Jose Mourinho and Chelsea have been involved in some of the most lucrative sackings in the history of football - here is a rundown of the 10.
This list spans the best part of 13 years and the majority of these payouts were handed out by Premier League giants Chelsea.
Scroll through the gallery above to see the top 10 most expensive sackings of all-time
According to Copa90, current Inter head coach, Antonio Conte received the largest compensation package of all-time valued at £26.6 million.
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The second the manager in line is Mourinho's payout at Manchester United, which totalled to £19.6m after his dismissal in December 2018.
In third place is Mourinho again, this time after his first spell at Stamford Bridge between 2004 and 2007, where he was said to have earned £18m after his acrimonious exit.
Then we have former Paris Saint-Germain manager Laurent Blanc, who spent three seasons with the Ligue 1 giants, winning 11 trophies at the club.
Despite his success in domestic competitions, Blanc received his marching orders from the ambitious Qatari-owned club for his failure to bring success in the UEFA Champions League.
After his three consecutive Ligue 1 titles, the former France defender earned a pay package of £17m.
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Moving on, Fabio Capello, who coached the Russia national team from 2015 was sacked after three years in the job and was compensated £13.4m.
The third Chelsea manager that enters the list is Brazilian FIFA World Cup-winning coach Luis Felipe Scolari who pocketed £13m in 2009 after just seven months in charge.
Staying in London, former Tottenham Hotspur head coach Mauricio Pochettino spent five years in North London, leading the Premier League outfit to their first-ever UEFA Champions League final.
However, the Argentine was dismissed in November 2019 after a string of poor results and walked away with £12.5m.
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Another former Blues boss, Andre Villas-Boas spent less than one year in London within his three-year contract and the Portuguese tactician walked away with a cool £12m.
Then, the only Chelsea manager to win the UEFA Champions League, Roberto Di Matteo, who earned a full-time post after his success as caretaker earned £10m after his eventual exit.
And 10th on the list is Mourinho again and this time for his ill-fated second stint at the Bridge - he pocketed £9m in total.