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Inter Milan carries Italian soccer on its back as club seeks first Champions League title in 15 years

Inter Milan carries Italian soccer on its back as club seeks first Champions League title in 15 years

CNN3 days ago

It's been 15 years since an Italian club last lifted the Champions League trophy – a long and barren stretch for the calcio-mad country.
To see a team from Italy win the most coveted prize in European club soccer feels overdue, particularly given the nation's history and pedigree in the sport. That could all change this weekend when Inter Milan faces Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) in Munich on Saturday – a second Champions League final in three years for the Nerazzurri.
A fourth European title for Inter might be a flickering reminder of the golden era of Italian club soccer in the 1990s, back when Serie A was home to the greatest players of the time. Today's teams hardly boast the same number of global superstars, but Champions League success for Inter – following the lesser European titles of the Europa League and Conference League for Atalanta and AS Roma, respectively – would perhaps offer a glimpse of an Italian Renaissance.
'Italian football was really feeling a bit down on itself up until recent years, about its record in European competition,' Adam Summerton, a TNT Sports commentator who closely follows Italy's Serie A, told CNN Sports.
'I think it had almost become an embarrassment, really, for a league the size of Italy and the standing of Italy. … Some of that pride now has been restored with the performances of teams in recent years, but in order to truly restore that – and I guess for Italian football to gain that bit of pride back – I think to win the Champions League, to win the ultimate prize, to have a club that has to be called the best team in Europe, that's massive.'
Inter has been on the cusp of silverware on three, arguably four, occasions this season. Just last weekend, it came achingly close to winning the Serie A title, only to finish a single point behind champion Napoli on the final matchday. That prompted manager Simone Inzaghi to acknowledge that there had been 'a lot of suffering in me and in the players' at the start of this week, though Saturday's final offers a chance to ease that pain.
And one positive for Inter is that Inzaghi and many of his players have been in this position before, the current squad not radically different to the one which narrowly lost to Manchester City in the 2023 final.
This Inter team is full of experienced campaigners – the likes of defenders Francesco Acerbi and Matteo Darmian, plus midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan. It has the highest average age of any squad in Italy this past season – 29.1, according to Transfermarkt – and will be hungry for silverware after a series of near-misses. As well as failing to clinch the league title, Inter lost to bitter rival AC Milan in January's Italian Super Cup and again to Milan in April's Italian Cup semifinals.
But the bigger picture for the Nerazzurri is one of success under Inzaghi. The 49-year-old, who arrived at the club in 2021, has already won a Scudetto, two Italian Cups and three Italian Super Cups during his time in charge. Just to reach two Champions League finals is also an impressive feat, especially given the financial firepower of some of Europe's top clubs – the likes of Real Madrid, Manchester City, and, indeed, PSG.
'This isn't just a coach who's a flash in the pan or somebody who's up and coming,' says Summerton. 'People might disagree, but in my view, he's an established, elite-level coach now, and I think that to win the Champions League would give that validation, recognition, and underline that this is a guy whose work really needs to be taken seriously.'
Inzaghi, a former striker who spent most of his playing career with Lazio, is under contract with Inter until 2026. He has reportedly been offered more than $23 million per season (€20 million) to take charge of Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal, but was reluctant to talk about his future when asked this week.
'It's the same thing every year, when I was at Lazio and at Inter,' said Inzaghi. 'Luckily, there are requests from Italy, from abroad and from Saudi Arabia.
'But I think it would be crazy right now to think about that. As the (club) president said, with whom I have a great relationship, the day after the game we'll sit down and talk, as we've always done over the years, with only one objective, which is the good of Inter.'
Understandably, a Champions League trophy would provide a huge boost to Inzaghi's managerial resumé – because of the funds at his disposal and the teams he would have beaten along the way.
Having conceded just one goal in this season's group stages, Inter then saw off Feyenoord, Bayern Munich, and – in sensational fashion – Barcelona in the knockout stages.
The breathless, mad-cap win in the semifinals against Barça – finally ending 7-6 on aggregate after Acerbi's stoppage-time equalizer and Davide Frattesi's extra-time winner – will be remembered as one of the great nights in the club's history.
Crucially, it showed that Inter under Inzaghi has the tools and tactics to compete with – and beat – the best teams in Europe.
'They have this incredible ability to adapt, to be flexible,' says Summerton. 'They play within a formation that Inzaghi is pretty wedded to – the 3-5-2 – but there is so much flexibility within that formation, in the way that they play.
'I think that Inter are a really tricky side for PSG to play in the final because of that versatility that they have, the rotations that they play with. They're a very, very difficult team to play against.'
Ahead of the final, Inter has been boosted by the return of captain Lautaro Martínez, whose nine goals in 13 games represents one of the best returns in the Champions League this season – only four players have scored more.
Martínez is looking to add a Champions League medal to an already impressive haul of trophies in his career: the World Cup and two Copa América titles with Argentina, as well as two league titles with Inter.
'To experience another final of this scale, in this competition, is going to be incredible,' he told UEFA this week, adding: 'I really want to enjoy the moment, this final, this game. Then if it comes to fruition, it will be a dream come true.'
It will be a dream, too, for those Inter fans who have waited 15 years to taste Champions League glory once again. Now, only one team stands in the way of the trophy's long-awaited return to Italy.

