Napoli boss Antonio Conte opens up about Tottenham exit

Antonio Conte reflects on his tragedies during his time at Tottenham

Napoli boss Antonio Conte has shed light on his exit from the reigning Europa League winners Tottenham Hotspur and how it changed his perspective on life.

The former Juventus, Chelsea, and Spurs boss has reflected on his “difficult” moments with the North London side – the emotional burden he carried along with him in his managerial career.

Conte, who guided Spurs to a top-four finish in 2022, has admitted that qualifying for the Champions League was not worth celebrating — and revealed how a series of tragic personal losses shifted his thoughts about football and life.

Read more: Antonio Conte left ‘upset’ by claims he would join Juventus this summer 

The 55-year-old Italian tactician joined Tottenham Hotspur in November 2021 but left in March 2023 by mutual consent – after just two season.

He will later join Napoli in June 2024 and win the 2024-25 Serie A title in his first season – his fifth Scudetto and become the first manager to win the Italian league with three different clubs.

Antonio Conte has reflected on his “difficult” moments with the North London side, Tottenham Hotspur

Speaking to Sky Italia, Conte recalled his first full season with Spurs and the emotional and philosophical toll it took:

“It was a difficult year at Tottenham. I arrived in November with them ninth in the standings and we ended up in the Champions League, overtaking Arsenal… For them, going to the Champions League was like winning the Premier League.”

But for Conte, the celebrations in the dressing room after sealing fourth place didn’t sit right:

“On the last day, the Champions League entry was celebrated in the dressing room.

“I called my staff and told them: we don’t get used to these celebrations. You don’t celebrate these things.

“We are used to celebrating other things. OK, great feat, but at the same time, we understand what kind of celebration it is.”

Read more: Simone Inzaghi to part ways with Inter Milan

The Italian coach went on to speak openly about the personal tragedies that surrounded his final months in charge — the deaths of close friends Gian Piero Ventrone and Gianluca Vialli — which ultimately left him questioning his priorities and emotional capacity to continue at Spurs.

He added: “Gian Piero Ventrone died of leukaemia in fifteen days and it was a terrible blow on an emotional and psychological level and it wasn’t easy.

“Then Gianluca Vialli also passed away, with whom I had met the month before at a restaurant with my wife. I had seen him very calm, he was even fine, but during that dinner, I understood that something was wrong. You notice it when someone is enjoying something, he had drunk, eaten and after a month he passed away.”

The Napoli manager also spoke about Sinisa Mihajlovic’s death and its impact on him, and how it led him to reconsider his priorities in life.

Conte continued: “Sinisa’s story also had an impact. A series of pains that made me rethink some priorities. I had my family far away, in Italy, while I was in a hotel.

“My wife had always made an effort for me. So I asked myself: how much is it worth sacrificing family and friends for this knowing that from one day to the next you find yourself facing tragedies of this kind and no longer being there? This made me change some priorities.

“Then I also had a problem and I had to urgently have gallbladder surgery and I was at risk of getting pancreatitis. In short, that period made me think a lot about the priorities.”

Conte’s return to Italy has already yielded the much-needed results with domestic success at Napoli. But that feel-good factor would have nearly dissipated had he walked away from the sky blue brigade even after winning the Scudetto.

Read more: Como President Mirwan Suwarso debunk Cesc Fabregas move to Inter Milan

Ishmael Amonoo

Ishmael Amonoo

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