The Death of the Fullback

This piece was meant to run as a Tactics Thursday yesterday, but the thought of extorting 50M from PSG and doing a little post-XMAS shopping was simply too good to pass up. Now this isn’t meant to be a eulogy for my favorite position by any means, but a discussion on what has happened to the fullback?

Being a Milan fan we are no stranger to the fullback position, being the home of arguably two of the World’s best in Paolo Maldini and Cafu, not to mention a host of other talented options in Costacurta, Serginho, Panucci , Janks, and others. But in the past few years outside of the emergence of Ignazio Abate at RB, Milan, Serie A, and much of the World has seen a decline in the fullback as we knew it. Gone is the marauding fullback capable of joining the attack as well as defending better than anyone else on the team, able to track down wingers and negate opposing crosses. I am not talking Maldini-esque challenges, but simply the ability to be tactically sound and handle both sides of the ball equally well.

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Now players with the athleticism of their fullbacking forefathers are moved into wing positions in the midfield, attacking more and defending less, or into wing-back positions for coaches who choose to deploy only three at the back. In fact few players are turned into fullbacks as was done successfully with Serginho and now Abate at AC Milan. Players like Dani Alves and Gareth Bale have the athleticism and raw talent to be some of the best fullbacks in the game but instead their inability to learn the nuances of defense has turned them into attack minded wingers as opposed to all around talents at fullbacks. Why aren’t coaches nurturing this position anymore, has the game changed to make the wide attack irrelevant? Pressing and possession is now the name of the game, and a lot of teams are using more narrow formations with skilled players in the middle of the field and less reliance on outside attacks. Sure some teams still play very wide, but often times with wingbacks and wingers instead of the old fashioned way with fullbacks.

Italy, often known for producing quality defenders seems to be having the same problem. Maggio and Dossena of Napoli are now wing-backs; same can be said for Armero at Udinese. Promising young defenders like Santon and Motta are afterthoughts, with Motta being the biggest pile of unrealized hype I have seen in a while, no coincidence it was Roma fans doing the hyping, but you get my point. At Juventus Conte has deployed Chiellini, a prototypical CB at LB, even Arsene Wenger has deployed four CBs at the back due to injuries. Pep Guardiola has seemingly done the same, but instead of removing fullbacks he seems to be stepping away from the defender completely hoping to deploy more midfield type players. Is it tactics, is it lack of talent, or is it simply the extinction of the fullback like the sweeper before him?

Tough to tell really and I am not going to go ahead and say that the fullback is in fact going extinct, but the idea of seeing the next Paolo Maldini seems farther and farther away from ever happening. There are still supremely talented players and youngsters at the positions, as well as tried and true throwbacks. Leighton Baines, for one, always makes me smile as does Patrice Evra and Balzaretti. But players like Bertrand, the vice Ashley Cole at Chelsea, or Van Der Weil or even Abate can help bring the role back into prominence but we may never see the completeness of the Legends before them.

A Little Shopping

I was going to post a piece about the Death of the Fullback in modern Football but that will have to wait for the weekend. Instead it is time we turn our attention to more pressing matters, shopping. If all goes well and Pato is sold to PSG, for far more than he is worth, then our old pal Fester gets to go shopping, and knowing the way he does business that means a fair amount of new players to help this team go from good to great. Getting your Golden Tie Ready because it is addition by subtraction at its finest.

I am still torn on this Tevez thing, Tevez the player is incredible, the perfect blend of grit and finesse, and a true asset to Allegri’s system. Tevez the person, on the other hand, is circus sideshow on the brink of lunacy. Will Italy give him the change of scenery and mentality that turned Robinho from problem child to the little engine that could? Maybe, but the risk here outweighs the reward and if Fester can bag Maxi Lopez as a fill in for Ibra, and then use Cassano and Robinho with El Shaarawi as a fill-in, the striker department is not as hard pressed as people make it out to be. I don’t think Lopez is the best option, but we really only need a fill in to cover for Ibra not compete with him as he is the focal point of the attack, so why break the bank for a player who may only have a bench role? That goes for Tevez as well?

Above all else, what this team really needs is a DM to replace the aging Van Bommel and Ambrosini duo. Both players have fallen off from last season and an injury to either could prove disastrous for Milan. The money from Pato could go onto fund a serviceable CDM. Heck, I am not his biggest fan but if Fester wants to go after DDR on a Bosman, with a loan in January, I won’t argue. My dream is Alex Song, but we all know that even Pato’s over inflated cost couldn’t pry that guy from Arsene Wenger. I am sure many of you have your favorites for this position, but it is imperative the player shields the defense and plays a simple brand of football to fit Allegri’s system and allows Prince and Nocerino the freedom to get forward and join the attack. He doesn’t need to be the next big thing, over-hyped, or any of that nonsense. Just give me a guy who can do what Ambro and Van Bommel do, just a few years ago and bit more pace.

Lastly, this team needs a real LB, and while I don’t think the problems we have there at the moment are catastrophic to the point of failure, as some have made them out to be. It is time we take a good hard look at the position that has been a void since Maldini moved to CB and Serginho retired. If Taiwo isn’t going to work, ship him off to Newcastle for Santon. If Milan aren’t interested in grooming then Santon, then start looking at left backs in Italy! What better way to have a player ready for the rigors of Serie A then by getting one that already plays or played there: Crisciti, Armero, or Balzaretti. Unless of course Milan wants to really splash the cash and go for guys like Ansaldi, Baines, Bale, or Maxwell.

One more minor point, for those worried Milan won’t spend the money as they did with Kaka and Sheva, times have changed. That team back then was different, under performing and keen on balancing books, those days are gone. You can sense the excitement with the performance against and the last two trasnfers windows saw plenty of movement to better the team, Robinho, Zlatan, Urby, Cassano, Van Bommel! Yes they were cheap moves and cost effective, but we still added players, and we did it Fester’s way, without breaking the bank and overspending. Personally I don’t worry about this money going to the bank, Allegri wants players and Fester is out in full force! So there you have it, I always contended Pato was worth more to Milan as a pile of cash then a player, so how would you spend the money?

Nocerino: Transfer of the Year?

In the summer, while everyone lusted after Mr. X, Fester quietly made the signing of the season with Antonio Nocerino. One could argue, specifically Juve fans, that Pirlo is just as valuable to his new team, but this was a given, whereas Nocerino was a wild card. So much so that even some Milan fans wrote him off as a pub player and someone not up to the caliber of AC Milan, well those fans have been proven wrong by the player and it looks even Allegri is on the Nocerino bandwagon!

“Among my players Ignazio Abate has made the most significant improvement. Who is the symbol of Milan? It’s too easy to say Zlatan Ibrahimovic or Thiago Silva, so I’ll vote for Antonio Nocerino.” – Allegri

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To me this comes as no surprise; in fact his signing merely reinforced my belief in a player I felt had the makings of a future workhorse for both Club and Country. Often called a more complete version of Gattuso, a young Nocerino, then plying his trade for Juventus was a bolt of energy tracking down opponents and winning possession. His move to Palermo for Amuari was met with resistance but the smarter Juve fans, but in this modern age where everyone loves strikers, it is players like Nocerino that are often glossed over. At Palermo he further refined his skills, becoming a more complete passer and attacker, and was called irreplaceable by Zamparini. Granted Zamparini had never made a deal with the Devil, and for a pittance he was shippd to Milan. Full disclosure I bought my Nocerino jersey that day, and bid my time while Antonio showed the World what I already knew! Nocerino is a player!

To be fair he fits the Allegri mold perfectly. Exuberant runner, great tackler, and excellent movement he has made the RM spot in the three midfield line his very own. While the great Rino Gattuso fades into retirement, it is Nocerino who will take on the mantle. Flamini was thought to be the heir, but anyone who watched the Frenchmen for 90 minutes could see that a headless chicken often covers ground in a more sensible fashion. So Nocerino simply took advantage of what was given to him, and made it his own, rendering the loss of Gattuso to a severe eye injury palatable, and making Flamini an afterthought. But his defensive strength is not the only thing to cheer about, his six goals in 13 matches equals his tally in 70 matches with Palermo! He has taken the freedom to get forward to a new level and Allegri and Company welcome his efforts and goals, as his return after a brief injury was a missing spark and helped Milan get back to winning ways.

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The Nocerino purchase was stroke of genius, but more importantly his play and contribution have given Milan some hope for the future. His understanding and chemistry with Prince has been excellent, and he is no stranger to Aquilani either. If Milan can build around those three, while adding a CDM in the vein of Mikel, Asamoah, Diaby, or even hand over the reins to Strasser then the midfield problem that was evident last season will be history and the new breed will usher in the next generation of success for AC Milan. Nocerino, Silva, Abate, and Prince will be the new guard of AC Milan taking the venerable reins from Amborsini, Nesta, Rino, and Clarence. Future doesn’t look so bad anymore now does it?

Interesting…

Here is a little something from Football Italia to mull over as you head back into the doldrums of work before another Holiday…

Alexandre Pato has made some strange comments on life at Milan under Massimiliano Allegri amid reports linking the striker with a move away.

Speaking to Il Corriere dello Sport and Il Corriere della Sera, the Brazilian striker discussed a number of topics, from captaining Milan to his relationship with Coach Allegri. However, he began by focusing on how the calendar year has progressed from a personal point of view.

“My 2011 was a very good year – I won my first trophy in Europe, I scored some important goals. It would be a year to remember if I had not had so many injuries.”

The 22-year-old has suffered eight injuries over the course of the past 12 months.

“Every time I have tried a different method to try to find a solution. I’ve never been afraid, even after the injury in September. I thought, ‘I will return slowly, only when I am 100 per cent’.

“I’ve always done double training sessions, arriving at Milanello early each morning. I have worked more and more to return better than before each time.”

Pato was pricklier with the follow-up question that suggested his form since returning from his latest injury has not been better.

