Name
Massimiliano Allegri

Thumb

Image Source

User Rating
(0 users)

Complete
60%

Born
1967 (57 years old)

Birth Place
Livorno, Italy

Position
Manager

Status
Retired

Ethnicity
White

Team Number


Height
1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)

Outfitter


Kit


Side


Agent


Wage Year



Player Cutout


Full Body Render


Sport
Soccer

Team
_Retired Soccer

2nd Team


League
_No League Soccer

Creative Commons Artwork
Yes



Description
Available in:

Massimiliano Allegri (Italian pronunciation: ; born 11 August 1967), also known as Max Allegri, is an Italian professional football manager and former player who most recently managed Serie A club Juventus.

During his playing career, Allegri played in the Serie A as a midfielder with Pisa, Pescara, Cagliari, Perugia and Napoli. In 2002, he won the Serie D title with Aglianese, with whom he retired as a player. During his time in Livorno, due to his lean body and quickness, he was referred to as “Acciughina” (Little Anchovy), a nickname Italian press still uses to address him.

After beginning his managerial career in 2003 with several smaller Italian sides, Allegri helped Sassuolo gain promotion to the Serie B for the first time in their history, winning the Serie C1 championship and Super Cup in the same year. From 2008 to 2010, he coached Cagliari in Serie A, leading them to their best Serie A finish in almost 15 years. His performances as head coach of Cagliari earned him a move to AC Milan in 2010, where he remained until January 2014; he won a Scudetto in 2010–11, Milan's first since 2004, and a Supercoppa Italiana title in 2011. Between 2014 and 2019, Allegri was in charge of Juventus, with whom he won eleven trophies: five consecutive league titles (from 2015 to 2019), four Coppa Italia titles in a row (from 2015 to 2018) and two Supercoppa Italiana titles (2015 and 2018); he also reached two UEFA Champions League finals (2015 and 2017). He returned to Juventus in 2021, following two years away from management. In his second period at the club, he won another Coppa Italia in 2024, but was sacked only a couple days later, largely due to his behaviour during and after the final, which the club deemed incompatible with its values.

Individually, Allegri won the Panchina d'Oro (Golden Bench) four times (2009, 2015, 2017 and 2018) and was four times Serie A Coach of the Year (2011, 2015, 2016 and 2018), as well as being awarded the Enzo Bearzot Award (2015) and inducted into the Italian Football Hall of Fame (2018). He is also the only coach in Italian football history to have won five Scudetti and four Coppa Italia titles consecutively, and the only one in Europe's top five leagues to have won a domestic double for four consecutive seasons.



Career Honours

Italian Coppa Italia
2023-2024

Juventus

Italian Serie A
2018-2019

Juventus

Italian Supercoppa Italiana
2018

Juventus

Italian Football Hall of Fame
2018

Juventus

Italian Serie A
2017-2018

Juventus

Italian Coppa Italia
2017-2018

Juventus

Italian Serie A
2016-2017

Juventus

Italian Coppa Italia
2016-2017

Juventus

Italian Serie A
2015-2016

Juventus

Italian Coppa Italia
2015-2016

Juventus

Italian Supercoppa Italiana
2015

Juventus

Italian Serie A
2014-2015

Juventus

Italian Coppa Italia
2014-2015

Juventus

Italian Supercoppa Italiana
2011

Milan

Italian Serie A
2010-2011

Milan


Career Milestones


Serie A Coach Of The Month
2023-12-05


Serie A Coach Of The Month
2022-11-15


Former Youth Teams


Former Senior Teams

1985-1988

1988-1989

1989-1990

1990-1991

1991-1993

1993-1995

1995-1997

1997-1998

1998

1998-2000

2000-2001


Former Club Staff

2004-2005
Manager

2005-2006
Manager

2006-2006
Manager

2007-2008
Manager

2008-2010
Manager

2010-2014
Manager

2014-2019
Manager

2021-2024
Manager


Contracts



Fanart


Banner
None Found...


Other Links