Riccardo Rossi Serie A articles

Beast

The Observer
Comic capers in Milanese massacre

Tuesday 01 September 2009 11:30
AC Milan fans are going to need a good sense of humour this season.

The 4-0 humiliation at the hands of Inter certainly had plenty of comic value at every turn.

After making a game of it for about 20 minutes, Milan started the circus when Ronaldinho ballooned the ball over the bar from inside the area.

Soon, Rino Gattuso fell over, got up, decided he could play on, but was looking very dodgy on one good leg.

Meanwhile, there on the bench sat Clarence Seedorf in his flip-flops and training vest, without a care in the world.

Then, just like that, 1-0 Inter, 2-0 Inter, and Gattuso booked for dragging back Samuel Eto’o inside the area.

Cue Gattuso deciding he has had enough and indicating that he is coming off, although no one on the Rossoneri bench seemed to be taking it seriously – least of all Seedorf, who was still acting as if he was lounging around at the San Siro beach club.

When Leonardo finally stopped fiddling with his hair and informed the Dutchman that maybe he should slip on a pair of boots, a thoroughly demented and wide-eyed Gattuso had already lunged after Wesley Sneijder – making a classy debut – and seen red.

The hirsute one had a few parting words for his coach and Seedorf, as if it was their fault and the only way Gattuso could get their attention was by being sent off.

Mathieu Flamini and Marek Jankulovski then donned chicken suits and ran around in circles while Inter just simply ran amok. 3-0 and still another 45 minutes to go.

Up the stands, Silvio Berlusconi sat stony-faced and no doubt wishing he could enforce a media blackout on reporting the debacle unfolding in front of him.

Meanwhile the Inter fans began a rendition of “We are here to see Kaka play” - a little ditty that their rivals used to sing in happier times.

Silvio didn’t hang around for much of the second half and neither did many of the soon-to-be-long-suffering Rossoneri supporters, who must have regretted giving up the last weekend of the summer holidays to pay to be humiliated.

The only bright note is that things cannot get much worse.

It was a bitter lesson for Leonardo, who only last week was being hailed as the brightest young coach around.

It’s clear that the coach needs to put some distance between himself and his players – for example, a quick rollicking for Clarence may have got him to dress for the occasion.

But the Brazilian must know that the crux of the crisis lies with his cruise-control creative maverick.

These days, Ronaldinho can only play in fits and starts.

And as long as he is remains immobile for most of the game, Milan are going to be overrun in midfield and thus stretched to wilting point in defence – especially as both Marek Jankulovski and the previously majestic Gianluca Zambrotta have become so ineffectual in just about every aspect of their game

With Berlusconi demanding that his flavour of the year start on a regular basis, how to employ dithering Dinho will tax Leo’s thoughts throughout his waking hours.

No such worries for Jose, who watched in admiration as his team produced a fluid display of passing and movement.

The opener, dispatched crisply by Thiago Motta, was a succession of neat, short inter-play straight out of the Barcelona training manual.

Sneijder turned out to be key to this new effortless approach, where power and precision have made way for craft and guile.

Then, there is the ease with which Diego Milito and Samuel Eto’o drop off their markers to encourage the midfielders to play that extra 10 metres or so further up the pitch – and suddenly black and blue shirts are crowding the opposition penalty area.

Against 10 men and thoroughly disorganised opposition it was too easy, but a real test looms over the horizon in Barcelona.

Mourinho has set his sights on dethroning the Catalans and on this display there would seem to be little or no gap between the two sides.

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Spalletti escapes Roman ruin

Wednesday 02 September 2009 12:00
The transfer window closed with no great shakes around the Serie A clubs – the big moves had been done and dusted earlier in the summer.

There was no surprise that Fabio Grosso joined his Italy international team-mates at Juventus, and Marcello Lippi will be glad to have three of his back-four, as well as goalkeeper Gigi Buffon, in one team.

It was a bit of a shock to see Zdravko Kuzmanovic move to Stuttgart, but then Fiorentina need the money and €8 million is not bad business for a player the Tuscans picked up for a song a few year’s back.

