There
are some strange things being said amidst all of this madness. People seem to
be focusing only on the monetary side of things or only on the player side of
things. But take a step back and look at the whole picture. The pieces just
don’t fit. And I don’t understand how people can angrily speak of the betrayal
from management and in the same breath say “I trust in Galliani.” The pieces
just don’t fit. Or the piece about “rebuilding” and “having a plan.” If our
management had a plan, why would they have ever put themselves in this
situation? If our management was capable and transparent, why would our parent
company have ever done anything to warrant a €564m fine? The pieces just don’t
fit.
"Do you have a plan" "No, I thought you had a plan." |
So
let’s take the puzzle piece by piece. First
the monies. It is well known that Milan had been carrying a large wage
bill. With salaries like Ibra’s or Thiago Silva’s out of the way and
accompanying payments & expenses, getting rid of them will save the club
€150m over the next two years, according to Berlusconi himself. But why were we
in that situation in the first place? Why didn’t we have players with
reasonable salaries? Well, when you get players on cheap/free transfer deals,
their salaries, bonuses etc. are more, costing more in the long run. And we can’t
afford those kinds of expenses due to the fact that we’ve kept an increasingly
large roster full of high salary players for too long. Oh, and that little
€564m Fininvest fine that wasn’t supposed to impact Milan at all. Yeah, right.
So it would be fiscally responsible then to drop the wage bill by €20m or more
by losing the Senatori, then sell two of our highest paid players and reinvest
the transfer monies into smarter buys of players with more reasonable salaries.
Okay,
so many things wrong with this “fiscal responsibility” fantasy. If they had ever
had a decent plan, they would never have kept such a big wage bill. Dropping it
all of a sudden and then selling two top players risks all of the monies we
could get from Champions League and a possible Scudetto. (Our Champions League
haul this year was just under €40m.) You have to spend money to make money. Even
Barbara Berlusconi wrote seven pages on why it was fiscally negligent to sell
Thiago Silva. No, this was an impulse move, in direct correlation to everything
going on in the economy, with the giant fine and Berlusconi’s other pending
legal issues (as well as a possible new bid to run for Prime Minister again.)
And the sale of Kaka should remind us that when a player (or two) was sold due
to financial crisis, they have not
reinvested all of the monies, so we can definitely not count on them to do that
this time. You don’t pull a giant stunt like this after already doing so much
to lower expenses to reinvest the income. You do this to balance the books.
Berlusconi checks Kaka's teeth to make sure he can get top dollar for him |
For
those looking at the player side of things, you are seeing that we stand to
lose Serie A’s Capocanonniere from last year, with 28 league goals. Also the
best center back in Serie A, if not the world. So I have seen many ideas of how
to attempt to replace them. Some of you are even keen to reinforce other areas
of the squad that have been lacking, such as a proper left back or another
defensive midfielder. And others are remembering that we have lost ten other
players that we had last year, and even if we are decreasing the numbers in the
squad, we need to improve the quality. Then there are Muntari’s and now
Strasser’s injuries, even if Constant was already brought in to cover for
Muntari. Oh, and of course, Pato has picked up a knock playing with Brazil.
Ahhhh,
fantalcalcio. And it’s enhanced by the prevalence of Football Manager. I have
seen everything from lineups that would make Mourinho blush to people who have
taken the reported transfer monies and “spent” much or even all of it to create
a more competitive lineup based on current valuations of the players. Only that
doesn’t account for their wage bills, which is how we got here in the first
place. It also doesn’t account for the fact that we have never reinvested like
that before, why is everyone so convinced we will now? Or those who say that we
need to promote our own Primavera or invest in other youth. Well most of our
Primavera are already out on loan or some even sold, which is why that won’t
happen. We never do that. We went so far as to spend €300,000 and a precious
non-EU spot on a 19 year-old Brazilian for our third keeper, rather than
promote Piscitelli, who was good enough to be on our bench last year, but
apparently not this year.
Milan Channel showing a starting 11 of players who have left this summer |
You
just don’t replace 10-12 quality players with the few players we’ve bought so
far, with most having little to no Serie A experience. Considering the last
time we had such an exodus, we bought Gattuso, Inzaghi, Pirlo, and Nesta, who
were already established players as young or younger than the ones we’ve bought
so far, then it’s safe to say that there is room for panic when we are now also
trying to replace the irreplaceable in Silva and Ibra. We are taking the squad
that supported those two, removing 10 players, filling in with unproven
players, and now have these two gaping holes left to fill, too. I would love
for our current players and the new players to step up and surprise me (like
Nocerino,) but what are the odds that this will happen with more than one of
them? I wouldn’t take that bet. An anomaly is bound to happen here or there, but
it would be a miracle if we could come close to the level of play this year as
we had last season. It just doesn’t add up. The monies and the players are intrinsically linked, you have to get both of them right to have continuous success.
