Why combustible Antonio Conte is another Chelsea gamble

Prepare for fireworks from Italian accused of arrogance and egotism 

Ian Herbert
Chief Sports Writer
Monday 04 April 2016 18:48 BST
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Incoming Chelsea head coach Antonio Conte
Incoming Chelsea head coach Antonio Conte

Antonio Conte has not always enjoyed the idea of Chelsea winning football matches. When his Juventus side had just beaten Midtyjlland in the Champions League three and a half years ago, he arrived in the press room to find a journalist celebrating the 94th-minute winner Victor Moses had just scored against Shakhtar Donetsk, in the same group, for the club he will now manage. “Chi è quella merda che ha esultato?" - "Who is that piece of shit who has just celebrated (Chelsea's goal)?” - he demanded to know. “This is the game I am talking about.”

Juve went on to win the group and reach the quarter-final while Chelsea, in the throes of a managerial crisis as usual, were relegated to the Europa League which they won under Rafael Benitez. The episode provides an important pointer to what Conte expects from journalists. They’re a part of the team, as he sees it, and though there will be jokes, there will be something of the sergeant major about him. The press conferences often start at 9am - Arsene Wenger style – except that “the sergeant” always arrives on time.

The question for those of a Chelsea disposition is whether players are ready for his volatile and sometimes temperamental ways. England has been a graveyard of those from the Italian nation who lay down the law and become detested for it. It was impossible to find so much as a gentle quote of gratitude from the ranks of Manchester City’s squad for Roberto Mancini when the club’s owners decided they’d had enough of the unholy wars he was causing and got shot in 2013. The Spartan environment Fabio Capello created in the England set-up was even more authoritarian and made it a joyless place where factions took hold at the 2014 World Cup. On the scale of toughness, Conte sits behind Capello but ahead of Mancini, says Federico Farcomeni, UK Correspondent for Italian sports daily Tuttosport, who knows how these individuals work as well as any. At Sunderland, Paolo di Canio was off the scale.

The Italians who prosper discover the value of flexibility, equanimity and adaptability in English conditions. Claudio Ranieri is clubbable in England, though a completely different person in Italy very serious, often angry – while only Carlo Ancelotti is more or less the same person wherever he goes and his vastly superior track record reveals the outcome.

With Conte, there are often fireworks. Many speak of aggression and ego. "Arrogant" was the description applied by Cristiano Doni, one of the player at Atalanta, where Conte managed for one season, six years ago. Conte replied to say: “He should think about playing only, he is not God who came down on Earth.” It is thought that the row was the reason why Conte resigned from the Bergamo club so abruptly. His stays at Arezzo, Bari and Siena were very short, too. It was at Siena that midfielder Filippo Carobbio asked for permission to leave the training set-up in order to spend time with his wife who was about to give birth. Conte refused because a game was imminent. There were words between Mrs Carobbio and Mrs Conte at the end of the season.

Of course, a faint heart never clinched the Premier League. Jose Mourinho has certainly not been in possession of one and Farcomeni observes that Conte, like his predecessor, can engender supreme devotion from a group of players – at Juventus, Gianluigi Buffon, Leonardo Bonussi and Arturo Vidal - who will deliver his message on the pitch. His achievements as player speak for themselves, though with Conte’s grasp of English still very basic, the continued presence of John Terry would be no bad thing at Stamford Bridge.

Chelsea will look for echoes of how Conte made such an impact on Juventus on arriving in 2011 for a three-year stay which remains the longest stretch of his decade in management. There had been consecutive seventh-place finishes beforehand but Conte immediately rehabilitated the Old Lady, who lost only the Coppa Italia final all season. “He needed only one speech, with many simple words, to conquer both me and Juventus,” Andrea Pirlo later observed. “He had fire running through his veins and he moved like a viper. 'This squad, dear boys, is coming off two consecutive seventh-place finishes. It's crazy. It's shocking. I am not here for this, so it's time to stop being so crap.'”

Conte found it harder to maintain the same standard when juggling European competition. In his second – and last – Champions League campaign, Juventus managed a tally of only six points from six games in the group stage and dropped into the Europa League. He left on the second day of pre-season training for the next campaign, citing fatigue and financial constraints. “You cannot eat at a 100 euro restaurant with just 10 euro in your pocket, can you?” he said.

His successor, Massimo Allegri, seemed to manage well enough. He secured a domestic Double and took Juventus to the Champions League final, where they pushed Barcelona hard despite losing Giorgio Chiellini, cornerstone of their defence, just before the game. The overhaul of the squad, for which Conte must take credit, continued after his departure, too. That suggests that the Juventus director general, Giuseppe Marotta, and his right-hand man, Fabio Paratici, must take very substantial credit for acquisitions.

Chelsea are confident that a match-fixing allegation hanging over Conte from his Siena season will not present a problem when the verdict is delivered in a few months. They view their seventh permanent manager in 13 years as the one who will deliver some of the Mourinho stardust with the toxicity taken out. They are happy to possess another superstar manager, who will add richly to the global league’s compelling narrative. But, in truth, the diminishing ranks of those left to choose from left them with very few options. They are gambling, as much as they ever did.

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