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The names that Milan are interested in for the striker position for next season:

  • Dusan Vlahovic
  • Andrea Belotti
  • Donyell Malen

[Sky Italia]
 
Manuele Baiocchini, the Sky Sport journalist, has spoken in the show Il Calcio è servito about AC Milan’s plans for the center-forward position ahead of the next summer transfer window. Here are his words:

“To replace Ibrahimovic immediately against Genoa there are 3 options. The most plausible is to put Leao as he has already done it many times this season, then there is Rebic but I don’t think he will play attacking winger, finally Mandzukic who is training with the team. For the future I’ll give you 3 other names. The first is Vlahovic from Fiorentina who Pioli likes so much. His performances have raised the price up to 40 million and perhaps they are too much for the Rossoneri’s coffers. Then there is Belotti [whose contract] expires in 2022 and has not found an agreement to renew with Torino, Cairo asks for 30 million. The same money PSV asks for Malen, 22. He has scored 25 goals in 41 games and is run by Raiola. We need to understand how Milan will work with the agent also because Donnarumma and Ibrahimovic are at stake”
 
With the victory against Parma, #ACMilan rose to 63pts for the season. The Rossoneri have not exceeded 70 points since the 2012-13 campaign

➤ 12-13: 72pts
➤ 13-14: 57pts
➤ 14-15: 52pts
➤ 15-16: 57pts
➤ 16-17: 63pts
➤ 17-18: 64pts
➤ 18-19: 68pts
➤ 19-20: 66pts https://t.co/fb8nwEXzNq
 
Jonas Giæver, Norwegian journalist from Dagbladet, was interviewed exclusively by MilanNews.it about Jens Petter Hauge's season with the Rossoneri, who arrived in the last summer / autumn transfer market from Bodo / Glimt. The Norwegian made a strong start right away, dropping away but deciding the match against Sampdoria, thanks to the equalizer.

Hauge's year was characterized by ups and downs, up to the goal at Sampdoria which brought him back to the news. Was this trend predictable?

"It must be remembered that Jens Petter Hauge played without stopping, match after match, with Bodo / Glimt from June 2020 until he was sold to Milan. Of course there is more competition in the Rossoneri, the level is higher and you have to adapt. which you are probably seeing now. Hauge is a player who needs to play. National team coach Stale Solbakken asked him if he could play for the Primavera to increase his time a bit. He is one of those players who needs to play. continuity on the pitch. I think the decline may be due to the fact that he has lost his momentum, which is normal considering the players who are at Milan. There is great competition, which he had never experienced at Bodo / Glimt.

Hauge only scored two goals fewer than Rebic and Leao, but he played far fewer than them. Would he have deserved to play a little more?
"The numbers do not lie and I believe that Hauge, given the small difference with Rebic and Leao, should play a little more. In any case, it must be considered that these players have adapted more to the game of Milan in terms of playing without ball. It should not be forgotten that for him this is a new world, we need a period of adaptation and I believe that now we are starting to see it ".

In Norway what is said today about Jens Petter?
"He is certainly regarded as one of the big stars in Norway, but a little behind Erling Haaland and Martin Odegaard. However he is still seen as one of our best players, as well as attracting the interest of the fans. Sampdoria was great news, not least because both Thorsby and Askildsen were on the pitch at the same time at the same time. It is quite surreal for us in Norway to see three of our players on the pitch at the same time in Serie A. "

In the summer they will sum up, does he think he should stay at Milan and play his opportunities?

"Too early to tell. I think he needs to play, but he could do it at Milan too. If any of the Rossoneri forwards were given up, then he could take his chances for him. If that doesn't happen, maybe he should go on loan. 'still early to talk about it, but I think it's pretty clear that he needs to play continuously to express himself at his best. "
 
Leao insists his position ‘doesn’t matter’ and declares: “The important thing is to help the team”

Rafael Leao has once again declared that the role he plays in the team is not important but rather that he contributes with goals and assists.

There are two different routes Stefano Pioli can go down in terms of replacing Zlatan Ibrahimovic for Sunday’s game against Genoa with the Swede suspended for one game following the red card he received in the 3-1 victory against Parma.

One of them involves playing Leao as a striker, and it is an idea that divides opinion among the fan base as some believe the Portuguese forward can play that role well while others insist he is a natural winger.
 