“I have scored two goals in three games. At Bologna I did not play well but then neither did the rest of the team. It is said that you win and lose together, no?

“We always talk about me because I am an important player for Milan.”

The No 7, who joined Il Diavolo in January 2008 for a reported €24m, was then asked about his relationship with his Coaches. Where he described Carlo Ancelotti and Leonardo as his ‘godfathers’, he was less-than-forthcoming with compliments for Allegri.

“Carlo always spoke to me, told me what to do on the field. If I have to improve [now] then [Allegri] has to recommend how. Champions must always move forward, they are expected to be the best.

“Every now and then Allegri will explain something to me, but a Coach should always suggest to his players how to correct defects.

“I would like to have a more direct relationship with Allegri, I won’t say much more. If he thinks it is right to criticise me then I have to keep my head down and work. I have to respect what the Coach says.

“The fact remains, however, that if he has noticed something wrong with my game then he would be better to come directly to me so we can discuss it together.”

Pato was then asked of Allegri’s comments that he had to get used to the position of striker again after previous Coach Leonardo had used him out wide on occasion.

“Even in the national team I played as a striker and I don’t think I did badly.”

In late November, Milan’s League win over Chievo was notable for Thiago Silva’s selection as captain, even though Pato was thought to be in line for the armband, according to Italian football tradition.

“The truth was, until I arrived in the changing room, I was convinced that the rule of seniority would see Milan assign the band to me.

“It did not turn out so, but I was not disappointed because in the end it ended up on the arm of a friend and a teammate.

“I did not [ask for an explanation], these are the decisions of [Adriano] Galliani and Allegri.”

Pato’s comments come on the same day that he is being linked with moves to Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain. The London side, who the Rossoneri face in the Champions League in a couple of months, are reportedly monitoring Pato’s situation in Milan and are even prepared to make a €28m bid for the youngster.

Competition, according to Mediaset, comes from PSG and Pato’s ‘godfathers’ Ancelotti and Leonardo, who have been given a €20m budget to try to tempt Galliani with.

So what does this mean for the beloved little duckling? I don’t like it when players air their grievances and talk out of turn, and this is no exception. The rumor mill has been strong that PSG is his next stop to be reunited with Leo and Carletto, and frankly the way he has been playing he is worth more to Milan at the moment as a check then a footballer. Four long years we waited for him to become what many have touted and few have seen. No sweat off my back, I made peace with his departure last season, now time to go shopping shall we…

Buon Natale

Merry Christmas to all of you, wherever you are. If you have been around here long enough you know that Christmas is not my favorite Holiday. In fact the stress and commercialization of the Holiday has truly led to a lost of luster for me. As a child you waited in anticipation for the newest toy, the arrival of your family (maybe if you were lucky, like it was, it meant Nonni from the Boot!), and things as simple as making sugar cookies decorated in Red and Black. Now we shop online, hunt out gift cards, and run ourselves ragged for no apparent reason. So this year I ask for only one thing from everyone this Holiday season, and it’s not a Scudetto, an iPad, or anything material. It is simply to take a minute and be happy with what you have and who you get to share it with, be it here on the blog, at your house, or with your family.

Let’s Hear it for Max

It is no secret; I really respect and admire Max Allegri. Frankly it is hard not to, he isn’t on TV turning Milan into sideshow, he puts results first, and he approaches each game with the pragmatic sense of what is needed to earn a victory. He isn’t enamored with this notion that football is a spectacle; he knows deep down inside that winning cures all and for that Max I think you. So when his Boss came out and said he wished Milan played more like Barcelona, what did Max do? Like a true gentleman, he told his Boss to shove it! Well played Max, well played!

AC Milan coach Massimiliano Allegri has voiced his opinion that it is impossible to copy Barcelona’s style of play in the wake of recent comments from club president Silvio Berlusconi, who declared that he would like to see the Rossoneri play like the Catalans.
Allegri feels that the newly-crowned 2011 Club World Cup champions are unique, but added that Milan have plenty of quality as well and can compete in their own way.

“It is impossible to copy Barcelona. We have a squad with lots of great players and real champions. We are top class in Italy and I believe that we can do well in the Champions League too, with different characteristics to Barcelona,” Allegri said to Domenica Sportiva.

“The things that they are doing are unique and can’t be copied. Arrigo Sacchi’s Milan have players and characteristics that others didn’t have. Every coach has to play in a way that gets the best out of the player at his availability.”

Allegri then praised Sacchi for introducing young players into the senior side, and believes his current outfit are on the right path to doing the same.

“Sacchi’s Milan were a very strong team, but did not only consist of big names, but also had plenty of youth products. We are doing some great work in our youth academy. We are incorporating more and more young players into the first team.”

Youngsters such as Simone Ganz, Bryan Cristante and Mattia De Sciglio have all made their debuts with the senior side this term.

So what can we ascertain from Max’s discussion? First and foremost the one thing that seems to be forgotten by every team trying to emulate Barca, and the most obvious, mind you, is that you need the players. Barca plays BarcaBall because they can with the likes of Xavi, Messi and Iniesta. Other teams just don’t see this! Neither do owners, in Berlu’s sick twisted fantasy, Milan would play 4-3-3 with Pato, Robinho, and Zlatan up front, knowing Berlu he would probably even stick Pato central and Zlatan wide!? He hasn’t even considered the value of defense!? What Berlu also doesn’t seem to recognize is that when you play 4-3-3 you are telling the opponent who will be scoring goals, and where to counter attack? RW, presses toward goal, LB can kick start the counter, midfielders up in support of the attackers, play a long ball in front of the defense. The 4-3-3 is inherently flawed for any team who don’t have the personnel to play it. Instead Milan now plays with width on the right in Abate, and have goal scoring from the midfield as well with both Prince and Nocerino very capable. It makes Milan more dynamic and not dependent on a single goal scorer.

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Allegri also sees the value of forging your own identity and by doing so getting the most out of the players at his disposal. In these modern times of Football Manager and FIFA it is easy for a fan to pretend they are Man City and buy whomever they like for their squad, irregardless of money. It is also easy to plug in random youth into the team, see some success and wonder why isn’t Milan doing that? Answer is simply because algorithms don’t factor in traits like experience and one of the most important ones, being a human! Kidding aside, Allegri knows how to deploy aging players like Van Bommel, Ambro, Zambro, and Seedorf in situations to make both the player and team successful. A comment a few days criticized Ambro for not moving much, this same commenter probably never really looked closely at Van Bommel who rarely moves out of the center circle, this is by design. Shield the defense and be the first passing option forward for the CBs. In fact to his credit Ambro gets more forward than Van Bommel ever does, sometimes to much even!

So while the World chases the elusive Barca copycat mantra, Allegri basically says screw it, I will do my own thing! So if Milan can find a way to topple the mighty Barca, maybe next year everyone will be copying our very own Milan, then again best we let Milan be Milan, let the others figure things out for themselves. Not to mention he may be a bit of a physic stating that Milan would be top of the table come XMAS, any other talents we don’t know about Max?

Cagliari 0 Milan 2

This morning Milan sits alone atop Serie A, and while it is pending the result of our little Bianconeri problem, the real credit is in the result obtained yesterday. If Milan finds a way to win this year’s Scudetto it is a match like this one, when we took first place in gritty fashion, that you can say was pivotal in the charge. As we learned firsthand last season winning a title is not always walking pace 3-0 wins, sometimes it takes a bit of grit and getting your hands dirty to grind out a result, and in the pouring rain on Sardinia, mission accomplished.

Last season in this fixture Milan waited for Rodney Strasser to score his first goal from the first of many assists from Antonio Cassano, this year was a bit different, with Milan scoring early on an own goal but a makeshift defense, Cagliari’s willingness to attack, and Milan’s lack of possession made for an interesting 90 minutes. Unlike Siena, Cagliari had no fear coming forward, they saw Milan’s defense and felt their best option was to attack. Cagliari succeeded with Cossu, Nianggolan, and Ibarbo linking as effectively as their Milan counterparts, in fact rewatching bits of the game you almost feel like Cagliari has three players named Nianggolan running around the pitch. Credit to Abbiati for coming up big with sure and steady hands whenever he was called upon, for what some call an “average” goalkeeper his MOTM performance surely was a reason Milan earned three points.

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The makeshift defense was mostly at fault for Cagliari’s willingness to attack, and not so much in defending, but their lack of composure on the ball. Often when they did win the ball, instead of passing to the checking midfielders, or even Zlatan who was even deeper than usual to provide more passing options in the space left by Cagliari, Milan’s defense simply hoofed the ball forward. Mexes and Taiwo were most guilty, and maybe a byproduct of their lack of first team action and chemistry, but this will need to improve if they plan on seeing more playing time. Taiwo also struggled to join the attack, which was made to appear even worse with Bonera getting forward like Abate, granted the former looks like a FIAT Panda while the latter is like a Ferrari, but either way we are getting forward from the back. Because passes were not coming in the usual quick and short combinations both Prince and Aquilani struggled to get involved and had matches to forget. Nocerino continues to be everywhere and at this point own goal or not, he has to be considered one of our most dangerous goal scorers with his runs into the box. That will pose a real problem for any team needing to worry about Zlatan, Robinho and now a midfielder who comes out of nowhere to bury the ball in the back of the net. Hope you are watching Prandelli! Robinho was responsible for two assists and once Pato came on he did little but to his credit the match was in the dying stages and Pato was unable to use his electric pace, amazing skill, and incredible talent to find the back of the net against an exhausted back line but hey maybe he will score in the New Year!?

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All and all a great performance on the heels of a difficult game on Saturday as well, it is never easy to play two games so close together, but 6 points out of a possible 6, 31 out of the last 33 and top of the table! While we may not be Winter Champions, I like the momentum and position in which we sit at the start of the New Year. Now onto the silly season, thankfully it is a short one, with Fester in Man City today we should know more about the Apache Carlos Tevez, in the meantime your thoughts on the match are always welcome.