Apart from that, the usual journeymen were packing their bags once again, although Sampdoria have landed an excellent back-up to Giampaolo Pazzini in Nicola Pozzi, who may have already been fitting snugly into the former’s boots, so to speak, if it had not been for two serious knee injuries.

While the players can rest easily for another few months, the same cannot be said for the coaches who must wish they had a transfer window of their very own.

The season is hardly up and running and already we have the first managerial casualty, even though it was a car wreck waiting to happen.

Of course, it’s in the city of fading glory where Luciano Spalletti has overseen another disastrous start to the campaign by AS Roma.

We have been down this road to Rome before, and the Giallorossi are currently propping up the rest of the league following defeats to Genoa and Juventus.

The opening fixtures may have been unkind to Spalletti, but it is Roma after all, and they are expected to beat any team on their day.

However, the writing was on the wall for the Tuscan who admitted as much that he had lost the dressing room after Sunday’s 3-1 loss to Juve, claiming that the team had “failed to follow orders” and “lacked fighting spirit.”

Spalletti had long seemed to have given up the ghost as well, once again staring at the ground for most of Sunday’s threadbare performance.

He was like a down-in-the-mouth tourist who has been pick-pocketed at the Trevi Fountain and can’t wait to get out of town.

He could have gone to Chelsea last season, was heavily linked with Juventus and a move to Zenit St. Petersburg in the summer, but his bald plate was still shining in the Roman sun come the start of the campaign – and what an easy target it was for the club’s detractors.

Of course, the coach has to take the rap, when all is said and done, for the on-field results but there are quite a few other candidates who should be wary of the fans’ ever-growing hostility.

The Sensi family – with the demure but totally ineffectual Rosella in charge – have clung on to control, racking up a massive debt while refusing to step aside when a potential buyer presents itself.

No longer a buying club, unless you count Nicolas Burdiss and Bogdan Lobont - the latter only there on a loan deal - they cashed in on Alberto Aquilani.

But the real business would have come with the sale of even bigger money-spinners in Daniele de Rossi and Philippe Mexes.

It looks as if everyone connected with Roma are deluding themselves that the club can actually be a force again under the current ownership.

Just look at the man to arrest the slide into oblivion: Claudio Ranieri. At least, Jose Mourinho will have someone to bully again.

Roberto Mancini would have been a better option, but there is no point even going there with the persona non grata of Italian football.

Ranieri may be a Roman through-and-through and adored much in the way an eccentric, old uncle would be, but when it comes to taking Roma back to anywhere near the heights they enjoyed in recent years then he’s not your man.

He is cheap – earning less than a €1 million-a-year compared to Spalletti’s €1.9m-a-year salary – but when it comes to managing star names, as witnessed at Juventus, he has little sway.

Francesco Totti will not be too pleased with a new 4-4-2 formation, because in his eyes there can only be one striker and goalscorer in the team.

Sorry to say, but the great man’s powers in that role are waning match by match as ever-physical Serie A defenders muscle him off the ball.

While opponents have long worked out that cutting off the supply to the captain nullifies the team’s sharp movement in the attacking third of the pitch.

Ranieri has further problems to iron out when it comes to defending – six goals leaked in two league games – but how much more covering can De Rossi do?

It looks as if we have seen the last of Roma’s free-wheeling approach and probably the end of Jeremy Menez, unless he can adjust to tracking back.

Spalletti is well out of the mess and you know what, giving up another two years on his contract will be no hardship.

All he has to do is sit back and wait for Zenit to come calling.

It would be interesting to see who else would jump at the chance to follow their former boss to Russia and leave Roma to head along the rocky road to ruin.

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Beast

The Observer
Genoese-y does it at top of Serie A

Monday 14 September 2009 11:00
Genoa has a glorious past as a centre of trade, and now it seems the port city is set for a glorious future on the football pitch.

It’s been 18 years since the league title found its way to Liguria. But the city known as La Superba – the Proud One – is currently living up to its moniker at the top of the Serie A table.

Genoa and Sampdoria have set off with a fair wind in their sails, with only Juventus keeping them in sight while the cities of Milan and Rome are left in the doldrums.



