Rafael Benitez was appointed coach of Serie A side Napoli on Monday, the club president announced.
The
53-year-old Spaniard - whose previous experience in Serie A was a
painful short-lived spell with Inter Milan - had been widely expected to
be named and Napoli supremo Aurelio De Laurentiis tweet confirmed that
to be the case.
"Rafa Benitez is the new
coach of Napoli," tweeted De Laurentiis, whose side finished runners-up
in the recently finished Serie A season.
"He is a man of experience and a true leader."
Benitez,
who had also been linked with French champions Paris Saint-Germain, had
a successful spell in charge of Chelsea after replacing the sacked UEFA
Champions League winning coach Roberto di Matteo.
The
Spaniard guided Chelsea to the UEFA Europa League crown and also helped
them qualify for next season's Champions League after being brought in
on a short-term basis.
According to the
Spanish press Benitez was to sign a two year contract with the option of
extending it by a further year and an annual salary of €3.5million.
His first job at Napoli will be to try and persuade fans favourite and leading scorer Edinson Cavani to stay.
The
Uruguayan international, who topped the Serie A scoring charts with 29
last term, is one of the most sought after players in Europe with both
Real Madrid and 2012 English champions Manchester City keen to secure
his services.
City, who surrendered their
title tamely to city rivals Manchester United last season, have offered
money and Bosnian striker Edin Dzeko as payment for Cavani.
Benitez replaces Walter Mazzarri, who has been appointed coach of Inter Milan.
Ironically,
Benitez's last Italian adventure was at Inter but lasted only six
months and ended just after having won the 2012 FIFA Club World Cup.
His
team had struggled in the league and he had forced officials' hands by
telling them to strengthen his squad or find another solution, which
they did.
Despite not always being popular with fans because of his reserved exterior he has a good record.
He won two Spanish titles and the Europa League with Valencia while he led Liverpool to Champions League success in 2005.
No comments:
Post a Comment