Milan 2 Siena 0

I am going to cover this one in spurts, much like the match itself, things seemed to happen in quick bursts…

-So the makeshift defense wasn’t all that bad now what is it? Yes, it had its moments of poor positioning and tactical stupidity, but it could have been far worse. It helped that Milan retained possession for the majority of the match, but all and all a solid performance. Mexes asserted himself quite well while Taiwo sadly seemed to be playing in neutral. Sadly I think Taiwo may have flubbed his final chance, at least he was a free transfer and we can earn something on his sale. I expect maybe another chance tomorrow possibly, and then that will most likely be it for the Nigerian. To Newcastle for Santon anyone?

-Nocerino and Prince are the future of AC Milan. I absolutely adore their workmanship and industrious play, they make killer runs forward, they keep things simple in the midfield and they pressure the ball like mad men. Time to extend their contracts for life and for this team to start being built around bulldogs like them, add a proper CDM under the age of 30 and you can start talking about the Milan dynasty, TSilva, Nocerino, and KPB!

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-If you still feel dirty about the PK, I have some advice for you, take a shower. Calls like this will always be part of the game, and they happen so quick it is almost impossible to fault the ref. Was it soft, yes, was it a dive, I don’t think so. In the box, things happen, and more often than not a player making slalom run into is rewarded, defenders need to be just as smart. Stay on your feet and avoid contact, why does every defender suddenly turn into David Luiz in the box, and then complain about PK’s and diving?

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-Robinho and Zlatan, while not creating a goal in this one, showed why their chemistry is superior to all other striker combos. Good movement, great off the ball work, and the ability to make the smart choices with the ball instead of simply trying to do too much. To his credit even Pato looked better, it’s always easier to play against a tired a defense when your stronger asset is running right at them.

Tomorrow Milan take on Cagliari for the last match before the Holiday break. Unbeaten in their last ten in Serie A, with 26 of 30 points, and a yearlong home unbeaten streak. The team is building on a solid foundation leading into the New Year. Abbiati has returned to training, but the lineup is a bit up in the air considering the match on the weekend and recent injuries to Abate and Antonini. I would expect Allegri to change little, if any and merely for the sake of fatigue, best to keep a good thing going.

Squad for the match:

Goalkeepers: Abbiati, Amelia, Piscitelli.

Defenders: Antonini, Bonera, De Sciglio, Ely, Mexes, Taiwo, Thiago Silva, Zambrotta.

Midfielders: Ambrosini, Aquilani, Boateng, Emanuelson, Nocerino, Seedorf, Van Bommel.

Attackers: El Shaarawy, Ibrahimovic, Pato, Robinho.

The result is most important in this and sure it would be nice to be Winter Champions, but we have to let somebody win something…

Birthday Wishes, CL Surprises, and Problems in Black and White

So much to discuss today, we may as well hit the ground running. First and foremost Happy 112th Birthday to AC Milan…

I remember 1999’s Centennial like it was yesterday, hard to believe another 12 have gone by. Those 12 were some of the most amazing for me as a Milan Tifosi. Two CL’s, three scudetti, the rise of Sheva and Kaka, the retirement of Maldini, the scourge of Ronaldniho and Leo, a Club World Cup, and the gut –wrenching loss in Istanbul. What a roller coaster, a ride I wouldn’t trade in for the World. Here is to many many many more. FORZA MILAN!

Now onto the Champions League draw:
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I warned against the dangers of Arsenal, but many a Milan fan seem to be oblivious to Arsenal’s recent run of form and more functional result orientated style of football they are currently playing. This is not the pass you around the block, physically inept Arsenal many are used to, this is a roll their sleeves up punch you in the face Arsenal and that sort of never say die attitude always poses a problem. Of course I still believe Milan will come out on top, but this is not going to be a walk in the park. For the rest of the boot both Inter and Napoli have a chance to advance as well. From a fan perspective, I have to say Chelsea v Napoli is incredible, 4-3-3 v 3-5-2, nice wide open football, and a good chance for Napoli to show some class. Some will call it revenge if Italy can come out on top in the Italy v England ties, but for most it will simply be the cyclical nature of football.

Now onto more pressing matters, our little “Black and White” problem gets a little worse. Udinese and Juventus sit atop the table ahead of us and Siena comes town to make matters worse. Now Siena has not been a strong team and sitting atop the relegation zone at a mere 14 points doesn’t exactly strike fear in the heart of opponents, but as we already know, no game is easy. It has also grown abundantly clear that this Milan team is very capable of winning and more often defeats themselves, something that can’t be done in what is a must take three points match.

Allegri is still dealing with the loss of Nesta, so the tossup between Mexes and Bonera remains. This is an important one because Siena has Destro and Calaio up top and their blend of pace and strength could pose a problem. But injuries may force Allegri’s hand even further. Nocerino also remains a question mark and his pace, tackling, and off the balls were sorely missed against Bologna. While I want him to play, I also don’t want him to further worsen his injury. Would almost prefer he continue to be rested. There is also the discussion about Seedorf, Aquilani or Urby, and frankly I think Seedorf and Aquilani on the pitch together are useless, and Urby’s appearance last week earned a start in my book. The same way Pato’s disappearing act earned him a spot on the bench.

My lineup:
Amelia; De Sciglio, Bonera, Silva, Taiwo; Prince, Van Bommel, Urby; Aquilani; Zlatan and Robinho

UPDATE: No Abate, Antonini or Abbiati!? Not to mention no callup for Zambro so defense is pressed. I like Aquilani closer to the strikers, simply because Prince and Urby can provide more in pressing and forward runs while Aqui is better on the ball. Zlatan and Robinho need no explanation, when those two are on, they are on. See you for a Saturday afternoon match no liveblog this time around, but I had a blast time and if people enjoy it I am happy to do it again. One thing is for sure, expect a live blog for the matches against Arsenal!

Dissecting Silvio

Football gives me grief about a few of things, the first is the simple greed that exists in the modern game, the second is the fan-boy hype, and the third? Overbearing, manipulating, know it all Owners. I thought Silvio had learned his lesson, he laid off last season and SURPRISE SCUDETTO, but it was to good to be true, his return to Milan may spell the end of our resurgence. He spoke out recently and I want to take a minute to translate and dissect, and remind everyone while Silvio was always better at an arms-length. When he became President of Italy a transplanted family member said, “Thankfully he is no longer Milan’s problem, now he is Italy’s problem.” To that I reply, he is no longer Italy’s problem, but once again Milan’s problem…

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Berlusconi was also keen to talk about one of the side’s current strikers, who has been plagued by injury and inconsistent form.

“[Alexandre] Pato is a great player but in recent times he has not been at his best. We see him a lot on the right but he should play more in the centre. In football, goals are what win it and we should serve him,” he added.

Translation: So this kid is porking my daughter, and while he is porking my daughter he should play where he wants. Wait, we have Zlatan in the middle, forget it…

Sadly, this is far from the truth, imagine this. Wait, that guy can’t play on the right, he can’t play on the left, so we try him in the middle, only Berlusconi….let’s let Allegri decide shall we? Speaking of Allegri…

The president confirmed he is also in the process of offering a new extended deal to coach Massimiliano Allegri.

“We will be looking to renew the contract of Allegri. This Milan side are designed to win all competitions,” he confirmed.

Translation: I love this Max guy, I told him to play two strikers and he did, Bada Bing Scudetto!

Truth be told, he deserves an extension, the current style of play and balance is excellent, best I have seen in a while, but don’t let Silvio fool you.

Berlusconi concluded with a few words on Milan’s season so far and how he would like the side to replicate Barcelona’s style of play.

“I’d like to see Milan playing like Barcelona does. I taught this style of football when I was a coach of a non-professional team,” Berlusconi stated.

“This year we think we’ll be able to win the Scudetto again and we want to do great things also in Europe.

“We are two points behind Juventus, we are in good form and we’re doing well. It’s a positive season [so far].

Translation: When I coached, I didn’t know what I was doing, so when the players said Mister what do we do, I said pass it. Then I taught that to Pep, and now I want to teach it to Allegri.

Uggh, here we go, another lunatic blinded by Barca-only football. Have we not learned anything this year, Milan had Barca to the sword and instead of killing them and ending this nonsense, they let them get away. Well guess what Silvio, you won’t be wishing for Barca if Max and Milan get another chance, better idea, sell the Club to Fester and go buy Barca! Problem solved.

“We are in the last 16 of the Champions League, where there is also Barcelona, who plays the style of football I like. Barca don’t have more class players than us, it’s just a matter of willing to play a certain style of football.

“Milan play good football, but I think we lack the willingness to practice a style of football far away from the traditional one.”

Translation: You may have played two strikers like I ask, but your football sucks. You win games, I don’t care, you play to many defenders, we need to play 5 strikers, win 99-98, get me Leonardo!

This is where I draw the line. It is almost like he pulls his head out of his ass once every three years and decides to make a comment. Champions of Italy almost always have the best goal differential, and Milan to their credit, almost always have one of the strongest possession records much like Barcelona. Why do Owners, pundits, and fans insist on this belief that a team’s identity has to mirror or match another’s, instead of forging it on it’s own. What happens if Milan win the CL and Scudetto, will Allegri football be all the rage?

Silvio, I am going to be blunt, the last time your dumb ass got involved with transfers and coaching we bought Ronaldinho and watched his career plummet wide left, where not even your Coach could find him. FYI they did find him, he is taking care of himself in the bathroom in case you wondering, and sadly that can mean more than a few things, it could be sexual or by his recent fitness levels simply eating a hostess cupcake. I ask you rather politely, do what you do best, smile, sign checks, and let the football people handle the football. In the meantime go talk to Barbara, I have a feeling we are on the verge of a Duck problem.

