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===Subsequent achievements (1967–1991)=== [[File:1970-1971 Inter Milan.jpg|thumb|left|A line-up of F.C. Internazionale Milano during the Scudetto winning 1970–71 season]] Following the golden era of the 1960s, Inter managed to win their eleventh league title in 1971 with [[Roberto Boninsegna]], one of the greatest striker in club history, that leaded the league two times in a row, and their twelfth in 1980.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Toscani |first=Oliviero |title=Inter! 100 anni di emozioni 1908-2008 |publisher=Skira |year=2008 |isbn=978-88-6130-622-6 |publication-place=Milan |language=Italian}}</ref> Inter were defeated for the second time in five years in the final of the European Cup, losing 0–2 to [[Johan Cruyff]]'s [[AFC Ajax|Ajax]] in [[1972 European Cup final|1972]]. During the 1970s and the 1980s, Inter also added two to its Coppa Italia tally, in 1977–78 and 1981–82 under coach [[Eugenio Bersellini]]. Italian federation reopened the possibility to sign foreign players in 1980, Inter signed among others [[Hansi Müller]] (1975–1982 VfB Stuttgart, 1982–1984 Inter), [[Karl-Heinz Rummenigge]] (1974–1984 Bayern Munich, 1984–1987 Inter) and Argentinian [[Daniel Passarella]] (1986–1988 Inter); other important players in that time were Italians [[Graziano Bini]], [[Walter Zenga]] (voted as [[IFFHS World's Best Goalkeeper|World's Best Goalkeeper]] by [[IFFHS]] for three years in a row in 1989, 1990 and 1991), [[Giuseppe Bergomi]], [[Alessandro Altobelli]], [[Gabriele Oriali]], [[Riccardo Ferri]], [[Gianpiero Marini]] and [[Giuseppe Baresi]]: Bergomi, Oriali, Marini, Altobelli and [[Ivano Bordon]] were part of Italy squad that won [[1982 FIFA World Cup]]. In 1981 Inter reached for the sixth time in six participations [[European Cup]] Semifinals this time against Real Madrid, a classic match that will repeat in 3 different European competitions in the 80's: in [[UEFA Cup Winners' Cup]] quarter-finals in 1983 and in [[Uefa Cup]] semi-finals in 1985 and 1986. Led by the German duo of [[Andreas Brehme]] and [[Lothar Matthäus]], with [[Aldo Serena]] top scorer in Serie A with 22 goals, Argentine [[Ramón Díaz]] and [[Nicola Berti]], Inter coached by [[Giovanni Trapattoni]] captured the 1989 Serie A championship ended with an all-time record for most points in Serie A history with 18 teams, with 58 points out of 68. Inter were unable to defend their title in the following season in a very competitive Serie A, despite adding fellow German [[Jürgen Klinsmann]] to the squad and winning their first [[1989 Supercoppa Italiana|Supercoppa Italiana]] at the start of the season.
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