Ricardo Rodriguez’s agent points the finger of blame at Torino coach Davide Nicola for ‘not having the experience’ to appreciate the player football-italia.net/169109/rodrigu… #Torino #SerieA #SerieATIM
 
AC Milan became the first Serie A club to sign the Manifesto of non-hostile communication for sport, as clubs combat racist and other hate speech online football-italia.net/169106/milan-s… #ACMilan #SerieA #SerieATIM
 
Earlier today, the official verdict arrived on Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s red card, as the sporting judge confirmed that he will be banned for one game. A blow for Milan, of course, but above all a tough call to swallow.

As highlighted by Matteo Calcagni of MilanNews, the red card is difficult to explain thanks to the crystal clear audio available, revealing no insults from Ibrahimovic. Yet, the 39-year-old has been heavily criticised by media since the game on Sunday.

Looking at the numbers, though, it paints a very different picture as Ibrahimovic has received just two yellow cards in Serie A this season (vs. Inter and Roma). In 16 games, he has never been punished for a ‘provocative attitude’, as the sporting judge described it.

There was the clash between him and Lukaku in the Coppa Italia, of course, but the blame must be split between the two for that one. Yet, no one has questioned the attitude of Lukaku, despite the fact he has been booked twice for protests in the league.

Sure, Ibrahimovic could have kept silent at the Tardini but at the same time, it’s very clear that the red card was completely the wrong call. At most, it should have led to a yellow, which would have seemed silly as well based on the audio.

As Calcagni concludes, if the standard of Maresca is used on every game, then there would be three or four red cards each game. But above all, the criticism in media for Ibrahimovic is completely unjustified and must stop
 
Cafu (2003–2008)
Not so much a right-back as a nuclear powered high speed intercontinental super train with a grin on its face. One of six children, Marcos Evangelista de Moraes grew up in the broken alleys of a Sao Paolo shanty town and soon realised that football was going to be his only way out. 'Il Pendolino ' didn't arrive in Italy until he was 27-years-old. Six relentlessly impressive seasons with Roma were followed by five almost as consistent years at the San Siro and Cafu was able to retire safe in the knowledge that there has not been a better right-sided wing-back anywhere in the world in the last ten years

Alessandro Nesta (2002-)
Probably the most cultured central defender of the century so far, Nesta has exuded an unflappable air of calm assurance ever since he joined the Rossoneri from Lazio in 2002. And, while injury and personal misfortune have blighted his career at both club and international level, he would walk into any best team of the decade back four. Nesta is an almost flawless defender, who's impeccable technique means he could have played anywhere on the pitch. But game after game, season after season, he remains forever disciplined, forever selfless, a master of the defensive arts and not someone who ever crosses the half-way line

Alessandro Costacurta (1986–2007)
Ray Wilkins once said that he thought Costacurta would have looked more at home on a film set than a football pitch and it's easy to see why. Playing the role of good cop to Franco Baresi's ball-busting Magnum Force, 'Billy', as he is known to everyone except his mum, tended to breeze through games with the air of someone who wasn't all that keen on messing up his hair. But this foppish demeanour concealed undeniably brilliance. Seven Serie A titles, five Champions League's, four UEFA Super Cups and one Coppa Italia says it all. And he gets a mention in the pilot episode of Father Ted

Paolo Maldini (1985-2009)
What is there left to say about the extraordinary career of the greatest left-back in the history of the game? Having spent his entire club career in the red and black number 3 shirt, Maldini spent a record-breaking 25 years in the first team. In that time, he won seven Serie A championships, one Coppa Italia, five Supercoppa Italiana, five UEFA Champions League's, five UEFA Super Cups, two Intercontinental Cups and one FIFA World Club Cup. All this, and the looks of a matinee idol. Milan may take a while to learn how to walk again without him around

Andrea Pirlo (2001-)
Andrea Pirlo is a unique footballer in more ways than one. The son of a wealthy industrialist, Pirlo spent the early part of his career as a trequartista but Carlo Ancelotti had the vision, and the courage, to turn this most gifted of talents into a deep-lying playmaker. Pirlo has never looked back. No other player of his type fills a similar role in the game. And yet, for both club and country, he has become utterly indispensable, dictating the direction, tempo and shape of the play. Gennaro Gattuso put it best when he said, "When I see what Andrea can do with the ball, I have to ask myself whether I am a footballer

Gennaro Gattuso (1999-)
If Pirlo carves beautiful shapes on the football field, Gattuso is there to destroy them. Energetic to the point of carelessness, the pit-bull of the Milan midfield charges about the place with scant regard for his, or his opponents, safety. He snaps into tackles, hassles and harries and generally disrupts the merest hint of comfortable possession with a passion that goes above and beyond the call of duty. If there were walls on the pitch, he would run through them. One Scudetto, two Champions League's, two UEFA Super Cups, one FIFA World Club Cup, one Coppa Italia and the small matter of a World Cup suggest he has taken what was Rangers boss Walter Smith's idea and made it fly.

