Training Day

By: MAD | July 28th, 2009

Okay, I just wanted to take a step back from the Eto’o/Ibra thing. Yes, they are both big players. Yes, the money that is changing hands could feed my family for 20 years 10,000 years. Yes, they are both fabulously wealthy and the existence of reality TV shows that we care about this, apparently.

I think that we are missing the forest for the trees at the moment. Yes, these individual trees are fabulous as I have said, but Inter Forest isn’t made up of only one tree, no matter what tripe the Juve, Roma and Milan idiots try to salve their own wounded egos with.

So, I wanted to take a moment in all the preseason prediction hysteria to focus on the players that will actually have a say in how many spaces we fill in our trophy cabinets next spring. I don’t think that I am out of line in expecting at least 1 piece of silverware.

This past Saturday, my wife and I watched Inter and Milan practice. Ibra wasn’t there of course, which highlighted how many gifted players there are for this team. It also gave a lot of insight on what people mean when they say that Mourinho trains differently than other coaches. It also showed me how hard some players work and how hard some don’t.

A quick overview and then a quick look at whom I noticed working hard.

First of all, the only part of practice when the players weren’t using the ball was the stretching. In complete contrast to the Milan practice, the stretching was organized, supervised and at the coaches command. This means that the single most important part of the practice was treated as such by the training staff, and I can’t tell people how happy that made me. As a former coach – at a much lower level – stretching properly and with the correct technique is the best way to keep players on the pitch. There’s nothing you can really do about knee ligaments or broken bones or freak accidents, but pulls, sprains, tears and overall fitness can be improved.

The second part of practice was a game of foot and hand passing with 4 teams in a confined area. It was a warm up and it looked like the players were all having a good time. More importantly, whatever the goal of the game was, they were working intensely at it. The coaches hovered around giving directions and restarting play whenever the ball crossed a line. Again, in contrast to the Milan practice where the players just ran back and forth a bunch of times. They did it on their own and without a whole lot of direction. Btw, after the game was over on Sunday, the young players on Milan had to run extra too, a lot. Even those who played had to run. It looked like it sucked big time – and it also looked like they weren’t too happy with it.

The goalkeepers were on the other side of the pitch than I was on so I couldn’t see really great but it was easy to see how they were training and who the best keeper was. The goalkeepers were using short bursts of activity to build explosiveness while slowly gearing up the difficulty. For example, the first goalkeeper up in the first drill had to move across the goal mouth while catching underhand throws. He had to move quickly in a short area but although intense, it was over quick for him. After the other 3 keepers had gone through the same drill he was up again, this time the ball is volleyed instead of thrown but it’s still right to him. The next time it’s volleyed harder. The next time it’s thrown to the side. Eventually, he has to stretch out in a full dive just to get a hand on it – all while moving across the line quickly getting up quickly in time to dive again.

When the senior goalkeepers rejoined the squad Belec and who I can only guess was Orlandoni moved to the other end of the pitch and continued training. I got a much better look at Belec. The kid is young by player standards, but by goalkeeping standards, he’s a fetus. He also lacks a lot of explosiveness at this point and he has poor technique. His feet rarely make it off the ground on the full out diving saves and he has a short range of effectiveness. He didn’t look incredibly instinctive or crazy either. A little crazy goes a long way for a keeper. I should also point out that both keepers got rounds of applause by the fans after their drills. It was obvious how hard they were working and they had the attention of everyone sitting behind the endzone and on that half of the field where we were sitting.

While the keepers were going at it, the team had some Monkey in the Middle drills right in front of the stands. It was obviously placed so that the fans that paid the extra fee for the tickets could get long extended looks at the team. There was some heckling and calling out that happened but it wasn’t real bad. There were a lot of Milan supporters but they weren’t the ones making remarks, I’m sad to say. Zanetti, Cambiasso, Chivu, Lucio, Santon, and Cordoba were amongst those who were right in front of me. The other two or three other groups were all to my right down the endline. The group immediately to my right looked like it had a lot of the younger guys. I remember seeing Obi Wan and Quaresma over there, I think.

