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Derby della Madonnina
Other namesDerby di Milano
Location Milan, Italy
First meeting10 January 1909
Italian Football Championship
Milan 3–2 Inter Milan
Latest meeting16 September 2023
Serie A
Inter Milan 5–1 Milan
Next meeting21 April 2024
Serie A
Milan v Inter Milan
Stadiums San Siro
Statistics
Meetings totalOfficial matches: 238
Unofficial matches: 71
Total matches: 309
Most winsOfficial matches: Inter Milan (90)
Unofficial matches: Milan (36)
Total matches: Milan (115)
Most player appearances Paolo Maldini (56)
Top scorer Andriy Shevchenko (14)
Largest victory11 May 2001
Serie A
Inter Milan 0–6 Milan
Inter Milan
Milan

The Derby della Madonnina, also known as the Derby di Milano (English: Milan Derby), is a derby football match between the two prominent Milanese clubs, Inter Milan and AC Milan. It is called Derby della Madonnina in honour of one of the main sights in the city of Milan, the statue of the Virgin Mary on the top of the Duomo, which is often referred to as the Madonnina ("Little Madonna" in Italian).

In the past, Inter Milan (commonly abbreviated to Inter) was seen as the club of the Milan bourgeoisie (nicknamed bauscia, a Milanese term meaning "braggart"), whereas Milan (nicknamed casciavit or casciavid, meaning "screwdriver" in Lombard language, with reference to the blue-collar worker) was supported mainly by working class. [1] Because of their more prosperous ancestry, Inter fans had the "luxury" to go to the San Siro stadium by motorcycle (motoretta, another nickname given to the Nerazzurri). On the other hand, the Rossoneri were also known as tramvee or tranvee (i.e. able to be transferred to the stadium only by public transport). Today, this socioeconomic divide has largely been mitigated and preference for either club is personal or familial.

Taking place at least twice during the year via the league fixtures, this cross-town rivalry has extended to the Coppa Italia, Champions League, and Supercoppa Italiana, as well as minor tournaments and friendlies. It is one of the only major crosstown derbies in association football that are always played in the same stadium, in this case the San Siro, as both Inter and Milan call San Siro "home". Though both clubs share this stadium, Inter ultras traditionally occupy the stadium’s northern end ( Curva Nord) while Milan ultras occupy the southern end (Curva Sud). [2]

History

Scene of a Derby della Madonnina in 1915

On 13 December 1899, Herbert Kilpin and others founded the Milan Cricket and Football Club. Alfred Edwards, a former British vice-consul in Milan and a well-known personality of the Milanese high society, was the club's first elected president. Initially, the team included a cricket section, managed by Edward Berra, and a football section managed by David Allison. The Milan team soon gained relevant notability under Herbert Kilpin's guide. The first trophy to be won was the Medaglia del Re ("King's Medal") in January 1900, and the team later won three national leagues, in 1901, 1906 and 1907. The triumph of 1901 was particularly relevant because it ended the consecutive series of wins of Genoa, which had been the only team to have won the title prior to 1901. On 9 March 1908, issues over the signing of foreign players led to a split and the foundation of Football Club Internazionale.

The first derby match between the two Milanese rivals was held in the final of the Chiasso Cup of 1908, a football tournament played in Canton Ticino, Switzerland, on 18 October of that year; the Rossoneri won 2–1. While Inter and Milan faced each other sporadically in the early years, the rivalry has been renewed annually since the inaugural 1926–27 season of the Divisione Nazionale, the first truly national Italian league. The two teams have played each other at least twice a year since then.

Gunnar Nordahl scoring a goal in a Milan derby on 25 March 1951

In the 1960s, the Milan derby saw two big stars of Italian football come face-to-face. One of the most representative players of Inter was Sandro Mazzola, the son of former Torino player Valentino Mazzola who, along with most of his Torino teammates, died in the 1949 Superga air disaster after dominating Serie A for four seasons. His Milan counterpart was Gianni Rivera, nicknamed "Golden Boy" for his talent. This era saw brilliant derby matches and an increasing rivalry: while Milan won the European Cup in 1962–63, Inter followed with back-to-back success in the following years. Milan again won the title in 1968–69. During this successful period for both teams, Milan were coached by Nereo Rocco and Inter by Helenio Herrera, both coaching many notable players. The rivalry continued on the Italy national team, where two players from their respective clubs would often not play together, with one usually being substituted by the other at half-time. Rivera ended up losing the starting line-up to Mazzola in the 1970 final against Brazil, in which Italy was defeated 1–4 by the South Americans. He would later enter in the 84th minute after Italy were already far behind. Arguably Milan's greatest-ever era took place during the late 1980s and had extended through to the mid-2000s. Often hailed as the greatest-ever Milan side, the team stemming from the 1989 European champions managed by Arrigo Sacchi, contained legendary Milan players, Marco van Basten, Ruud Gullit, Frank Rijkaard and Paolo Maldini, amongst others. Milan's dominance, both domestically and internationally, had seen them capture four league titles and three European Cups (finishing runners-up two additional times) between 1989 and 1996. During this time, Inter had gone on to finish runners-up in the 1992–93 season (behind Milan) and won two UEFA Cups.

Adriano heading a goal in a Milan derby on 15 February 2009

The two clubs famously met in the semi-finals of the 2002–03 UEFA Champions League, their first ever European matches against one another, in which Milan went through on the away goals rule despite both clubs playing at the same stadium; Milan would go on to win the competition. They met again in the quarter-finals of the 2004–05 edition; Milan triumphed on aggregate after UEFA awarded them a 3–0 victory in the second leg, as the match was abandoned due to flares thrown by Inter fans.

Inter's long wait for a league title that began after 1989 finally arrived in 2006, when the Calciopoli scandal stripped Juventus of the 2005–06 title (as well as deducting points from Milan's final overall total) and handed it to Inter, who originally finished third behind both Juventus and Milan. This was seen as a controversial decision by many, as even though the title won the previous season by Juventus was also stripped, it was left unawarded, which many felt should have also been the case with the 2005–06 title. Inter went on to win the 2006–07 Serie A title as well in a season that saw Juventus relegated from the top division, and Milan, as punishment, starting the season with negative points. Inter's triumphant campaign included a record-breaking run of 17 consecutive victories and victories in both fixtures against Milan. During the same season, however, Milan had captured their seventh European Cup/UEFA Champions League, defeating Liverpool in the final in Athens. As the Italian league recovered from the aftermath of the match-fixing scandal, Inter continued to dominate, winning each league up until the 2009–10 season in which they secured the title on the last day of the season. That season had also seen Inter become the first Italian side to win a treble. In addition to their league title, Inter also secured the Coppa Italia and their first Champions League title since 1965. The following season, however, Milan, with the acquisition of several players that included former Inter striker Zlatan Ibrahimović, recaptured the Scudetto, their 18th overall, leading the league standings from as early as November until the end of the season. That season also saw Milan win both derby matches, keeping clean sheets in both fixtures.

Between the 2011–12 and 2019–20, both Milan teams lagged behind Juventus in Serie A, with a disappointing ninth-place finish for Inter in 2012–13 and a difficult campaign for Milan in 2014–15, finishing tenth. However, Inter ended Juventus' nine-year streak by winning their 19th title in 2020–21, overtaking Milan's total. Milan tied Inter's total by winning their own 19th title in the following season.

The two clubs met once again in the semi-finals of the 2022–23 UEFA Champions League; the tie was their first European derby in 18 years, as well as being both clubs' first appearances in the semi-finals since winning the trophy in 2007 and 2010 respectively. Inter won the tie, defeating Milan 2–0 in the first leg and 1–0 in the second, reaching the final.