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Inside Paris chaos: Violence and disorder prove familiar footnote to historic game
Inside Paris chaos: Violence and disorder prove familiar footnote to historic game

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Inside Paris chaos: Violence and disorder prove familiar footnote to historic game

Desire Doue's deflected shot had barely had time to nestle in the net before the first firework broke across the sky in the eastern Paris suburb of Montreuil. Here, as across the French capital, fans piled into bars and cafes, squeezed themselves onto beer-garden benches and crowded around televisions in their sitting rooms to witness Paris Saint-Germain's historic 5-0 annihilation of Inter in the Champions League final. Advertisement It was a success that had been a long time coming: five years since PSG's only previous appearance in the final, 14 years since the club's agenda-changing takeover by Qatar Sports Investments, 32 years since hated rivals Marseille had claimed France's first — and hitherto only — men's Champions League success. PSG may be a young football club, having only come into being in 1970, but their supporters, young and old, had been waiting for this moment their entire lives. Expectation had turned into tension in the days preceding the game and the nearer it came, the greater the tension grew. But then, in the blink of an eye, the tension was gone. Doue's goal made it 2-0 after only 20 minutes and when he added PSG's third goal with half an hour remaining, shortly to be followed by a fourth, and then a fifth, the cork came off the bottle, turning the entire city into a riot of booming fireworks, bright flares, honking car horns and deliriously celebrating fans. Very quickly, however, and well before the game in Munich had finished, a darker note crept into the celebrations as disturbing videos began to pop up on social media. Cars burning in the streets. Bus stops smashed. Groups of youths flooding across the Peripherique ring road, bringing traffic to a standstill. A young man violently robbed of his scooter. A cyclist left slumped in the road after being knocked from his Velib rental bicycle by a car. Shockingly graphic images showing the aftermath of a collision between a car and a group of people, this time in the south-eastern city of Grenoble, which left two people seriously injured. On the Avenue des Champs-Elysees, police deployed water cannon and tear gas to disperse supporters who attempted to break through crash barriers in order to reach the Arc de Triomphe at the top of the iconic cobbled street. Running battles between troublemakers and members of the CRS, France's notorious riot police, continued throughout the night. Advertisement 'We arrived on the Champs and we saw the first lines of CRS,' says Mathieu Faurie, who was out watching the celebrations and witnessed some of the disorder first-hand. 'We got to the first shops and some people started smashing the windows in Foot Locker. Behind us, the police started tear-gassing people, so there was a moment of panic and everyone started running towards the top of the street. 'It started to get chaotic everywhere. There were crowds of people surging this way and that. People were trying to leave but the cops weren't letting people down the side streets — you had to walk back down the street towards the Place de la Concorde. 'It took a long time to get out and that killed the atmosphere a bit but we carried on towards Grands Boulevards, where there were loads of people, and it was much better.' At Place de la Bastille, east of the city centre, fans massed in their thousands to celebrate PSG's triumph. But a journalist from the German newspaper BILD reported having had to take shelter at the back of a restaurant after it came under attack from rioters. 'Paris made it 4-0. Again, there was great cheering. But this turned into hatred,' wrote Torsten Rumpf. 'The guests in the restaurant were attacked with fireworks and bottles, chairs and tables were thrown. Windows were broken. Fights broke out. 'I saw children and young women crying and heard loud screams. The air became stuffy with the smoke from the fireworks. After 10 minutes, the security guards brought the situation under control.' The French authorities reported that 491 arrests were made in Paris during the night of the game. Paris prefect of police Laurent Nunez told a press conference that 192 members of the public and nine police officers had been injured. In Paris, a 23-year-old scooter rider was killed after being hit by a car, while in the southwest town of Dax, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest. Investigations into both incidents are under way. Advertisement France's Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau posted on social media that 'barbarians have taken to the streets of Paris'. If it was a tragic footnote to append to a significant football match, it was also familiar. The following afternoon, a helicopter hovers in the overcast sky above the River Seine as PSG supporters exit the Invalides metro station and make their way across the Pont Alexandre III towards the Champs-Elysees for their team's triumphant trophy parade. Ousmane Toure, clad in a PSG home shirt and accompanied by his girlfriend, Angeline, had watched the match along with 45,000 fellow fans on the big screens at the Parc des Princes the night before. 'The atmosphere was incredible,' he says with a smile. 