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> Milan sack Allegri

 
Fillipo Simone
post Jan 14 2014, 08:02 PM
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You mention Kluivert, but he's with van Gaal and Holland, isn't he?

Yes, there's a big gamble with those guys. All of them great players, but none of them experienced. Tassotti staying would be a good start therefore.

But it will, I hope, open up some possibilities for Milan in Holland which is a big talent nest. I'm sure Seedorf, Stam and possibly Davids would do the trick and lure a few talents into our arms.
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Ry4n
post Jan 14 2014, 09:41 PM
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Tassotti staying with Allegri did him no good and i think we need a fresh start Seedorf needs his own back room staff not people from before. Seedorf looks like he wants to bring in his own staff in which i hope he does Tassotti has it in him to be a good Serie A coach its time he steps up.
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mishie
post Jan 14 2014, 10:19 PM
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QUOTE (Fillipo Simone @ Jan 14 2014, 09:02 PM) *
You mention Kluivert, but he's with van Gaal and Holland, isn't he?

Yes, there's a big gamble with those guys. All of them great players, but none of them experienced. Tassotti staying would be a good start therefore.

But it will, I hope, open up some possibilities for Milan in Holland which is a big talent nest. I'm sure Seedorf, Stam and possibly Davids would do the trick and lure a few talents into our arms.

Kluivert and Van Gaal all leave after the world cup, yes i agree it's a gamble but IMO worth taking just see what Anchelotti said about Clarence tonight...i'm feeling positive for the 1st time in months
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TriniKing_CE
post Jan 14 2014, 11:30 PM
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Seedorf has confirmed that he will coach Milan:

http://msn.foxsports.com/foxsoccer/seriea/...an-coach-011414?
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TriniKing_CE
post Jan 14 2014, 11:37 PM
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QUOTE
TASSOTTI'S PRESS CONFERENCE - FIRST TEAM


(IMG:http://media3.acmilan.com/uploads/news/images/TASSOTTI_BIG.jpg)

MILANELLO – Please see below the latest from coach Mauro Tassotti’s press conference ahead of Milan-Spezia:


Speaking about tomorrow’s opposition Spezia: "Tomorrow is an important match. It seems the best way to get back into Europe. In the league we’re behind. Tomorrow we won’t experiment too much. It’s a difficult time, but the players need to understand that tomorrow is a vital match. We need to take advantage of the occasions that come our way against Spezia and try to go all the way in the competition. It’s a delicate moment for the club. We will have to be careful. Spezia have some good players and a great coach. They will have lots of their fans cheering them on and perhaps our fans will be angry. The Italian Cup is the best route to qualify for Europe."

There were naturally questions about the dismissal of Massimiliano Allegri: "A dismissal is never easy to take. The atmosphere was very sad. We’re in a privileged position, but it wasn’t an easy time for us. At the end of the day, the coach pays the ultimate price, but we the staff also share the responsibility. By now it’s too late. We had plenty of chances to turn things around. The dismissal was inevitable. Yesterday was hard and sad to see Allegri clearing out his locker. The results are what hurt us the most. The defensive problems? Last year we also started badly and recovered in the second part of the season, only losing to Juventus and Barcelona. We played differently and better. This year we started better, but we changed the way we played compared to last year. We lost some important players and we’ve made the situation hard for ourselves. Unfortunately things haven’t gone the way we planned and we haven’t been able to sort it out."

Asked about possible replacement Seedorf, here is what Tassotti had to say: "I’ve been here 34 years and I’m committed to the club. I can give my contribution and it seems logical to confirm my commitment. I don’t know anything about Seedorf. What Allegri said is true. There have been fantastic footballers who have coached for a couple of years only to then realise they’re not up to the job. Of course, Seedorf has the qualities in place to do well, he’s got great character and this will help him a lot. A change in coach can certainly change things, but the players also need to play their part. I haven’t got any advice for Seedorf. He knows the Milan set-up as well as me. If he wants to know the current situation of the players, I’m happy to bring him up to date."