Official match results

Dates are in dd/mm/yyyy form

  • SF = Semi-finals
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • R16 = Round of 16
  • R32 = Round of 32
  • GS = Group stage
  • R1 = Round 1
  • R2 = Round 2

  Milan win   Draw   Inter win

  1. ^ Milan won on away goals after tied 1–1 on aggregate. [3]
  2. ^ The match was abandoned after 72 minutes;
    UEFA awarded a 3–0 win for Milan as Inter fans threw flares onto the pitch. [4] [5] [3]
  3. ^ After extra time

Statistics

As of 16 September 2023
Total matches
played
Inter wins Draws Milan wins Inter goals Milan goals
Prima Categoria 14 5 2 7 27 24
Divisione Nazionale 8 3 1 4 13 12
Serie A 179 69 56 54 256 230
Total (league) 201 77 59 65 296 266
Campionato Alta Italia 2 1 0 1 3 3
Coppa Italia 27 9 8 10 27 34
Supercoppa Italiana 2 1 0 1 4 2
UEFA Champions League 6 2 2 2 4 6
Total (official) 238 90 69 79 334 311
Other meetings 71 24 11 36 124 155
Total 309 114 80 115 458 466

Top scorers

As of 16 May 2023

Below is the list of players with the most goals scored in official games.

The Rossonero Andriy Shevchenko, the top scorer of the Milan derby (14), and Giuseppe Meazza, the highest scorer of the Nerazzurri (12)
Rank Player Team(s) (goals) Goals
1 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko Milan 14
2 Italy Giuseppe Meazza Inter (12)
Milan (1)
13
3 Sweden Gunnar Nordahl Milan 11
Hungary István Nyers Inter
5 Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović Inter (2)
Milan (8)
10
Italy Enrico Candiani Inter (7)
Milan (3)
7 Argentina Lautaro Martínez Inter 8
8 Brazil Italy José Altafini Milan 7
Italy Alessandro Altobelli Inter
Italy Roberto Boninsegna Inter
Italy Benito Lorenzi Inter
Belgium Louis Van Hege Milan
13 Italy Aldo Boffi Milan 6
Italy Aldo Cevenini Milan (4)
Inter (2)
Argentina Italy Attilio Demaría Inter
Italy Sandro Mazzola Inter
Argentina Diego Milito Inter
Italy Pietro Serantoni Inter

Most appearances

As of 5 February 2023

Below is the list of players with the most appearances in official games.

The Rossonero Paolo Maldini, the record appearance-maker of the Milan derby (56) and Javier Zanetti, the record appearance-maker of the Nerazzurri (47)
Rank Player Team(s) (apps) Apps
1 Italy Paolo Maldini Milan 56
2 Argentina Javier Zanetti Inter 47
3 Italy Giuseppe Bergomi Inter 44
4 Italy Alessandro Costacurta Milan 43
5 Italy Gianni Rivera Milan 42
6 Italy Giacinto Facchetti Inter 40
Italy Sandro Mazzola Inter
Italy Giuseppe Meazza Inter (37)
Milan (3)
9 Italy Franco Baresi Milan 39
10 Italy Mauro Tassotti Milan 35
11 Italy Tarcisio Burgnich Inter 34
12 Italy Giuseppe Baresi Inter 33
Italy Mario Corso Inter
14 Italy Marco Sala Milan (31)
Inter (1)
32
15 Netherlands Clarence Seedorf Inter (7)
Milan (24)
31
Italy Luigi Perversi Milan

Managers

Appearances

As of 16 September 2023

Below is the list of managers with the most appearances in official games.

The Rossonero Nereo Rocco, the record appearance-maker of the derby della Madonnina (25) and Helenio Herrera, the record appearance-maker of the Nerazzurri (20)
Rank Manager Team(s) (apps) Apps
1 Italy Nereo Rocco Milan 25
2 Argentina Helenio Herrera Inter 20
Italy Giuseppe Viani Milan
4 Italy Carlo Ancelotti Milan 19
Italy Antonio Busini Milan
6 Italy Fabio Capello Milan 18
7 Sweden Nils Liedholm Milan 16
Italy Stefano Pioli Inter (2)
Milan (14)
9 Italy Roberto Mancini Inter 14
10 Italy Giovanni Trapattoni Milan (3)
Inter (10)
13
11 Italy Virgilio Fossati Inter 12
Hungary Árpád Weisz Inter
13 Hungary József Bánás Milan 10
Italy Eugenio Bersellini Inter
Italy Simone Inzaghi Inter
16 Italy Adolfo Baloncieri Milan 9
Italy Arrigo Sacchi Milan