'Truly memorable.' But after setting out across Paris on his scooter after the game to revel in the festivities, he saw scenes that left him with memories that he will not look back on with any kind of fondness at all. 'I went out on the Periph (ring road) and it was a bit of a s*** show, to be honest,' he says. 'There were lots of people — I don't know where they'd come from — on motorbikes, blocking the traffic. They were trying to have a party but it wasn't very cool for the people in the cars. 'You'd go past certain streets and there were scenes of chaos. It was unfortunate because it gives a bad image of football and a bad image of the people of Paris. They should have been scenes of joy and they turned into scenes of horror.' On either side of the bridge, street vendors have opportunistically set up stalls offering refrigerated drinks. Cars speed past honking their horns, some twirling PSG flags and scarves from their windows, while youngsters in small groups nimbly dart and weave their way through the crowds on bicycles. Although the atmosphere is relaxed and festive, the sound of police sirens and the whir of the helicopter's blades serve as reminders that the authorities remain on high alert. Advertisement Eliot Nivet, strolling across the bridge with his friend, Pierre-Francois Kerbrat, says that the scenes that had marred the previous evening's celebrations were simply par for the course. 'It started kicking off during the match, which shows it can't have been connected to real supporters,' he says. 'We went to the Champs after and I was there from 11 o'clock until two in the morning. There were fires, like there always are; bikes that were set on fire but nothing out of the ordinary. 'Then the police did their job. There was a fair amount of tear gas. There were just loads and loads of people in every street. There was so much fervour and it's difficult to contain. We're not worried about today.' Arriving on the Right Bank of the Seine on Sunday, police have blocked off Avenue Winston Churchill, which leads straight to the Champs-Elysees. Three dark-grey police vans are parked across the street. Beside one of them, a black-clad police officer eyes the small crowd that has formed beside the crash barriers and mutters something into his walkie-talkie. The supporters there seem more concerned about missing the parade than inadvertently wandering into a riot. There were further skirmishes between supporters and riot police shortly before the trophy procession, as reported by L'Equipe. The clashes continued during Sunday evening, with Reuters reporting that police deployed tear gas when dozens of ticketless fans sought to enter the security perimeter, and again after supporters threw fireworks at police as the stadium emptied out. It was something of an achievement that it was even allowed to take place at all. Mindful of the scenes of serious disorder that had marred a previous PSG trophy parade in 2013 at the Place du Trocadero, which overlooks the Eiffel Tower, Paris authorities were initially minded to reject the club's request before being persuaded into performing a U-turn. Advertisement To cite a more recent example, Liverpool supporters will not need reminding of the carnage that took place before and after the 2022 Champions League final at the Stade de France, where fans were kettled and tear-gassed by police prior to the game, and then picked off by opportunistic muggers as they left the stadium afterwards. Patrick Mignon, a sports sociologist and author, says that eruptions of violence around sporting events in Paris reflect the underlying mistrust that exists between the police and disaffected young people from the city's disadvantaged suburbs. 'When you get events like this, which bring masses of people into the streets, they're an opportunity for people to display the tensions that exist within French society and the phenomenon of political polarisation,' he says. 'The conflict between young people from working-class neighbourhoods and the police is an old story. We also had riots here in 2022 and 2005. Paris is the place where all the tensions within French society are focused. 'We also know that any event that brings lots of people into the streets for a party also attracts young people who see these events as opportunities for all kinds of criminal activity: looting shops, pickpocketing, seeking confrontations with other young people or provoking the police.' Even at the most glorious moments in France's footballing history, tragedy has seldom been far away. After the great Saint-Etienne squad of the mid-1970s returned from beating Dutch side PSV in the European Cup semi-finals in 1976, one of the fans who rushed onto the runway at Boutheon airport to greet them was killed by the plane's propellers. When crowds flocked to the Champs-Elysees to celebrate France's victory over Brazil in the 1998 World Cup final, a panicked driver drove her car into a crowd at the Arc de Triomphe, killing one person and injuring 35. Two men died in different areas of France during the celebrations that followed Les Bleus' triumph at the 2018 World Cup, which also prompted scenes of violent disorder on the Champs-Elysees. Advertisement Of course, excessive celebration, enormous crowds of people and alcohol have proven to be a deadly combination after all manner of sporting events across the world. But as they sweep away the broken glass and patch up the wounded in Paris, there is no shrugging off a troubling sense of deja vu. (Header photo:)

