Inzaghi under Pressure as Inter Milan Visits Porto in UCL

Football - Serie A - Spezia v Inter Milan - Stadio Alberto-Picco, La Spezia, Italy - March 10, 2023 Inter Milan coach Simone Inzaghi before the match. (Reuters)
Football - Serie A - Spezia v Inter Milan - Stadio Alberto-Picco, La Spezia, Italy - March 10, 2023 Inter Milan coach Simone Inzaghi before the match. (Reuters)
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Inzaghi under Pressure as Inter Milan Visits Porto in UCL

Football - Serie A - Spezia v Inter Milan - Stadio Alberto-Picco, La Spezia, Italy - March 10, 2023 Inter Milan coach Simone Inzaghi before the match. (Reuters)
Football - Serie A - Spezia v Inter Milan - Stadio Alberto-Picco, La Spezia, Italy - March 10, 2023 Inter Milan coach Simone Inzaghi before the match. (Reuters)

After another disappointing loss in Serie A, Inter Milan coach Simone Inzaghi is under increasing pressure to deliver in the Champions League as his team visits Porto in the round of 16 on Tuesday.

Inter is carrying a slender 1-0 advantage from the first leg and Inzhagi's long-term future at the club could depend how the team performs this week after falling out of contention for the Serie A title.

While Inter is still in second place in the Italian league, a 2-1 loss at relegation-threatened Spezia on Friday cast further doubts on Inzaghi’s position, with his team 18 points behind Ieader Napoli.

A home game against bitter rival Juventus is up next on Sunday, and Inzaghi's job could come under serious threat if Inter loses both games this week.

Some Inter fans are already clamoring for Antonio Conte’s return, with the Italian coach's future at Tottenham unclear after this season.

“A coach always has all the responsibility, when he wins and when he loses,” former Inter president Massimo Moratti told Italian newspaper Leggo. “(Inzaghi) still has to prove he knows how to keep the team focused with consistency.”

Inconsistency has been a big problem for Inter, with eight league losses this season. Six of those have been in away games and it has only won once on the road in 2023 — a worrying trend ahead of the Porto game.

“We’ve had a few too many defeats this season, especially away from home, and we need to do more,” Inzaghi said after the Spezia loss.

Inzhagi will also have a tough decision to make on whether to start Romelu Lukaku — who scored the late winner in the first leg — or Edin Dzeko up front alongside Lautaro Martinez against the Portuguese team.

Porto, in contrast, has an impressive home record and has won nine of its past 10 matches at the Estádio Do Dragão. The only blip came immediately after its first-leg loss at Inter, when it lost 2-1 to Gil Vicente and had two players sent off.

But the hosts will be without midfielder Otavio, who was sent off in the first leg, while defender Joao Mario is out with a knee injury.

Inter has not been to the quarterfinals since going out at that stage as the defending champion in 2011. Porto has reached the final eight in two of the past four seasons, although it hasn’t gone beyond that since it lifted the trophy in 2004.



France Coach Didier Deschamps Says He’ll Leave after 2026 World Cup

France's coach Didier Deschamps celebrates as they do a lap of honor during a ceremony to celebrate the victory of the 2018 World Cup at the end of the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherlands at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris, on September 9, 2018. (AFP)
France's coach Didier Deschamps celebrates as they do a lap of honor during a ceremony to celebrate the victory of the 2018 World Cup at the end of the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherlands at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris, on September 9, 2018. (AFP)
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France Coach Didier Deschamps Says He’ll Leave after 2026 World Cup

France's coach Didier Deschamps celebrates as they do a lap of honor during a ceremony to celebrate the victory of the 2018 World Cup at the end of the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherlands at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris, on September 9, 2018. (AFP)
France's coach Didier Deschamps celebrates as they do a lap of honor during a ceremony to celebrate the victory of the 2018 World Cup at the end of the UEFA Nations League football match between France and Netherlands at the Stade de France stadium, in Saint-Denis, northern of Paris, on September 9, 2018. (AFP)

Didier Deschamps announced Wednesday that he won’t continue as France coach after the next World Cup.

The 56-year-old Deschamps said in an interview with broadcaster TF1 that he will leave when his contract expires in the summer of 2026.

“I’ve been here since 2012, I’m scheduled to be here until 2026, the next World Cup, but that’s where it’s going to end because it has to end at some point,” Deschamps said in excerpts of the interview to be aired later Wednesday.

“I did my time, with the same desire and the same passion to keep the French team at the highest level, but 2026 is all very well.”

Deschamps started in his role as a successor to Laurent Blanc and led France to victory at the 2018 World Cup, also reaching the final in 2022 and at the 2016 European Championship.

At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, France reached the final and lost an epic title match to Argentina.

“I’m not here for the records,” Deschamps added. “The most important thing is that the France team remains at the top as it has been for many years.”

Europe will send 16 teams to the first 48-team World Cup, being co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico in the summer of 2026.

Deschamps did not elaborate on his future beyond the World Cup.

“There is a life afterwards,” he said. “I don’t know what it will be.”