Records

  • Most goals in a single derby: 11, Internazionale 6–5 Milan (6 November 1949)
  • Largest derby margin of victory for Milan: 0–6 (11 May 2001)
  • Largest derby margin of victory for Internazionale: 0–5 (6 February 1910)
  • Most derby wins in a row: 6, Milan (from 5 February 1911 to 9 February 1919, and from 30 May 1946 to 11 April 1948)
  • Most consecutive derby draws: 4 (from 29 September 1935 to 7 February 1937)
  • Most consecutive derby matches without a win: 17, Milan (from 10 November 1929 to 7 February 1937)
  • Most goals in consecutive derbies for a player: 5, Romelu Lukaku (from 21 September 2019 to 21 February 2021)
  • Fastest derby goal scored for Internazionale: Sandro Mazzola, after 13 seconds (24 February 1963)
  • Fastest derby goal scored for Milan: José Altafini, after 25 seconds (26 March 1961)
  • Most goals in a single derby for a Milan player: 4, José Altafini (27 March 1960)
  • Most goals in a single derby for an Internazionale player: 3, Giovanni Capra (6 February 1910), Amedeo Amadei (6 November 1949), István Nyers (1 November 1953), Diego Milito (6 May 2012) and Mauro Icardi (15 October 2017)
  • Most derbies played in a calendar year: 5 (2023)
  • Youngest goalscorer in a derby: Edoardo Mariani (27 February 1910, aged 16 years and 359 days)
  • Oldest goalscorer in a derby: Zlatan Ibrahimović (26 January 2021, aged 39 years and 115 days)

Head-to-head ranking in Serie A (1930–2023)

P. 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7
8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
9 9 9 9 9 9
10 10 10 10 10 10 10
11 11 11 11 11
12 12 12 12
13 13
14 14
15 15
16
17
18
19
20

Total: Milan with 40 higher finishes, Inter with 48 higher finishes, and 1 equal finish (as of the end of the 2022–23 season). No head-to-heads in 1981 and 1983, since Milan was in Serie B.

Notes:

  • 1945–46 Italian Football Championship is not included in Serie A statistics.
  • Both teams finished with the same number of points in 1958, and the regulation of the time did not contemplate tiebreakers: both teams finished in ninth place.
  • Both teams finished with the same number of points in 1991, but Milan had better goal difference: Milan finished in second place, Inter in third.

Players who played for both clubs

Note: Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. Player names in bold are still active for one of the two clubs. Updated per 17 March 2024.

