Monday, January 19, 2009
Finally..
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Kaka oh Kaka..
Berlusconi confirms: it will be hard to keep Kakà
It seems that the transfer of Kakà to Manhester City is now highly likely to take place after Milan President Silvio Berlusconi confirmed that he will probably sell the Brazilian."I will have to probably sell him," the Italian Prime Minister told La Stampa. "City have made a really big offer to him, more than €15m after tax per year in wages. If i don't sell him then the balance of the team will go up in smoke".
Ancelotti: Not my choice
AC Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti admits he will have no say over whether Kaka leaves for Manchester City.
After previously refusing Chelsea and Real Madrid permission to speak with the Brazilian, Milan have finally buckled after being presented with a staggering £108m offer from City.Ancelotti said: "I have said Kaka should not leave. But I am just the trainer. I train the team."
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Kaka Absolutely Not For Sale
Milan direct of communications, Vittoria Mentana, has insisted that Kaka is not for sale, despite rumours he is close to making a move to Chelsea...Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Ronaldinho to sign for AC Milan
Manchester City have lost out to Italian side AC Milan in the race to sign Barcelona playmaker Ronaldinho. "AC Milan and Barcelona have reached an agreement in principle over the transfer of Ronaldinho," the Serie A club said on their website. "The player will be in Milan on Wednesday to undergo a medical and sign a contract that will keep him at Milan until 30 June 2011." City had reportedly bid £25.5m for the 28-year-old Brazilian. But Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport reported on its website that Milan will pay Spanish side Barcelona just £14.6m for his services, with the figure likely to be increased by performance-related bonuses.
Milan chief executive Adriano Galliani has been in Barcelona for talks with the club and the player for two days. The two-time Fifa World Player of the Year's time at Barcelona effectively came to an end in June when new manager Pep Guardiola announced the playmaker was surplus to requirements.
Nevertheless, the Catalans were not prepared to release Ronaldinho to join Dunga's Brazil squad for next month's Beijing Olympics. Ronaldinho helped Barcelona win back-to-back Spanish league titles (2004-05, 2005-06) and the Champions League in 2006, but failed to cement a regular place in the starting XI last season because of injury and fitness issues.
Friday, July 4, 2008
Rossoneri reign supreme
A brief history...
On 16 December 1899, Erbert Kilpin founded Milan Football and Cricket Club in the Lombardi capital. Within a few short decades, it would become one of the most prestigious clubs in the world.
As early as 1901, the fledgling outfit lifted its first Italian league title with the historic starting eleven of Hoode, Cignaghi, Torretta, Lees, Kilpin, Valerio, Dubini, Davies, Neville, Allison and Formenti.
In 1919, the club's name was shortened to 'Milan Football Club', before becoming 'Associazione Calcio Milan' (AC Milan) in 1938. Throughout these frequent reincarnations, the club's red-and-black strip remained unchanged. The choice of colours was also down to Erbert Kilpin, who explained at the time: "Let us be like the devil and instil fear in everyone."
But after a remarkable early flurry of success (three titles in seven years), the club had to endure an agonising barren spell lasting 44 years. In 1926, Milan acquired a stunning new home courtesy of the chairman at the time, Pierro Pirelli, who financed the construction of a new stadium, the San Siro, which took thirteen months to build. During the 1960s, the stadium was sold to the local council by AC Milan and renamed the Giuseppe Meazza stadium upon the death of the legendary player for their great rivals and ground-sharers Internazionale. From then on, it was referred to as the San Siro when AC Milan played there and the Giuseppe Meazza when Inter were at home.
In the 1950s, AC Milan started to make an impact on the European scene courtesy of the contributions of some exceptional foreign players. Most notable among these were the Swedish Gren-Nordahl-Liedholm trio, dubbed GRE-NO-LI by the Italian media, the Brazilian José Altafini and the Uruguayan Juan Schiaffino, tormentor of the Brazilians in the 1950 FIFA World Cup Final.