French police detain dozens after football celebrations
French police detain dozens after football celebrations

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

French police detain dozens after football celebrations

French authorities detained 79 people in the second such wave of arrests during celebrations following Paris Saint-Germain's football Champions League win, a police chief said Monday. The PSG thrashed Inter Milan by a record 5-0 in Saturday evening's final in Munich, flying back to Paris on Sunday for a triumphal parade along the Champs Elysees, then celebrations in a packed Parc des Princes stadium on the edge of the French capital. The PSG winning the biggest prize in European club football for the first time sparked delirious festivities in France, but was marred by violence. On Sunday, "we saw a resurgence of individuals driven by malicious intent who were not really PSG supporters," Paris police chief Laurent Nunez told RTL radio. "We arrested 79 people, some of them in the night," he said, adding that order had been restored before dawn. Some were detained over taking barriers and briefly blocking the ring road around Paris, while others had tried to vandalise businesses or fired fireworks on the Champs Elysees, he said. On Saturday night, police had made more than 500 arrests across France, the interior ministry said, after more than 200 cars were torched and police clashed with youths. In the southwest town of Dax, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest. A 23-year-old man riding a scooter in central Paris also died after being hit by a vehicle. A policeman was in an induced coma after being injured by a firework. Receiving the triumphant team at the Elysee palace on Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron condemned what he called "unacceptable" violence during the festivities. Many of the stars of the team, one of the youngest in the competition, are drawn from the huge football talent pool in the Paris suburbs after PSG's Qatari owners turned their back on the policy of signing star players like Neymar and Lionel Messi. A total of 11.5 million people tuned in across France to watch the match. mca/ah/yad