We may only be three games into the campaign, but it’s a refreshing change to see the table take on such an unfamiliar look.

For football purists, the compact Luigi Ferraris stadium is the place to be - and this most English of Italian grounds was packed to the rafters for the visit of another seafaring town on Sunday evening.

Napoli brought an impressive travelling support to add a real cup-tie feel to the occasion and the referee played his part by sending off Genoa’s Domenico Criscito before the half-hour mark.

Generally this would be the signal for both teams to close ranks and wait for the official to “even” things up – but not in this new era, where entertainment has replaced good old-fashioned cynicism around the league.

The ref did bring parity to the contest just before the break when Hugo Campagnaro saw red, but it was not as if anyone had noticed that the home side were a man down and goal down.

Whatever the circumstances, Gian Piero Gasperini’s side just keep coming forward, looking to create chances and generally running the opposition ragged.

While many felt that the loss of Diego Milito and Thiago Motta would see the Rossoblu drop off the pace, that incoming Inter money has been well-invested and looking along the bench there is a enough quality and quantity to seamlessly replace tired limbs or change the tactical approach to unlock any defence.

This was the case on Sunday when the livewire Rodrigo Palacio took over from Giuseppe Sculli on the left to exploit the space created by Campagnaro’s dismissal.

Then, when Sergio Floccari had run himself into the ground, Genoa introduced the forgotten man of Serie A: Hernan Crespo.

Both subs played their part in sweeping a talented but lightweight Napoli side away, but rather than any indivudiual it is the team’s driving force that gets the job done.

With Samp, it’s the other way round – and the individual who sparks the team is of course Antonio Cassano.

What a shame that the most naturally-gifted Italian player of his generation will never grace a World Cup finals.

BLOG, September 7: Function but no fun from artless Azzurri


For Samp fans of a certain age it must be like watching Roberto Mancini and Gianluca Vialli rolled into one, in the manner which the former “Bari Bawler” navigates his way around the pitch while the rest of the team go about their tasks in unruffled fashion.

For a man who had the ability to spark a bad thought on even the most beautiful of days, a certain calmness has now descended.

Maybe it’s the settling influence of a steady girlfriend, staying off the ice-cream and employing a full-time personal trainer to ensure that he’s still sharp in the final quarter.

And that new-found fitness told at Atalanta when he ran almost the length of the pitch to get into a position to unlock the defence with a slide-rule pass for the only goal of the game.

These are heady days indeed for the fine Genoese citizens who no doubt will be patting each other on back this morning as they cast their gaze over a very pleasing looking league table.

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Beast

The Observer
Dinho down in the dumps

Monday 21 September 2009 11:04
The sheer folly of AC Milan’s infatuation with Ronaldinho has finally come home to roost.

Silvio Berlusconi was so attracted to the dazzling Brazilian that he ignored the stories of late nights spent on the dance floor followed by late mornings under the covers, and moved heaven and earth to incite those on-pitch Samba skills to land of la dolce vita before showering his new beau with all the attention of the smitten.

But now even the old sugar daddy seems ready to turn his back on the fading pin-up and allow Leonardo to cast him adrift.

Poor old Dinho took badly to being left out of the Champions League game at Marseille and turned up for the official club photo-call on Friday complaining of a high temperature.

Seemingly unable to raise any semblance of a smile until some wag cracked a joke about “swines” and “flu”, the sickly star was able to drag himself into the team photo – evidence at least that he was a Milan player at the start of the 2009-010 season – before jumping back into his car and off home again.

More worryingly than a few sniffles is that the patient is in terminal decline – although he was well enough to pop along to the San Siro on Sunday to watch his team-mates labour to a 1-0 win over Bologna.

How he felt about the only goal coming from the Clarence Seedorf, who covets his position, is anyone’s guess – but he didn’t look much like a man suffering from the raging fever suggested in some quarters.

In fact, he was quite chipper - sporting a Lenny Karvitz circa 2005 look replete with giant beanie and wrap-around shades.

Conveying rocker-in-repose image may be one of the reasons why Ronaldinho increasingly finds himself on the outside looking in.

