Inter on Monday appointed Cristian Chivu as coach in place of Simone Inzaghi, who left following the Italian side’s 5-0 UEFA Champions League final loss to Paris Saint-Germain (PSG), with their former player signing a two-year deal.
Romanian Chivu, who left Parma after less than four months in charge, played as a defender for Inter for seven years and was part of former coach Jose Mourinho’s treble-winning side in 2010 before ending his playing career at the Serie A club in 2014.
“In February 2025, Cristian was given his first opportunity to coach a senior side at Parma... He led the Emilians to safety, with the team picking up 16 points from 13 matches under his guidance,” Inter said in a statement. “Now, Cristian Chivu is beginning the third chapter of his Nerazzurri story. And he’s doing so with the values that have always guided him: dedication, sacrifice and a tireless work ethic.”
Photo: AFP
Chivu’s second Inter chapter started in 2018 when he returned, moving up through the ranks to manage the youth team and winning the league title in his first season in charge.
Although Chivu lacks the experience that Inzaghi brought to the role, the 44-year-old made an immediate impact at Parma by shoring up a defense which had been leaking goals, with his side conceding only 13 compared with 27 in the previous 13 games.
Parma performed better against the bigger sides under Chivu, beating Juventus, Bologna and Atalanta BC while earning draws against Inter, SS Lazio and SSC Napoli.
Chivu’s Parma also did Inter a huge favor on the penultimate matchday with a 0-0 draw against Napoli, but Inzaghi’s side failed to take advantage, conceding a late penalty in a 2-2 draw with Lazio, and Napoli went on to become champions.
Inzaghi, who led Inter to the Scudetto in the previous campaign, ended last season trophyless, losing to neighbors AC Milan in the Coppa Italia semi-final, and the campaign ended with the humiliating loss to PSG in Munich.
Three days after that defeat, Inzaghi left Inter after four years at the helm, and joined Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal the next day.
Chivu’s first challenge is the FIFA Club World Cup where Inter begin the tournament on Tuesday next week when they take on Mexico’s Monterrey in Los Angeles followed by two games in Seattle against Urawa Red Diamonds and River Plate.
Badminton world No. 3 Anders Antonsen clinched his first Indonesia Open title yesterday after beating Taiwan’s Chou Tien-chen, while South Korea’s An Se-young won her second championship in Jakarta. The 28-year-old Dane sank world No. 7 Chou at the Indonesian capital’s Istora Senayan arena, winning 22-20, 21-14 in a 60-minute match to secure the prestigious Super 1000 event. Antonsen came out on top in a tightly contested first game before cruising to victory in the second. In a more closely fought women’s singles final, South Korean ace and world No. 1 An fought back from one game down to beat China’s
Spain starlets Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams dazzled on Thursday as La Roja beat France 5-4 in a thriller in Stuttgart, Germany, to set up a UEFA Nations League final with Portugal. Yamal bagged a brace, while Williams scored and provided an assist as the two wingers cut France’s makeshift defense to ribbons. Mikel Merino and Pedri were also on the score sheet for the UEFA Euro 2024 champions. Kylian Mbappe netted a second-half penalty, but Spain were 5-1 up and cruising, before Les Bleus suddenly woke up as their opponents took their foot off the pedal. France’s three late goals — a
Italy crashed to a 3-0 loss away to Norway, as the four-time FIFA World Cup champions made a disastrous start to their 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign on Friday, while Belgium had to settle for a draw in North Macedonia. Alexander Sorloth, Antonio Nusa and Erling Haaland all scored in the first half in pouring rain in Oslo as Norway made it a night to forget for Italy, who missed out on the past two World Cups. “I have no explanation. Our supporters don’t deserve this kind of match. We need to do some soul-searching. It’s unacceptable,” Italy captain and goalkeeper Gianluigi
The Crusaders yesterday produced a clinical performance in difficult conditions to beat the Queensland Reds 32-12 and claim home advantage in next week’s Super Rugby semi-finals. Lock Scott Barrett and prop Tamaiti Williams scored first-half tries to reward an outstanding performance from the Crusaders’ forwards in wet, slippery conditions and bitterly cold temperatures. Scrumhalf Noah Hotham defied the conditions in the second half to score a superb solo try and, after kicking a conversion and penalty to make the score 22-0 at the hour mark, flyhalf Rivez Reihana scored a try which took the game beyond the Reds. “Typical Christchurch weather, cold, wet