Benoit Cauet: “Inter Can Sign Barcelona’s Messi, Zhang Is A President Who Thinks Big”

Former Inter midfielder Benoit Cauet has shared his belief that his former employers have what it takes to be able to sign Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi.

Inter have drawn links to Messi in recent months and even in the past few days after former Inter president and owner Massimo Moratti shared his desire to see the multi-time world player of the year represent the Nerazzurri.

“Of course Inter can sign Lionel Messi, there is no doubt about this. Steven Zhang has the economic skills and potential ambition. He is a president who thinks big,” Cauet remarked in an interview with journalist Simone Togna via social media platform Instagram.

The Frenchman then went on to state his best moment whilst on Inter’s books between 1997 and 2001.

“The 1998 UEFA Cup remains the greatest joy. It was a tough competition. We had to come from behind in some rounds. The final in Paris was almost the easiest game as we won 3-0 against Lazio. With all that we had gone through earlier on, we new we could win and we also had a certain Ronaldo with us.”

Cauet then went on to discuss who was the best manager he worked under during his 19 year senior career which also saw him represent the likes of Paris Saint Germain and Swiss side Sion.

“Gigi Simoni was a great person and excellent manager. Camolese who I worked under at Torino was an excellent manager too but I had so many prepared and capable managers in my career.”

He then spoke briefly on how the season has gone so far and Inter’s striker force of Lautaro Martinez and Romelu Lukaku: “Inter are a really strong team. Lautaro-Lukaku are a fantastic partnership, I would never let the Argentine go.”

He concluded the interview by sharing his views on Inter manager Antonio Conte.

“He is a great manager, you can see that he has a winning mentality. If the season starts again it would no longer be a marathon but a sprint, let’s see what happens. The Nerazzurri can do it.”

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Momento amarcord tra Ronaldo e Vieri: “5 maggio? Forse era destino”

Ronaldo e Vieri ricordano i momenti passati all’Inter: “Abbiamo giocato solo 11 partite insieme, troppo poco cazzo”.

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Inter Interested In Signing Liverpool Midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum

Inter are interested in signing Liverpool and Netherlands national team midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum according to a report from Italian news outlet TuttoMercatoWeb.

Wijnaldum is one of several midfielders whose name has come up during conversations between Inter’s management regarding possible additions to the squad in the coming months.

The Dutchman’s contract with the current Champions League holders is due to expire at the end of next season and he could represent a cheaper option to the likes of Lazio’s Sergej Milinkovic-Savic for Inter.

As per the report, Wijnaldum could cost around €30 million but he is a valued member of Jurgen Klopp’s side and for this reason they have tabled him a contract extension offer, which, if signed, would tie him down to the Merseyside based club until 2024.

The 29-year-old, who has been with his current employers since the Summer of 2016, has made 38 appearances across all competitions to date this term in which he has scored five goals.

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FIGC President Gravina: “If We Get The Green Light To Resume, Football Must Be Ready”

Gabriele Gravina, the president of the Italian football federation, has insisted that football must be ready to resume if the green light is given for the season to resume by medical professionals.

Due to the ongoing global Coronavirus pandemic, football at all levels in Italy has been on hold for close to a month now and is likely to remain on hold for the remainder of this month too at the least.

Some Serie A clubs have as much as 13 games to still play and there have been a number of suggestions as to how the season could possibly resume and conclude.

“If and when we get the green light to gradually resume the sport, the world of football must be ready. That is the aim of our medical commission,” he said at the end of the meeting of the Federal Medical Commisson as quoted by Football-Italia.net.

“Considering the role that football plays in Italian society, I am convinced that we can give an important contribution to the whole country.”

There have been various reports in the media in the past few days regarding the possible resumption of training with reports suggesting it could resume at the beginning of next month with squads likely having to adhere to the current guidelines.

Gravina then went on to add: “The protocol concerning footballers and members of staff already infected and ‘cured’ of COVID-19 was also discussed. The diagnostic tests indicated for this category will follow a protocol appropriate to the clinical severity of the infection suffered.

“In the discussion, it was recommended that ‘team groups’ should initially meet in ‘closed’ environments, which would obviously need to be sanitised and in line with all the hygienic-behavioural norms, even for those who do not belong to the restricted group.”