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Wednesday Milan Musings: Let’s Talk CL

In two days’ time the big wigs of UEFA will congregate to determine the next round match-ups of the UEFA Champions League. We all know quite well this random pot drawing is the cornerstone of credibility and in no way would UEFA attempt to designate these match-ups for the benefit of wealth, marketing and business. So with that said, let’s explores Milan’s options and why some match-ups are far better than others.

As many of you know, Milan did not win the group, and to the victor go the spoils so Milan is in the proverbial pot 2, or losers bracket as I like to call it, and can be drawn against the following: APOEL, Chelsea, Arsenal, Real, Benfica and Bayern. Barca and Inter are off the list because you can’t be drawn against someone from your group or association, in this case Serie A. So let’s take a closer look at each team and see where our best chance of advancing out of the first KO round for the first time since 2007, when we were in fact crowned Champions.

Chelsea

Andres Vilas Boas, or AVB, is yet another Coach with the unenviable task of following in the footsteps of the Special One. The Chelsea brass were tired of Mourinho’s shadow, so went ahead and hired his former assistant and a guy who basically followed the same path as Jose, except he never won the CL, nor Coached on the big stage, you should have stuck with Carletto, Roman! Mistake or not, the deal is done, and the young Coach is left in charge of one of the most inconsistent teams in the EPL. Studs like Drogba, Lampard, and Terry are in their twilight and winning now has never been more pressing. Big money buys like David Luiz and Torres, are looking more and more like busts, and if anyone can honestly watch David Luiz and say he is a good player, or wants him anywhere near their team, I would question them immediately. Frankly, I like our chances against this team, a leaky defense and a Leo-esque 4-3-3 give me faith that Allegri can come out on top on this one.

Verdict: Bring on the Blues!

APOEL

I am sure every casual fan says, “I hope we draw APOEL.” I say no thank you, the Cyprian Champions play a perplexing brand of football and while they do nothing exceptionally well, they present a unique challenge to any Club because of their attitude and tactical desire to play a prevention game instead of a reactive game. In the past Milan have been troubled by teams like this, and it has been a test of their patience more than anything else. Not the worst draw but not the best draw either, dealing with a ten man defense for 180 minutes doesn’t sound appealing.

Verdict: Would rather not be the victim of a park the bus underdog upset.

Arsenal

NO THANK YOU. Is there any player playing better than Robin Van Persie at the moment? If you don’t think so, take the blinders off. His goal against Everton was out of this World, and even more amazing was the pass from Alexander Song to make the goal possible. Arsenal has shed this burning need to play pretty football and have instead shifted to playing results orientated football. Turning around a dismal start in the EPL into an 8 game unbeaten streak taking 22 points out of a possible 24. Safe to say no player is hotter than RvP at the moment and no team is hotter in all of Europe. I don’t want a repeat of 08, give me Arsenal, but not until the Final.

Verdict: No reason to play chicken with a steam roller.

Real

This rendition of Jose’s Real is the best yet. The work rate of everyone has improved, and there is a balance to the squad that was not present in year’s past. They came up short against Barca on the weekend, but it wasn’t a lack of class to be clear, this is not a team I want to lock horns with, but also not mission impossible. Sad thing about the CL is at some point if you want to win it, you have to play the best!

Verdict: Not going to welcome them with open arms, but not cowering in fear either.

Benfica

Personally, I like this match up for Milan. Undefeated in the group, but their only real challenge was a wounded Man United, and only two draws to show for it. Yes they are tied atop the Portugese league, and Milan have had trouble with Portugese teams in the past, but they are youngish team missing some of the hardened experience needed to win a KO round of the CL, not to mention their roster gets thin rather quickly and will play to Milan’s advantage come the new year. Many will wait patiently to watch Milan target Alex Witsel but let’s not get ahead of ourselves, best he be subdued early.

Verdict: A-OK with this match-up.

Bayern

Past history between the Clubs gives Milan the edge, but Bayern, like Milan are a bit of a sleeping giant. Having lost to Inter a few years back in the final, the team has reshaped and reformed and are beginning to fire once again on all cylinders. Not as stout and resolute as they once have been, and also not a shoe in for Bundesliga Title either, they are in the midst of finding their new identity. They currently sit top of the table, but on a slender 3 point lead, they may run out of gas before the KO round starts, or they will cement their place as the team to beat in Bundesliga and carry that momentum to the CL? End of the day, I still think Italian teams match up well against German opposition.

Verdict: Van Buyten will always scare me, the rest of Bayern does not.

Bologna 2 Milan 2

So Christmas came early for AC Milan in the form of a handful of gifted calls in their favor yesterday. I have and will always continue to be of the belief that these types of things even out over the course of the season, so at some point this sort of fortune will be turned upside down; let’s hope we can earn a draw in that situation as well. With that said, it is fair to say Milan didn’t deserve a win, and a fair amount factors went into this statement, simply a bad day all around, from top to bottom.

If you read the live blog you will have noticed my beef with Pato. Where are the super fans know to support the hype? But that sort of beef can hold for a handful of players and even the Coach. Missing the work rate of Nocerino is surely a huge blow, and it is perfectly evident that this sort of player is integral to Allegri’s formation and the success of the team. Without a player like Nocerino to compliment Prince and Van Bommel, Milan had little to no answer for Diamanti and Ramirez who appeared capable and dangerous every time they were on the ball. It didn’t help that Di Vaio appeared to turn back the clock and score a one of the prettiest goals I have seen this year, and had it not gone one in should have most likely resulted in a Red Card for Amelia.

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Seedorf and Aquilani were also equally abysmal, and it appears that having them on the pitch at the same time is simply a negation of their talent and value to the team. Both look to receive the ball and play it forward, and without an extra ball winner Milan see less of the ball in the attack third therefore less touches for either. Hopefully Allegri learned his lesson and in the future deploys Urby instead of Seedorf together with Aquilani. At least on this day Allegri made the right subs, albeit a bit late, Robinho and Urby proved a definite spark in place of the sluggish Seedorf and useless Pato. To his credit Seedorf’s goal was very nice, but it took a great effort from Prince, and an excellent pass from Abate to make that happen. Both players were bright spots on this day when it appeared that the rest of the team was going to have a rough day at the office.

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Most alarming for me however was Milan’s inability to first and foremost limit Bologna chances, but second of all to locate and contend with the likes of Diamanti, Ramirez, and Di Vaio. This goes for everyone, but if players are dangerous, how can we let play free? This was a poor representation of an Allegri team and their inability to pressure the ball early in the neutral third is squarely to blame. A missed opportunity away from home, and while a draw is better than a loss, a win was surely obtainable.

Now our little Juventus problem gets even worse, with a chance for the Old Lady to four points clear. In fact you can call it a bianconeri problem with Udinese two points ahead as well while we share the spoils of third with Lazio. In true Milan fashion, they never take the easy route, and now the next six points are even more pivotal. A week off will do the team good, get some players back healthy and rested as they prepare for Siena.

Bologna v Milan: LIVEBLOG!

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In the immortal words of Pragatish, time for a little Bologna for Breakfast!

1st: Made it, been awhile since I did one of these, so bear with me!

3rd: KPB draws a free kick early, Zlatan over the ball with Clarence, Zlatan off the bar! What a rip. No finesse to a Zlatan free kick, just straight power.

5th: Interesting stat, Silva leads the team in passes attempted and completed, and while being a CB makes this a bit easier, the accuracy of his passes and more important availability to teammates to make a safe pass is excellent. Baresi anyone?

7th: Safe to say Aquilani is the worst tackler at Milan, FK to Bologna. A bit of trickery but crisis averted.

8th: Diamanti has excellent moves on the ball and the ability to use either foot, would be a bad situation for Yepes if he comes at him with pace. Still not sure why Mexes didn’t get the nod?

10th: Imagine if Di Vaio and Di Natale had ever hit it with big Clubs, their skills are so similar and both can simply finish out of anything. Funny how that is sometimes .

11th: Dammit, should have kept my mouth shut about Di Vaio…what a goal, what a finish…Lecce flashback…to make matters worse had that not gone in Amelia should have seen red…wow.

13th: Milan need to calm down now and keep the ball, just find a rhythm no reason to get crazy and impatient here.

13th: Even the pass from Diamanti for that goal, incredible.

15th: Anyone realize Pato started, 15 minutes he is like the ghost of Milan’s eleven right now.

16th: Prince with a stellar run on an Abate pass, pass to Seedorf and Clarence with a cracker!!! Excellent goal, gives Clarence new life for once again. Two goal scorers, both old men!

18th: Pato first touch, through ball to Zlatan, finds the target, does Pato continue his run for a ball raked across the face of goal? NOPE…being fast is one thing, reading the game is another.

20th: Anyone else upset about losing our clean sheet streak in Serie A? I am…I absolutely hate conceding.

25th: Yellow card for Gaston Ramirez, why give Milan, or more importantly Zlatan another crack at goal?

26th: Free kick results in a corner, Seedorf to take, looking for TSilva here.

29th: Abate with a little chip to try and beat the keeper! Very nice, forces a save out of Gillet, but great run.

31st: I am going to be brutally honest here, if Bologna find Diamanti he is going to make something happen. Van Bommel you better get on that, he isn’t hard to spot, few players can pull off biker tattoos and an Fellaini-esque afro.

32nd: KPB makes solid run but gets himself into trouble 2 v 1, draws a foul. Bologna upset, as Aquilani, looked to foul at the start of the counter attack.

33rd: Clarence over the ball for a free kick from wide right, Zlatan wants it played to feet early, but ref doesn’t allow the kick. Kick is taken, ball scraps about the box, nobody on the end it, hard to believe with Milan’s opportunistic striker on the pitch.

36th: A few days off give Seedorf some pace even this late in the first half, a great run, a great pass to Zlatan to Abate who puts the ball across, close but no dice for Aqualini.

38th: Pato third touch, awful cross to Zlatan, having a half to forget, Robinho anyone?

