Antonio Conte and José Mourinho increased their fortunes after collecting millionaire compensation in Premier League clubs

The English newspaper The Sun has compiled a ranking of the most expensive coaches redundancies in football.

Antonio Conte has just found a job. The Italian left Inter Milan after winning Serie A in Italy due to a disagreement with the black-blue board. They sold Achraf Hakimi and then Romelu Lukaku.

In between, Conte stepped aside. He was not convinced to see what he had built crumble on the market. Now, they called him from England to take over Tottenham Hotspur.

There is talk of a salary of more than $ 17 million. The 52-year-old coach, born in the town of Lecce, has one of the most important caches in Europe. Chelsea know this well, because they were Premier League champions in 2017.

The English newspaper The Sun has compiled a ranking of the most expensive coach layoffs in football. Which coaches have earned more after losing their job as severance pay, publishes the newspaper AS from Spain.

a ranking featuring a Ronald Koeman you just lost your job. Dismissed to make way for Xavi, the dutchman will pocket $ 13 million if your requests are satisfied. He is tenth in a classification led by Conte. The Italian took $ 34 million from Chelsea in 2018.

After the Italian, the Portuguese appears twice Jose Mourinho. Dismissed by United in 2018 and Chelsea in 2007 for $ 26 and 24 million, respectively.

The fourth position is occupied by French Laurent Blanc with the $ 22 million paid to him by Paris Saint-Germain after his dismissal in 2016.

Luiz Felipe Scolari completes the top 5 from The Sun. The Brazilian took a good chunk out of Chelsea, after being fired in 2009. $ 18 million, specifically.

Fabio Capello also appears in the list. The Italian was sacked by the Russian Federation in 2015 to take $ 17 million.

In seventh place is the compensation that Tottenham Hotspur had to pay the Argentine Mauricio Pochettino when he left the Spurs in 2019. They were $ 16 million.

Something less than $ 16 million charged the portuguese André Villas-Boas for his abruptly unfinished job at Chelsea in 2012. In that year the English club also had to pay the Italian-Swiss Roberto Di Matteo $ 14 million. (D)

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