Coach Tassotti put the match ahead of his future with the club: "The thing that has worried me the most has been the injuries. This needs to be looked at in my opinion. I chose to be an assistant. I had the chance earlier to be a head coach, but I preferred to stay here. I’ve got no regrets about it. The players need to understand the current situation. They need to fight for every inch. We can’t perform like we did at Sassuolo. To concede 4 goals in that manner is unacceptable. Without taking anything away from them, our attitude was all wrong. We expect the side to react. The side can play a couple of formations. I have a contract until the end of June and I remain committed to Milan. In June the club and I will talk. However, none of this is important, the most important thing is tomorrow’s match."

Mauro Tassotti had this to say about individual players: “Pazzini will play tomorrow. In defence we will see and Rami has a good chance of playing. We’ll make sure Honda plays in his role. Abbiati will play tomorrow. We’re happy with Honda and the minutes played against Sassuolo. He showed his technical abilities and his danger in the final third of the pitch. Kakà and Honda can play together. Birsa and Abate are recovering. We’ve never had Abate and De Sciglio together at the same time. They’re vital players to our game."

A final word was reserved for the club’s management: “The club has always been close to us. The squad need to understand that you play in 11 for the good of the team, not for individual glory. Despite a difficult first part of the season, the club has always been there. We need to just focus on getting points.”


Link: http://www.acmilan.com/en/news/show/150842
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Ry4n
post Jan 15 2014, 03:44 AM
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If no one has read this here it is :

from Euro sport , a very good read.

http://uk.eurosport.yahoo.com/blogs/pitchs...ZW4tR0I-;_ylv=3

Allegri’s unsavoury departure leaves AC Milan in a mess


By Eurosport | Pitchside Europe – 12 hours ago

(IMG:http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/BalmIjeGQXvZV3XB.HamPQ--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en-GB/blogs/pitchside-europe/allegrimaxc.jpg)

Late Sunday night, Massimiliano Allegri appeared in front of the cameras of La Domenica Sportiva, Italy’s Match of the Day. He was told of a statement made by Barbara Berlusconi, the daughter of Milan’s owner, recently elevated within the club to vice-president and chief executive, the same rank as Adriano Galliani.
It had been “a disappointing evening, like the others, which confirms how, with the contribution of everybody, it’s both necessary and urgent to change,” she had explained to ANSA, the Italian news agency. “It’s no longer tolerable that our fans assist in unacceptable performances like these.”
Your heart would have to be made of stone not to feel sympathy for Allegri while watching him listen to that, biting his lip, not knowing where to look, an anguished expression on his face. He was hearing, second-hand, live on national TV that he’d essentially been sacked. Whatever you make of Allegri’s time at Milan - and it divides opinion - and regardless of whether his dismissal was by then imminent and had attained a sense of inevitability, he didn’t deserve that. It was horrible, a reminder of how cruel this profession can be at times.
Milan had just lost 4-3 to Sassuolo. They had been 2-0 up after barely more than 10 minutes only for Domenico Berardi, a teenager co-owned by Juventus, to become the youngest player to score a poker (four goals) since Silvio Piola and also the first to do so against Milan. Their defending had been appalling. Sassuolo had lost their last five games in all competitions. They hadn’t scored in that time and their coach Eusebio di Francesco was in more jeopardy of losing his job than Allegri. Their situation going into Sunday night made the end result all the more damaging for Milan.
There was a touch of irony too. Sassuolo, a club from a small-town with a population half the size of San Siro, are owned by a Milan fan, the tiles and ceramics empresario and head of Italy’s employers’ union Giorgio Squinzi. Close to Berlusconi, he claimed in May that “every now and again” the Milan president calls him to complain how “[Allegri] doesn’t understand anything [about football].” That’s not Squinzi’s experience.
It was under him at Sassuolo where Allegri first established himself as a bright young coach, setting them on this run to the top flight by achieving promotion from the third to the second division in 2008. So for Allegri to be relieved of his duties after a game against them was, from a certain perspective, to come full circle.
Though the end of his time at Milan felt nigh, he could have survived Sunday night but only if the club had put on a united front. Even though Galliani has insisted that the issues between himself and Barbara Berlusconi have been “resolved” after she challenged his authority by asking her father for a change in direction following a defeat to Fiorentina in early November, the weekend’s events and its fallout would indicate that they haven’t, which was fairly predictable.
The right thing to do, if there was consensus on the decision to sack Allegri, would have been to issue a joint statement. Instead, while Galliani [portrayed almost as though he were distracted] spoke on the phone to Berlusconi senior, Barbara gave one of her own to ANSA that made the coach’s position untenable. It has been presented as quite Machiavellian. Wasn’t Galliani supposed to be the one who made the football-related decisions?