A Juventus Problem

It’s time we start being perfectly honest with ourselves, we have a Juventus problem. Marco Amelia said it best, “In Serie A there are no simple games, our strength is in focusing on the quality of each individual. When we do that there is nothing for our opponents.” So in order to keep our little black and white problem at bay, we have to continue to focus on each and every league game and opponent and Bologna is no different. Last season this was a resounding 3-0 win, this year the result needs to stand so we can continue to stay within striking distance of Juventus. As if that was not Juventusplay Roma, fresh off of three red cards and the drama that is AS BarcaRoma continues to surprise no one! But let’s focus now on the task at hand.

Amelia will continue to mind the net, and outside of the two goals midweek at PLZEN he has been steady in the absence of Abbiati. Abate, Silva, and Antonini will most likely start on defense, which leaves the question of who partners with Silva. My vote Mexes, but the tactics in a match like this one may prove better suited for Yepes allowing Silva to press forward and aid in breaking down the wall of defense that Bologna will most likely employ, then again Mexes has more speed on the counter!? Oh the beauty of choices!

Nocerino will miss out, and Prince will have to face a last minute fitness test, and personally if he is unfit I would prefer he be rested. This sadly leaves Seedorf prime for a start, but one can argue Urby earned his keep midweek. The question becomes do you play Aqui, Van Bommel and Ambro in the midfield with Urby ahead, or swap Urby for Ambro/Van Bommel and use the slower Seedorf to help with possession and breaking down the defense. Again the luxury of choice here for Allegri, but I say let’s reward Urby for a solid midweek showing. Zlatan is as always a shoe-in, but his partner in crime remains a mystery. Pato was hot and cold midweek, a Pato-esque first half, and a solid second, but Robinho seems to benefit most from Zlatan’s work around the box and his work rate is simply second to none. My choice in Brazilians will always fall to Robinho, then again how do you continue to inflate the value of Pato on the bench?

My winning eleven:

Amelia, Abate, Silva, Mexes, Antonini; Aquilani, Van Bommel, Urby; Clarence; Zlatan, Robinho

Ambrosini played midweek, so he is off it for me. Mexes and Urby earned themselves a place, and if Pato is to be sold in January to make room for Tevez, better we he doesn’t go and get hurt. He has played a few to many games on the trot without an injury. Pippo can be used in this match, but at this point you have to ask what’s the point? As I have stated in the past, the time was great and take nothing away, but this team is FINALLY moving forward, let El Shaarawi take the minutes when available. Midfield cover is slim in this match, so a strong first half and the ability to close out the game is a welcome goal, but goals have been hard to come by away from home, time to fix that problem. I am sure Zlatan will have an idea or two on how to do that. See you all Sunday for a fantastic 9AM EST start, game to broadcast on FSC, and aspirations of a live blog, but please don’t hold your breath! I don’t want that on my conscience.

PLZEN 2 Milan 2

I guess the first and most important thing to reiterate is that this game had little bearing, but it still doesn’t relinquish the players on the pitch from what was in fact a shambolic ending to the match. Yes, PLZEN was at home, and playing with the hopes and dream of Europa League football, something they deservedly earned with a strong fighting spirit. Those pining for youth over experience, you got what you wanted today in Allegri’s lineup choice to some extent, and the result proved why sometimes it’s better to stick with the old hands who now how and when to kill a match.

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This match was a golden opportunity for a handful of players, and a run about for others. For Pato a chance to play a full 90 minutes, for De Sciglio a chance to prove his worth, Mexes a chance to make a case to be Nesta’s replacement and Taiwo a chance to show Allegri he can play in all matches. Some players capitalized, others did not, and in the end you look at this as an opportunity wasted and poor showing in the eyes of many.

Pato to his credit, scored, but he usually does, but not until the second half when he actually started moving a bit and working off the ball. In the first half, however; he was vintage Pato, no idea when to dribble, no idea when to pass, and no idea how to move laterally. Scoring goals is not the only thing a player, a striker for Milan should do, and Pato needs to get the memo. De Sciglio lacks the blazing speed of Abate, then again many do, but defending he can handle. He moved well off the ball, tracked back regularly, and while he could have done more attacking, it was best he kept things simple in his first full match. Reminds me a bit of Darmian before he was shipped off to various Clubs, but for a team desperately seeking defensive cover this was a solid debut. The same, sadly, can’t be said for Taiwo, who seems incapable of any sort of tactical defending, how on Earth can a player so gifted in terms of strength and pace, be so unwilling to those tools when defending. A simple step to a cross, or a the ability to twist and turn to cover a runner, all too difficult. I badly want him to succeed, but it appears that will not be the case as he runs out of chances and now begins pondering his own future. Finally, Philou Mexes, was solid did everything asked of him until very late in the game when his experience should have done better, it was not the case, something to be said for all the “older” players on the pitch.

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End of the day, what was a meaningless game for the team, was not meaningless for some players. Not sure if the gravity of that situation was lost on them, but their play didn’t show it. So when Allegri continues to turn to his trusted group, you can quite simply why. News on Nocerino is good, but this was a game where he could have been rested, instead of risked, and I am sure Allegri will be more cautious going forward. Now as we wait for the weekend, and a reprieve from two games a week, we sit anxiously waiting to hear if Tevez will arrive in January and what that means for the team.

Genoa 0 Milan 2

For the time being Milan sits atop the Serie A table as the team and fans anxiously await this weekend’s results. Shortly we will be treated to Udine and Inter, and while no one should root for our rival, Udinese sits three points adrift of the top. Juventus on the other hand can reclaim first place with a victory and it appears the title race is starting to get interesting as the we approach the Christmas break. Can Milan take hold and never look back, or will we be treated to a see-saw finish? Can’t answer that for you quite yet, and first place would have been a lost cause had business not been taken care of in Genoa.

Beating Genoa at home is no small task, for Milan the impressive unbeaten run continues. It was not the best of games, or the most exciting, but it is the type of win that is a building block of Champions. It is in these matches where three points do not come easily, but are the most important over the course of a long season. A disjointed game from start to finish, even the fans had their say early on with an incident of tear gas/pepper spray that stopped the match for fifteen minutes in the first half, but more importantly rendered it a sloppy affair.

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Milan had other ideas in the second half , and while they enjoyed the bulk of possession and control of the match they began to attack in a bit more fluid fashion as Ibra continued his stellar playmaking role, looking less and less like an out and striker and more and more like a superb support striker. I have always contented that Arsenal’s Robin Van Persie is one of the game’s best strikers at creating and doing the little things, but suddenly it is Zlatan who is showing RvP a thing or two! As chances came and went it was ex Milan player Kaladze who gave Milan the break they needed with a poor challenge on Ibra and a subsequent PK.

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After the goal Milan dominated long spells sending 8 players into the attacking third and possessing the ball easily. A span of about ten minutes late in the second half was all Genoa had to show as Milan finished the scoring with Nocerino, after an excellent run and cross from Prince. Seeing those two operate in the midfield position alongside Ambro was simply excellent, and you have to wonder if Allegri had made that choice against Barca if the game would have gone differently. Both players have the ability to get forward and create will maintaining the work rate to defend, a potential World Class tandem of box to box midfielders.

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There were few other standout performances in the match, with Robinho being chastised for his missed opportunity, nothing new, but hey at least he was healthy to partake in the match! Antonini actually did well, but continues to be exposed rather easily on the defensive side of the ball. Allegri chose Yepes over Mexes, to fill in for Nesta and even that is starting to get a bit troublesome. If Mexes is fit to play it may be time to see some minutes because the pace of Yepes is alarming, even though his strength and power is second to none. On a more positive note, the team, and Marco Amelia got their second straight clean sheet, ah I don’t miss the dynamic duo of Dida and Kalac, that is for sure.

At the end of the day, it was not the prettiest or cleanest of matches but the result still stands. A two goal win away from home and three points in the bag and a spot at the top, even if for a fleeting a minute. Midweek a trip to PLZEN, a rather meaningless affair, but as the schedule rounds out towards the new year, games will start to come twice a week on the regular, Allegri and company need to build on and find confidence in performances like this one where even if the team was not playing to its fullest they still found a way to win. The goals for those who missed out.

Let’s Talk Tevez

Here in the States we have “Black Friday” and “Cyber Monday” well today I introduce to you, “No Tevez Tuesday!”

Now I will gladly come right out and tell you that I am a big fan of Carlos Tevez, the player. Industrious, hardworking, and a tireless work rate I remember his season with West Ham as he seemingly single-handedly staved off relegation. What I am not of fond of is Carlos Tevez, the person. In fact to be rather blunt, I am not a fan of any player who spends more time mired in controversy then on the pitch playing, are you listening Mr. Balotelli? So while I firmly believe that Milan is not the place for Carlos Tevez, it is not as cut and dry as some want to make it out to be. He also doesn’t look all that bad in Red and Black!?

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The biggest negative for me, is also the clearest, and that is Tevez’s off the field issues. Now Milan has had success in the past with a player just like him, in the form of Robinho, another Man City want away, but Tevez isn’t coming into a team with a strong Argentinean presence, nor is he coming into a team assuring him of first team football. Both of which could cause him to act up and upset the balance of a team that has finally taken the shape and attitude that Allegri has worked so hard for. It is not secret Allegri would rather a CDM and some defensive cover, but management seemingly still continues to lust after attackers despite the fact that it remains the position with the largest glut with Zlatan, Cassano, Pato, Robinho, El Shaarawi, and Pippo.