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Lippi: “Inter Have Untapped Potential, Conte Has Done A Great Job”

Former Inter manager Marcello Lippi has shared his hopes to see the football season resume but only so long as there is no risk posed to health.

“I don’t imagine it now, I don’t think about when and if it will start again. I think only of one thing, like everyone else, that if it starts again, it will mean that this tragedy is over,” he began an interview with Italian radio station TMW Radio earlier on today.

“I hope that whoever has to decide, they will do it because everything is over and there is no risk. If it should start again, it will only be because the risk of the virus has been averted.

“I would not like the season to end with extraordinary assigments or with playoffs. I’d like to see winners crowned on the field.”

He then gave his view of how the 2019/20 Serie A campaign has went so far.

“Lazio are having an exceptional season. They have very strong players and are having a great season. All the prerequisites are there for them to finish the season well.

“As usual, Juventus are strong whilst Inter have grown. It has been a strange year for Napoli who are perhaps at the end of a cycle.”
He was then asked whether or not he was expecting Inter to do as well as they have done this season under new manager Antonio Conte.

“Inter have done well but then they lost to Lazio and Juventus and they broke away a little. Inter still has untapped potential. Conte has done a great job and he knows how to get the most out of the group he has. He still has to get the most out of some players like Eriksen.”

Lippi then went on to discuss some young Italian players who have caught his eye with their performances this term.

“I really like Castrovilli, but also Tonali and Barella. Zaniolo had had a positive season too before the injury.”

In conclusion he was asked if Paris Saint Germain and Italian national team midfielder Marco Verratti could play for either Juventus or Inter.

“He does not have an exceptional physique but he compensates for this with great quality and with an excellent ability to manage the ball.

“He knows how to build play up and knows how to create important situations. I have seen him grow as player, also at an international level.”

Lippi, who managed Inter during the 1999/2000 season, is currently without a job having left his role as manager of the Chinese national team for a second time at the end of 2019.

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UEFA & European Leagues In Talks Over What To Do With Titles If Season Doesn’t Finish

European football’s governing body UEFA and European leagues are in talks over what to do when it comes to the assignment of league titles if the season does not finish according to a report in today’s print edition of Corriere dello Sport.

Football across the continent has been on hold for almost a month now due to the ongoing global Coronavirus pandemic and it remains a mystery as to whether or not the season will be able to resume.

Aside from league titles, UEFA also need to know which clubs will be in both the Champions League and Europa League from each member federation.

The report from the Rome based newspaper goes on to state that the Italian football federation (FIGC) are preparing themselves for any possible scenarios that could arise, including having to face possible legal action from clubs who may feel like they have been cheated by being unable to finish the season during which time they could have won the title or other things.

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Former Inter Manager Roy Hodgson: “I Couldn’t Turn Down The Chance To Manage Inter, Facchetti Was So Important”

Former Inter manager Roy Hodgson has reflected on how he came to manage Inter in an interview with The Coaches Voice.

“I was still the Switzerland manager when I came home one afternoon to a message on the telephone from Giacinto Facchetti of Inter Milan. It was a very brief message. “I am Giacinto Facchetti – can you call me?”

“I’d met him a couple of times when I was with Malmo, and we had played Inter Milan in the European Cup. ‘I wonder what that’s about?’ I said to my wife.

“When I called him back, he explained that Massimo Moratti was looking for a new coach and that they had identified me as someone they would like. So a meeting was set up.

“On the day of the meeting, there was also a big game between Basel and Grasshoppers at St Jakob Park. The plan was that I would go to the game and then drive directly from there to Milan overnight. I would then meet Massimo Moratti the following day.

“It took longer than I expected to get away from the stadium, of course, and then the tunnel that leads from Basel was closed. Instead, I had to go over the pass – which, with it starting to snow, was a really bad experience.

“I also had to stop close to Bellinzona when I got over the pass. This was in the early hours of the same day I was supposed be meeting Moratti in the centre of Milan. That I was eventually asked to take the job seemed pretty much written in the stars.”

Hodgson, who won 27 of his 55 matches in charge, then admitted he could not have possibly turned Inter down despite them not being in the best of places upon his arrival.

“Inter had had a poor, poor start to the 1995/96 season. I arrived in October, by when they had already played several games that hadn’t gone very well.

“I knew it wasn’t going to be easy, but after four years of working as a national team manager I wanted to get back on the training field every day.