He’s still only 29 and should in theory be in his prime but many observers believe he’s selling his employers short; content to scoop up the 7.5million Euro-a-year salary, he could probably pay Adrian Mutu’s 17m Euro fine in cash.

Is it also the case that he has enough money never to have to lift a finger again, and so he won’t bother lifting a leg now and then?

Have his physical powers declined that much or is it seeing Lionel Messi claim his mantle as the world’s top player that has all but extinguished his desire?

More questions than answers at the moment, but it’s hard to believe that someone who obviously loves the game, and has given every football follower so much pleasure, would suddenly lose interest when offered the chance to continue his career at one of the biggest clubs in the world.

Maybe only the player himself knows the reasons but whatever is rattling around in his head there have been a number of occasions since moving to Milan when he has not acted in a professional manner.

There was the summer incident at a Milan nightclub when a group of Rossoneri followers felt obliged to tell the fun-loving late bird to head home early and get a good night’s sleep.

Then there was a little-reported training ground episode at the start of the season.

With the full squad already out and going through a stretching routine, Ronie, sporting his trademark goofy grin and wearing a nappy – in fact on closer inspection it was a pair of shorts pulled up around the top of his thighs – came strolling out of the dressing room to hoof a ball into the middle of the pitch.

If he was expecting hoots of laugher he was sorely disappointed. Leonardo informed his shame-faced compatriot that proper attire should be worn at all times and that the first-team squad was expected to start training as a group at the same time.

That’s not to say that there have not been plenty of arms around his stooped shoulder recently, but genuine affection must be tinged with disappointment that the player has lost his way so badly.

While the Ronaldinho mystery will no doubt rumble on, back on the pitch it was business as usual at the top of the table.

Juventus maintained their 100% record thanks in part to Gigi Buffon’s heroics once again; Antonio Cassano ran Siena ragged to keep Sampdoria level with the Old Lady; and Jose Mourinho was sent off for protesting as Inter sneaked past Cagliari.

Genoa’s Europa League exertions got the better of them as they found themselves 2-0 down at Chievo after just nine minutes and finally went down 3-1: an early warning that battling on two fronts with a small squad, however talented, will take its toll.

Toiling, on the other hand, are AS Roma who are in such a mess financially that apparently the players have not been paid since April.

The Ultras of the Curva Sud weren’t too happy with having to pay to watch their beloved club’s fall from grace – and boycotted the first 30 minutes of Sunday evening’s home game against Fiorentina.

They missed Francesco Totti score twice and are no doubt planning further demonstrations, citing them as a decisive factor in the Giallorossi’s improvement as Daniele de Rossi added third – although the Viola players seemed to be acting like the ones who had missed a couple of pay packets.

It’s a pity Milan hadn’t thought of paying Ronaldinho on a performance-related scheme.

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Where is Dinho "will be back " groupies ?
 

Beast

The Observer
Headbands and headbanging for morose Milan

Thursday 01 October 2009 10:00
AC Milan’s fall from grace is now complete.

The former masters of Europe suffered the worst humiliation imaginable: a giant defender in the daftest of John McEnroe headbands scored the deftest of Gianfranco Zola back-heels for the only goal of the game.

The fact that Hannu Tihinen was playing for a Swiss side – FC Zurich – made the whole Champions League evening at the San Siro even more depressing.

NEWS: September 30 Zurich beat Milan at San Siro

Last season was bad enough, having to face the same opposition in the UEFA Cup.

But it speaks volumes about what the paying public think that there were only about 30,000 dotted around the 80,000-capacity ground last night – for the continent’s premier club competition.

Catcalls and jeers assailed the players as they beat a hasty retreat down the tunnel, leaving their coach to sit forlornly in the dug-out.

At this rate, Leonardo’s sad tale will be played out for a few more weeks – but with a double-header against Real Madrid coming up, maybe the Brazilian will want to back in the boardroom by then.

It's plain to see that Leo is floundering and, worse still, perceived as a company man installed at the whim of the boss.

The senior players obviously have not been won over – last Sunday during the goalless draw with Bari, Clarence Seedorf and Ronaldinho were whispering away on the bench, and you can bet it wasn’t about how good the coach looked in a suit.