Inter, then Milan

Ronaldo's Inter Milan away jersey (left) and AC Milan away jersey (right) in the San Siro museum. He played for Inter from 1997 to 2002, and AC Milan from 2007 to 2008
Player Pos. Inter Milan
Tenure Apps Goals Tenure Apps Goals
Italy Mario Cevenini DF 1915–1916 3 0 1916–1919 4 2
1919–1921 36 1
Italy Pietro Bronzini FW 1915–1916 ? ? 1916–1917 4 0
1919–1926 139 5
Italy Eugenio Negri MF 1918–1919 0 0 1919–1920 1 0
Italy Luigi Binda GK 1912–1913 0 0 1919–1922 48 0
1923–1925 2 0
Italy Antonio Da Sacco DF 1920–1922 36 0 1923–1925 14 0
1931–1932 0 0
Italy Guglielmo Tornabuoni MF 1924–1925 11 3 1925 0 0
1925 8 3
1925–1926 10 1
Italy Orlando Bocchi MF 1925–1926 ? ? 1930–1932 35 2
Italy Enrico Rivolta MF 1922–1933 265 54 1936–1937 0 0
Italy Renato De Manzano MF 1933–1934 14 2 1936–1937 11 0
Italy Elpidio Coppa MF 1932–1934 1 0 1938–1939 11 2
Italy Carlo Villa MF 1936–1937 23 1 1944–1945 14 0
Italy Umberto Guarnieri FW 1938–1942 52 25 1944–1945 20 6
Italy Pietro Rebuzzi MF 1939–1941 11 5 1944–1945 2 0
1942–1944 11 6
Italy Giuseppe Meazza FW 1927–1940 348 241 1940–1942 37 9
1946–1947 17 2
Italy Celso Battaia DF 1938–1940 4 0 1946–1947 13 0
1941–1943 29 0
1943–1944 11 0
1944–1945 12 0
Italy Enrico Candiani MF 1937–1946 187 71 1949–1950 22 8
Italy Narciso Soldan GK 1949–1951 42 0 1956–1959 36 0
Italy Giorgio Ghezzi GK 1951–1958 186 0 1959–1965 123 0
Italy Gino Pivatelli FW 1947–1949 1961–1963 37 11
Italy Saul Malatrasi DF 1964–1966 22 0 1967–1970 67 0
Argentina Antonio Angelillo FW 1957–1961 113 68 1965–1966 11 1
1967–1968 3 1
Italy Aldo Bet DF 1967–1968 8 0 1974–1981 144 0
Italy Egidio Calloni FW 1968–1970 0 0 1974–1978 101 31
Italy Massimo Silva FW 1968–1971 0 0 1976–1977 20 4
Italy Giorgio Morini MF 1967–1968 0 0 1976–1981 75 4
Italy Oscar Damiani DF 1968–1969 0 0 1982–1984 55 17
Italy Adelio Moro MF 1972–1975 61 9 1981–1982 19 1
Italy Tiziano Manfrin MF 1973–1974 0 0 1982–1983 17 0
Italy Nazzareno Canuti DF 1974–1982 130 1 1982–1983 35 0
Italy Giancarlo Pasinato MF 1978–1982 96 6 1982–1983 33 7
1983–1985 35 2
Italy Aldo Serena FW 1978–1981 2 1 1982–1983 20 8
1981–1983 21 2
1983–1985 28 8
1987–1991 114 45 1991–1993 10 0
Italy Maurizio Ganz FW 1995–1997 68 26 1998–2001 40 9
Italy Fabio Di Sauro DF 1993–1999 1 0 1999–2001 0 0
Italy Giorgio Frezzolini GK 1995–2001 0 0 1999 0 0
Italy Pierluigi Orlandini MF 1994–1996 30 4 2000 2 1
Italy Andrea Polizzano DF 1997–2000 0 0 2000–2003 0 0
Nigeria Taribo West DF 1997–1999 44 1 2000–2001 4 1
Brazil Ronaldo FW 1997–2002 68 49 2007–2008 20 9
Ivory Coast Cyril Domoraud DF 1999–2001 6 0 2001–2004 0 0
Italy Andrea Pirlo MF 1998–2001 22 0 2001–2011 284 32
Croatia Dario Šimić DF 1999–2002 66 3 2002–2008 82 1
Italy Marco Varaldi GK 2000–2003 0 0 2003–2008 0 0
Italy Christian Vieri FW 1999–2005 143 103 2005–2006 8 1
Italy Matteo Bogani FW 2000–2001 0 0 2001–2003 0 0
Italy Giuseppe Ticli MF 1999–2003 0 0 2003–2007 0 0
Italy Alessandro Livi MF 2001–2003 0 0 2003–2005 0 0
Netherlands Clarence Seedorf MF 2000–2002 64 8 2002–2012 300 47
Italy Luca Ceccarelli DF 2002 0 0 2003 0 0
Italy Salvatore Ferraro DF 2002 1 0 2003–2008 0 0
Argentina Hernán Crespo FW 2002–2003 18 7 2004–2005 28 11
2006–2008 49 18
2008–2009 14 2
Italy Giuseppe Favalli DF 2004–2006 49 0 2006–2010 75 2
Netherlands Chedric Seedorf MF 2000–2001 0 0 2008–2009 0 0
Hungary Attila Filkor MF 2006–2010 0 0 2010–2015 0 0
Romania Cristian Daminuță DF 2008–2010 0 0 2010–2015 0 0
Switzerland Mattia Desole DF 2008–2010 0 0 2010–2014 0 0
Italy Mattia Destro FW 2005–2010 0 0 2015 15 3
Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović FW 2006–2009 88 57 2010–2012 61 42
2020–2023 64 34
Italy Mario Balotelli FW 2007–2010 59 20 2013–2014 43 26
2015–2016 20 1
Brazil Mancini FW 2008–2011 26 1 2010 7 0
Italy Luca Santonocito MF 2005–2007 0 0 2010–2014 0 0
Ghana Sulley Muntari MF 2008–2012 66 7 2012 13 3
2012–2015 57 8
Italy Giampaolo Pazzini FW 2011–2012 50 16 2012–2015 74 21
Italy Andrea Poli MF 2011–2012 18 0 2013–2017 90 3
Argentina Matías Silvestre DF 2012–2015 9 0 2013–2014 4 1
Uruguay Diego Laxalt DF 2013–2016 0 0 2018–2021 24 0
Italy Leonardo Bonucci DF 2005–2006 1 0 2017–2018 35 2
2006–2009 0 0