The 1960s was marked by the reign of the legendary Nereo Rocco in the dugout, and Cesare Maldini (father of Paolo), Giovanni Trapattoni, and the elegant Gianni Rivera on the field. This golden era was followed by a lengthy spell in the doldrums due to a serious betting scandal, or 'totonero'.
But since 10 February 1986, the date businessman, television magnate and future Italian president Silvio Berlusconi purchased 90% of the club's shares, AC Milan have risen from the ashes. Long before Chelsea did the same thing in England, Milan turned standard transfer market practice upside down in Italy. "I don't sell, I only buy," declared the new chairman on taking over, and within 10 years, AC Milan had won every major honour in the game. Between 1969 and 2003, the Rossoneri qualified for the Toyota Cup no less than seven times.
A seventh European Cup arrived in the summer of 2007 and it was followed in December of the same year by the club's crowning moment, when the Rossoneri became the first European side to win the FIFA Club World Cup. Their victory in the final of Boca Juniors, revenge for a defeat in TOYOTA Cup in 2003, came after the Italians had eliminated Urawa Red Diamonds in the semi-final. Kaka was the team's undoubted star, yet many saw the title as the product of Carlo Ancelotti's side's remarkable experience, with captain Paolo Maldini symbolising a team whose average age was 30.7 years old.
AC Milan Profile
City: Milan
Founded: 16 December 1899
Official website:www.acmilan.com
Honours:
* 1 FIFA Club World Cup
* 3 Intercontinental Cups: 1969, 1989, 1990
* 6 European Cups/UEFA Champions Leagues: 1963, 1969, 1989, 1990, 1994, 2003
* 2 European Cup Winners' Cups: 1968, 1973
* 4 European Super Cups: 1989, 1990, 1994, 2003
* 17 Italian Championships: 1901, 1906, 1907, 1951, 1955, 1957, 1959, 1962, 1968, 1979, 1988, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1999, 2004
* 5 Italian Cups: 1967, 1972, 1973, 1977, 2003
Legendary players:
Gunnar Nordahl (1949-56), Nils Liedholm (1949-61), Juan Schiaffino (1954-60), Jose Altafini (1959-66), Giovanni Trapattoni (1960-71), Gianni Rivera (1960-79), Franco Baresi (1977-97), Paolo Maldini (since 1985), Roberto Donadoni (1986-96), Ruud Gullit (1987-93, 1994), Marco van Basten (1987-95), Frank Rijkaard (1988-93), Demetrio Albertini (1988-2002), Dejan Savicevic (1992-98), Marcel Desailly (1993-98), George Weah (1995-2000), Andriy Shevchenko (1999-2006)
Records:
Paolo Maldini - appearances (ongoing)
Gunnar Nordahl - 221 goals
Ronaldinho 80-90% likely to join Milan
Ronaldinho is '80-90%' likely to secure a move to AC Milan, according to the Barcelona playmaker's agent Roberto De Assis. Milan have long been linked with a move for Ronaldinho after the Brazilian was told he was not part of Barca's plans for the future. Vice-president Adriano Galliani insisted on Thursday that a deal would only be completed if the price is right, but De Assis is confident his client will make the switch to the San Siro. 'Yes, it's true, it's true that he'll probably go to Milan,' De Assis - who is also Ronaldinho's brother - told Lombardy television stations. 'Everything's ready for the transfer. He is there 80-90% and we are working towards that. 'He is working hard to get back to his best and the important thing is that now he is fine and that he is working for his future.' Milan might be leading the pack but there is no shortage of other possible destinations for Ronaldinho, with Chelsea and Manchester City just two of the clubs reportedly in the hunt.
However, De Assis rubbished suggestions that the two-time FIFA World Player of the Year could join David Beckham at Los Angeles Galaxy. 'There's a contract with Barca, there's other possibilities,' he added. 'We'll see in the next fortnight. 'LA Galaxy? No, no, absolutely not. Why Galaxy? 'I absolutely rule out Galaxy. It's not possible because he is only 28 and he wants to play at least five or six years more at the top level in world football.'

