: Sevilla • 2021: Villarreal • 2022: Eintracht Frankfurt • 2023: Sevilla • 2024: Atalanta •

Intercontinental Cup winners

1960: Spain Real Madrid · 1961: Uruguay Peñarol · 1962: Brazil Santos · 1963: Brazil Santos · 1964: Italy Inter Milan · 1965: Italy Inter Milan · 1966: Uruguay Peñarol · 1967: Argentina Racing · 1968: Argentina Estudiantes de La Plata · 1969: Italy AC Milan · 1970: Netherlands Feyenoord · 1971: Uruguay Nacional · 1972: Netherlands Ajax · 1973: Argentina Independiente · 1974: Spain Atlético Madrid · 1976: West Germany Bayern Munich · 1977: Argentina Boca Juniors · 1979: Paraguay Olimpia · 1980: Uruguay Nacional · 1981: Brazil Flamengo · 1982: Uruguay Peñarol · 1983: Brazil Grêmio · 1984: Argentina Independiente · 1985: Italy Juventus · 1986: Argentina River Plate · 1987: Portugal Porto · 1988: Uruguay Nacional · 1989: Italy AC Milan · 1990: Italy AC Milan · 1991: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade · 1992: Brazil São Paulo · 1993: Brazil São Paulo · 1994: Argentina Vélez Sársfield · 1995: Netherlands Ajax · 1996: Italy Juventus · 1997: Germany Borussia Dortmund · 1998: Spain Real Madrid · 1999: England Manchester United · 2000: Argentina Boca Juniors · 2001: Germany Bayern Munich · 2002: Spain Real Madrid · 2003: Argentina Boca Juniors · 2004: Portugal Porto

FIFA Club World Cup winners

2000: Flag of Brazil Corinthians • 2005: Flag of Brazil São Paulo • 2006: Flag of Brazil Internacional • 2007: Flag of Italy Milan • 2008: Flag of England Manchester United • 2009: Flag of Spain Barcelona • 2010: Flag of Italy Internazionale • 2011: Flag of Spain Barcelona • 2012: Flag of Brazil Corinthians • 2013: Flag of Germany Bayern Munich • 2014: Flag of Spain Real Madrid • 2015: Flag of Spain Barcelona • 2016: Flag of Spain Real Madrid • 2017: Flag of Spain Real Madrid • 2018: Flag of Spain Real Madrid • 2019: Flag of England Liverpool • 2020: Flag of Germany Bayern Munich • 2021: Flag of England Chelsea • 2022: Flag of Spain Real Madrid • 2023: Flag of England Manchester City • 2025: Flag of ? TBD •

Serie A 2024–25
Atalanta · Bologna · Cagliari · Como · Empoli · Fiorentina · Genoa · Hellas Verona · Inter Milan · Juventus · Lazio · Lecce · A.C. Milan · Monza · Napoli · Parma · Roma · Torino · Udinese · Venezia
Italy national football team crest
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