Milan, then Inter

Player Pos. Milan Inter
Tenure Apps Goals Tenure Apps Goals
Switzerland Hugo Rietmann MF 1906–1908 2 0 1909 1 0
Switzerland Carlo Hopf MF 1908 0 0 1909 2 0
Switzerland Arnaldo Woelkel MF 1908 ? ? 1909 2 0
Italy Franco Bontadini MF 1910–1911 7 1 1911–1920 47 28
Italy Gustavo Carrer FW 1904–1907 2 0 1912–1913 6 0
1909–1912 38 6
Italy Giuseppe Rizzi MF 1904–1907 7 3 1913–1915 20 0
1910–1913 42 16
Italy Aldo Cevenini FW 1909–1912 42 15 1912–1915 51 42
1915–1919 42 48 1919–1921 18 2
1922–1923 22 1
Italy Luigi Cevenini FW 1911–1912 1 1 1912–1915 55 63
1915–1919 7 5 1919–1921 40 54
1922–1927 94 42
Italy Julio Bavastro FW 1910–1913 37 4 1913–1916 41 10
Italy Marco Sala DF 1908–1920 90 3 1921–1922 18 0
Italy Cesare Cevenini DF 1917–1918 0 0 1919–1923 12 3
1926–1927 ? ?
Italy Carlo Cevenini FW 1917–1920 9 2 1920–1921 16 15
1923–1927 68 25
Italy Francesco Soldera MF 1914–1924 108 9 1924–1925 1 0
Italy Guglielmo Gajani MF 1918–1919 0 0 1927–1928 ? ?
1925–1927 18 0
Italy Giovanni Bolzoni DF 1924–1925 1 0 1928–1932 71 0
1926–1927 4 0
Italy Alessandro Savelli MF 1923–1927 78 35 1927–1928 16 6
Italy Emilio Gattoronchieri MF 1934–1936 7 0 1936–1938 15 0
Italy Bernardo Poli DF 1933–1935 0 0 1939–1944 46 2
Italy Oliviero Mascheroni MF 1934–1936 6 0 1941–1942 13 3
Italy Savino Bellini MF 1943–1944 0 0 1945–1946 7 1
Italy Romano Penzo FW 1943–1944 11 4 1945–1946 27 8
Italy Sergio Marchi DF 1944–1945 17 0 1945–1948 88 0
Italy Lino Grava DF 1947–1949 3 0 1952–1953 1 0
Italy Bruno Mazza MF 1942–1943 3 1 1952–1955 83 7
Italy Celestino Celio MF 1952–1953 26 0 1955–1956 16 1
Italy Eugenio Rizzolini DF 1955–1956 0 0 1956–1959 4 1
Italy Lorenzo Buffon GK 1949–1959 277 0 1960–1963 79 0
Italy Gaetano Salvemini FW 1958–1959 0 0 1968–1969 0 0
Peru Víctor Benítez DF 1962–1963 12 1 1967–1968 8 1
1964–1965 16 1
Italy Dario Barluzzi GK 1962–1967 85 0 1967–1968 0 0
Italy Aquilino Bonfanti MF 1964–1965 3 0 1967–1968 7 1
Italy Nevio Scala MF 1965–1969 11 0 1973–1975 26 1
1975–1976 23 0
Italy Fulvio Collovati DF 1976–1982 158 4 1982–1986 109 3
Italy Sergio Battistini DF 1980–1985 162 29 1990–1994 112 10
Italy Fabrizio Ferron GK 1985–1986 0 0 1999–2000 4 0
Italy Francesco Toldo GK 1990–1993 0 0 2001–2010 148 0
Italy Christian Panucci DF 1993–1996 89 9 1999–2001 26 1
Italy Cristian Brocchi MF 1994–1998 0 0 2000–2001 15 1
2001–2008 99 4
Italy Roberto Baggio FW 1995–1997 51 12 1998–2000 41 9
Italy Davide Cordone MF 1998–1999 0 0 1999–2003 0 0
Italy Marco Bonura MF 1997–2000 0 0 2000–2003 0 0
Italy Stefano Lombardi DF 1993–1994 0 0 2000–2004 0 0
Italy Francesco Coco DF 1995–2002 56 2 2002–2007 26 0
Netherlands Edgar Davids MF 1996–1997 19 0 2004–2005 14 0
France Patrick Vieira MF 1995–1996 2 0 2006–2010 67 6
Argentina Guly MF 1998–2001 57 6 2001–2004 30 0
Italy Domenico Morfeo MF 1998–1999 11 1 2002–2003 17 1
Denmark Thomas Helveg DF 1998–2003 105 0 2003–2004 23 0
Croatia Dražen Brnčić MF 2000–2001 1 0 2001–2003 0 0
Italy Paolo Ginestra GK 2000–2001 0 0 2001–2004 0 0
Turkey Ümit Davala DF 2001–2002 10 0 2002–2004 0 0
Italy Matteo Giordano DF 2001–2003 0 0 2003–2007 0 0
Italy Simone Brunelli GK 2002–2003 0 0 2003–2005 0 0
Italy Matteo Deinite MF 2002–2003 0 0 2003–2007 0 0
Italy Ronny Toma MF 2002–2003 0 0 2003–2008 0 0
Italy Marco Fossati MF 2002–2007 2007–2010
2010–2011
2011–2015 0 0
Italy Antonio Cassano FW 2011–2012 33 7 2012–2013 28 7
Ghana Edmund Hottor MF 2010–2015 0 0 2016–2017 0 0
Italy Matteo Darmian DF 2006–2010 4 0 2020–present 108 8
Turkey Hakan Çalhanoğlu MF 2017–2021 135 22 2021–present 92 19
Italy Raoul Bellanova DF 2018–2019 0 0 2022–2023 18 0
Italy Francesco Acerbi DF 2012–2013 6 0 2022–present 54 2