Clarence Seedorf (2002-)
The only player to win the UEFA Champions League with three different clubs, the Suriname-born Dutch superstar seems to have been at the top of the game for about 100 years. It is almost impossible to think of Seedorf as a coltish 16-year-old making his debut for Ajax back in the early nineties. Sampdoria, briefly, then Real Madrid, Inter and finally, Milan followed, as he left his own personal footprint all over the European game. Granted, he does have off-days and his long-range shooting suggests he may be someone who believes he is more capable than he actually is, but when he finds his groove he can dominate and win games like few other midfielders

Kaka (2003-2009)
He may have arrived as part of the South American heritage that gave us Zico, Rivaldo and Ronaldhinho but the boy named as a result of his kid brother's inability to pronounce the word 'Ricardo' is a very different kind of Brazilian. Kaka's most devastating feature is to run, at pace, with the ball at his feet. And when he's in full flow, he is virtually unstoppable. He drifts instead of dribbles, leaning one way, then the other, sprinkling little seeds of uncertainty into the collective minds of the opposition, as subtle and as dynamic as a breeze

Andriy Shevchenko (1999–2006) (2008–2009)
Before he became a spare part of a striker with an allergy to putting the ball in the back of the net at Chelsea, this skinny-looking Ukrainian spent a considerable amount of time being the most lethal finisher on the planet. 175 goals in 324 appearances for Milan make him the clubs second all-time top scorer, one place behind fearsome Swedish thunderbolt Gunnar Nordahl. Shevchenko's biggest strengths were his ultra sophisticated interpretation of the play and his chillingly clinical eye for goal. The angled patterns of the Rossoneri suited him perfectly

Filippo Inzaghi (2001-)
'Super Pippo' is probably the last of the great goal-hanging strikers, a genuine 100 per cent maverick. Half elbows and half knees, he has spent the whole of his career poised on the shoulder of the last defender, waiting for his moment to pounce. When it comes to making off-the-ball angled runs, there is no-one better, perhaps ever. His jagged scurries into the box have been one of the defining features of European football in the 21st Century. As have the number of offside decisions given against him. His goalscoring record, in case you didn't know, is phenomenal. No-one loves scoring goals as much as Inzaghi. Great goals, average goals, fluky goals, vital goals, meaningless goals, headers, shin kicks, tap-ins, he celebrates each one in the same euphoric manner.

Memory lane brothers
If wishes were .....
 
Zlatan Ibrahimović won his 300th match in the 'top five' European Leagues against Parma (170 in Serie A, 88 in Ligue 1, 24 in La Liga and 18 in the Premier League). https://t.co/q95bsU1Z1W
#god
 
Mandzukic has withdrawn from receiving the salary of March due to his unavailability due to injury.

Milan president Paolo Scaroni: “It’s an exceptional gesture which demonstrates ethics and professionalism.”
 
Milan offered Danilo D'Ambrosio a 2-year contract (2 million euros net per season). The 32-year-old's contract with Inter expires on June 30.

[Sportitalia]
 
Former Inter Milan defender Lele Adani has spoken to BoboTV on Twitch about the potential transfer of Josip Ilicic to AC Milan. Here are his words:
“It would be a perfect signing. In Milan, in recent years, in that area, Calhanoglu has grown, but Ilicic is a another thing: it’s an extra variant. Besides, of course, having a different foot. He can also play with Hakan, he gives you many solutions“.
 
Roberto Muzzi has spoken to La Gazzetta dello Sport about the interest of Milan in Genoa’s promising striker Gianluca Scamacca. Here are his words:
“He should absolutely take it and say yes to the transfer, it would not be too big of a leap and then [being] close to Ibrahimovic he would have the opportunity to take another step in his maturity. Indeed, I will tell you more, if I had been Milan I would have already taken Scamacca. Among other things, he can easily coexist with Ibra. For me, even together they can form a really good pair in attack“.
 
Una for add Barcelona, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich. As if he's better than KDB, Mtcheeew. When agents want big salary and parentage, they will start throwing up names of clubs
 
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