Lippi retired from active football in 1982, at the age of 34, to pursue a coaching career. He consequently became a coach with the Sampdoria youth teams, and, after various stints in Italy's lower divisions, became a head coach in
Serie A in 1989 with
Cesena. Lippi then moved on to
Lucchese and
Atalanta. The turning point for Lippi came in the
1993–94 season when he led
Napoli to a place in the
UEFA Cup. The achievement was all the more remarkable given the financial turmoil of a club still basking in the past triumphs inspired by
Diego Maradona.
In 1994, Lippi took over
Juventus and led them to three
scudetti, one
Coppa Italia, four
Italian Super Cups, one
Champions League, one
European Super Cup, and one
Intercontinental Cup. Lippi was now a managerial target for the top clubs with Juventus winning the race to secure his services. He won the Serie A title in his first season with a team that included
Gianluca Vialli and
Ciro Ferrara, a player he had coached at Napoli and who later acted as his assistant with the
Azzurri. The trophies began to flow thick and fast, including the UEFA Champions League in 1996.
After five highly successful seasons at Juventus, Lippi moved to
Internazionale in
1999, but was sacked after the first
2000–01 matchday after having faced a lot of criticism due to his poor results in his previous season with the
nerazzurri. He was then again appointed as coach of Juventus for the
2001–02 season and managed to win two other
scudetti, also leading the
bianconeri to the finals of
UEFA Champions League in 2003 held at
Old Trafford. Juventus lost to
AC Milan in a
penalty shootout after both the teams failed to score during the normal time and extra time.
Despite never having played for Italy at senior level, Lippi gained a wealth of experience over the years playing in his country’s top flight as a central defender for Sampdoria. His rise to the top of the managerial tree also began at the Genoese club where he started as a youth-team coach.
Italy coach Marcello Lippi was something of an exception at the
2006 FIFA World Cup. Unlike most of his counterparts, the Tuscan-born coach had only ever worked in his country of birth.
A motivator rather than a strategist, Lippi is not bound by a rigid tactical approach. He earns the respect of his players thanks to this flexibility as well as his own personal charisma and sincerity.
Lippi is considered by many to be one of the best managers in the history of Italian football.