Ange is a great manager and Simeone and Ancelotti are bums.
You are so ignorant at football, you think going to attack and being swiss cheese at the back as a result is some kind of reward in itself. Wow, great feat, it's just great seeing every decent team have fun with your defense. It doesn't even matter you finish near relegation zone.
Football is both phases mate.
Simeone has been great, even though unlikeable, until circa 2016. Since then, he has turned into a big fraud.
Highest paid coach in the world that constantly underachieves in both league and Europe
Fraudcelotti once was a great coach (when he was at Milan) with ideas about football. After that he gradually become a personality balancer manager that gives his team 0 tactical identity in general and in specific games.
Madrid players themselves said so after their Arsenal elimination last season.
The fact that he won 2 CLs with Madrid is pretty much irrelevant, since he would have been totally unable to do it with any other top club and others with not better tactical nous, like Zidane, have also done the same with Madrid. It's the club and not the manager.
Look at his stints at Bayern Napoli and Everton to get an idea where he stands in club football
I am gonna tell you one more time something until you hammer it inside your narrow-minded head:
it's much more difficult to do what Ange did at Celtic and at Spurs than what Ancelotti did with Madrid the last 3 years.
I am gonna also give you another secret insight that might be useful to you from now on: I know that you, and all the others that express similar views, are real losers in real life that want to compensate that with the 'big titles' your team wins in football. You underestimate and undervalue the success of small clubs, because being small reminds you of your petty little life, where of course you are never going to achieve something 'big'.
Unfortunately for you and the rest, football industry (with the exception of obsolette decision makers) does not work like that and values very much the small club success