General |
Image gallery |
Massimiliano Allegri | ||
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Personal information | ||
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Full name: | Massimiliano Allegri | |
Date of birth: | 11 August 1967 | |
Place of birth: | Livorno, ![]() | |
Height: | 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) | |
Playing position: | Midfielder | |
Club information | ||
Current club | ![]() | |
Senior clubs | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls) |
1984–1985 1985–1988 1988–1989 1989–1990 1990–1991 1991–1993 1993–1995 1995–1997 1997–1998 1998 1998–2000 2000–2001 2001-2003 Total |
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29 (0) 2 (0) 32 (8) 29 (5) 64 (16) 46 (4) 41 (10) 21 (0) 7 (0) 46 (4) 18 (1) 32 (8) 374 (56) | 7 (0)
Teams managed | ||
2003–2004 2004–2005 2005 2006 2007–2008 2008–2010 2010–2014 2014–2019 2021– |
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Massimiliano Allegri (born 11 August 1967) is an Italian professional football manager and former player who is the manager of Serie A club Juventus.
During his playing career, Allegri played in the Serie A as a midfielder with Pisa, Pescara, Cagliari, Perugia and Napoli. In 2002, he won the Serie D title with Aglianese, with whom he retired as a player.
After beginning his managerial career in 2003 with several smaller Italian sides, Allegri helped Sassuolo gain promotion to the Serie B for the first time in their history, winning the Serie C1 championship and Super Cup in the same year. From 2008 to 2010, he coached Cagliari in Serie A, leading them to their best Serie A finish in almost 15 years. His performances as head coach of Cagliari earned him a move to Milan in 2010, where he remained until January 2014; he won a Scudetto in 2010–11, Milan's first since 2004, and a Supercoppa Italiana title in 2011. Between 2014 and 2019, Allegri was in charge of Juventus, with whom he won eleven trophies: five consecutive league titles (from 2015 to 2019), four Coppa Italia titles in a row (from 2015 to 2018) and two Supercoppa Italiana titles (2015 and 2018); he also reached two UEFA Champions League finals (2015 and 2017). He returned to Juventus in 2021, following two years away from management.
Individually, Allegri won the Panchina d'Oro (Golden Bench) four times (2009, 2015, 2017 and 2018) and was four times Serie A Coach of the Year (2011, 2015, 2016 and 2018), as well as being awarded the Enzo Bearzot Award (2015) and inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame (2018). He is also the only coach in Italian football history to have won five Scudetti and four Coppa Italia titles consecutively, and the only one in Europe's top five leagues to have won a domestic double for four consecutive seasons.
Honours[]
Manager[]
- Sassuolo
- Serie C1 (1): 2007–08
- Milan
- Serie A (1): 2010–11
- Supercoppa Italiana (1): 2011
Individual[]
- Panchina d'Oro Prima Divisione (1): 2007–08
- Panchina d'Oro (1): 2008–09
- Serie A Coach of the Year (1): 2010–11
External links[]
Template:Juventus FC sqaud
Current Serie A managers 2024–25 |
Gasperini (Atalanta) · Italiano (Bologna) · Vacant (Cagliari) · Roberts (Como) · Nicola (Empoli) · Palladino (Fiorentina) · Gilardino (Genoa) · Zanetti (Hellas Verona) · Inzaghi (Inter Milan) · Motta (Juventus) · Baroni (Lazio) · Gotti (Lecce) · Fonseca (AC Milan) · Nesta (Monza) · Conte (Napoli) · Pecchia (Parma) · De Rossi (Roma) · Vanoli (Torino) · Runjaić (Udinese) · Vacant (Venezia) |
