logo
Lewis Ferguson is already a history-maker at Bologna... but victory in the Coppa Italia over AC Milan would make him and his side legends!

Lewis Ferguson is already a history-maker at Bologna... but victory in the Coppa Italia over AC Milan would make him and his side legends!

Daily Mail​13-05-2025

Lewis Ferguson has already written his name into the history of Bologna Football Club.
Who knows? In future years, the city's ancient university - believed to be the oldest in the western world - might harbour dusty tomes recounting the feats of this team and its Hamilton-born leader.
A year ago, Ferguson captained Bologna to Champions League qualification for the first time since 1965, winning the Serie A midfielder of the year award as the club finished fifth and broke its points record with its highest finish in more than half a century.
In doing so, he became the top-scoring male Scot in Serie A history, surpassing the great Denis Law. But for all that, greater glory could await Ferguson in Rome on Wednesday night.
On the grandiose stage of the Stadio Olimpico, a desperate AC Milan side stands between Bologna and their first major trophy in 51 years.
The stakes could not be higher for this Coppa Italia final in the Eternal City. For Bologna and Ferguson, legend status is at their fingertips. For Milan, it could be their last chance to qualify for Europe.
Few Bologna fans are old enough to remember the names, let alone the faces, of previous trophy-winning captains. Although the club are seven-time Italian champions, the last of those Scudetti came in 1963/64 and the others were all won by the 1940s.
Since then, two Coppa Italia titles in 1970 and 1974 have been the only major trophies the club's fans have been able to celebrate.
But for Ferguson, this final offers a chance at a happy ending to a story of personal, as well as collective, travails.
An ACL injury last April cruelly denied the midfielder a dream Scotland call-up for Euro 2024 and potentially a lucrative transfer too, as he watched team-mates Joshua Zirkzee and Riccardo Calafiori complete moves to Manchester United and Arsenal respectively.
He was back on the pitch within six months, attributing a 'Scottish mentality' for recovering sooner than expected. 'This is just the nature of a Scottish player - we have the desire and the will to win,' he quipped at the time.
A contract extension to 2028 followed in November, but Ferguson faced more bumps in the road as muscular problems in February and April stalled his momentum.
Ferguson has had his moments. He made his Champions League debut last year, captaining the club four times on the biggest stage. He netted a penalty against Roma and set up one of five goals in an extraordinary 5-0 thrashing of Lazio in March.
But for most of this season, he has had to listen to Billy Gilmour and especially Scott McTominay being lauded as the new Scottish darlings of Italy as the pair close in on a sensational Napoli Scudetto.
It would be a wonderful end to a difficult year, then, if Ferguson could trump them by becoming the first Scottish man since Graeme Souness at Sampdoria 40 years ago to win a major trophy in Italy.
The fact Bologna find themselves in this position at all, balancing a top-four push with a cup run, comes as a surprise after the club lost Zirkzee, Calafiori and coach Thiago Motta last summer.
Vincenzo Italiano's appointment has proven to be a savvy one, with the former Fiorentina boss getting his team playing slick, effective football after a slow start.
He has brought out the best in talisman Riccardo Orsolini and developed exciting Argentinian talents Santiago Castro and Benjamin Dominguez, although his record in finals at Fiorentina - three defeats in two years between Coppa Italia and Conference League - is a cause for concern.
The Rossoblu's cup run has electrified the city, with Italiano calling it 'a historic appointment' that 'all of Bologna is ready' for.
Full-back Charalampos Lykogiannis has taken to printing photos of the trophy and sticking them on the walls, while there was even a Coppa/Conclave crossover last week when Cardinal Matteo Maria Zuppi was asked about the next big event to hit the Eternal City.
'I never hoped (to be Pope) - firstly Bologna need to win the Scudetto. Let's start with the cup final against Milan,' he said.
For Milan, the final represents their last chance to make something of an otherwise hugely disappointing season.
The Rossoneri sit eighth in Serie A with two games to go and winning the Coppa Italia final is by far their best route to European football for next year, with a Europa League spot on offer for the winners.
'A historic club like Milan can't be content with being (eighth) in the standings. Everyone is hugely frustrated and disappointed,' said boss Sergio Conceicao, who replaced the sacked Paulo Fonseca mid-season.
However, Milan did enjoy ideal preparation, winning a dress rehearsal against Bologna 3-1 in Serie A on Friday at the San Siro in a game where a Santiago Gimenez double and Christian Pulisic strike completed a comeback after Orsolini's opener.
Fightbacks have been something of a trademark for this team under Conceicao. Only Atletico Madrid (23) have won more points than Milan (22) from losing positions in Europe's 'top five leagues' this season.
The former Porto manager's decision to switch to a 3-4-3 formation last month proved sensible, with the team looking more balanced and winning four of their last five games as a result.
This is, after all, a squad packed with individual talents: Pulisic, Gimenez, Rafael Leao, Tijjani Reijnders, Theo Hernandez, Kyle Walker, Mike Maignan and Joao Felix are not players you would expect to find in a mid-table side.
They have already lifted one trophy this season, claiming the Italian Super Cup in January, and doubling up with the domestic cups is now seen as the only route to delivering damage limitation.
Former Milan midfielder Riccardo Montolivo said this week that the season 'could not be negative with two trophies,' but that was where the optimism stopped.
'I finished eighth and didn't win any trophies with Milan, for God's sake, but my team didn't have the quality that this team has,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Probierz quits Poland after Lewandowski boycott
Probierz quits Poland after Lewandowski boycott