The last part of practice was a scrimmage. I remember four things about this part of practice: 1. Quaresma was working his ass off 2. Mancini hit the ground about 4 times – once he needed the medicos 3. Marco left practice early – like really early 4. It was short but pretty intense. Practice ended about a half hour earlier than it was supposed to and then Mourinho and some players came to there stands area to sign stuff. I’m not really into that stuff so I hung back to try and get some photos. But the press of bodies to get stuff signed was like a horror movie doing a piranha scene. People had begun to line up on the fences way before practice ended to get good signing spots. I couldn’t get any photos of players or coaches – I tried to get Baresi but he was swarmed too – really super close up. But I had a good time regardless.

Okay, players who caught my attention:

Zanetti – Practiced hard and was always in the thick of things. He just looked like he was in control of things. Confident and in control – like during a game – that’s just how he is, I guess. And he just didn’t stop working…

Cesar – All the goalkeepers looked good in drills but there is just a quality that Cesar has that is hard to define. He has more range, more explosion and less extra movement. Physically, I don’t think that there is a better goalkeeper in the world. He needs to work on decision making, such as when to leave his line, and catching. Otherwise he’s great. But he could be better… and that’s a little scary.

Cambiasso – Three words describe Cambiasso: tireless, tireless and tireless. It was a minor miracle that he wasn’t injured last season, as he has been in every other year since he came to the team. If he goes down… we lose a lot.

Maicon – Maicon was notable for his appearance and lack of response that I heard for him. People went crazy when Cesar did anything. I heard people talking about him, but it wasn’t really happy talk. It was more of, “Oh, he bothered to show up?” I am happy he is on the team- and as a player he’s the best in the world at what he does – but at this point do I say that he’s a legend in the making? Or am I just marking time until he’s “no longer happy”?

Balotelli – I don’t think I can express how poorly I thought he trained. I think he walked through most of it, and I think he was just there until he was able to leave. Like several others, he was spotted watching Milan practice. I am now going on record and saying that as much native ability as he has, I can see Mario turning into Adriano in 5 years. I don’t think it was possible for him to look less interested in playing.

Quaresma – He worked hard, I have to give him that. I think he also wiped out Mancini once during the scrimmage. Quaresma has talent, confidence, ability, quickness and a certain amount of speed… he just lacks… something… I can’t even put it into words. A certain strength of will to dominate, perhaps?

The Coaches – I wouldn’t have thought that the coaches would spend so much time actually coaching. At this point you have to figure that they know the game, but the coaches were there instructing and talking to players about the game/stretching/warm down everything, including Mourinho.

Contrast this to the Milan practice, and the coaches mostly talked to each other. Leonardo spent the first part of the practice talking with Ronaldinho, who just came out for a half assed stretch and Maicon, who was finished practicing. The coached talked to each other and there were long stretches when the players where done with an activity and the coaches looked like they were still talking to each other.

Inter went from activity to activity. The only breaks were for water and then it was off to the next thing – which is what I expected from a professional team. I was, frankly, shocked at the Milan practice.

More Photos!

There was a lot of speculation on who these shadowy figures were. Some thought it was Moratti and crew. Some thought it was the Krafts. Some thought it was Uncle Fester.

Someone got a good line off on Mourinho and he acknowledges the touche with a wave

Chivu, Cambiasso, Santon, Belec and the guy who is cropped a bit to the right is Lucio

Got to love this group that was in front of me for a good 20 – 30 minutes.

I keep reading about how Juve are getting closer to us and I look at these guys and I just don’t see it…



The next group over to the right from where we were sitting. Obi Wan, Toldo, Cesar and Deki

The reason I don’t have more Zanetti photos? It wasn’t for lacking of trying, but the bastard just won’t sit still!

A rare moment…

The captain at work

Last one I’ll post, hopefully these weren’t too boring. The first thing that flew into my mind when I saw this picture was, “My god, they look like they could be brothers!” The second thing that came into my mind was, “NOOOOOOOO!”



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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 2:15 pm

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    First of all, let’s realize that I have said repeatedly that I don’t watch La Liga, so I don’t know what Eto’o is good at.

    In fact the first game I watched all the way through in which he played was the CL final.

