When a club like AC Milan produces performances and results
like this season, people are quick to look for the reasons why. Some blame
management, some blame the coach, some blame the players, some blame Inter, or
any combination of those and other reasons. In fact in the last post, we answered
10 different questions about the poor performances. However, many right
now want to blame the quality of the squad. Which is actually a little different than
blaming the summer mercato, as the Curva recently protested. A few weeks
ago, I wrote about this, but recent events inspired me to expound
further. So I thought I’d take a minute today to talk about the quality of our
current squad.
These "quality" signings were part of the team that turned around last November with a little pep talk |
If you look back one year ago until right now, our squad is
actually improved in many ways. We spent about €47,5m on new players and only
received €25m for players we sold. Which means we at least have players who are
worth more in transfer fees, and that doesn’t include deals like Kaká, who
arrived on a free transfer. Here is the list again that compares the squad from
last year to the squad we have now. Players in grey have moved on, players in
red are new either from the January or summer mercato:
In defense, we lost Acerbi, Antonini, Didac Vila, and Yepes.
But we gained Silvestre, Zaccardo, and Vergara. Definite improvement. In the midfield, we
lost Ambrosini, Boateng, Mesbah, Strasser, and Traore. But we gained Birsa,
Cristante, Poli, and Saponara. Which mostly fits with the plan to bring in more
youth. Up front, we lost Bojan Krkic and Pato, but we gained Balotelli, Kaká,
and Matri. Despite most people agreeing that the Matri deal is one of the worst
deals ever, we got Balotelli and Kaká, and kept four very talented strikers. I
cannot understand how anyone can argue that the squad is the same as or less than
it was one year ago.
But based on results, it is easy to see why people would
want somewhere to point the blame. For example, our most recent result against
Chievo paints a horrible picture. They were the worst team in the league,
coming into the match with only 4 points. Meanwhile, we won a Scudetto just
over 2 years ago, but came into the match only 4 points above the relegation
zone. So to play to a 0-0 draw is unthinkable. But it wasn’t because of squad
quality. Just compare not only the squads, but also the wage bills of the two
clubs, and you’ll see that we lack nothing of quality in this matchup:
Source: La Gazzetta dello Sport 9-9-13 (salaries listed on the right in millions euro) |
That’s right, Milan’s wage bill is €105,000,000 and Chievo’s
is €17,6m. So even if you want to argue about several of our players being
overpaid, and maybe a few of their players being underpaid, there is a vast
discrepancy in quality. Not even our small handful of injuries at this point
can justify drawing with that team. Sure, there are miracle games, surprise
results. Only this was just the most recent in a whole season of very, very
disappointing results. But you can’t blame quality for the results.
What the curva protested was the mercato itself – that they had wanted reinforcements in the midfield and defense instead of strikers. And that
is a fair point. Looking at the quality we have up front, we are definitely
weaker in those areas. I think it is also fair to question the club for buying or taking on loan older players like Zaccardo, Silvestre, Coppola, Kaka, and Matri and giving some of them lengthy contracts when they told us they
were committed to youth and no long contracts. And one could argue that the squad that broke its poor
form mid-November last year and never really looked back was more cohesive
because the management had a plan, and they all understood what it was.
Contrast that with this current squad, where the confusion starts at the top,
dominated the summer mercato, and trickles all the way down to the players. No
one is sure of their place or what direction the club is heading this year.
That is a very valid argument, and could easily be one reason that a squad of
this quality
is performing so poorly.
Chievo want different results, so they have done something different |
Looking back at the Chievo match, it is interesting. Chievo
have never won a Scudetto, breaking into the top ten to finish a season in
Serie A is their best finish to date. But they are not particularly underperforming, just
fighting to stay in Serie A and compete on some level with teams like ours whose quality and wage bill
is nearly six times their wage bill. But rather than further risk relegation, the club
fired Sannino after just 12 matches. And I would be willing to bet that they
will get more than 5 points in their next 12 matches, simply because they were
willing to make a change. In the long term, it doesn't always work out, but in the short term, changing a coach is a way to get better results from an underperforming team.
Contrast that with Milan, who were expected to place top three,
certainly have the quality of squad to make that happen, and now sit 4 points
above relegation after 12 games. With no sign of changing, having already hit
the ritiro panic button not once but twice, with no real results, Milan have chosen
to keep Allegri on, with no other apparent plans to change anything. So if we
keep on doing the same things we’ve always done, we’re likely to keep on
getting the same results we’ve always gotten. And regardless of whether or not
you like Allegri, or believe in sacking a coach mid-season or think there is
not a viable replacement available, or whatever, making a change now is just about the only
hope we have of turning things around.
Adding more quality shouldn't hurt, but will it help enough? And will it come to late? |
People are quick to point out that we’ve signed Rami, who
will be available to us as of January 1st, and Honda is still expected, even
though nothing has been officially announced yet. This will improve our squad quality
that much more come January, and are maybe more the type of reinforcements we
needed over the summer. And of course, a squad can always be improved. But if quality was never the issue in the
first place, how can we cling to the notion that bringing in those two players or even more will change the performance of the team?
The issues are many, they start at the top and are
manifested at every level. They are not easily solved. But to get short term
results, there is something that can be done right now, and it is not being
done. The quality of this team is greater than that of the little-engine-that-could team
that pulled itself up by its bootstraps after a good old-fashioned pep talk
from the club president last year. And with a couple of reinforcements that
came in 10 weeks after their turnaround (and a LOT of luck from the refs), they pulled out a third place finish.
Personal issues, moving headquarters, and more prevent management from seeing what the team really needs |
But there is no one able to give that pep talk this year,
something which always should have come from the coach, anyway. So find someone
who can motivate and make the change. Because if the squad we had last year
could do it, certainly this improved squad should be able to do it this year.
Especially with the reinforcements already on the way. Talk about the
management, talk about the coach, talk about the poor mercato, but this squad
has way too much quality for that to be to blame.
This post inspired by
the music of the Foo Fighters
Our next match is a FRIENDLY
Young Boys vs. Milan
Saturday, November 16 • 18:30 CET (12:30pm EST)