BBC News

time31 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Probierz quits Poland after Lewandowski boycott

Michal Probierz has resigned as Poland manager in the wake of Robert Lewandowski saying he would not play for the country under who is Poland's record goalscorer with 85 goals in 158 appearances, quit his national team on Sunday after Probierz replaced him as captain with Piotr decision to resign also follows Poland suffering a 2-1 loss in Finland in a World Cup qualifier on defeat left Poland third in their group on six points after three games, with the Netherlands second on six points after two games and Finland top on seven points having played four games."I have come to the conclusion that in the current situation the best decision for the good of the national team will be my resignation from the position of coach," Probierz said in a statement., external"Performing this function was the fulfilment of my professional dreams and the greatest honour in my life."Probierz, 52, took over as coach in September 2023 but his side finished bottom of their group at Euro 2024 and were the first country to be knocked out of the his 21 matches in charge he won nine, drew five and lost added: "Thank you, of course, to all the footballers I have had the pleasure of meeting along the way."I will keep my fingers crossed for all of you, because the national team is our common national asset."

'I enjoyed every moment' - Yengi on Pompey career
'I enjoyed every moment' - Yengi on Pompey career

BBC News

time43 minutes ago

  • BBC News

'I enjoyed every moment' - Yengi on Pompey career

Former Portsmouth striker Kusini Yengi reflects on his two-year stint at Fratton Park with memories he will "cherish", but says he was "disappointed" by how his final season at the club 26-year-old Australian was released by Pompey in May as they chose to not take up an option to keep him for another year. Since then the free agent has been signed by Aberdeen and will make the switch from the south coast up to Scotland. During his two seasons at Portsmouth Yengi made 45 appearances, scoring 13 goals and registering two assists. "I really enjoyed every moment of my time at Portsmouth," Yengi told BBC Radio Solent."I made some great memories that I will cherish for the rest of my lifetime. I hope to one day have kids and take them down to Fratton Park and they can live the experience that I had there."The fans were amazing and I was involved with an brilliant group of players and staff. We had a lot of success in that first season and even this season too."I will remember this club forever - and I truly mean it."After a blistering first season for John Mousinho's Portsmouth - where Yengi made 31 appearances and scored 13 goals to help the Blues get promoted - expectations were high for how he would fare in the Championship. But injury prevented him from getting any real momentum - he made 14 appearances in the campaign just gone but failed to register any goal contributions. The striker said he would have liked for the club to have kept him for another season, and that they had the option to do it in his deal. "It's a bit of a strange one to be honest," said Yengi. "I don't think it's really set in that I'm leaving Portsmouth and that I won't be there next year."I found out that I was leaving probably quite close to when the rest of the public did. I was initially told my deal would be extended but then the club got in touch with my agent to say they wouldn't and I would be leaving as a free agent."I wasn't sure which way the club wanted to go. I didn't have the best of seasons mainly because of injury and I wasn't able to pick up where I left off last year."I tried to do everything in my power to get my body right and be able to give my all for Portsmouth, but this is life and football."Things happen and I've tried to take things from the experience so I can learn from it. I am disappointed with the way my season went." European football 'big factor' in Aberdeen move Yengi revealed that he had offers from around the world once news of his departure had broke. Moving to Portsmouth was his first taste of football in the UK and Europe, having previously only played at club level in Australia. The forward said that despite a host of offers, with Aberdeen promising the chance to play European football next season it was an attractive proposition. After the Dons beat Celtic to win the Scottish Cup they will enter the qualifying stage for a chance to play in the Europa League, and if they fail to do that they will at minimum play in the Conference League next season. "I'm excited for the new chapter and can't wait to get going with my new club," Yengi said."I had lots of options to pick from across England, Scotland and the Asian market too. It helped that I was a free agent as no-one had to pay a transfer fee for me."I'm ready to prove myself and improve myself as a player. Aberdeen is an amazing club and it is a really good project for me over there. I'm really excited and can't wait to get started."The fact that there is European football there was a big factor in me moving - I can't wait to test myself against the world's best players."