🤔 Inter, who after Inzaghi? Fabregas, RDZ and Chivu: pros and cons ✅❌
🤔 Inter, who after Inzaghi? Fabregas, RDZ and Chivu: pros and cons ✅❌

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

🤔 Inter, who after Inzaghi? Fabregas, RDZ and Chivu: pros and cons ✅❌

Inter is at a crucial moment: on Tuesday, President Beppe Marotta and Simone Inzaghi will meet to define the future of the coach, who is on the brink after the heavy 5-0 defeat in the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain. Fans are divided on the future of the coach, who might leave the team to embark on a new adventure with Al-Hilal, ready to offer him a contract worth 50 million euros over two years. Advertisement At the end of the final lost in Munich, Inzaghi stated that he does not know if he will be on the bench for the next Club World Cup, leaving room for a possible farewell. According to Sky Sport, the club is already considering several options: Cesc Fabregas, confirmed by Como after a surprising season in Serie A, is the first name on the list. Cristian Chivu - a former Inter defender and now coach of Parma - and Roberto De Zerbi, confirmed at Marseille after some internal tensions. They are the other two candidates to start a new cycle on the Inter bench. But what are the positive and negative factors of the individual candidacies for the post-Inzaghi era? 🔚 Inzaghi towards farewell to Inter Simone Inzaghi ended the season without trophies, despite reaching and losing two European finals. Advertisement The clear defeat in the Champions League final left significant repercussions: the coach himself, in a press conference, stated that he does not know if he will lead Inter in the Club World Cup, expressing his bitterness and awareness that one emerges stronger from defeats. According to Gianluca Di Marzio, the heavy defeat has increased the possibility of his departure, although the coach wants to discuss with the club before deciding. The offer from Al-Hilal represents an important opportunity, and the hypothesis that Inzaghi might agree to end his cycle with Inter seems increasingly concrete. 🔥 Fabregas first choice Cesc Fabregas is the top name on Inter's list should Simone Inzaghi's departure materialize. The Spaniard impressed while leading Como in Serie A in the recently concluded season, with a tenth place finish that captivated the Inter management. Advertisement His innovative and 'fresh' football philosophy, combined with his ability to shape young players and discover raw but pure talents, are 'pluses' for a coach who has unsurprisingly attracted the attention of Bayer Leverkusen, Roma, and Leipzig in recent weeks. On the other hand, Como does not intend to part with him after the first high-level season, which seems to have laid the foundations for an ambitious project. Moreover, his footballing ideas differ greatly from Inzaghi's, with a potential new cycle under the Spaniard requiring a real revolution. 🔙 Chivu, the coach who knows Inter Cristian Chivu, currently leading Parma, is another name in Inter's orbit. After coaching Inter's youth teams, the Romanian coach accepted the challenge in Emilia and has shown clear and modern ideas. Advertisement With an important past as a player in the Inter shirt, Chivu knows the environment and the mentality of the club deeply. His name represents an 'internal' solution and could be a return home in a prestigious role. On the other hand, his lack of experience leading first teams represents a question mark for the Inter formation, which will have to restart after a season without titles but must necessarily lift its head and return to winning in the next season. 👀 De Zerbi, is it time for a big team in Serie A? Roberto De Zerbi is an intriguing option for the Inter bench. Currently under contract with Marseille, De Zerbi is appreciated for his proactive and spectacular football, inspired by Guardiola's principles. Advertisement Marseille will participate in the next Champions League, but often tense relations with the French management could facilitate a possible transfer. On the other hand, the not very 'malleable' character of the Brescia-born coach, who has repeatedly emphasized the need to have functional players for his football, and a philosophy far from Inzaghi's, make the De Zerbi path more difficult to pursue. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇮🇹 here. 📸 Timothy Rogers - 2025 Getty Images

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