Inter and Juve looking for Euro bounce back
ROME (AFP) - Having been humbled in midweek by the best team in Europe, the best team in Italy will be looking to bounce back this weekend.
Inter Milan were given a lesson on Tuesday by a Barcelona team that still proved superior despite missing star forwards Lionel Messi and Zlatan Ibrahimovic.
But while Inter's Champions League struggles continue—they have won only three out of 13 games in Europe's premier competition under coach Jose Mourinho—they will look to re-assert their domestic dominance in Florence on Sunday.
But that will not be easy against a team buoyed by their own continental exertions.
La Viola may sit sixth in Serie A and already 11 points behind Inter after only 13 games but they secured progress to the Champions League knock-out stages with a 1-0 defeat of Lyon.
It was the culmination of tangible progress in Europe for Cesare Prandelli's team who a year ago limped out meekly.
This time, they have qualified with a game to spare in a group containing English giants Liverpool.
However, they are still missing playmaker Adrian Mutu and centre-back Alessandro Gamberini although young Montenegro star Stevan Jovetic could make his injury comeback.
Inter will be trying to refocus following their Barcelona disappointment, and that despite some harsh words from their president ringing in their ears.
"We stayed in Milan, it was a wasted trip for me, something like this has never happened before" fumed Massimo Moratti.
"Everyone needs to know how to take his own responsibility to do better next time and I'm sure that everyone, Mourinho included, will do so."
Leaders Inter not only need to put their Barca debacle behind them but also not let thoughts of next weekend's crucial clash against second-place Juventus distract them either.
The heat has been brewing ahead of that match since last weekend, with Inter's young black striker of Ghanaian origin Mario Balotelli at the centre of it.
Juventus were fined 20,000 euros in midweek for distasteful chants their fans directed against Balotelli during Sunday's 1-0 victory against Udinese.
Those, which were repeated in France against Bordeaux in midweek, rekindled memories of nasty racist chants directed at the teenager during the pair's clash in Turin last season.
Having the behaviour of their fans examined under a microscope has not helped Juve, who also lost 2-0 in Bordeaux and like Inter face a tense all or nothing match in the Champions League in two weeks time.
Juve travel to Sardinia on Sunday to play Cagliari, who have been in excellent form recently.
The Sardinians were edged out in a seven-goal thriller against AC Milan a week ago but before that had won four in a row.
Juve have also been disrupted by perceived criticism of coach Ciro Ferrara by Brazilian playmaker Diego, who was quick to try to clarify his comments on his personal website.
Following the defeat in Bordeaux he had said it was up to the coach to identify problems and solve them.
"I didn't want to attack the coach, but only explain that the coach has to make the decisions," he said.
Meanwhile AC Milan travel to Catania hoping to improve on their midweek showing at home to Marseille.
Marseille twice hit the woodwork in a 1-1 draw that leaves Milan favourites to pip the French in the bid to reach the competitions knock-out rounds.
Fixtures:
Saturday
Genoa v Sampdoria, Udinese v Livorno
Sunday
Atalanta v AS Roma, Bari v Siena, Cagliari v Juventus, Catania v AC Milan, Chievo v Palermo, Inter Milan v Fiorentina, Lazio v Bologna, Parma v Napoli
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44 Comments
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AC Milan is the other team.....The right name is Internazionale, Inter, Inter of milano or inter F.C.
And that's it.....Capite ...Sti Rompi palle !!.....Ciao da un Interista per vita..
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africa or africa period it is a nigthmare for the spanish because the moors and arab rule spain for long time.... so, i really don't see any kind racism in them but fear and hate because of the long history between africa and spain
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I am not defending he Southwest or any part of the US for that matter. Racial profiling is rampant in every part of the country. HOwever, have you seen anyone in a stadium in the US calling players racist names? Have you heard monkey noises and seen bananas thrown at players. If not bananas have you seen anything derogatory (RACIAL) in US stadiums in the southwest in stadiums? If people can do it in stadiums where the whole public can see them, I am affraid of what they would do in private. It would be much worse than cutting family ties if that person married a black. Have you seen a US official keep his post after he called someone a derogatory name? When Louis Aragones called Thiery Henry "a black @#$%", he kept his post. You would never see this in the US. Racism is official in SPAIN if a high ranking official can get away with it.
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Thats just how spain is. Its has racism like any other country. There problem is just being insensitive. You can call it what you want but its not racism. I have seen real racism here in the southwest against mexicans. Families cutting ties with their son for marrying a mexican. Racist name calling. If they were looked at as a second citizen it would be at step foward.
So stop judging because you have very little room to talk.
Live there for a few years and then tell me if its worse than the USA.
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One thing thing that you are missing is that the way spaniards speak can be seem very racist by people of other cultures. For example, there is an commonly used expression that you use to express that you are working very hard. You say that you are working like a black man. This is reffering to manual labor. Someone who uses this expression may or may not be racist.
Spain's culture is insensitive to calling people names or being politicaly correct. This doesnt mean that they are racist or that they arent. Its just an insensitive culture towards everyone. I am telling you that they are not any more racist than Americans in the southwest.
Those tpyes of name calling will not only be heard towards blacks but also towards, asian, muslim, americans, latins, people from the north, south, east and west, fat, skinny, uggly,...
This doesnt mean spaniards hate people of over races or that they want to kill those people. They are just insensitive.
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I'm a Black American. My wife went to Malaga and Marbella for our honeymoon in 2001 long before Aragones and anything else mentioned here. We were glared it, comments were made, we weren't treated with warmth or in a welcoming manner by the locals. Only people in the service industry were polite and engaged me in what little Spanish I can speak.
But we had been warned by my parents who had been there as well as in Madrid a year earlier on vacation. They too were treated very poorly and only a little better when they got to Barcelona.
So I have travelled there and therefore are not speaking out of ignorance but rather exeperience. Spain DOES have a race problem and it's been laid plain for the world to see thanks to futbol.
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Spain does have a race issue. Don't tell people to live there to experience it. I visited Barca twice and you can hears some of the underlying hatred for blacks when your mixing with some locals (jokes here and there). They have teams who play in empty stadiums because of mob racism. Entire clubs have fans that chant in unison very mean things like monkey noises and some throw bananas. Watch the Barca vs. Real Zargosa game 2 or 3 years ago, Eto was going to walk off the pitch, but the refs and other team players convinced him to stay and play. The ref confirm they heard it and some of the Zaragosa players admitted to hearing it. Of course it is not the majority but in the USA (i know we are far from perfect) we never have football games when the players are being hit with a dozen bananas or monkey chants never never rain down from the stands.
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not what it used to be, its the 3rd or 4th best league out there at best
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Viva il calcio !
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And you have an ignorance issue, don't talk about what you don't know, travel to Spain, live there for several months then you will be qualifyed to evaluate if your statement is true or not
1 - 25 of 44