“The glamour, and excitement, of being asked to manage a team like Inter was also too difficult to turn down, even if I was leaving something far more stable than Inter was ever going to be.”

Hodgson then went on to speak about how big a help the legendary Giacinto Facchetti was to him during his time in charge of the club.

“I was very fortunate that Moratti was behind me signing, but more important for me was Giacinto Facchetti.

“He was a team manager of sorts. He backed me to the hilt, and led me through the political situations that develop at a club like that, where there are always going to be factions and which had enjoyed such a glorious past without a glorious recent past. It was always going to be testing for someone not used to that environment.

“Nothing in my career had prepared me for such a step, so I had to learn very quickly to swim at the deep end. I was very fortunate that I had a friend by my side in Facchetti. I don’t think I could have survived without him.

“When it came to things that needed specific explanations, Giacinto helped. He couldn’t speak English, so I would speak to him in French.

“The problem was that because he’s so diligent, he didn’t want to say anything I hadn’t – so get-togethers were taking too long. We experimented with Paul Ince (below) and Massimo Paganin translating from English – but Massimo, a good player, is nothing like me as a person. Nothing like the same kind of passion came through.

“Giacinto said to me: “Look, this isn’t working. You’ll have to try and do it because you understand Italian.” Which, to be fair, I did. “Even if you get it wrong, and even if you don’t necessarily understand the words correctly, they’ll understand anyway.”

“I was lucky that I had people around me who really did help, but everything was down to me and the fitness coach. That was very demanding, particularly with all of the pressure that exists at Inter – and at a time when, if anything, they were failing. Giovanni Trapattoni’s team had won the league in the late 1980s, but since then there had been a definite decline.”

Next he went on to speak about the close relationship he enjoyed with then Inter president and owner Massimo Moratti.

“Massimo Moratti’s father had owned the club during those great days. Massimo had since become owner, and it was his dream to build it back up again – to do what his father had in making them the household name in the country.

“He was very cultured. A very polite, courteous man. Classy and, most importantly, an enormous fan.

“He lives and breathes Inter more than anyone, but that can be a slight disadvantage – that passion could put him into contact with plenty of other people who told him what needed to be done when Giacinto or myself were saying something else.

“Working with him was very interesting, so I’m grateful for that time. He treated me well, and we certainly had a mutual respect, even if we didn’t go on to make Inter the all-singing, all-dancing club he wanted to.”

Hodgson then went on to discuss the squad which he inherited from Luis Suarez in 1995.

“I’d inherited a relatively modest squad. Roberto Carlos was there for the first season – he was a star, but a young one with Brazil Under-21s. Like Marco Branca, he had a God-given natural talent.

“Javier Zanetti became a big name, but he certainly wasn’t then. Paul Ince was the other big-name, foreign player, who had recently won the Premier League with Manchester United. We also had Gianluca Pagliuca in goal and Giuseppe Bergomi at the back.

“Javier wasn’t even signed to be the big player he became – he made himself into that. He had an incredible professionalism and desire to make the very best out of himself. Whatever his coaches or fitness coaches wanted him to do, he was going to show he could do it.

“Bergomi was the same. It was about the quantity of their work, and their seriousness as professionals and about making sacrifices.

“We qualified for the following season’s UEFA Cup by the back door, which was fortunate, because our great rivals Juventus beating Ajax in the Champions League final had opened up a further qualification place.”

Hodgson, who is still managing nowadays aged 72 with Premier League side Crystal Palace, then spoke on some of the players that were signed during his second season in charge.

“It was for the second season where we shipped in some more famous names – Youri Djorkaeff, Jocelyn Angloma and Ivan Zamorano were among them – but, strangely enough, it didn’t actually make us a better football team.

“The previous team was more cohesive in many ways – even if we were slightly more successful in terms of results. You can have too many riches and players who don’t complement each other, or who want to do the same job.

“For that second season Angloma came in at right-back, Fresi moved to central defence alongside Paganin or Fabio Galante, and Alessandro Pistone played at left-back. Javier and Aron Winter were often our wide midfielders, with Ince and Ciriaco Sforza in central midfield, behind Zamorano and either Branca or Ganz.

“We had the temerity to lose the UEFA Cup final at the end of that season, against an inferior team in Schalke. We’d have done even better overall, but we had a very small squad that, by the end of that season, was stretched to its limit by all of those extra cup games. At the end, that cost us.”

