Imperial Valley Press

Conte could be the right coach for troubled Inter

- BY DANIELLA MATAR TOO SMALL

MILAN — After being heavily linked with Roma and Juventus, Antonio Conte seems destined for Inter Milan if the coach returns to Italian soccer.

Italian newspapers have reported Conte has already agreed on a three-year contract with the Nerazzurri to replace current coach Luciano Spalletti at the end of the season.

Inter chief executive Giuseppe Marotta did not deny the reports when asked about them on Monday.

“We have to bear this discussion and that’s not easy because it’s annoying,” said Marotta, who brought in Conte as coach at Juventus. “But Spalletti’s work has to be recognized.”

Inter beat 10-man Chievo Verona 2-0 on Monday to all but secure qualificat­ion for next season’s Champions League. It moved to third in Serie A, a point above Atalanta and four above AC Milan and Roma with two matches remaining.

The top four from Serie A qualify.

It hasn’t been an easy season for Inter, however: It was eliminated from all competitio­ns early on, top signing Radja Nainggolan has performed way below expectatio­ns, and there has been trouble with forward Mauro Icardi, who was stripped of the captaincy at the beginning of the year.

Icardi, who scored 29 league goals last season and 24 in the previous one, has netted just 10 times this campaign.

He hasn’t scored from open play since December and he was again roundly jeered by the Inter fans when he was substitute­d 11 minutes from time against Chievo.

Conte has been out of a job since June 2018 when he was fired from Chelsea, and the former Juventus and Italy coach is seen as the perfect man to rejuvenate the squad.

“I can’t understand the criticism that has come of late,” Marotta added. “We have an objective to achieve and we are aware of it, what matters is our position in the table.

“Everything else is an irritation and we have to be alert so that we can deal with these disturbanc­es in the best of ways.”

Alessandro Florenzi might be “too small to speak” according to Cristiano Ronaldo but he had the last laugh as he set Roma on its way to a 2-0 victory on Sunday.

A row broke out between the players late in the match on Sunday after Ronaldo unsporting­ly didn’t give the ball back after Roma kicked it out so an injured player could get treatment.

Florenzi was fuming and Ronaldo responded by making a gesture with his hand and clearly saying “you’re too small to speak.”

Shortly afterward, Florenzi scored the opener, exchanging passes with Edin Dzeko before dinking the ball over Juventus goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.

Florenzi, who is 173 centimeter­s tall, was asked about the tiff with Ronaldo

“Let’s leave what happens on the pitch there,” Florenzi said. “We’d put the ball out of play, and then he played it. Obviously he’s won the Ballon d’Or and thinks he has all the right to do what he did.”

Ronaldo had earlier had a goal ruled out, hampering his chances of winning the top goalscorer award. He trails Sampdoria forward Fabio Quagliarel­la by five goals.

 ??  ?? Inter Milan’s Mauro Icardi grimaces during a Serie A soccer match between Inter Milan and Chievo, at the San Siro stadium in Milan, Italy, on Monday. AP PHOTO/LUCA BRUNO
Inter Milan’s Mauro Icardi grimaces during a Serie A soccer match between Inter Milan and Chievo, at the San Siro stadium in Milan, Italy, on Monday. AP PHOTO/LUCA BRUNO

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