Euro 2025: Wales fans angry they can't personalise women's shirt
Euro 2025: Wales fans angry they can't personalise women's shirt

BBC News

time43 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Euro 2025: Wales fans angry they can't personalise women's shirt

Football fans have voiced their anger at being unable to have their names and numbers on the new Wales women away Evans, from Cardiff, said it "screams of the bias that often crops up in the women's game" that fans could not personalise the mint green Adidas shirt, which was released specifically for Euro 2025 in Football Association of Wales (FAW) unveiled the shirt after the team qualified for the first major tournament in their history. JD Sports said it was waiting for a delivery of the new print colour and would be able to offer the service to customers soon, adding that it offered personalisation on the women's home shirt. Fans can personalise the home shirt - which is shared by the men's team - but, while the men's away kit can have any name and number on it, this option is not available on the women's version, which is priced at £75. A member of the Wales squad, who wished to remain anonymous, told Telegraph Sport: "It's extremely disappointing that, as we prepare for the Euros, as we make history, we still can't get access to names on the back of our shirts." Ms Evans, 44, said: "I understand it's only to do with away shirts, but it's our first ever major tournament and it shouldn't be an issue and should be doable."I was at the first game in 2019 where the women played against Italy in their shirts [with their names on their back] for the first time. The players had been fighting for that for a long time."To come from there to now here, where we have qualified for the Euros and fans can't get their names on their shirt. It's a bit of a joke. We wouldn't be going through this for a men's shirt." Ian Johnson from Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, said the oversight was "the sort of sloppy mistake that major companies shouldn't still be making".The 46-year-old added: "Walking down any high street, you can see footballers' names on the back of the shirts being worn, so why would they not be set up in advance to do this for the Wales national team?"Hopefully Wales qualifying and playing at the Euros will inspire a new generation of footballers to follow players like Jess Fishlock and Angharad James - and their fans can wear their shirts proudly." Emma Walters, from Swansea, said it was "sexist", as it would not happen with the men's team. "I tell my daughter she is no different, so why can't we have the same opportunities? What is the reason? What is the reason behind it?"She added that her daughter Freya, who is a goalkeeper for her local team, was also unable to buy a goalie kit for either the men's or women's team, which she felt was "unfair". Phillip Buffery, from Caldicot, Monmouthshire, said it was "a kick in the teeth" that fans could not get the shirt personalised. He added that his nine-year-old daughter Amelia was also "devastated" that she could not get a goalkeeper kit. "She idolises Laura O'Sullivan and says she wants to be the next goalkeeper for Wales, and captain. To not be able to get the kit for her is really heartbreaking." The FAW said it was "in regular dialogue with Adidas and JD to find a resolution" ahead of the Euros, which kick off on 2 Wilkinson's side start their campaign on 5 July against the Netherlands before facing France four days later and England on 13 maker Adidas added: "We are always exploring ways to expand our options and better meet the needs of fans who want to show support for their teams." It is not the first time a national women's team have been dragged into a kit row around a major Earps, the former England goalkeeper criticised Nike for not making replica versions of her goalkeeper later said "limited quantities" would go on sale, which promptly sold out in a matter of minutes.

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