Hodgson then went on to talk about his exit from Inter and revealed that Moratti initially persuaded him to stay when Blackburn Rovers came in for him.

“Massimo Moratti had offered me a new contract and said that he wanted me to stay beyond the 1996/97 season, but then that contract didn’t materialise. We had a respectful relationship, but for one reason or another I don’t think he wanted to broach the subject with me.

“Blackburn came in for me, and I said to Moratti: “Look, I’m not sure you want this. Blackburn really want me to go, so at the end of this season I’ll go there.”

“He said: “No, no, no. We don’t want you to go. I want you to stay.” So I rang Jack Walker up and disappointed him, really, because he was pretty convinced I was coming over. As a gesture of goodwill, he had offered me a signing-on fee that would then be deducted from my wages.

“Massimo had persuaded me not to take it, but another month went by and we were struggling a little bit in the league – from the injuries, apart from anything else. I didn’t give him a second chance to change my mind. He probably thought two years was enough; Blackburn really wanted me, so that’s where I went.”

He went on to conclude that it was a far from easy decision to leave as there was a lot he liked about managing in Italy.

“It wasn’t easy to leave. There was lots about Italian life and Inter that I missed to begin with – that I still miss – which includes the glamour of it all.

“You do wonder about attempting to stay, and have what-ifs, but I don’t often allow myself to wallow or even contemplate those because my career has been so good to me. And so many spur-of-the-moment decisions have turned out to be good ones.

“Even the bad ones have given me something, if only in terms of life experience and knowledge of other countries and cultures.

“Instead I am pleased that my friendship with Giacinto, and my relationship with Massimo, remained afterwards.”

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Andy Van der Meyde: “I Didn’t Want To Join Inter As I Didn’t Want To Leave Ajax”

Former Inter player Andy Van der Meyde has admitted that he did not want to join the club in an interview with Italian news outlet FootballStation.it.

“The transfer to Inter? To tell the truth I didn’t want to go not because I didn’t want to leave Ajax. I felt in top condition, but Moratti offered the club a lot of money and the club forced me to go, telling me clearly that the Nerazzurri’s offer was an indispensable offer and that I would earn a lot of money.”

The Dutchman then went on to reveal that he has great memories from his time on the Nerazzurri’s books between 2003 and 2005.

“I still have wonderful memories from my time at Inter. The first year went well but I played less under Mancini in the second season so I decided to change clubs.”

Van der Meyde also spoke on what he felt the most important goals he scored during his career were with one of them coming whilst he was with Inter.

“I scored for Ajax against Roma in front of a full stadium against a team full of great players such as Totti and Cassano but my goal for Inter at Highbury against Arsenal was a great goal on the fly.

“We beat a very strong Arsenal, it was an incredible night, on the way back I even found Nerazzurri fans at home who wanted to party with me.”

During his two year spell with Inter, the 17 time Dutch national team player, made 54 appearances across all competitions, in which he scored four goals and provided just as many assists for his teammates.

He left Inter for Everton in the Summer of 2005 and would spend four years with them before having a season with PSV Eindhoven and then had a season in the Dutch amateur leagues with WKE before calling time on a 15 year senior career aged just 32.

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Inter Unlikely To Exercise Buy Back Option For Marco Carraro

Inter are unlikely to exercise the buy back option that they have on midfielder Marco Carraro according to a report from Italian news outlet FCInterNews.it.

Inter sold Carraro to fellow Serie A side Atalanta for a sum of €5 million during the 2018 Summer transfer window. As part of that deal Inter secured a buy back option for each of the next two Summer’s with this coming Summer being the last opportunity for them to activate the buy back option.

As per the report, the buy back option is worth €9-10 million but everything for the moment suggests Inter will not activate the option and Carraro will remain with Atalanta, who he is under contract with until the end of the 2022/23 season.

This season the 22-year-old midfielder has split his time between Atalanta and Serie B side Perugia, who he joined on a six month loan back in January. In 29 games across all competitions to date this season, he has provided two assists.

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La proposta delle Canarie: concludere la Liga nell’arcipelago

Dove giocare le ultime giornate del campionato spagnolo? Dalle Canarie l’interessante idea per giocare in primavera ed estate.

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