Serie Aaaaargh!…

Straight from the dark heart of Italy


Riccardo Rossi

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Star-studded la Liga leaves Serie A sulking


Thursday 02 July 2009 08:30

Do you ever get the feeling that the good times have gone and that they aren't coming back anytime soon?

Well, watching Ricky Kaka’s unveiling at the Santiago Bernabeu reinforced the thought that while La Liga is the new Hollywood, Italian football has become decidedly B-list.

They say that no man is bigger than a club, or a league for that matter.

But watching the Brazilian shine brightly in front of the adoring thousands in Madrid, this side of the Med the feeling is that of a spurned lover.


Kaka laps up his new lovers' adulation 

Amid all the hysteria in Spain – they even courted the Brazilian with Giacomo Puccini’s Nessun dorma – there seems little that can be done to incite another beauty to fancy Serie A.

Last summer, Jose Mourinho wooed everyone when he strolled into his first Inter Milan press conference and started nattering away in Italian.

While Ronaldinho drew 45,000 to the San Siro as AC Milan finally got their man – probably two or three years too late.

David Beckham injected a bit of glamour and razzmatazz to banish some of the January blues, but ended up relatively unmolested by one and all.

And now, when traditionally the transfer market should spark into life, there is little to make the heart race that bit quicker or at least persuade fans that they should be first in the queue for a season ticket.

Ronaldinho’s arrival saw Milan’s season-ticket sales leap from a relatively benign 28,000 to something in the region of 45,000.

It's doubtful that the names of Edin Dzeko, Emmanuel Adebayor or Luis Fabiano are going to create anything more than a ripple of mild interest.

Silvio Berlusconi has already revealed that, after going through the club’s budget sheet, he is not a happy man.

So there may be further bad news for the Rossoneri faithful by the end of the month when Alexandre Pato poses alongside former Milan alumnus Carlo Ancelotti at Stamford Bridge.

Champions Inter have been equally low key, concerned more about those seemingly desperate to leave rather than those knocking on the door to arrive.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic has priced himself out of the market and will have to make do with achieving the respect he craves throughout Europe by turning it on for the Nerazzurri, while Maicon has been told to shut up and sign up.

Tuttosport summed up the tired feel perfectly with their half-page headline claiming Xabi Alonso was back on Juventus' radar – again too late, one feels.

AS Roma are the first club back in pre-season training, and the Romans don’t have two shiny cents to rub together to motivate even a pauper to come to the Eternal City.

Such is the uncertainly surrounding whether the Sensi family will relinquish their majority holding that talks concerning Francesco Totti’s contract extension have even been put on hold indefinitely.


"So... about that contract" 

And just when you thought things couldn’t get any more dire, who raises his ugly mug once again?

Yes, the Lord of Darkness himself, Luciano Moggi, is back.

Banned from the game for five years but still apparently spinning his web in the shadows, any conspiracy theorists wondering how Bologna somehow beat the drop are in for a field day.

“Old Lucky” has been chumming it up with Bologna owner Renzo Meriarini and along the way has certainly not lost any of his brashness, claiming: “I was helping him out finding new capital. It was just a bit of free consultancy work.”

That must have sent a shudder down the spines of all Bologna fans, who believe that it was Moggi and his corrupting system that helped condemn their team to relegation last time round.

In these dog days of summer, we may have lost a glittering star, and we will live with that, but the last thing Italian football needs is a bad stain reappearing.

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Comments

  July 2, 2009 09:12

Fergal said:

As a fan of Italian football I wouldn't get too concerned about whats going on at Madrid. Yes, they are signing all in front of them but they are still a long way from being a great team, or even a good one. There's no point having all these great forwards when the guys behind them are all wasters. They may win a weak Spanish league but they'll come unstuck in Europe against the first decent English,or even Italian side they meet. As for the Italian transfer market it has been a bit depressing so far. Diego is the only big signing so far while only Milan could fall about blindly with the two attempts to get Cissokho and Dzeko.It's a pity neither worked out as they are exactly the type of player Milan should be looking for.As for Adebayor- stay away. Inter's signings have been nothing but average, but why no deal for Benzema?. They could have easily bought him with the money from Ibrahimovic,who they should sell. Roma and Fiorentina have yet to do anything. Still, they all have a few months to get a few good players in

  July 2, 2009 16:37

David Kim said:

This will be good time for Serie A to just try to develop good Italian players. Serie A shined in the 90s largely because of the Italian stars like Del Piero, Totti, Vieri, Maldini, Nesta, etc. I'm not denying that Zidane, Rui Costa, or other foreign players helped make Serie A awesome but now Italy is the underdog, and there's nothing they can do about that. Just hope that Italy does good in next World Cup or Euro 2012 so that public will turn its eyes back to Italy.

  July 3, 2009 08:08

Snyde said:

Talking a bit out of your *rse Fergal?

Weak spanish league? I thought Barca just won a competition in one of the most complete victories seen in the final. Which competition? The one Serie A miserably failed in.

Serie A should now be more concerned with Bundesliga and Ligue 1 than looking above.

  July 3, 2009 20:36

Forza Il Lupi said:

But overall, outside of the top 2 or 3 teams, Serie A is a stronger league and more competitive. AS Roma or Aston Villa?

  July 4, 2009 01:01

Fergal said:

TO SNYDE. Yes, Barca won the champions league and deserved to do so too. But that doesn't make the rest of the Spanish league strong. Chelsea, Arsenal and Man.Utd all had tough games against the Italians last season.But what kind of resistance did the English get from Madrid and Villarreal? They were both destroyed. Juve also did the double over Madrid too. The Spanish were also very poor in the Uefa cup. I'm not saying Italian teams are better, but there is no question that besides Barca, the Spanish teams have been average in Europe in the last few years, which points to a weak league overall. Still, watching truly great players like Xavi and Iniesta in the final was fantastic.

  July 5, 2009 00:26

Emmet said:

The Spanish league is incredibily weak, outside of  Barca and Real who is there? really? Villarreal, Valencia, Athletico, all average teams. Italian teams always have the beaten of Spanish teams. Case in point. 08-09 season, Juve beat Madrid twice(quite comfortably I may add) and Samp beat Sevilla in the UEFA.

Serie A is above La Liga in terms of teams IMO. Sure we dont have the star power, but sure when did individuals ever win competitons? Except when your name is Maradona.