Zlatan is proving epic this season, and is easily the most dangerous and in form striker. His most effective partner in crime has been Robinho, who proved his chemistry last season and seems to be carrying over just as well. Pato has been injured and inconsistent, nothing new, and El Shaarawi is still rough around the edges leaving Pippo and Cassano. Cassano may be out for the season with his heart condition and while Pippo is a sentimental choice more than a tactical one, you can see the reason for courting Tevez, or any striker for that matter is puzzling, but not outlandish. Is it possible that Pato could be sold? Cassano never to play again, El Shaarawi not as expected or Pippo poised to retire? All these questions are unlikely and remain unanswered so management wants to hedge their bets and make sure the team is deep and competitive on all fronts as the new year arrives and the potential for two matches a week until May becomes a real reality.

The point of concern here for me has never been strikers, but always defensive cover. As Nesta is set to miss a month we still have no real groomed back up for him, and stop gap solutions like Mexes and Yepes don’t give Silva that partner for the future to assure Allegri and Milan a menacing CB duo for the next ten years Astori, Ogbonna, Chris Samba, or even the pricier and less attainable Hummels are far better buys. Not to mention buying a striker doesn’t address the fact that only two players on this team can play a vital CDM role for Allegri, and both of those players are on the wrong side of thirty. Can this team really afford an injury to Van Bommel and Ambrosini for long stretches with two matches a week? Not at all, yet we are not sniffing around for a real solution at CDM. Maybe Milan sign De Rossi, something that would surely cause me some grief, but why not make the big splash and get a guy like a Alex Song , hugely underrated, but makes this team World Beaters almost instantly, or offer a player like Essien a chance for a fresh start in a new venue?

So while I don’t disagree with a player like Tevez, he is a surplus to need and has a real chance to disrupt the chemistry of a team that is really gelling at the moment. Now if you are were going to ship off Pato for 50M, bring in a guy like Song, and then take Tevez for free, we can talk. But in the meantime it remains “No-Tevez Tuesday.”

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Milan 4 Chievo 0

You can do one of two things after a match like this one. The first being you can bask in all its glory. Or the second, albeit a bit less popular is you can nitpick. Should we have beaten Chievo? Of course, especially after watching a cracker of a Lazio-Juventus match, and a solid Udinese – Roma match in which both victors renewed their passes atop the table with Milan. A win on Tuesday for Juventus will give them a four point cushion, but Milan need not worry about the opposition and only about themselves, with a few things that still need to be addressed, but then again it is always easier to nitpick after you address a few positives.

-Zlatan was lethal, and Chievo really had no answer. The first goal was simply stunning and his ability to drag two to three defenders was a huge reason for the space and scoring. He earned a big star in my book for the goal midweek against Barca, helping silence some of his disappearing act critics in CL game, but against second tier teams there is still no player who delivers more. I know this sounds peculiar, in short Zlatan bullies the minnows, but when you look at Serie A and you play these teams 10-16 times a year, which is 48 points on the table. You don’t win a title without those matches.

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-Van Bommel looked to be his old self yesterday, and maybe it had a bit to do with Chievo being demoralized and deflated by the 30th minute, but he was disruptive and protective allowing Aquilani, Prince and Nocerino the freedom to move and operate all over the pitch. He also managed to get 45 minutes of rest while on the pitch in the second half, no small feat, but all kidding aside his experience and ability to play simple one-two touch passing gave him the freedom to run less and pass more. Something younger players often neglect, but a great saying nonetheless, “let the ball do the work.”

-Antonini and Yepes put in strong performances, and while I know many want to see Taiwo and Mexes, I frankly don’t care who plays as long as they are playing well. Competition for minutes is good for everyone involved, it forces those not playing to step up their game, and keeps the players playing sharp. At the end day whoever is going to help the team win is the player who needs to be out there, nobody should play just to play. For the record in the final minutes of the game, when everyone else had taken their foot off the gas, it was Antonini and Yepes still looking to impress the manager.

Now onto the nitpicking…if you happen to take criticism of certain players personally, this is maybe where you switch to do some online shopping…

-Aquilani offensively is sharp and passes the ball very well, but is defensively challenged. Filling in behind the ball almost appears to be a mystery to him, and while Seedorf is no better, Aquilani should have the pace to at least impede the opposing player on the ball. Instead he just fouls, and then stops running. I don’t like that sort of laziness and from what we have seen neither does Allegri. Alberto is too talented and to intelligent to not work that little bit harder. Pirlo was a tactical foul mastermind, Aquilani just looks lazy and then fouls to make up for it, very different, and not good.

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-In games like this one, where Milan have 70% possession, there is no reason for wasteful errant 20 meter passes. Passing the ball on the ground is simply stellar, then unnamed players (Silva, Van Bommel, Nocerino, Abate…oops) hoof it to Zlatan when they run out of options. While this worked on this day, there is no reason for it against better opposition and was a sore spot against Barca. There is simply no reason a team this good and experienced can’t have a little patience on the ball.

-Do you know what the first thing I saw in my email was after the match…this…

“Pato scored today, what now you stupid (EXPLETIVE).”

I thought to myself, this is cute, wonder if this fanboy-homer noticed the goal was a mindless tap-in, or that while Zlatan was dragging defenders all over the place Pato did little before he earned the PK. SOme people get it:

Yepes & T.Silva had more touches on the ball than Pato did during the 1st entire 30 minutes.. he had a tap-in goal Bonera could score that too.. apart from the beautiful play to win the penalty he was just a number on the pitch…

My criticism is simple; if people are going to email me about how great he is; then he better deliver, otherwise let his play do the talking. Great players don’t need to be hyped or defended, they simply shine. My time as a Milan fan has had a few players like this; they all currently reside on other teams. See the point? If you are going to email me about Pato, it better be after a crushing performance, to which I will simply say when you are right you are right, otherwise you only the raise the bar that much higher.

Back tomorrow to address a minor Argentine problem, and not the same problem Osvaldo had, then again Zlatan may do the same thing but the real person who should be worried is everyone’s favorite Ducky…one more player to share the minutes with…

Oh yeah, in case you missed the goals…

Milan 2 Barcelona 3

Occasionally two teams come together and instantly create a match for the ages, an instant classic. I guess someone forget to tell the two teams that this is the group stage, and not the Final, but that wasn’t stopping anyone from leaving it all on the pitch! End to end action, stout defending (from one team) and slick passing (for another) made this match a joy for the neutral supporter, and hopefully struck a bit of fear in the Barca-machine…

We may as well start by discussing Barca, they are in fact what they people say they are. They pass the ball, very well, they move and pressure, very well, but their defense is suspect and it is because of that our very own AC Milan fought tooth and nail and kept themselves in the match. But sometimes just keeping yourself in a match is not the sign of a great team, but a scared team, and one that didn’t take risks and capitalize when Barca looked feeble. Unfortunately, I don’t really like the idea of moral victories, and the fact that many are in fact proud of the team is only a sign of where we stand. If we are going to be proud of a 1 goal loss in a game we could have won then we will always be second class citizens to the likes of Barcelona. Today could have been our day, but a few mistakes from the outset put the team at a disadvantage.

I didn’t like Allegri’s decision not to use Nocerino, instead choosing Aquilani who had a travesty of a match. I can even justify the inclusion of Seedorf, but when it was time to introduce Pato, Allegri had it all the gain and could have left Robinho, Zlatan and Pato to trouble Barca’s weakest link. I have to say I am wholeheartedly disappointed in Pato, he was nonexistent and did little to impose himself on the match. If he is going to be a true star, it will be in matches like these where he will shine. Even Zlatan was able to score when Milan needed him most, something he has been criticized about on bright CL nights. At the end of the day Milan didn’t create enough chances to truly make Barca bow when there were chinks in the armor and Allegri didn’t go for the jugular when he had the chance.

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Credit to Abbiati for having a MOTM performance and keeping Milan in the match, and to Prince whose passion is infectious, even three thousand miles away on my couch I was thumping my chest in Prince-esque fashion after his incredible goal. His little touch and feint to bury the ball near post was stellar. The rest of the squad was inconsistent and even while defending admirably the diving and theatrics of Barca are difficult to handle, but not as infleuntial on the match as many will make them out to be. While there is no place for them, they didn’t change the match, and even the referee, while consistently bad for both teams, was at least fair. To be clear, Van Bommel negated Xavi’s offside by touching the ball, but it didn’t appear the linesman was going to make the call anyway. The PK was fairly clear, though soft, but the third goal left nothing to chance and the pinpoint passing was incredible. A far cry from Milan’s disjointed passing and lack of connection from the defense. Passes more then ten meters always seemed to be to short, off target, or simply to no one. Not reflective of what Milan is capable of on the ball.

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So where does Milan stand? Disappointed is a good start, we had this one and didn’t exert enough class on the game to combat Barca, even though at times it looked as though we could. Like Rocky, the team stood there and took all it could, throw in a few blows, but lost in the end. Now, like Rocky again, I hope only for a rematch to prove that this team can in fact stand toe to toe with the best. So while I believe moral victories are for the weak, this should prove to Milan and the many fans that boldly claimed Barca would wipe floor the with us, that we can in fact compete, with any team, and that Serie A is ours to lose.

Happy Thanksgiving

This year I am thankful for…

Italy Soccer Serie A

Had it not been for you, yesterday could have been much worse. Yet somehow you still don’t earn respect…

Today is my favorite holiday, one to spend with family and friends, without the pretension of holiday’s like Christmas. Good food, good drink, and good company. In observance I will be back tomorrow with the Barcelona recap, take a minute to be thankful for anything worth being thankful for, no matter where you are.

It’s Time…

The other night I re-watched Barca –Milan. My first viewing was at a bar in Greece, and my second was upon my return home, but now as I sat down to watch it a third time I decided to take a much closer look at the game and what can be done to turn a point into three.

The start of that game was rather surprising; Pato took advantage of a high defensive line and by doing what he does best, run downhill straight to goal. The shocking start however seemed to gloss over the fact that Milan spent the rest of the first half defending, admirably and stoutly, but with little possession and few chances on goal despite Pep’s desire/need to deploy two defensive midfielders as CB’s. Limited possession and chances is in fact a by-product of Barca’s possession game and Milan did well despite this, but when you defend for long stretches inevitably the dam bursts or the levee breaks.

