Watching the last few games AC Milan has played in Serie A has produced a familiar feeling—and not a good one.
Milan have looked flat and uninspired. The confidence and assured
air that the team had through much of the unbeaten run that stretched
from January to last week's loss against Sassuolo
has suddenly been sucked away. Passes have been wayward, tackles have
been half-hearted, and in general the team's play has just been
uninspired. It's a problem that needs to be corrected—and its solution
may be fairly simple.
We've seen this Milan before, at around this time last year. With
the team headed toward a 10th-place finish, many of the players last
year looked utterly defeated.
The team had simply given up. With nothing to play for last year
that was perhaps understandable—though not acceptable—but this season
the team has a lot still on the table. Staying in sixth place will
ensure them a place in the Europa League next year, even if they lose
the Coppa Italia final to Juventus.
While the 11-point gap between Milan and AS Roma in third is almost
certainly too much to overcome at this point, the top five—and an even
more solid guarantee of European football—is still attainable if they
get some help.
Veteran goalkeeper Christian Abbiati was quick to call out his teammates after Sunday's goalless draw against Chievo.
"We had an unacceptable attitude right from the start today," he told Mediaset (h/t ESPN FC)
after the game. He continued: "We needed to show far more hunger...if
only one out of 11 [players] have a winning mentality, you're not going
to get results."
Mihajlovic is popular with players like Luca Antonelli.
Abbiati's words were echoed by Milan's youth coach, former midfielder
Cristian Brocchi. "I always insist that a player has got to be
motivated whenever he pulls on a Milan shirt," he told ITASportPress
(h/t ESPN FC) When I played for Milan, every single player had this desire—it was part of our DNA."
It's interesting that Brocchi would comment on the issue, because
it's entirely possible—maybe even probable—that he's one of the reasons
that it's happening, indirectly at least.
The incessant rumors about the security of Sinisa Mihajlovic's job as
manager may be taking a toll on the team. This time last year, when
the side looked even worse, former coach Filippo Inzaghi's future was in
similar doubt.
While it's true that Inzaghi had also lost the locker room, the fact
that Mihajlovic hasn't is perhaps all the more reason Milan's players
could be distracted. The Serbian seems popular with his players.
Whether a coach is beloved or not, any team in any sport is capable of
adopting a "what's-the-point" attitude when they sense that their coach
is on his way out at the end of the season.
Owner and president Silvio Berlusconi certainly hasn't done much to
help things. When questioned about the coach's future on Rai Radio 1 on
Tuesday (h/t Football Italia), he called any talk one way or the other "premature" and that his future will "depend on how the rest of the season goes."
Berlusconi's season-long indifference toward his coach really has no
basis in reality. Mihajlovic has done well to take a broken club—one
that was broken in large part by the actions of its owner—and rebuild
it.
A Juventus-like jump into the top three—or more—was always an outside
chance this year, and for Mihajlovic to take a team that still has some
serious flaws as far as he has this year is an achievement.
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