
China Evergrande to delay creditors' meetings amid fresh restructuring plan
Embattled property developer China Evergrande Group on Wednesday resolved to delay its meetings for the Hong Kong CEG
2023-08-16 19:45

Logitech founder calls on computer peripherals group to find new chairperson
By John Revill ZURICH Logitech co-founder Daniel Borel stepped up his call for it to find a new
2023-09-15 18:44

AC Milan are back – but not as how you remember them
The European Cup is approaching its 70th birthday and only one city has produced two clubs who have won it. Not Madrid or Manchester or London. Definitely not Rome or Paris or Berlin, each still awaiting its first, but Milan. Two of the first four winners were AC Milan and Inter. They were two of the four between 2007 and 2010, too. Since then, nothing. As recently as 2015-16, neither was even in Europe. Now they are in the Champions League’s last four, albeit with the caveat that there is a chance neither even finishes in Serie A’s top four. A glamour game this week also has the feel of a throwback fixture. It is the 236th derby di Milano. Four of the previous 235 were in the Champions League: two in the 2005 quarter-finals, two in the 2003 semi-finals. Then Milan were a team with imperial grandeur, with a kind of elegant, aristocratic superiority that meant they didn’t need to run that match. Now manager Stefano Pioli has described Milan as “a project... to invest in young, talented players”. Then it was the natural home of the rich and famous, now Pioli has the youngest team in Serie A. Rewind 20 years and Milan had a relatively young manager, in Carlo Ancelotti, and a side featuring two of his old teammates: at 37, Alessandro Costacurta spent his time pottering about on the halfway line at right-back, as though unaware of the concept of the attacking full-back. He won his fourth Champions League in the final at Old Trafford and got a fifth in 2007, at 41. Paolo Maldini went on to 41, too, having first won the European Cup in the 1980s, playing for Milan for 24 years. There is a forty-something now, but he has a watching brief: Zlatan Ibrahimovic was not registered for the Champions League for the knockout stages. And if he recovered from injury quicker than Milan expected, that omission nevertheless displayed their lack of confidence in their ability to progress beyond the last 16. Ibrahimovic is closer to Maldini and even Costacurta in age than to many of his colleagues. In profile, too: Milan evolved in the 2000s into the natural destination for the big names. At the San Siro, Ancelotti first showed his skill at managing and massaging egos, and not merely owner Silvio Berlusconi’s. The president invariably wanted him to select two strikers; one, Andriy Shevchenko, scored the winning penalty in the 2003 final; another, Hernan Crespo, an oft-forgotten double in the 2005 final defeat; and a third, Filippo Inzaghi, a match-winning double in the 2007 final; his younger brother, current Inter manager Simone, may recall it. The problem in following Berlusconi’s orders was that Milan, with a surfeit of talent, also tended to be well-stocked with No 10s: Rivaldo spent some of the 2002-03 season on the bench, Ronaldinho later spent three seasons at the San Siro, and Kaka won a Ballon d’Or there. Ancelotti had so many playmakers a midfield could include three of four, with Andrea Pirlo anchoring, Clarence Seedorf adding to his collection of Champions Leagues, and Rui Costa providing languid elegance. It was an exaggeration to say the workhorse Gennaro Gattuso had to do the running of four men but he was surrounded by artists. If it was a far cry from the hard-pressing style Arrigo Sacchi had introduced in the late 1980s, the ethos is very different from the modern Milan. The supersized budget is gone. If the greats used to gravitate to Milan, now the search is on for the up-and-coming. Smart scouting involves value for money. The term Galactico was invoked to describe Real Madrid’s stars but, for years, felt equally applicable to Milan’s. Not now. Pierre Kalulu cost €480,000 and has made the second most appearances for them this season. Ismael Bennacer came from relegated Empoli and struck against Napoli in the quarter-finals. Olivier Giroud may be a World Cup winner and a France great but he was picked up for a bargain €1m and was the other scorer against Napoli. Brahim Diaz, borrowed from Real for three seasons, delivered the winner against Tottenham in the last 16. The relatively low-profile Junior Messias, Alexis Saelemaekers, Rade Krunic and Tommaso Pobega help sum up the new Milan. Davide Calabria may follow in the footsteps of Maldini and Franco Baresi by captaining European Cup-winning teams, but he is less celebrated. Charles de Ketelaere is a rare failure in the transfer market but Mike Maignan and Rafael Leao represent coups, match-winners at either end of the pitch. Yet it is notable that even De Ketelaere, the most expensive player in this squad, cost less than Rui Costa did in 2001. The side that started the second leg against Napoli cost around €140m: much less than the combined fees paid for Rui Costa, Inzaghi, Seedorf, Shevchenko and Alessandro Nesta, without even accounting for inflation over the last two decades. If Leao, an injury doubt, does not start on Wednesday, the team of 2023 could be cheaper still. Even if he does, there is far less stardust than in the past. It is AC Milan, but not how we used to know them. But astute business has offered a road back from obscurity. They may prove the least talented, least garlanded Milan team to reach a Champions League final. But the key element is that they may reach a Champions League final. Read More The Milan derby crowns Serie A’s return - but it also means so much more Is AC Milan vs Inter on TV? Kick-off time, channel and how to watch Champions League semi-final AC Milan vs Inter predicted line-ups: Team news ahead of Champions League semi-final
1970-01-01 08:00

