2003–04 Inter Milan season
| 2003–04 season | ||||
| President |
Massimo Moratti Giacinto Facchetti | |||
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| Head coach |
Héctor Cúper (until October 2003) Alberto Zaccheroni (from October 2003) | |||
| Stadium | San Siro | |||
| Serie A | 4th | |||
| Coppa Italia | Semi-finals | |||
| UEFA Champions League | Group stage (3rd) | |||
| UEFA Cup | Quarter-finals | |||
| Top goalscorer |
League: Christian Vieri (13) All: Christian Vieri (17) | |||
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Season
2003–04 season started with a lot of issues: despite the expensive and request signings, Inter got bad results in domestic league (two wins, three draws and a loss in derby) and Héctor Cúper was sacked. In order to replace him, Alberto Zaccheroni was appointed coach: eventually, Inter came to a bare goal of fourth place. His campaign in Champions League, however, resulted in a failure: it didn't manage to pass his group, after an historical win over Arsenal (0-3 in Highbury).
In January 2004, Massimo Moratti decided to leave his position of chairman: former footballer Giacinto Facchetti substited him, retaining the charge until his death (occurred on 4 September 2006).
Squad
- Squad at end of season[1]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Left club during season
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Serie A
Games
| 5 | Inter | 1–3 | Milan | |
| Martins |
F. Inzaghi Kaká Shevchenko |
| 16 | Parma | 1–0 | Inter | |
| E. Filippini |
| 21 | Inter | 1–2 | Udinese | |
| Cruz |
Pinzi Fava Passaro |
| 28 | Inter | 3–2 | Juventus | |
| Martins Vieri Stanković |
Kily González Di Vaio |
Top Scorers
Sources
References
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