Managers who worked at both clubs

Inter, then Milan

Manager Inter Milan
Tenure Apps Wins Draws Losses Tenure Apps Wins Draws Losses
Hungary József Viola 1928–1929 31 17 3 11 1933–1934
1938–1940
71 27 18 26
Italy Stefano Pioli 2016–2017 27 14 3 10 2019–present 229 127 54 48

Milan, then Inter

Manager Milan Inter
Tenure Apps Wins Draws Losses Tenure Apps Wins Draws Losses
Italy Giuseppe Bigogno 1946–1949 116 61 27 28 1958–1959 26 16 5 5
Italy Giovanni Trapattoni 1974
1975–1976
47 21 13 13 1986–1991 232 124 64 44
Italy Luigi Radice 1981–1982 23 6 8 9 1983–1984 41 16 13 12
Italy Ilario Castagner 1982–1984 78 36 32 10 1984–1985 70 36 20 14
Italy Alberto Zaccheroni 1998–2001 125 54 44 27 2003–2004 43 18 13 12
Brazil Leonardo Araújo 2009–2010 48 23 13 12 2010–2011 32 21 4 7

Trophies

As of 22 January 2024
Team Major domestic International Grand total
SA CI SCI Total UCL UCWC UEL USC FCWC / IC Total
Milan 19 5 7 31 7 2 0 5 4 18 49
Inter 19 9 8 36 3 0 3 0 3 9 45

References

  1. ^ E. Pigozzi, Come difendersi dai Milanesi. Firenze, Giunti, 2006 (in Italian)
  2. ^ Gastelum, Andrew (29 December 2022). "Milan vs Inter: The tradition, future of the Derby della Madonnina". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  3. ^ a b #TBT: 5 European clashes against Italian sides, AC Milan, 30 November 2017
  4. ^ "Milan move into last four". UEFA. 13 April 2005. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  5. ^ "Inter handed stadium ban and fine". BBC Sport. 15 April 2005. Retrieved 3 November 2017.

External links