logo
Inter Milan Vice-President Zanetti Compares Current Champions League Finalists To 2010 Treble Heroes – Adds ‘Here's Where The Serie A Title Was Lost'

Inter Milan Vice-President Zanetti Compares Current Champions League Finalists To 2010 Treble Heroes – Adds ‘Here's Where The Serie A Title Was Lost'

Yahooa day ago

Inter Milan Vice-President Zanetti Compares Current Champions League Finalists To 2010 Treble Heroes – Adds 'Here's Where The Serie A Title Was Lost'
Javier Zanetti feels that there are similarities and differences between the current Inter Milan team and the team that won the Treble in 2010.
The Nerazzurri Vice-President spoke to Milan-based newspaper Il Giorno, via FCInterNews, in an interview in today's print edition. He also gave his thoughts on the failure in the Serie A title race.
Advertisement
Inter Milan are in the Champions League final. They are in the match for the second time in the space of three years.
The last time that Inter were here was just two years ago. They narrowly lost to Manchester City in the final of the 2022-23 edition of the competition.
Meanwhile, the last time the Nerazzurri actually won the Champions League was in 2010. They completed the European Treble along with the Serie A title and the Coppa Italia.
Javier Zanetti was the captain of Inter at that time. And now, the Argentine is the club's Vice-President.
Zanetti Compares Current Inter Milan UCL Finalists & 2010 Treble Heroes
FUCHU, JAPAN – FEBRUARY 11: Inter Vice President Javier Zanetti attends a press conference during the inauguration of Inter Academy Japan on February 11, 2017 in Fuchu, Japan. (Photo byfor FC Internazionale)
Zanetti looked back, 'My Inter was a very strong team,' he said.
Advertisement
'But this team is also very strong. They haven't gotten to the final by chance after eliminating Bayern Munich and Barcelona.'
'If we think about the days leading up to the event, we certainly got to the match feeling very fired up,' Zanetti said of the 2010 Champions League final.
'The team had the adrenaline of the players who had won the Scudetto and the Coppa Italia.'
'Now, the coach and the players have to digest the title that slipped from their fingers narrowly.'
'It's something that makes you angry,' Zanetti said.
Meanwhile, as far as the possibility that that disappointment in the title race could affect Inter's performance tomorrow, Zanetti said 'I don't think so.'
Advertisement
'The guys are motivated,' said the Vice-President. 'Unfortunately, everything happened right at the end of the season.'
'Maybe the loss in Bologna in stoppage time was decisive,' he admitted.
'But now we have to be optimistic. The team believes in it, and it will be a very balance match.'
'We hope for a happy ending,' Zanetti added. 'We can only praise this group that's reach two Champions League finals in three years.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

INEOS devise four-man shortlist of Delap alternatives – including 38-goal PL frontman and Osimhen
INEOS devise four-man shortlist of Delap alternatives – including 38-goal PL frontman and Osimhen

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

INEOS devise four-man shortlist of Delap alternatives – including 38-goal PL frontman and Osimhen