Template:U.S. Sassuolo Calcio managers Template:Cagliari Calcio managers
A.C. Milan Football Club - Managers |
Kilpin (1899–06) • Angeloni (1906–07) • Camperio (1907–11) • Technical committee (1911–15) • Moda (1915–16) • Cevenini (1916–18) • Technical committee (1918–19) • Moda (1919–21) • Lovati (1921–22) • Soldera (1922) • Oppenheim (1922–24) • Pozzo (1924–26) • Moda (1926) • Burgess (1926–28) • König (1928–31) • Bánás (1931–33) • Violak (1933–34) • Baloncieri (1934–37) • Garbutt (1937) • Felsner / Bánás (1937–38) • Bánás (1938–39) • Violak / Bánás (1939–40) • Bánás (1940) • Busini / Ara (1940–41) • Magnozzi (1941–43) • Santagostino (1943–45) • Busini / Baloncieri (1945–46) • Busini / Bigogno (1946–47) • Bigogno (1947–48) • Busini / Bigogno (1948–49) • Busini / Czeizler (1949–52) • Busini / Sperone (1952–53) • Busini / Gren (1953) • Busini / Morselli (1953) • Guttmann (1953–55) • Puricelli (1955–56) • Viani (1956–58) • Viani / Bonizzoni (1958–60) • Viani / Todeschini (1960–61) • Viani / Rocco (1961–63) • Viani / Carniglia (1963–64) • Viani / Liedholm (1964–65) • Liedholm (1965–66) • Cattozzo (1966) • Silvestri (1966–67) • Rocco (1967–72) • Rocco / Maldini (1972–73) • Rocco (1973) • Rocco / Maldini (1973–74) • Maldini (1974) • Trapattoni (1974) • Giagnoni (1974–75) • Rocco / Trapattoni (1975–76) • Rocco / Barison (1976) • Marchioro (1976–77) • Rocco (1977) • Liedholm (1977–79) • Giacomini (1979–81) • Galbiati (1981) • Radice (1981–82) • Galbiati (1982) • Castagner (1982–84) • Galbiati (1984) • Liedholm (1984–87) • Capello (1987) • Sacchi (1987–91) • Capello (1991–96) • Tabárez / Morini (1996) • Sacchi (1996–97) • Capello (1997–98) • Zaccheroni (1998–2001) • Maldini / Tassotti (2001) • Terim / Di Gennaro (2001) • Ancelotti (2001–09) • Leonardo (2009–10) • Allegri (2010–14) • Tassotti (2014) • Seedorf (2014) • Inzaghi (2014–15) • Mihajlović (2015–16) • Brocchi (2016) • Montella (2016–17) • Gattuso (2017–19) • Giampaolo (2019) • Pioli (2019–24) • Fonseca (2024–) |
Juventus Football Club - Managers |
Károly (1923–26) • Viola (1926–28) • Aitken (1928–30) • Carcano (1930–35) • Bigatto (1935) • Rosetta (1935–39) • Caligaris (1939–41) • Munerati (1941) • Ferrari (1941–42) • Monti (1942) • Borel (1942–46) • Cesarini (1946–48) • Chalmers (1948–49) • Carver (1949–51) • Bertolini (1951) • Sárosi (1951–53) • Olivieri (1953–55) • Puppo (1955–57) • Broćić (1957–59) • Depetrini (1959) • Cesarini (1959–61) • Parola (1961) • Gren & Korostelev (1961) • Parola (1961–62) • Amaral (1962–64) • Monzeglio (1964) • Herrera (1964–69) • Carniglia (1969–70) • Rabitti (1970) • Picchi (1970–71) • Vycpálek (1971–74) • Parola (1974–76) • Trapattoni (1976–86) • Marchesi (1986–88) • Zoff (1988–90) • Maifredi (1990–91) • Trapattoni (1991–94) • Lippi (1994–99) • Ancelotti (1999–2001) • Lippi (2001–04) • Capello (2004–06) • Deschamps (2006–07) • Corradini (2007) • Ranieri (2007–09) • Ferrara (2009–10) • Zaccheroni (2010) • Delneri (2010–11) • Conte (2011–14) • Allegri (2014–19) • Sarri (2019–20) • Pirlo (2020–21) • Allegri (2021–24) • Monteroc (2024) • Motta (2024–) |
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