It is no secret around here how I feel about Barcelona. While I respect the Coach and players, the idea of Barca ball and how it is touted by the media makes me ill. There is a belief in many that there are only two ways to play football, Barca’s way or everything else, and if you aren’t playing Barca ball then you aren’t playing football. Teams talk about it, teams emulate it, teams try and fail, because at the end of the day Barca play’s Barca ball and everyone else should find their own identity. To Allegri’s credit we haven’t fallen into this fruitless trap; Milan does have their own identity, one that I have come to appreciate. Stout in the midfield, quick in attack, and strong on defense, the team is just as comfortable defending as they are in possession. This was evident in the previous match, but now that has to change, and for once Allegri has to throw caution to the wind and take a risk.

Now I am not advocating Leo’s absurd 4-1-fantasy of conceding goals, in fact I would be content to live my whole life never to see that awfulness again. Instead we have to look at the match and what it means, and what we stand to gain as a team. Regardless of outcome both Milan and Barca have qualified for the KO stages of the CL, but with a win Milan could potentially (still have to play PLZEN on 12/6) top the group giving them an easier passage into the next round. Again, not a given, but a victory over a team like Barca both in a match and in the group goes a long way to silence some of the Barca aficionados, and remind people that before Barca there was in fact AC MILAN!

So how does Allegri achieve the three points that would mean so much? Simple, pressure Barca’s weakest link, the back line. Defensively Silva, Nesta and Abate are shoe ins, and following Saturday’s performance Ambrosini should get the nod at CDM with Van Bommel on the ready. I say this only because of Van Bommel’s recent sluggishness and rewarding Ambro’s good performance. I don’t expect Ambro to go the full 90 in a demanding match like this one so Van Bommel is kept on the ready. That leaves Nocerino and Prince to help pressure the ball in the midfield, and give freedom to the attacking trident. It is with this trio that Allegri goes for the jugular, Pato, Robinho, and Zlatan. With the understanding that two of those attackers need to pressure at all times, Robinho no problem, but if Milan want to take a risk then Pato and Zlatan will have to roll up their sleeves on both sides of the ball. Time to find out which one really brings his A-game, Zlatan tends to fade when the lights are brightest and if “Pato saves” as many have claimed, now would be the time for miracles. The only position I left out was LB, and Zambro for me is a no go, even though Alves is out, so why not let Taiwo maraud the flank, we are taking risks after all, anything for the three points! So here is how they line-up:

Abbiati; Abate, Nesta, Silva, Taiwo; Nocerino, Ambro, Prince; Binho; Pato, Zlatan

It is Allegri’s and Milan’s time to go for it, all hands on deck, nothing to lose and everything to gain, with the most important thing being respect. I am sick of everyone’s love for Barca, and this notion that Barca is everyone’s second favorite team, is BS. If you like Barca that much then we probably don’t need you anyway! Milan has always been a European powerhouse, and while the Lion has rested over the last few seasons, it is starting to rouse, and what better first victim than the best in the World. Put the heartbreaking loss to Arsenal and Tottenham behind and remind everyone who AC Milan is…for those of you who have been around the blog long enough you may remember this little video, and I shamelessly posting it again. It is one of my favorites and something to wake up that competitive spirit in all of us.

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Fiorentina 0 Milan 0

Occasionally there comes a match where Milan will be the better team, create more chances, have a few things not go their way and end up dropping points. Unfortunately, Saturday was that match, and while it is not the best for momentum, going into Barca, with a draw, there are some decent positive to take from the match, as well as negatives.

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First and most important point to discuss is the clean sheet. I have said it, and will continue to say it, find comfort in keeping the opponent at zero. With a clean sheet you can never lose! Sure you have to swallow a frustrating draw, but one point is always better than none in the long haul of a Serie A season. Second positive is that despite the relative disjointed play of Aquilani and Seedorf Milan continued to create chances, hitting the post and having a goal disallowed. I am not about to chastise the referee, as they are part of the game, and mistakes happen, but even though Milan were seemingly not at their best going forward they were still able to create.

The lack of cohesion going forward had a bit to do with Aquilani and Seedorf for me, while both players had flashes of success, for the most part their styles don’t seem to blend. It may be that if one plays the other shouldn’t, and maybe Allegri would have been better suited dropping Binho into the CAM role later in the match? This is simply hindsight, but it was frustrating to watch Seedorf and Aquilani make poor choices or over complicated touches when the simpler option was seemingly always present. In true Milan fashion, much like last season, this can be said of the entire attack. At times last season when Milan were pressing for goals, they looked impatient, and forceful, choosing often times to just shoot into defenders or pass into traffic, instead of continuing to hold the ball. This tendency reared it’s ugly head again on Saturday and is not the mark of a team with such talented and experienced players in the attack. Credit to Delio Rossi and Fiorentina who defended admirably, getting numbers behind the ball and playing intelligently, but a bit more patience at times may have been the difference.

Many people are laying blame on Allegri as well, but his choices were not all that far off base. Timing could have been a bit sooner in substitutions, but can you fault him for sticking with it when Milan were holding possession and control of the match? Why risk loosing that foothold? I also love to read, “Well do you think he knows he has all three subs?” Of course he does, but why use all three when you are away from home, holding firm on a point, and in control of the match? What if someone, say Abbiati, gets injured, then what? The third sub is a safety net, not something you just use because. The more pressing concern is the inclusion of Urby which leads me to believe Allegri is hoping to use Seedorf against Barca, which looks like a bad choice following this performance. There was also talk about throwing Pato on sooner, but his fitness levels may have been a question and this may have been more of a run out to test the legs then anything else. I will say he did get his nose into some good chances, but why is that Pato fans applaud his position and ability to get on the end of chances, yet they don’t call him wasteful? Curious? Had it been Robinho missing those chances, he would have been called a bum. Wasteful or not, end of the day from all those chances we need to finish one. At least for the first time in a long time it appeared he had some sort of understanding with Zlatan, which is imperative if the team is going to be successful with both those players on the pitch.

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This isn’t the worse possible result, but most matches like this one leave you wanting a bit more. It would have been great to wipe the floor with Fiorentina and come out firing against Barca, but it is an opportunity missed. Delio Rossi’s impressive records of six straight matches against Milan without a loss still stands, albeit just barely. Now Allegri needs to take a good hard look at the squad and put his strongest foot forward on Wednesday, CL knockout round qualification is assured, winning the group is not, if ever there was time to take a risk, this is it, but more on that tomorrow.

Oversight

It would be easy to overlook Saturday’s match against Fiorentina, with Barca looming only a few days away. A mistake that many a team would make, considering the opponent’s state of flux at the moment. The problem is that state of flux may be exactly what makes Fiorentina dangerous. Yes, they are missing some players, possibly Jovetic, but the real key here is hiring of Delio Rossi.

Rossi has always perplexed me, one of the most sound tacticians in all of Italy, yet somehow he gets hired and fired like a Zamparini employee. Wait a minute, I think he was a Zamaparini employee, and Lotito too, that explains a lot. But at the end of the day how he has not stuck with a bigger Club, when a guy like Gigi Del Neri was handed the reins of Juventus, is beyond me. Always a guy capable of doing a lot with a little, he has his teams be both tactically and technically sound and always play well against our Milan. While the record of 4 wins, 5 losses, and 8 draws doesn’t seem all that convincing he hasn’t lost to Milan in his last five matches. He has his work cut out form him, taking over the Viola just a few days ago, but the benefit of the International break, and the buying on of his best players, such as Milan target Montolivo. The challenge for Allegri and Co is stout indeed.

With Barca only a few days away, but having the benefit of International break and some rest, the lineup for this game will simply be a balance of what Allegri’s desires are for both matches. A few interchangeable players, such as Van Bommel/Ambro, will be key choices for Allegri, and securing three points will only build necessary momentum for the challenge ahead. I won’t talk to much about Barca quite yet, because it is the winning eleven for Fiorentina which is of the current concern. My take:

Abbiati; Abate, Bonera, Silva, Zambro; Nocerino, Ambro, Aquilani; Seedorf; Zlatan, Binho

I started Ambro for the sake of regaining form, better here than against Barca. Also, the pace of this game and Rossi’s preference for the 4-3-1-2, with a diamond midfield may afford a Seedorf a bit more time and space and his lack of pace is better here than midweek. Aquilani and Nocerino can both play again midweek and getting Nesta some extra time is a big help to assure he is fresh. Pato may be fit for the match and on the bench, but even Allegri hinted at gaining some more fitness before risking him to another injury so I would expect Pippo should be kept on the ready. Then again better he gets reinjured now than midweek where substitutions may be more critical, the joys of having to be concerned about injury…

The biggest point here, however; is to assure three points and then find rest for players if and when it is possible. Best case scenario an early lead and controlled possession match, a poor showing here will do nothing to benefit the team going forward so in true Allegri fashion, put the team’s best foot forward and go for the win!

For the Record…

In May of next year I will have been at this blog thing for five years. Five years, of simply doing what I love to do, watch Milan and write about it. In those five years I have seen Milan win the Champions League Title, not even qualify for it, and then return to glory with a Scudetto. I have witnessed heroes like Sheva, Kaka, Pirlo and Maldini leave, and the purchase of bums like Ronaldino and Huntelaar. In short these years have been a Milan rollercoaster of every possible outcome.

At the same time, in these five years, I have been given responsibilities I have never once requested or welcomed but begrudgingly accepted. I simply wanted to write about Milan, my way, in my own little space, so expertly provided by the folks at Boots N’ All. What I never anticipated was the volume of emails and comments that slowly started to trickle in, some of them incredibly insightful and others simply to disgusting to even discuss. I took requests from readers to co-blog, something I was always against and still am to this day, because selfishly this is my space. This blog has always been for me, my little creative outlet, my soap box, and never did I expect the comments to become what they did and have, and never did I expect to read some of the awful things I have. Many of you have done an incredible job in that forum, sparking email discussions and relationships with each other and myself outside of the blog maybe via email, or together for a match. That to me is pretty special.