INEOS have had to go back to the drawing board after missing out on the signing of first-choice centre-forward target Liam Delap. Manchester United were informed this week that the Ipswich Town star had set his sights on a move to Chelsea, rebuffing interest from the Reds, Everton, Nottingham Forest and Newcastle United. Advertisement Chelsea have now taken the necessary steps to activate Delap's £30 million release clause before he'll formally join Enzo Maresca's already-stacked attacking options. United made to re-think transfer plans following Delap snub The Stamford Bridge outfit are preparing to add Liam Delap to their ranks. (Photo by) Now, it's a case of where United turn next. Their failure to qualify for the Champions League has made their pursuit of ambitious targets considerably more complicated; it's thought that's what deterred Delap from making the move after holding positive talks with the club over an Old Trafford switch. According to CaughtOffside, key decision-makers are racking their brains over potential forwards they could realistically welcome this summer, with Victor Osimhen, Jean-Philippe Mateta, Randal Kolo Muani and Jonathan David all of interest – the latter will be available for free ahead of his Lille release at the end of June. Who could lead Ruben Amorim's frontline next season? Of the quartet, Mateta is the only Premier League-proven option, having spent the last five seasons plying his trade at Crystal Palace. Advertisement Targeting players with respectable top-flight records has been an ongoing theme for INEOS in the lead-up to the window opening; Matheus Cunha is on the cusp of officially signing for United, while Bryan Mbeumo, Eberechi Eze and Emiliano Martinez have all been linked thus far. CaughtOffside also adds that United are long-standing admirers of Benjamin Sesko. However, the youngster is closing in on a move to Arsenal, who could be forced to fork out a fee as high as £75m to prise him from RB Leipzig, where he's tied down to a contract until 2029. More Stories / Latest News INEOS devise four-man shortlist of Delap alternatives – including 38-goal PL frontman and Osimhen Advertisement May 31 2025, 14:43 ESPN journo: United should move for 'proven' Liverpool ace who wants out this summer, he'd replace £47m let-down May 31 2025, 12:52 League winners now trying to 'soften up' United to agree £40m deal on their terms, negotiations underway May 31 2025, 9:20

Robocaller behind millions of illegal calls in Ohio permanently banned, attorney general announces
Robocaller behind millions of illegal calls in Ohio permanently banned, attorney general announces

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Robocaller behind millions of illegal calls in Ohio permanently banned, attorney general announces

A robocaller responsible for billions of illegal calls has been permanently banned in seven states, according to Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Texas-based robocaller John Spiller previously offered telemarketers robocall dialer and Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services through his companies Rising Eagle Capital Group, JSquared Telecom, and Rising Eagle Capital Group-Cayman. TRENDING STORIES: Man with filet knife arrested after standoff in Mercer County Local spa accused of operating as brothel; 2 arrested Popular music center gets a new name, $60 million gift to transform the venue Yost said this led to massive amounts of robocalls and often targeted numbers on the Do Not Call Registry. Spiller received a court order that barred him from making or facilitating robocalls in 2023. However, he used different names to create new companies that would continue facilitating the same types of illegal robocalls, according to Yost. These violations prompted eight attorneys general, including Yost, to seek a contempt of court order. Yost announced that a federal judge in Texas found Spiller in contempt of court on Thursday. Spiller is permanently prohibited from launching future telecommunications companies or operating in the telecom industry and must pay $600,000 in fees for violating the 2023 court order. He also cannot collaborate with the people who helped his operation, use aliases in government filings, or make deceptive statements, according to Yost. 'This scammer's line is dead — and it's not coming back,' Yost said. Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost was joined in this effort by the attorneys general of Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota and Texas. 'The judge's latest ruling sends a strong message that bad actors cannot evade court orders by simply operating under different business names,' Yost said. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

A 'criminal enterprise' may be emerging in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial
A 'criminal enterprise' may be emerging in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A 'criminal enterprise' may be emerging in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial

Capricorn Clark, a former assistant to music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs, said Combs was on a mission of revenge in December 2011 after learning rapper Kid Cudi was also dating his girlfriend, R&B singer Cassie. Combs, armed with a gun, commanded Clark to go with him to Cudi's Hollywood Hills estate, Clark testified this week during Combs' sex trafficking trial. ''Get dressed,'' Combs allegedly told Clark after beating on the door of her home. ''We're going to kill this n-----.'' Sign up for the 'Diddy on Trial' newsletter for key developments and analysis After Combs and a member of his security team broke into Cudi's home, she said, they saw he wasn't there, setting off a violent chain of events that she would tell a Bad Boy Records executive about three months later. 'I told him that Puff kidnapped me with a gun,' Clark said, referring to one of Combs' previous stage names. Clark's stunning testimony in the third week of Combs' trial provided another example of the control he allegedly wielded as head of his New York-based record label, building on the premise set forth by prosecutors that Combs allegedly oversaw a criminal enterprise that relied on employees and other accomplices to carry out illegal acts. Clark's 'testimony is certainly helpful in painting a sinister image of Combs, of his manipulation and his coercion, his control and his violence, which will be beneficial to the prosecution down the line in terms of gaining the jury's sympathies that this guy was up to no good and needs to be put away, or at least held accountable,' said Mark Chutkow, a defense lawyer who handled racketeering cases as a federal prosecutor in Detroit. Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to one count of racketeering conspiracy; two counts of sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion; and two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. As per the federal racketeering statute, the government must prove at least two predicate offenses, or crimes, committed via a criminal enterprise, Chutkow said. Cassie, whose real name is Casandra Ventura, spent four days on the stand in the first week of testimony, saying she 'felt trapped' into engaging in orchestrated sexual encounters, known as 'freak offs,' with male escorts at hotels and homes — sessions that she said Combs funded. Kid Cudi, whose legal name is Scott Mescudi, testified how his car was firebombed in January 2012, following the December break-in at his home. Los Angeles police also testified that evidence showed the break-in was connected to Combs. The car that police observed leaving the scene of the break-in at Kid Cudi's home was registered to one of Combs' companies, according to testimony from Los Angeles police officer Chris Ignacio. Another accuser, who used the pseudonym 'Mia' on the witness stand, testified that she worked for Combs as a personal assistant for several years and he sexually assaulted her on multiple occasions during that time. Combs was never charged in the firebombing or alleged sexual assaults. His defense team said in opening statements that Combs is a 'very flawed individual' prone to violence and jealousy in his relationships, but that the sexual encounters were consensual. The tangled relationships Combs had with his employees will have to be addressed by the jury during deliberations, Chutkow said, because prosecutors and defense attorneys have raised questions about whether the workers were victims, accomplices or both. For example, Clark, who testified she was paid $55,000 a year, said she set up hotel rooms for the freak-offs at Combs' direction and she sometimes procured illicit drugs on his behalf. Although she testified she was kidnapped twice by Combs or his bodyguards and subjected to multiple days of lie detector tests, defense attorney Marc Agnifilo entered into evidence an email Clark sent to Combs in September 2014, asking for his forgiveness. She did not specify what she wanted to be forgiven for. The email was sent two years after Combs fired her and about two years before she returned to work for him again. 'Mia' testified to sometimes feeling like Combs was a best friend and working partner, but other times treated her 'like I was a worthless piece of crap.' 'You do have these elements of extortion and coercion and fear and intimidation also at play, which you see in gangs and you see in the Mafia and other criminal organizations, and so I think that you don't necessarily have to have co-conspirators and accomplices that are completely voluntary in their commitment to the organization,' Chutkow said. Employees may have also realized the benefits of being in the powerful celebrity's inner circle and so may have been willing to go along, he added. 'That's why you hear the concept of a 'den of thieves,'' Chutkow said. 'They all have their own agendas at play, but they're still working together towards advancing other criminal objectives.' Chutkow said 'that's probably the way the prosecution will kind of categorize this for the jury, and say, 'Hey, we would love to be able to put on witnesses like firemen and nurses for you, but that's not the world that Combs worked in.'' Bad and illegal behavior does not necessarily guarantee a racketeering conviction, said Mark Zauderer, a veteran trial and appellate lawyer in New York. 'There is lots of evidence of violence and possible criminal activity,' he said of Combs' trial. 'But all of that still does not answer the question of whether the jury will find an enterprise and a conspiracy. 'There's no question that a jury can and will consider a so-called victim's own complicity in the matters that were violent and even illegal.' Attorney Rachel Maimin, a former federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York, said that while racketeering charges can be complex, prosecutors can sometimes prove the charge with only one witness or even circumstantial evidence. 'I don't know if they've met all of the elements of racketeering yet, but prosecutors are showing that Diddy used employees from his business and organization to carry out criminal activities,' Maimin said. 'They're linking the crimes to his business.' If you or someone you know is facing domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence hotline for help at (800) 799-SAFE (7233), or go to for more. States often have domestic violence hotlines as well. This article was originally published on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store