Inzaghi's predecessor had a fare more frustrating evening, not that Inter (or Juventus or Chelsea) supporters will be too surprised.
Antonio Conte may have won the Champions League as a player but he's never even made a semi-final as a coach. His poor record in the tournament has long been used to undermine his status as one of the game's great coaches.
And he knows it too, which is why for all his claims about Tottenham lacking quality and strength in depth, elimination at this year's group stage would seriously sting, as underlined by his furious reaction to Wednesday night's draw with Sporting CP.
In fairness, Conte's outrage, which earned him a red card, was somewhat understandable. Spurs looked to have won the game when Harry Kane hooked the ball home in the dying seconds, only to see the VAR disallow the goal after a ridiculously long wait.
Matt Doherty admitted that neither he nor his players had any idea what was going on, and that he would have to check the rule book to figure out why Kane was deemed onside given the ball had arrived at the forward's feet via a deflection.
The bottom line is, though, that Spurs were denied a place in the next round and must now avoid defeat at Marseille next week to progress.
"VAR is doing a lot of damage," Conte fumed in his post-match press conference. "I don’t understand why we have to get something from the next game when we could have secured qualification in this game. When you invent this type of situation, you create a lot of damage to the club."
And potentially the coach. With Spurs fans growing disillusioned with Conte's style of play, he can ill-afford further Champions League disappointment right now. Next week's game at the Velodrome is a massive one.