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The Serie A Thread


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massive shit bomb if true

it will so fuck both clubs

wow how things change

those Chinese cunts need to be banned

they are literally treating Inter like yank firm being carved up via a predatory venture capital scheme by hedge funds

Chainsaw Al's ghost is in Milan

Albert John Dunlap (July 26, 1937 – January 25, 2019) was an American corporate executive. He was known at the peak of his career as a turnaround management specialist via mass layoffs, which earned him the nicknames "Chainsaw Al" and "Rambo in Pinstripes", after he posed for a photo wearing an ammo belt across his chest. It was later discovered that his reputed turnarounds were elaborate frauds and his career was ended after he engineered a massive accounting scandal at Sunbeam Products, now a division of Newell Brands, that forced the company into bankruptcy. Dunlap is on the lists of "Worst CEOs of All Time" published by several business publications. Fast Company noted that Dunlap "might score impressively on the Corporate Psychopathy checklist" and in an interview, Dunlap freely admitted to possessing many of the traits of a psychopath, but considered them positive traits such as leadership and decisiveness. 

Chainsaw: The Notorious Career of Al Dunlap in the Era of  Profit-at-Any-Price: Byrne, John A: 9780066619811: Amazon.com: Books

Inter Investors Oaktree Capital Could Ditch Joint San Siro Project With AC Milan, Italian Media Suggest

https://sempreinter.com/2021/05/28/inter-investors-oaktree-capital-could-ditch-joint-san-siro-project-with-ac-milan-italian-media-suggest/

Inter Investors Oaktree Capital Could Ditch Joint San Siro Project With AC Milan, Italian Media Suggest

Edited by Vesper
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6 hours ago, Vesper said:

Inter Investors Oaktree Capital Could Ditch Joint San Siro Project With AC Milan, Italian Media Suggest

https://sempreinter.com/2021/05/28/inter-investors-oaktree-capital-could-ditch-joint-san-siro-project-with-ac-milan-italian-media-suggest/

The Muricans are so used to having cities pay for their stadiums with the tax payers' money and owners threaten to move the 'franchise' to another state if they don't agree to it so they can't fathom the idea of clubs actually paying for it themselves.

Americans should stay the fuck away from European football, no good thing can come from their involvment.

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4 hours ago, Jype said:

The Muricans are so used to having cities pay for their stadiums with the tax payers' money and owners threaten to move the 'franchise' to another state if they don't agree to it so they can't fathom the idea of clubs actually paying for it themselves.

Americans should stay the fuck away from European football, no good thing can come from their involvment.

Agreed

Edited by Vesper
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  • 3 weeks later...

Gattuso set to leave Fiorentina, both him and the club are working on a consensual termination.  The reason for the breakup is tied to a disagreement on the strategy on the transfer market made by the club when it comes to players suggested by Jorge Mendes who is also Gattuso's agent

Edited by Blues Forever
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56 minutes ago, Blues Forever said:

 

Fiorentina head coach Gennaro Gattuso leaves club after 23 days

https://theathletic.com/news/fiorentina-gattuso-manager-leaves/feH7TRxHtHCB

Gennaro Gattuso, who was appointed as Fiorentina’s new head coach only 23 days ago, has mutually agreed to leave the club.

Fiorentina had been searching for a head coach after Cesare Prandelli resigned in March and Guiseppe Iachini was appointed until the end of the season.

They thought they had found a replacement in Gattuso but differences of opinion have forced a mutual departure.

What has been said?

A club statement said: “ACF Fiorentina and Mister Rino Gattuso, by mutual agreement, have decided not to follow up on the previous agreements and therefore not to start the next football season together.

“The Company immediately set to work to identify a technical choice that will guide the Viola team towards the results that Fiorentina and the City of Florence deserve.”

Why has this happened?

Shortly after agreeing to work together it became clear that Gattuso and Fiorentina's executive team had a difference of opinion on transfer strategy.

Gattuso is represented by the agent Jorge Mendes and reports allege Fiorentina were reluctant to sign another of his clients, Porto midfielder, Sergio Oliveira, as well as consider other names in Mendes' portfolio, Jesus Corona and Goncalo Guedes as summer recruits.

23 days after announcing Gattuso’s arrival Fiorentina are now looking for a fifth coach in two years under US owner Rocco Commisso.

How did Fiorentina do last season?

It was a very underwhelming season for Fiorentina, with the side finishing 13th in Serie A.

Despite Dusan Vlahovic’s impressive form in front of goal, the team struggled for consistency and slumped to a mid-table finish.

The club themselves released a statement last month describing the season as “a very difficult campaign”, with the 40 points they achieved “clearly far below expectations”.

There was also shock during the season when Prandelli resigned after admitting a “dark cloud” had developed inside him and he was experiencing a period of “profound distress”.

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  • 4 weeks later...

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When Serie A Was King

ROY HODGSON

Inter Milan, 1995-1997

https://www.coachesvoice.com/serie-a-roy-hodgson-crystal-palace/

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When my first spell as manager of Inter Milan started, the Premier League was still in its infancy.

It was 1995, and Italy was the country the top players gravitated to – it's also where the money was. There weren’t £1m wage earners in England then, but there certainly were in Italy.

Many of the world’s stars were playing there – the finest Netherlands, Germany and Brazil internationals all came to Italy. In that respect, it was a fascinating league.

