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ANCELOTTI

Former banker Sarri only interested in money, says Napoli owner

Napoli owner Aurelio De Laurentiis on Wednesday accused former coach Maurizio Sarri of only being interested in money and predicted that new manager Carlo Ancelotti was in for the long haul as the southerners chase a first Serie A title since 1990 and dream of Champions League success.

Former banker Sarri only interested in money, says Napoli owner
Maurizio Sarri during the English Premier League football match between West Ham United and Chelsea on September 23, 2018. Photo: Ben Stansall/AFP

“I thought I had met a coach who would stay at Napoli for a long time,” De Laurentiis said of Sarri in an interview with Corriere dello Sport.

“At a certain point it became a question linked exclusively to money.

“Suddenly, it was established by the media that his contract must be adjusted. So what is the value of an agreement just signed? We had already gone from 700,000 euros ($800,000) to 1.5 million euros ($1.7 million).

“I also once heard him say that for his next contract, he wanted to get rich.

“Sarri's declarations of love for the city? I believed it, but then I wondered: 'What if he was using me as a bank?'”

Sarri, a former footballer who turned to a career in banking in London, Zurich, Frankfurt and Luxembourg, before returning to coaching, took over at Napoli in 2015.

But the 59-year-old moved to Chelsea on a deal reported to be worth nearly six million euros ($6.6 million) during the summer after Napoli finished runners-up to Juventus despite a club record 91 points.

His job in the Stadio San Paolo was taken by former Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain boss Ancelotti, who has won league titles in five of Europe's top leagues as well as the Champions League with AC Milan and Real Madrid.

“Ancelotti was a date written in the football universe as if fate had decided it,” said film producer De Laurentiis, who rescued the club from bankruptcy in 2004.

“It took five minutes to get an agreement. The quickest negotiation of my fifteen years of football.”

READ ALSO: Carlo Ancelotti looks set to be Italy's new football coach

Napoli are six points behind Juventus in Serie A this term, but are top of their group in the Champions League after a late Lorenzo Insigne winner over Liverpool a week ago.

“With him, we have a human relationship. We discuss our mutual interests. And if I talk about football, he doesn't get offended,” said De Laurentiis.

“Before the match against Liverpool I called him in the morning. I expressed some opinions, politely, but also with authority.

“He told me: 'Don't worry, president, we will win'. I took it as his word and at the 87th-minute thought: 'Do you want to see what happens?' And then it happened. 

“Insigne? He hasn't surprised me. He's a product of Napoli and Naples, a complicated city where it's more difficult than elsewhere to be a prophet in your homeland.

“He (Insigne) proved to be a man.”

De Laurentiis believes that there is still hope this season despite trailing Juventus by six points after eight games.

“There will be a moment when even Juventus can break,” he warned.

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JUVENTUS

Napoli draw all but hands Serie A title to Juventus

Juventus are practically assured of winning a seventh successive Serie A title after second-placed Napoli were held 2-2 by Torino on Sunday.

Napoli draw all but hands Serie A title to Juventus
Photo: Andreas Solaro/AFP

Juventus have a six-point lead in Serie A with two games left to play. Both teams are equal in head-to-head clashes but Juventus are well ahead of their southern rivals on goal difference.

The champions now need just one point to officially retain their crown with games to come against Roma in the Stadio Olimpico and already-relegated Verona in Turin.

Torino twice battled back from a goal down to steal a point from Maurizio Sarri's side who had been bidding for a first title since the days of Argentina legend Diego Maradona in 1987 and 1990.

“We battled for top spot right down to the wire,” said Sarri. “In the end, the Scudetto come down to minor details.

“We did everything within our power to give Juventus a run for their money but objectively speaking they have greater resources than us and we couldn't have done any more than we did. The biggest regret was those injuries to [Faouzi] Ghoulam and [Arek] Milik because they deprived us of two important players.” 

Sarri said the “real turning point” was Juventus' last-gasp win over Inter Milan last weekend with two goals in the final three minutes. “In four minutes the Scudetto went from within our grasp to in Juve's hands. Moments like that can define a season.”

The mood in the Stadio San Paolo was one of support for Sarri after club president Aurelio De Laurentiis laid the blame on the coach after last week's defeat at Fiorentina effectively ended their title challenge.

Napoli's last win was against Juventus in Turin two weeks ago. Dries Mertens celebrated his 31st birthday by putting Napoli ahead after 25 minutes after a shocking defensive error by Torino's Nicolas Burdisso, with captain Marek Hamsik coming off the bench to add a second for the hosts and his 100th in Serie A after 71 minutes.

But Daniele Baselli pulled the visitors level 10 minutes into the second half with a dejected Sarri burying his head in his hands as Lorenzo De Silvestri headed in seven minutes from time.

“I got angry because I want to finish the season as well as possible,” said the Napoli coach. “We must end the season on a high. These last two matches are very important because we can set a new all-time points record for this club.”

Juventus had recovered from a goal down to beat Bologna 3-1 on Saturday to open up a seven-point lead. Massimiliano Allegri's Juventus would have to lose their final two matches and Napoli to achieve high-scoring wins against Sampdoria and Crotone to make up the goal difference.

Napoli and Juventus both won 1-0 away from home against each other this season, but the Turin giants (+61) have a considerable edge over Napoli (+45) in terms of goal difference.

Inter still in Champions League race

With Juventus and Napoli in the top two spots, Inter Milan kept their Champions League hopes alive with a 4-0 win over Udinese to move to within two points of fourth-placed Lazio, who were held 1-1 by Atalanta.

Roma broke two points clear of Lazio in third thanks to Turkish international forward Cengiz Under's 15th minute strike in a 1-0 win which saw Cagliari slip into the bottom three.

Lazio – without injured Serie A top scorer Ciro Immobile – were trailing when Musa Barrow scored after two minutes before Felipe Caicedo grabbed the equalizer on 24 minutes.

Inter assured fifth place and seal at least Europa League action next season. “We're still convinced that we can get to the Champions League,” said Inter coach Luciano Spalletti.

Inter captain Mauro Icardi kept his push for the Golden Boot alive with his 28th goal this season, just one short of Lazio's injured striker Ciro Immobile.

Matteo Politano's goal midway through the second half ended Sampdoria's Europa League ambitions and secured Sassuolo safety.

Udinese slip to just a point above the drop zone, with Chievo moving ahead of them after a 2-1 win against relegation rivals Crotone. 

By Emmeline Moore