Exclusive-From Russia with gold: UAE cashes in as sanctions bite
By Peter Hobson LONDON The United Arab Emirates has become a key trade hub for Russian gold since
2023-05-25 13:07

Venice's Grand Canal turns phosphorescent green
A stretch of Venice's Grand Canal turned bright green Sunday, prompting police to investigate amid speculation about...
2023-05-28 21:30

Dubai’s Latest Property Spree Has Rich Buyers Taking More Risk
On Dubai’s manmade island of Palm Jumeirah, soaring laser beams signal the latest outsized construction project getting started.
2023-06-22 09:00

5 Evan Stewart transfer destinations after Jimbo Fisher's firing at Texas A&M
With Texas A&M firing its former head coach Jimbo Fisher, keep an eye on former five-star wide receiver Evan Stewart hitting the transfer portal. He may not, but here is where the star sophomore wideout could be playing at next season.
2023-11-19 05:01

Recreational marijuana is now legal in Minnesota but the state is still working out retail sales
Minnesota’s legalization of recreational marijuana went into effect Tuesday
2023-08-02 02:05

UC Irvine leads the entire 2nd half and upsets No. 16 Southern California 70-60
Devin Tillis scored five points in the final three minutes, including a 3-pointer with 37.4 seconds remaining, and UC Irvine upset No. 16 Southern California 70-60
2023-11-15 14:38

New Zealand to Seek Trade Diversity as China Slows, Hipkins Says
New Zealand’s government plans to focus on trade diversification to help insulate its economy from the slowdown in
2023-09-06 12:13

Danelo Cavalcante reveals surviving on stolen watermelon for 13 days, says police almost stepped on him thrice
The prison where Danelo Cavalcante is booked is described as a 'state-of-the-art facility' by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections
2023-09-15 01:04

Fortnite One Piece Creative Map Code
The Fortnite One Piece Creative map code is 7374-8187-1871 and will transport players into a One Piece-inspired pirate adventure in Fortnite.
2023-09-07 00:18
You Might Like...

Father held in France for making death threats over abaya ban

Best Early Black Friday 2023 Soundbar Deals: LG, Bose, Sony, More

CyberLink PowerDirector 365 Review

'The fun aunt we all need': 'The View' host Ana Navarro's 'dinner party' tale involving cops leaves fans impressed

SCOTUS tells Alabama it meant what it said the first time

Israeli troops kill 5 Palestinians, including 3 militants, as West Bank violence surges

What is Paige Spiranac scared of? Golf influencer reveals her 'biggest fear', fans say 'those little s**ts are ruthless'

Pinger Named to Fortune 2023 Best Small and Medium Workplaces in the Bay Area List