
Massimiliano Allegri, técnico del AC Milan está cumpliendo 45 años el día de hoy (11 de Agosto). Aquí les dejamos una pequeña reseña del técnico rossoneri...
Massimiliano Allegri comenzó su ciclo de entrenador en el banco de dell'Aglianese en la temporada 2003-2004 en la Serie C2. Luego fue primer entrenador y luego al SPAL en la Serie C1 y también un año con el Grosseto. En 2007 fue nombrado técnico del Sassuolo el cuál ascendió a Segunda división y ganó la Supercopa de la Serie C1 con el Míster como técnico y se le fue otorgado el premio al mejor entrenador de la Serie C1 ese año.
Luego el 29 de mayo de 2008 firmó un contrato con Cagliari (su primer equipo en Serie A), tuvo un mal arranque en donde perdió 5 partidos seguidos pero conservó la confianza del presidente y luego obtuvo 39 pts en 17 juegos, donde destacaron partidos importantes como Lazio 1-4 Cagliari, Siena 0-1 Cagliari, Juventus 0-1 Cagliari, Torino 2-3 Cagliari y un empate contra el Inter de Milán de Mourinho. Allegri recibió el premio del mejor jugador de la Serie A en 2008/2009 elegido por varios entrenadores y su nombre empezó a sonar en AC Milan, Juventus y Fiorentina.
Luego el 17 de Junio de 2010 fue despedido por encabezar una rancha de 9 partidos sin ganar y el 25 de Junio del mismo año firma como nuevo entrenador del AC Milan. Su debut fue contra el Lecce un partido que el Milan ganó 4-0, ese año Allegri no pudo triunfar en la Copa Italia (eliminado en semifinales), ni en Champions (eliminado en Octavos de Final) pero dirigió al equipo del AC Milan hasta el Scudetto conseguido en 2010/2011 terminando con la hegemonía del Inter de Milán.
En la 2011/2012 el Míster tuvo una gran pelea por el título contra Conte (técnico de la Juventus) pero terminó siendo segundo el equipo rossonero. Y en Copa terminó nuevamente en semifinales y en Champions terminó en Cuartos de Final.
En la temporada 2012/13 el equipo arranca con una mala rancha y corría riesgo su puesto como entrenador del AC Milan pero poco a poco Allegri logra remontar el campeonato y el equipo termina en el tercer puesto permitiendo el acceso de los play-off en la UEFA Champions League. En Copa Italia quedó eliminado en Cuartos de Final y en Champions quedó en Octavos de Final.
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Allegri started his managerial career in 2004, serving as the boss of Serie C2 team Aglianese, the club where he spent his two final years as a player. Following an impressive season with them, Allegri was called to head Grosseto, then in Serie C1; his experience with the biancorossi, however, proved not to be as successful as with Aglianese, and he was ultimately sacked shortly after the beginning of the 2006–07 Serie C1 season. Shortly after being sacked by Grosseto, Allegri agreed to rejoin his mentor Giovanni Galeone at Udinese, becoming part of his coaching staff.[2] This practice, however, proved to be forbidden by the Italian football laws because he was still contracted with the Tuscan club, which caused Allegri to be disqualified for three months on early 2008.
On August 2007, Allegri became head coach of ambitious Serie C1 team Sassuolo, who Allegri managed to lead quickly into the top league spots. On 27 April 2008, Sassuolo mathematically ensured the 2007–08 Serie C1/A league title, thus winning a historical first promotion to Serie B for theneroverdi.
On 29 May 2008, Allegri was announced as new head coach of Cagliari in the Serie A. Allegri was confirmed by club chairman Massimo Cellino and later went on to bring his team up to a mid-table placement in December. On 9 December, following a 1–0 home win to Palermo, Cagliari announced to have agreed a two-year contract extension with Allegri, with a new contract that was set to expire on 1 June 2011. The contract was then revealed to have been signed on October, in the midst of the rossoblu's early crisis result.
He completed the 2008–09 season in an impressive ninth place, which was hailed as a huge result with respect to the limited resources, the lack of top-class players, and the high quality of Cagliari's attacking football style, which led the Sardinians not far from UEFA Europa League qualification. Such results led him to be awarded the Panchina d'Oro (Golden bench), a prize awarded to the best Serie A football manager according to other managers' votes. In the 2009–10 season. On 13 April 2010, Cagliari surprisingly removed Allegri from his managerial duties despite a solid 12th place with 40 points.
Allegri was released from his contract by Cagliari on 17 June 2010, under request of Serie A giants Milan, who were interested in appointing him as their new manager.[9] On 25 June, Allegri was officially appointed as the new manager of Milan. In his first season in charge, Allegri led Milan to their first championship title since 2004, beating titel incumbents Internazionale in both league fixtures. His side, however, failed to make it past the semi-finals of the Coppa Italia, losing to Palermo 4–3 on aggregate. The team also qualified for the knockout stage of the UEFA Champions League, where they were eliminated by Tottenham Hotspur.
Success continued in his second season at the club. He led Milan to their sixth Supercoppa Italiana by coming from behind in a 2–1 win over city rivals Internazionale in a game played at the Beijing National Stadium. That was as far as his success went for that season, however. A semi-final Coppa Italia knockout at the hands of Juventus followed by a quarter-final UEFA Champions League knockout at the hands of Barcelona left Milan fighting on only one front towards the end of the season — the Scudetto. Even that was to be lost, however, with the Rossoneri finishing in second place to Juventus and therefore qualifying for next season's Champions League group stage.
On 13 January 2012, Allegri agreed to extend his contract with Milan to the end of 2013–14 season. On 5 June 2012, Allegri stated that he intends to coach for only 10 more years and plans to retire at the age of 55 due to the fact that coaching contains a high level of stress and anxiety. He also said that he hopes to coach the Italian national side before he retires.
At the beginning of the 2012–13 season, Milan had only collected 8 points from their first 7 games, putting Allegri in danger of getting fired early on. Despite all the criticism from the critics, Milan stuck with Allegri and he managed to get the best out of some younger players including Stephan El Shaarawy, Milan's home-grown player Mattia De Sciglio and later on Mario Balotelli. Allegri managed to steer the Rossoneri from 16th place to finishing 3rd at the end of the season, with an epic 2–1 comeback victory away to Siena. That gave Milan the spot to play in the playoff round for the 2013–14 Champions League campaign.
On 2 June 2013, club president Silvio Berlusconi confirmed Allegri to remain as the manager of Milan, despite numerous speculations that he would be given the sack and be replaced by former Milan player Clarence Seedorf.
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