That was a condition on which he’d apparently decided to stay after offering his resignation in late November following Barbara’s initial outburst. She would instead look after the commercial side of things, Milan’s brand management and marketing strategy. Barbara’s actions on Sunday indicate she still doesn’t intend to limit herself to just that. An uneasy compromise just got more awkward.
If Allegri has gone, it’s in part because of results, but also a Game of Thrones, which, Galliani, his chief sponsor and protector, appears to have lost. “I am sorry for Allegri and for how it’s turned out,” he said, “above all on a human level.”
I too have some sympathy for him. If you listened to some supporters, you’d think Allegri had presided over the worst period in Milan’s history. He hasn’t. As Inter’s former director Peppino Prisco liked to remind his rivals, Milan didn’t win a Scudetto between 1907 and 1951. What about the worst of the Berlusconi era then? Well, Milan placed 10th in 1997 and 11th in 1998. Berlusconi was able to spend then in a way he isn’t prepared to now, though. That shouldn’t be forgotten when judging Allegri.
While he leaves them down in 11th, his record over three full seasons really isn’t all that bad: 1st, 2nd and 3rd. The job Allegri did last season, ‘Year Zero’ for Milan after the “painful but necessary” sales of Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Thiago Silva and goodbyes waved to Alessandro Nesta, Rino Gattuso, Clarence Seedorf and Pippo Inzaghi, was more impressive than when he ended a seven-year wait for the Scudetto in his first season.

For that he merits immense credit and can count on the respect not only of the Curva Sud, who issued a statement thanking him on Monday night, but also illustrious peers like Cesare Prandelli, Marcello Lippi, Fabio Capello and the FIGC who are expected to strongly consider him for the Italy job if the post becomes available after the World Cup.
Of course Allegri made mistakes too, principal among them his decision not to accept an offer to join Roma in the summer and leave Milan with his dignity intact. A close second to that and arguably what he has never been able to live down would be consenting to the exit of Andrea Pirlo as part of the club’s cost-cutting measures, which swung the balance of power to Juventus in 2011.
Third would be rushing Thiago Silva back from injury in spring 2012 only for him to suffer a relapse, a decision more costly in their failed title defence than the referee and linesman’s choice not to allow Sulley Muntari’s goal in the decider that season with Juve.
Granted, his team selections were perplexing at times and - looking at the squad available to him in particular this season, a lack of depth at the full-back position aside - he could have played more expansive football than he did, providing, that is, everyone was fit which hasn’t always been the case. After the improvement in the second half of last season, further evolution was expected in this. Instead Milan struggled.
They’re now in a chaos of their own making. The plan had been for Allegri to see out the final year of his contract and then leave at the end of this season amid the expectation that Clarence Seedorf would take over. Now they have to throw someone in at the deep end. Rather than bring their plans forward, it would in my opinion be better to leave the team in Mauro Tassotti’s temporary charge until the summer. Why? Because that way they won’t burn anyone.
Imagine the situation: Milan, as anticipated, extricate Seedorf from his playing contract with Botofogo, he takes charge of the team [with special dispensation: he doesn’t have a UEFA Pro license] without having a pre-season, the coaching staff he desires [Jaap Stam and Hernan Crespo apparently] and the time to implement his ideas and Milan continue to do badly. Were that to happen it might become hard to make a case for him remaining in charge for the following season.
The same goes for Pippo Inzaghi if Milan were to promote him from his post as coach of their senior youth team, the Primavera. What if he were to do well? What then of their plans for Seedorf? They wouldn’t be able to tell Inzaghi to go back to the youth team - his job would have been taken. And as someone with aspirations to be a first team coach in his own right rather than an assistant, it’s improbable to think of him accepting a role on Seedorf’s staff.
The whole thing’s a mess. Milan should have resisted the temptation to sack Allegri, got to the end of the season, then reviewed things: for then Prandelli might have emerged as an alternative to Seedorf and offered the promise to rebuild Milan like he has done Italy since 2010. Berlusconi, however, has an intuition about Seedorf as he did about Arrigo Sacchi and Fabio Capello. He was right then. Milan fans can only hope he is now.