It was much like the Premier League is today. Every week you’d look at the teams, and each would have three extremely good foreign players who were household names.

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The passion in Italy was also just like it is over here. Clubs mean an awful lot to their fans, who showed up in big crowds, because every game was of vital importance.

That intensity was the biggest change from anything I had previously experienced in my career. At Malmo, for example, the pressure was nothing like that. When you’re winning all of the time there, life can even become quite easy.

"THE PREMIER LEAGUE WAS VIEWED AS A MUCH BETTER ENVIRONMENT THAN SERIE A. IT WAS CONSIDERED A DIFFERENT WORLD"

It was amazing to work for Inter when I did. But I wasn’t as prepared then as I should have been for the enormity of the club.

Even if I wasn’t young in terms of age, I was probably quite young in my mental preparation for taking on such a big job. I was fortunate that the two men who meant most during my time there, Massimo Moratti and Giacinto Facchetti, supported me through that by constantly encouraging me – and not taking the chance to get rid of me.

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Juventus and Inter were the two biggest Italian clubs by a street. We had several hundred fan clubs dotted around the whole of Italy, so it wasn’t a question of half of Milan being interested in our fortunes – it was virtually the whole country. The biggest derby is still Inter-Juventus, not Inter-Milan.

That intensity. Giacinto used to say to me: “This will come to England. We’re advancing at the moment, but you’ll certainly catch us up, and it wouldn’t surprise me if you catch us up and go beyond us."

"THERE WAS SPECULATION ABOUT WHETHER A COACH WOULD STILL BE EMPLOYED WHEN THE PANETTONE GOES AROUND AT CHRISTMAS"

I sometimes used to complain about certain aspects of Italian football. One of them, which was big at the time, was the judicial processes that the television companies ran after every game. A panel of experts would pull the team apart – that meant the coaches, and the players, and the owners.

When I went back to England with Blackburn after leaving Inter, I came across people like Gianluca Vialli and Ruud Gullit (above), who had played in Italy. At that time, it was considered a different world. The Premier League was viewed as a much better environment than Serie A.

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It was so much more relaxed. It was all about the football in England then; you didn’t feel like you were in such a goldfish bowl, and that your life wasn’t worth living if you hadn’t scored a goal on the Saturday. But that's changed.

Very common in Italy was the suggestion that this coach or that coach wouldn’t be mangiare il panettone. That was the classic, every day of every week, when there was speculation about whether a coach would still be employed when the panettone goes around at Christmas. “Who’s going to be the next to go?”

"THERE WERE PRESS CONFERENCES EVERY SINGLE DAY AT INTER MILAN"

Of course, the flames were being fuelled by that speculation as well. It often led to the fans turning against people, and at that point it takes strong owners to really fight that sort of thing off.

I arrived in Milan with a certain confidence, because I was coming off the back of so many good results and slaps on the back with Switzerland, and before then in Sweden. But that didn’t prepare me for the type of reception that all managers get in Italian football.

Hodgson02.png

I found dealing with the press very difficult. I perhaps would have found that easier had I been more fluent in Italian, or if I’d been doing it in my own language.

It was the first time that I’d ever had that situation where there were so many sporting newspapers that had to fill at least one page, every day, on Inter. So every day there were press conferences at the club.

"AT EVERY GAME, 16 OF THE 22 PLAYERS ON THE PITCH WERE ITALIAN"

I didn’t have to do every single one myself, but every day so much was being written in La Gazzetta dello SportTuttosport, and more. There was an aura about the club and the place that I hadn’t experienced before – maybe in the odd international game, but nothing like that. It was a baptism of fire.

Unless you’re Pep Guardiola or Jürgen Klopp, every job that becomes available in England leads to: “Is he the right man?” Even José Mourinho had that when he joined Tottenham – even a manager of that quality.

Hodgson05.png

During my two years at Inter, Milan were one club that had multiple different coaches. They were quick to get rid of people – even those of the quality of Arrigo Sacchi and Fabio Capello (above).

There are very few managers these days who are going to get the wholehearted backing of large groups of fans, because you have to have an almost faultless position in terms of perception. I was unfortunate, in that sense, with the timing of my arrival at Inter.

In the 1990s, there were a lot of foreign managers in the country – it would have been better if I’d been one of only two or three. There were only three foreign players allowed then in a matchday squad, so it was different in that way to what the Premier League has become.

While I was England manager, I attended Premier League games in which there might have been only one or two Englishmen playing. That certainly wasn’t the case in Italy. Every game you went to would have featured 16 Italians from the 22 out on the pitch.

Hodgson07.png

Italy is also a cultured place, and Italians have an enormous sense of style. People came from miles around, right to the north of the country to Milan, to do their shopping at the Via Monte Napoleone.

As has also become the way in England – though less so in London, because it’s so cosmopolitan – you couldn’t go out too often without people either looking at you or wanting to talk to you. It was certainly like that in Milan.

It was a difficult place to go wandering the streets if you didn’t want to get involved with the fans. There was never anything I found too intrusive, though – nine times out of 10 people were pleasant and positive.

Inter was an amazing club to work for. But it was the quality of the people, and the fans, that was particularly memorable for me.

1873f4aab36f97f5312c7767e6281fce.png

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