Then, last night, with at least two minutes remaining in the first-half, off down the tunnel went the benchwarming Rino Gattuso – not a man to get on the wrong side of when you may be at the mercy of a dressing-room coup.

Obviously nothing has changed since the Seedorf-substitution derby debacle and subsequent signs of discord mean that respect has been neither gained nor shown.

BLOG: September 1: Comic capers in Milanese massacre

You know what they say about where nice guys come, and the eloquent South American is certainly one of those within the rabid world of Italian football.

However, dressing-downs can only take a team so far or change an approach up to a point: what is needed is the personnel to carry out a game-plan.

If you go to the official Milan website, under Squad you'll find listed seven strikers and six midfielders.

Of the midfielders, Ignazio Abate has so far been used as a right-back and then headless chicken in the second-half against Zurich.

In reality, there are only five midfielders – and apart from Mathieu Flamini they were all around when the team won the Champions League back in 2003.

The aforementioned Seedorf and Gattuso, Andrea Pirlo plus Massimo Ambrosini have covered enough miles to have gone around the world a few times, and as a unit can no longer play the ball around crisply and with pace – once the hallmark of Carlo Ancelotti’s sides.

Now the ball is knocked forward as soon as possible for a 36-year-old who is almost permanently offside and a shy youngster who won’t say boo to a goose but only wants it played to his feet.

Filippo Inzaghi and Pato may have thrived if Ricky Kaka was still around but now there is only Dinho – who, with every passing week, looks more and more leaden in his gait.

Coming on last night for Seedorf, he immediately drifted out to the left and only showed signs of his former greatness when he wandered into the middle of the pitch to set up two goalscoring chances – one of which Pato fluffed badly.

What is to be done to climb out of this pit of despair? Well, get tough – a solid midfield platform for a start.

Flamini on the right, Gattuso alongside Pirlo in the middle and Ambrosini on the left, with Seedorf in waiting.

Up front, Klaas-Jan Hunterlaar will never adapt to Italian football sitting on the bench so he has to be given his chance alongside Pato.

The defence just about picks itself and the big Yank Oguchi Onyewu didn’t look too bad when he came on against the Swiss – at least he brought a bit of humph to proceedings.

The rest can mope on the bench if they want, but if Leonardo really wants to be a coach and a leader of men then he has got to follow the old Italian male tradition and show some... well you can guess what.
 
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Super Pippo

Guest
Good article. He's spot on about Huntelaar, there is nothing more frustrating about this situation than the fact that the one player who might be able to turn things around a bit never gets played. Like this guy mentioned, Milan have started resorting to long balls, which is pointless because we keep playing 2 short, ball to feet strikers: Pippo and Pato. Atleast if it was Huntelaar and Pato we'd have a tall striker who can knock it down to Pato to do his thing.

And thats not to say ditch Pippo, as we saw last season, he can get alot of gols coming off the bench, at 36 thats sensible. Infact it could work quite well: With Huntelaar playing, Pato should get more of the ball when long balls, and those rare crosses come in, and in turn actually causing defences something to worry about by being able to run at them. Then towards the end Pippo can come in and play against defenders that have actually had to work for 60+ minutes and he can find some gaps that he is so good at exploiting.

Really thats the only way I can see Milan being able to actually score gols until some creativity is found for the midfield in January, if at all. Or we can sit around and hope that after nearly 2 years Dinho actually loses the wieght, trains properly, and focuses on his football again... which just isn't going to happen.
 

Hamzah

High Definition Member
you need to get a massive transfer budget and buy more than you normally would. i think for too long the players have aged without being replaced properly. whether you'll get that or not is the problem.
 
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Super Pippo

Guest
Yes this is the problem for sure, and I know this sounds harsh, but Berlusconi needs to die first. As long as he is alive he will never sell Milan, but at the same time he cannot put money into it. Once he is dead his kids will have Milan up for sale within a month, and Colonel Gaddafi will be able to buy it.

What I am saying above is what needs to be done in the short term, damage limitation.
 

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