    So, compared to what I am used to in Zlatan, seeing a forward, or in this case two forwards, who came back and actively try to help out on defense, and be effective, to preserve a lead was a nice surprise for me. I didn’t expect that kind of effort from a forward – I am just not used to it.

    And I am not sure if this is too soon to mention, but Zlatan has been officially gone for two games… and we have won them both… not that I am trying to make any connection…

    Posted from United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 2:29 pm

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    MAD, dont tempt fate. Plus, these two games dont count for snot.

    BTW – at what point does the press stop writing about Ibra under the “Italian football” section? He no longer plays in Italy and I am tired of reading about him. I need a little distance.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 2:38 pm

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    Okay, let’s change the subject…

    There has been a weird vibe about the transfer market lately and the name that gets whispered a lot is Sneijder (man, am I going to hate having to spell that name before too long).

    I mean, Deco is the name that everyone is chattering incessantly about, but all the quiet voices of reason are calmly mentioning this Wesley guy as the one to watch for.

    So… let’s pool resources. Who is he, what’s he like and is he what we are looking for. Most importantly can he survive with Mourinho and this team?

    Posted from United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 2:50 pm

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    All I know is that he is relatively young (24), Dutch, he is another hair-challenged midfielder (why are all of them bald?), and CRon seems to like him quite a bit.

    http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/0cBra2K67I0bt/610x.jpg

    (beware Wesley, CRon probably has cooties!)

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 2:52 pm

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    And while we are on the subject of photos,

    That is how I like to see a coach – relaxed and arrogant:
    http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/06WJ2BX23w859/610x.jpg

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 3:10 pm

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    And this from Muntari after the match:

    The Ghanaian also commented on the competition for a place in the Inter midfield this season, adding: “We are a team. We are a family. There’s no war between us.”

    Awwww. That’s what I like to hear. Everyone pulling together.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • For Real |  July 30th, 2009 at 3:20 pm

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    It seems like the team is now thinking of them selves us a team and no more Ibra dependent which i think is great . Am sure it wouldn’t be easy without Ibra but this time we are going to capitalize on our handicap which is not having a swift , good dribbler and with an eye for only nice and wonderful goals Ibra ( Remember Mourinho last season Ibra should try and score the easier goals instead of better ones all the time ) to do all the work but we are going to learn to work and score goals for fun doesn’t matter how it comes what matters is a team of 11 players makes it helping.. Today Muntari tried a couple of shot on his own but with Ibra he will have passed but believe me that guy has a tender shot to shoot from long range also.

    Posted from United States

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  • Alessandro |  July 30th, 2009 at 4:01 pm

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    IL PRINCIPE is phenomenal, he’s fitting right in. Eto’o is still a long way from lasting 90 minutes, but I liked what I saw. He worked hard and did well to keep possession. Thiago Motta is also really impressing me. He’s so calm on the ball and he combined well with Cambiasso and Muntari in the middle.

    Posted from United States

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  • Francesco |  July 30th, 2009 at 4:35 pm

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    [quote] Jojo_milan | July 29th, 2009 at 4:05 pm
    Valid points, Francesco. So what if you had a choice to pick a playmaker, you have a preference ? [/quote]

    If I were in Branca&Oriali’s shoes, the player I’m looking for is an attacking midfielder (and **not** a striker/winger/tweener) who scores big points in the following categories: physical strength, dynamism, stamina, young age/upside.
    Let me get this straight: we don’t need to turn our style of play inside out. (Read: there is no need for a player with entirely different qualities compared to the ones who won us 3 consecutive titles).
    I project our player as someone who can do what Deki Stankovic pretty much did for us the last few years. That is, act as a facilitator in the transition from defence/ball possession to the attack phase. A player who can play in the hole and is able to sustain that kind of effort night in and night out without losing too much in terms of quality in the process. Deki did that for us the last 2 years especially but, alas, he’s getting old and we can’t demand that much from him on a weekly basis for much longer.
    With that in mind, I think we can cross out Cassano, for all the reasons in my previous post + he’s not a midfielder (counter that, you Cassano lovers!), and Deco (30+ years old, although still decent points in many of the above criteria).
    That leaves only Sneijder on the table, out of the 3 players that were mostly debated here. He’s young (25), dynamic, has good stamina (although he’s not very physically endowed). He fits the “attacking midfielder” mold and he’s also a finesse player (according to many he was the in-pectore Euro2008 MVP, until the Netherlands imploded in the quarter finals). Also a plus: Real Madrid are bound to sell some of their players at some point in time, aren’t they? So he might as well be coming pretty cheap, perhaps.