And
as for rebuilding… if Milan had a plan for rebuilding, they would have phased
out the Senatori over the last several years. If they had a plan for
rebuilding, they would have been working on having Primavera players to promote
when we needed new players instead of having to go out and panic buy players.
If there was a plan in place for rebuilding, why would they let so many players
leave and then pull the two pieces of the puzzle that would start a domino
affect on the players who were still left?
"Yes, Signore Galliani, that's a daily bathtub filled with champagne, and a vat filled with caviar in addition to wages and bonuses" |
Yes,
they could use this opportunity to
rebuild. But what signs have you seen that they will? They are meeting with the
agents of Tevez (approx. €26m transfer fee plus €13-16m in wages) and Rolando (has a €30m buyout clause in
his contract) this week. How would that be rebuilding? No this is
cash in on the players you can get the most cash for, and then send Galliani in
with his tire iron to try to steal other players who might give us almost as
much quality as the players we’ve lost. With similar costs and wages. And now a
lesser support system, too. How is that rebuilding? We are not shopping young
players, we won’t take risks with our own Primavera, we’ve shipped them all out
to Serie B clubs despite having as much or more potential than the older
players we’ve purchased. This is not rebuilding, it’s refinancing. And everyone
knows what you get when you refinance – higher cost in the end.
No one ever listens to blondes, apparently dyeing her hair red didn't work, either |
This
is an epic fail from the club. We’ve been here before, only it’s getting worse
every time. What will happen next, will Berlusconi sell his own daughter? I
imagine that might be why she was brought into the board, because it’s not as
if he listens to her. And she clearly has more sense than he’s ever had.
As
fans of a team with a room full of trophies and a proud heritage of amazing
players, we have been spoiled and have come to expect the best from our team.
To be fair, the best always have some bumps in the road. But this is a bump
that is all too familiar, one that is getting bigger and more treacherous all
the time. I will not relax and wait for Galliani to “do his magic” in the
mercato. I can see now that we have been here before, only not so badly. I can
see now that if you take away 10 players with so much talent and experience,
fill in with a few players without much Serie A experience, then take away the
two players on your squad who are top 5 in the world at their position and try
to replace them with players who aren’t (if they even get replaced,) you will
NOT have the same level of team the following season. It’s not rocket science,
it’s common sense.
"Without Thiago, where are we going...without Ibra, there is no challenge!!!" |
Sure,
I’m hoping they will reinvest at least some of the monies. Of course I want
Galliani to find us some players with a lot of talent and lower wages. Who doesn’t want
an infusion of promising youth, players who work hard and are talented enough
to play at such a big club? But I don’t trust that any of that will happen. Not
only have we never seen those things before at Milan, but Galliani was a big
part in the raping and pillaging of our team, which we now know was calculated
and planned. They told us Thiago Silva had to be sold, then that he would stay
and asked us to thank the President as they were planning to add Ibra to the
deal. If you still trust these guys, you truly might have fallen off of the
turnip truck yesterday. Although they do say that ignorance is bliss.
The
bottom line is that I love this club. I want to believe, but I am not naïve. I
am ready to swallow the bitter pill of the reality that we are in, and hope to
be pleasantly surprised by the outcome. But I cannot sit here and tell myself
that everything is going to be okay, because it isn’t. This is the worst
exodus, with the worst financial issues, and the absolute worst treatment of
the players and fans that I have seen. And don’t forget our worst injury
plague, too. It’s all of our worsts all put together to make one giant
catastrophe. This club’s management needs a massive overhaul in attitude and
practices if it is going to stay competitive and stay solvent. Without that, I
shudder to think what the future holds. The pieces just don’t fit.
This post inspired by the music of
Nirvana’s “Rape Me”
Our Next Match is the Trofeo TIM Tournament in Bari
THIS Saturday, July 21st
Inter vs. Juve begins at 20:45 CEST (2:45pm EDT)
Milan play at 21:45 CEST (3:45pm EDT) and 22:45 CEST (4:45pm EDT)
The tournament consists of three 45 min. matches
between Milan, Juve, and Inter
Our Next Match is the Trofeo TIM Tournament in Bari
THIS Saturday, July 21st
Inter vs. Juve begins at 20:45 CEST (2:45pm EDT)
Milan play at 21:45 CEST (3:45pm EDT) and 22:45 CEST (4:45pm EDT)
The tournament consists of three 45 min. matches
between Milan, Juve, and Inter