James Horncastle - @JamesHorncastle

I'm glad finally gone but this club has no class anymore , it surely looks like it left with the classy players we once had now its Balo fricken telli the constant diver the cry baby when shite hits the fan its a comedy. Also two facking captains of one ship one steering one way the other not knowing which way is east or west... its a joke and it is the managements fault entirely we are an embarrassment on the pitch and off it.

This post has been edited by Ry4n: Jan 15 2014, 11:21 AM
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Linkman
post Jan 15 2014, 05:27 AM
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True enough, Ryan. For all his faults, Allegri didn't deserve to hear about his dismissal second hand, on TV, no less.
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kurtsimonw
post Jan 15 2014, 07:59 AM
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This club has changed so much over the past 6 or 7 years, in every single way.
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mishie
post Jan 15 2014, 10:55 AM
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QUOTE (kurtsimonw @ Jan 15 2014, 08:59 AM) *
This club has changed so much over the past 6 or 7 years, in every single way.

that's why Clarence has been told to restore the clubs values hopefully this is a step towards progressive technical football with youth being given a chance
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X-Offender
post Jan 15 2014, 11:21 AM
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(IMG:https://scontent-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc3/1518360_689675854389064_397690321_n.png)

(IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif)
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X-Offender
post Jan 15 2014, 11:32 AM
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Seedorf: Iron first

1) More work at Milanello: two hours on the pitch then specialized training for each department
2) Tough discipline: the coach is always right; no coming late to training and healthy lifestyle
3) Visits of family and friends during training, transfers and trips will be reduced.

Source: Corriere

Seedorf's Milan:

(IMG:https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Bd__IhfCcAAzoWA.png)

Source: Gazzetta

I call BS on this one. First of all, there is no way in hell that he'll play Muntari over De Jong. Secondly, I was just reading yesterday how he loves 4-3-3 and now he's gonna play 4-3-1-2? All these initial assumptions on line-up and formation is just guesswork, and not a very bright one.
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X-Offender
post Jan 15 2014, 11:33 AM
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Oh, and many sources are also mentioning that Seedorf's first target will be Adam Maher of PSV.
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Danny
post Jan 15 2014, 11:59 AM
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If he picks Muntari I'll laugh till I puke.
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Fillipo Simone
post Jan 15 2014, 12:43 PM
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And no Abate?
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han2503
post Jan 15 2014, 12:59 PM
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QUOTE (Fillipo Simone @ Jan 15 2014, 12:43 PM) *
And no Abate?

And Bonera ahead of Zapata and Rami. That line-up just makes whoever wrote that seem retarded

Abate is still recovering and Tassotti also reiterated the importance of his and DS's involvement in the FB areas
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