    Then there’s a player whose name I’ve never heard mentioned in relationship to Inter as of lately (then, obviously, anybody’s name has been linked to Inter at some point in time): Bastian Schweinsteiger. He’s young (24), physically very strong and yet dynamic, has good ball skills. He’s basically the definition of the versatile, modern attacking midfielder. I admit, however, I have no idea what Bayern Munich’s plans for him are like (although I have a feeling they might be persuaded).
    The last name I want to put forward is one that will without a doubt have quite a few people here topple over: Yoann Gourcuff. Yes, the former AC Milan bench-warmer.
    The more i think about it the more it makes quite a lot of sense to me: (1) his natural position is precisely the one I was trying to portray a few lines above; (2) last year at Bordeaux he was nothing short of a revelation: he was awarded Player of the Year honours and carried his team to their first title in 10 years, being anointed as the Great French Hope for next year’s World Cup along with Ribery; (3) at 23, he’s as young as they come; (4) his style of play and ball mastery often draw comparisons to none other than Zinedine Zidane, and physically he’s something of a perfect replica (+ the hair). Last but not least: (5) if he enjoys some degree of success at Inter that’ll be the final straw that will send legions of hateful AC Milan fans spiraling down a dark circle of despair.
    And no: AC Milan has no direct control on the player any longer, Bordeaux have signed him permanently at the end of last season.
    The bad news is that he would not come cheap: he costed Bordeaux a pretty penny and if we’re able to snatch him from them they would definitely want to cash in big time. Also, I just don’t see him putting a rather safe spot on the French national squad at risk weeks before the beginning of the year leading to the World Cup.

    Posted from Germany Germany

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  • Kirby |  July 30th, 2009 at 4:55 pm

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    i missed the match (had an exam to write) but it sound like there were alot of positives coming out of it. milito sounds like he’s going to be scoring a goal game for us.

    i love eet!!! forza inter!!!

    Posted from United States

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  • Jojo_milan |  July 30th, 2009 at 4:59 pm

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    Detailed and enjoyable post Francesco. Have you heard of the latest news about Pablo Aimar (Benfica) or Rakitic who plays for Schalke which I guess you might be familiar with being in Germany? Any opinion about either one ?

    One thing I know is that we do need a playmaker. I am surprised Eto’o didn’t include that request in his contract. Without a playmaker who gets his runs, he is not going to do us any good.

    Oh, by the way, I was right, Milito can turn a snail !

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Kirby |  July 30th, 2009 at 5:13 pm

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    i honestly think some of you doubt the distribution capabilities of motta and cambiasso…

    Posted from United States

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  • Kirby |  July 30th, 2009 at 5:15 pm

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    oh, good news guess, supposedly we’re closing the deal for mr Arnatovic tomorrow. thats sweet, sweet music to my earssssssss

    Posted from United States

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  • Kirby |  July 30th, 2009 at 5:23 pm

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    wowie! i like i like!!!

    for those like myself who havent seen milito’s goal today, here you go:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHosE3nNIdw

    twas an excellent finish

    Posted from United States

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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 7:13 pm

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    Btw, that was Muntari who provided the assist for Milito by tackling the ball in the offensive side of the field (remember Mourinho always talking about playing a high line and playing defense in the opposition’s half?) and dishing it to Milito – you remember, that poacher type forward that we supposedly aren’t able to feed…

    Anyway, I actually happen to remember that for Real Madrid, Cambiasso was a Trequartista and for Mancio he played much higher up the midfield… but that isn’t really here nor there…

    I think that we are forgetting about Galloppa the just under 6′ play maker that used to play for Siena. I was really hoping we would have signed that guy.

    Posted from United States

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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 7:14 pm

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    Btw, how quickly is Milito assimilating to the team? He is acting like a real professional.

