Conte: Napoli have the fight for Serie A title race
Philip Billing scored a late equaliser as Napoli pegged back Serie A leaders Inter in a 1-1 draw on Saturday.
Napoli have the fight for an arduous Serie A title race, so says Antonio Conte, who pointed to Saturday's 1-1 draw with Inter as evidence.
Philip Billing scored a late equaliser as Napoli hit back against the league leaders and reigning champions at Stadium Diego Armando Maradona.
Conte's side risked falling further behind in the Scudetto race, having surrendered first place to Inter last weekend, but they remain a point behind Simone Inzaghi's team.
"This match was important not only for the standings, but also for a matter of personality," Conte told reporters.
"With 11 games to go, being one point from the top must make us understand that, despite the difficulties, if we want, we can play for the Scudetto until the end.
"This is the message that must be clear, first of all to ourselves, then to the outside."
Napoli were a goal down at the break and salvaged a draw three minutes from time but will possibly feel they should have beaten Inter after outplaying their rivals in the second half.
The hosts had 12 shots in the second half, accumulating 1.27 expected goals, while Inter - who led through Federico Dimarco's first-half free-kick - did not manage a single attempt going the other way.
"We all would have signed up to be in this position at this point of the season," Conte said.
"Inter are a top team, built over time and difficult to beat.
"Having shown that we can stand up to them and, for long stretches, having even been superior, must give us great confidence.
"This must give us confidence and make us understand if we are this, or that of the lacklustre second half in Como, which I have not tolerated all week.
"Having put in this performance in this way must give us a lot of confidence and at the same time we must understand that if we want to, we can.
"Wanting means working and pedalling more than others. Our goal is to stay united to continue being an annoyance until the end."