Sadly, early on however, I was naïve. I thought I could simply write and the comments would remain civil, and I wouldn’t need to do a thing. A belief that I know now is impossible because of certain people’s anonymity and lack of accountability. It is a terrible how easy people find it to use the internet as a vehicle to say whatever they please, whenever they please with little to no consequence. To be it into perspective this is merely a soccer blog, imagine what horrors exist in other forums like facebook? I still however hold the belief that free speech is of the utmost importance, and that people, when afforded a bit of leeway will lean towards the good, and that at end of the day, censorship, and babysitting each comment was never anything I planned or wanted to do. To this day I have still never deleted a comment, nor even banned a user, but for the first time in a long time I am simply considering going back to what I wanted in the first place, my own space, on or off the internet.

Two people, specifically Elaine and Jovan, approached me to be co-bloggers, they were not the only ones over the years but clearly those two people continue to hold a grudge because of my choice to keep this space my own. For that I am sorry, I am sorry that you feel that way, but your outcry for respect and most recent choice to use this blog as your own personal forum for your vendetta is simply poor. You could have written me an email, like a normal person would have, and aired your grievances privately to me but instead you made it shamelessly public. You had no problem crying for respect and looking for thank-you’s, but neglected to realize that I never reached out to you for anything, you always offered, and I simply took it, in return allowing you to post your links to your own blog in these comments, helping your traffic and giving you credit when I felt it was necessary and warranted. In fact I never even asked to do a podcast, had no interest really, until pressed and even then I was subject to continued pressure to do it in such a way outside of my own. That doesn’t work for me, I am my own person, and I will always do things my own way. I don’t understand why that can’t be “respected…”

I am actually embarrassed it had to come to this. A petty vendetta mission from people looking for “respect” when they don’t actually give any, shamelessly using this space for their own personal gain and creating a me versus everyone environment. In fact I am even embarrassed I had to write this. But if I didn’t I would simply stew and cloud my thoughts as I take a real hard look if doing this is worth it anyway. For the record, yes I get paid, $100 a month, barely enough to cover the cost of cable and internet to even watch Milan, with no share of traffic revenue. Yes, the blog has in fact been sold to SBNation and will eventually migrate over, when that happens, I am not sure. A point that I had to argue over email obsessively with Elaine, who couldn’t’ fathom why I would want to leave such a “great forum” selfishly neglecting to consider what I wanted for once or maybe that after all these years of being berated and belittled and wanting a little anonymity in my writing? The thing is at the end of the day; I did and do this for me, not for money, not for comments, and not for traffic. I never set out to be the best AC Milan blog on the web, or the most comments, or the most traffic. I just wanted a place to express myself.

So I leave you with this, if you don’t like my posts, my opinions, or even the little things I have shared along the way about myself and my life that’s fine. But please remember and realize this unlike some blogs, I have never shamelessly plugged for readers and never once asked you stay. I never visited other Milan site and posted my links in their comments, I never felt threatened by other blogs or felt the need to advertise this site. I also have always respected the fact that like me you are entitled to do what you please, and if you don’t want to read I am OK with that, always have been. If you want to tell me my opinion sucks, I am OK with that too, but that’s a two way straight. A point that is continually forgetton as people taking opnions about players so terribly personal you would think I was commenting on their own mother? Something that I have actually endured via email and comments, so take a minute to consider that before you cry for respect or censorship, when even comments such as those were upheld. With that I am going to click publish on this post, and then I am going to take a few days to gather my thoughts…I apologize to anyone who has been offended in the last week by the comments, or by my unwillingness to post simply due to the fact that my heart is not in it at the moment. At the end of the day one thing is really all that ever really mattered here before all the nonsense, and that is and always will be FORZA MILAN…

Cassano’s Letter

Dear friends, I just wanted to express my gratitude, on behalf of myself and my family, for the well wishes that have poured in over the last few days. Whatever sadness or difficulty I felt was soon replaced by the show of affection from people all over the world. The President, Silvio Berlusconi, Adriano Galliani, Massimiliano Allegri, the doctors Tavana and Mazzoni, all the staff, my team mates and everyone involved at Milan have constantly been close to me. Thanks to them and the doctors who have taken care of me I was able to face this strange ‘injury’ with courage. I would like to send out a hug to all those who have shown their support and made me feel important by coming to the Policlinico of Milan or through the numerous messages sent to me. I would like to dedicate a huge thank you to all the people at Real Madrid, particularly the President Florentino Perez and the coach Josè Mourinho. Now I will rest as much as possible at home and will be glued to the television when Milan are playing, or when Italy are playing. Also I will be following the developments in Genoa, a city that remains in my heart and that I know will soon recover from problems of recent days. I will do the same and I promise that I will be back on the pitch as soon as possible. Big hug to everyone, and thanks!

Antonio Cassano

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Milan 4 Catania 0

One of the perks of being a Milan fan on the East Coast of the USA is that a normal game time is 9AM on Sunday morning. I can’t think of anything better than waking up on a Sunday morning, and enjoying Milan, and then relishing a victory for the entire day. In fact it was the first game of the season that Milan has actually played at the standard time slot, and it seemed to work out for everyone, five wins on the trot and one point off the top of the table thanks to the postponement of Juventus’ match. We will have to wait and see the result of that match, but in the meantime we can discuss this one.

-Have to admit the formation worried me, almost a bit to offensive, but Allegri got it right. Seedorf was fresh and on his game, Aquilani and Ambro were strong, and the defense was rarely tested. It helped that Montella’s Catania was deployed conservatively enough to allow Milan a lot of possession and minimal fears on the counter attack.

-The game was pretty much over after the PK as Milan began to dominate possession and send waves of players forward. The difference on this day was the calculated nature of each wave, Milan were never over commited in the attack. If Zambro was pressed, Abate was held, if Ambro went forward Aquilani or Seedorf dropped off. Even Urby who struggled to find an offensive rhythm was excellent in pressing and movement. A much more tactically aware and astute Milan despite missing key players, a promising sign going forward.

-Zlatan may have only scored one goal on the day but his passing was incredible. Many people want to discuss the merit of a striker based only on his ability to score. But this is no longer the case, strikers can be much more than a goal scoring threat, they can pressure the ball, create goals for others, and in the case of Zlatan play three of the prettiest through balls I have ever seen. I hope Pato was watching because his one dimensional game will keep him off the pitch with the way Zlatan and Binho get on together. Pato’s saving grace, the injury to Cassano, otherwise his bags would probably already be packed. More on that this week though as he may still be the odd man out.

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-Who said Robinho can’t finish? His goal yesterday was class, the run, the move, the placement. The man creates so many chances for himself and others, he can’t possible score them all, no one can. For those who say Robinho can’t finish, yesterday he had 1 Goal with 3 Shots on Target, and last I checked 1 in 3 is the widely regarded mark of World Class strikers. Take a closer look at this chances, and you will see that his ability is really special. A great player for this team and his relationship with Zlatan from last season hasn’t skipped a beat. In case you missed it, it’s around 1:15…

- One thing I did noticed in the attack yesterday was an over complication of passing when the team neared the 18 yard box. If Zlatan was on the ball this was not the case, but Aquilani and Seedorf sometimes chose to play into pressure often foregoing the easier pass. I know this is nit-picky, when the team scores four goals and has a ton of chances, and can also be tied to the lack of chemistry of the group, but you want to see clinical quick passing that close to goal. We don’t need 7 passes to score when Zlatan proved it only takes one!

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-No surprise to anyone, but the minute Nesta or Silva are missing the team loses some strength in its spine. Mexes may be the answer, he may not, but Allegri and Milan need to earmark a third CB to slot in whenever one of the stalwarts is missing to create some cohesion. Bonera did well, until he was knocked on his head, but the minute Yepes came in there was some confusion. Neither player is a World-Beater, and neither is all that awful, but CB’s need to have an understanding and the more you mix those up the worse it is. If Mexes is the guy give him a shot, but it still doesn’t alleviate the need to groom the next CB for AC Milan.

Back midweek with musings as we prepare for the International Break…

Not Your Average Catania…

Vincenzo Montella has done more with Catania in ten weeks, then he did with Roma all last season. Roma chose a path more Barca, and Catania got a guy who has his team undefeated in the last five and carrying the scalp of Inter, Napoli, and a draw to Juventus. This won’t be easy, by any means, but add in a rash of injuries and suspensions and what was an attainable three points suddenly becomes mission impossible.

Catania will not be the usual shy park the bus opponent they have been in the past, employing a 4-3-3/5-3-2 formation with discipline wingers, they will not be shy to counter and exploit space left by Milan’s attack minded fullbacks. Montella may play conservative away from home and the formation will be defensive when behind ball, but Milan will need to adapt and find space in the attacking third, a job made all the more difficult, missing the key figures of Cassano and Prince. Robinho and Zlatan will most likely lead the attack, and due to the lack of fit players Seedorf will slot in behind. You could make a case for El-Sharaawi in this one, but I have to believe Allegri will lean on the old veteran before a start for the youngster. Seedorf was painfully slow on the ball midweek and even slower in tracking back, two things Catania will surely prey on. The rest of Allegri’s lineup will probably appear as follows:

Abbiati; Abate, Silva, Yepes, Taiwo; Aquilani, VanBommel, Ambro; Seedorf; Zlatan, Robinho

Surely not Milan’s quickest lineup on paper, but an experienced one. Interested to see if the experience can trump the upstart Catania. Depending on Montella’ deployment Milan may have been very patient with the ball and finding the right times to attack. Not conceding will be a good start in this match, especially on defensive miscues. A win here and Milan continue there strong run and five straight wins in the Serie A.