AC
Milan President Silvio Berlusconi and vice-president Adriano Galliani
refused to back Sinisa Mihajlovic as doubt continues to grow over his
future.
The Serbian tactician has led the Rossoneri to sixth place
in the standings after 30 games, while they will face Juventus in the
Coppa Italia final on May 21.
However, having failed to show
consistency in their performances and with qualification for the
Champions League next season unlikely, there are those that will argue
that this season has been another failure.
Mihajlovic has done an
impressive job in terms of rebuilding confidence in the squad with Milan
looking particularly fragile in recent years, while he has developed
young players such as Gianluigi Donnarumma and Alessio Romagnoli into
first-team regulars.
Nevertheless,
it doesn’t appear to be enough for the Milan hierarchy who hinted prior
to Sunday night’s encounter with Lazio that a change is likely to
happen in the summer.
“I expect to see a Milan that plays good football,” Berlusconi told Mediaset Premium, as reported by Football Italia. When asked if he is convinced by Mihajlovic’s approach, he responded: “I don’t know…. I saw Schiaffino’s Milan play…”
Meanwhile, Galliani also spoke with Mediaset Premium
on Sunday, and make an even more obvious suggestion that something is
perhaps brewing behind the scenes with reports claiming this week that
Mihajlovic will be moving on to coach at Lazio next season.
“Bayern
Munich won with Coaches who everyone knew were leaving, so they are all
super professionals. In other nations people announce things six months
early and nothing happens,” he noted.
“Before Sassuolo and Verona
we had been doing really well. We drew with Napoli and Roma, won
against Inter and Fiorentina, but the problem is with the small clubs,
not the big games.”
It remains to be seen whether or not
Mihajlovic will continue beyond this year, but there is an argument that
the annual change in coach is doing little to help Milan’s progress in
the long run.
Having gone through Massimiliano Allegri, Clarence
Seedorf, Filippo Inzaghi and now Mihajlovic since 2013, a sense of
stability and continuity is required for the club and the players.
Mihajlovic
has done well for the most part, and so it would seem like a poor
decision to part company after just one season at the helm.
No comments:
Post a Comment