    Posted from United States

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  • brian |  July 30th, 2009 at 7:26 pm

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    yeah i know the preseason doesn’t mean much, but milito has looked great in limited action so far. hopefully he will look even better with a playmaker behind him, if we get one.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 9:48 pm

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    MAD, you are a little obsessed with Galloppa! :)

    And yes, Milito seems to be the consummate professional. Plus after watching his frustration at not scoring during the Inter – Club America match, it is clear that he really wants to do well for the club. He is so earnest.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • Vinod |  July 30th, 2009 at 9:55 pm

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    MAD, I don’t know which Real Madrid you’re talking about, but I don’t recall ever seeing Cambiasso playing as a trequartista. Furthest up I’ve ever seen him play is as a box-to-box midfielder in his first couple of seasons. Or maybe you were talking about his teenage days with Real B?

    In any case, I can’t argue that he has undoubted creative potential, which Mourinho doesn’t utilize. He would rather use Cambiasso’s fantastic reading of the game to break plays than make them. Well, if it makes us have the strongest defence in Europe, maybe its a small price to play. I’ve noticed though, that when the going gets rough, Cambiasso attacks more and more. Like the second leg vs. Man Utd for instance.

    Milito is so darn clinical – I’d almost forgotten what it was like to have a classic penalty box striker. He has it all, terrific positioning, decent enough skill, snooker-accurate shots with both feet. He’s really impressing – I pray he can keep it up all season long. He might make us forget Cruz, Crespo, and young Bobby Acquafresca pretty soon.

    Also, anyone notice that there’s much more togetherness in the celebrations of late? I wonder why… :)

    Posted from United States

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  • Johonna |  July 30th, 2009 at 10:16 pm

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    Vinod, I think the togetherness came with Mourinho. Remember how he had them riding on each others backs (presumably as a bonding exercise) at the beginning of last season? I think Mou is all about the team.

    Posted from United States United States

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  • barindera |  July 30th, 2009 at 11:17 pm

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    Couldnt agree with you more Johonna.

    Btw I didnt get a chance to see today’s game how did Quaresma do?

    Posted from United States

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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 11:27 pm

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    Madrid signed Cambiasso as an offensive playmaker from Agentinos Juniors and put him on the B team for several years before loaning him out a bunch of times back to Argentina.

    He came back to Real early in the 2000’s and wasn’t used very much, so they allowed his contract to run out in 2004.

    http://www.sport.it/galleria/index.php?galid=3427353&pic=2

    http://www.fcinternews.it/?action=read&idnotizia=6222

    Posted from United States

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  • MAD |  July 30th, 2009 at 11:33 pm

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    It was nice to see someone put away a close up shot that was on target and beat the keeper.

    And I am a little obsessed with Galloppa I admit. I have also a soft spot in my heart growing for Diamanti.

    Inter never seems to have a playmaker, no matter how hard we try to get one. Defensive midfielders we have always had. Great defenses we have always had. Strikers we have always had.

    But playmakers… we had Berti for a while and that was interesting. We tried to shoehorn Pirlo into a playmaker, but that didn’t work. We had Pizzarro but he is too small, slow and can’t play defense. We tried to make Pandev into a support player but he didn’t like it…

    I have hopes for Krhin, but they are not too high.

    Posted from United States

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  • Vinod |  July 31st, 2009 at 7:32 am

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    I don’t know about Krhin – it seems like Mourinho wants to turn him into his new Cambiasso. Krhin looks like an intelligent player, he knows how to spray the ball about, I’ll give him that. The role he played yesterday though, it was that pivot in front of defence. Poor kid hardly attacked, instead we had to settle for watching Vieira push forward, make the slightest contact with some Monaco player, and sprawl on the ground. The ref fell for it too, he gave so many soft fouls.

    I don’t know, it seems like Mourinho’s priority is to ensure that the defence is rock-solid, even if that means causing a potentially creative player to knuckle down into a hardman role.

    Maybe Kerlon could get upto something – I wonder where he is…

    Posted from United States

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  • Johonna |  July 31st, 2009 at 8:19 am

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    Kerlon had surgery at the end of last season (which is why he has not gone out on loan again). I dont think he will even be able to train until this winter.

    Posted from United States United States

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