It was unimaginable that a
team with Champions League aspirations would lose three of their first seven
matches, even if they were a new team with so many new players. It was impossible
to think that a coach who was under fire would wait until his team conceded two
goals and a player asking to be subbed before he made a single change. So
difficult to understand how a team like Milan would play a game that was so
much improved to recent matches against their toughest opponent yet, and then
implode in the space of eight minutes to drop three points. At the final
whistle, I think everyone was in a state of disbelief.
Disbelief |
In a crowd of almost 62,000,
there were a lot of famous people: Totti, Baresi, Barbara Berlusconi, Galliani, Gattuso,
Cafu, Oddo, the injured Conti, and of course most importantly, the
incomparable Jovan. And Milan stepped up to reward their attendance.
The match started off very physically, but also with quality plays on both
sides. There were also errors made, things as simple as slipping or taking
someone down clumsily or more consequential errors like Calhanoglu’s first
yellow in the 33rd, which even he forgot about. Of course the most
egregious error was Roma’s “white” kit that was cream/off-white across the
shoulders, then white for the body. Not only do white and off-white not go
together, it looked like they ran out of white fabric and were too poor, so
color-blocked the off-white. So wrong.
The first 70 minutes were a
proper battle. There were shots, Milan would take 17 with only three on goal.
And Roma would only take 11 shots, but with a more clinical six on goal. There
were fouls, there were moments of brilliance on both sides. Speaking of moments
of brilliance, check out Andre Silva’s highlight reel. You know, the expensive
striker whom Montella never plays in Serie A? Especially look at the 12th
minute, how he takes the ball away, and the 64th minute, when he
completely schools Bruno Peres. Silva had a fantastic game in only his second
start in Serie A. Surprising that Kalinic is the striker who has so much Serie
A experience, it looked completely the opposite.
Not even a great performance will see him get more playing time |
But our world came crashing
down when El Shaarawy created a chance for Dzeko, who did not disappoint and
scored in the 72nd. 1-0 Roma. To Milan’s credit, they did not shy
away after the goal. But in the 75th, Kalinic was shown on camera
asking to be subbed. Still waiting for Montella to do something after conceding
and having an injured player, in the 77th, Florenzi scored from a
rebound of a Nainggolan shot Donnarumma had impressively parried away. 2-0 Roma.
Still nothing from Montella, but Di Francesco was able to make a sub in the 78th.
Finally, Montella subbed Kalinic off in the 79th. And apparently,
that was so unbelievable, Calhanoglu forgot he was on a yellow and made a
foolish challenge to get himself sent off for a second yellow in the 80th.
And Montella would only make one more sub in the 84th.
Montella is supposedly
supported by the team and by Mirabelli and Fassone, despite losing three of
seven Serie A matches with so much money having been spent this summer. But
Montella is not in favor with the fans. And not just in times of loss, either.
Heavily criticized for his formation choice, lineups, and late subs, I would
say that it was the latter that was so incredulously unbelievable on this
night. Look at what occurred before he subbed: a goal conceded, Kalinic asking
for a sub, another goal conceded, and a Roma sub made. His subs should have
started around the 60th, that is a normal timeframe, but they never
do, no matter what is happening on the pitch. And he let the game slip through
our fingers while he did nothing. He doesn’t even seem to know the definition
of reaction, or what an impact sub is or can do for a team. He rotates the
squad like a ferris wheel from game to game, but then makes everyone play 90
minutes. A healthier way to rotate would be to sub from the 60th
minute on to give more people consistent appearances, but shorter appearances
to help prevent injuries.
Rising above the criticism, but still more defensive errors in this system that still doesn't fit |
The game was actually really
exciting, and lost in the result is the fact that a beleaguered Milan pinned
Roma back for 70 minutes and actually got more shots off. But eight short
minutes of defensive errors and a manager who was apparently paralyzed is what
determined the game, and that is so disappointing. I don’t know what Montella
can do to win back the fans, as he has slowly and consistently dug his grave
with them from early in the season. I know we are told to have patience, but
patience is accepting things that happen. It is not patience to expect us to
continue to accept his lack of accountability for his poor decisions, or the
unnecessary results that go with. In a game that looked like we could certainly
pull off a draw, we ended up with a loss. And that leaves me in a state of
disbelief.
This post inspired by the music of EMF’s
“Unbelievable”
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Milan 0, Roma 2: Disbelief
Reviewed by Elaine
on
8:04 AM
Rating: