Paolo Maldini Thread

Rex

Moderator
Joined
May 3, 2002
Messages
4,058
Reaction score
0
Location
Planet Earth
LOL...San Paolo cracked me up again. :D

P.S. Seeing our captain expresses no doubt 'I will do everything to be there' is exactly morale boost for other team-mates to deserve the best in closing stages. If he really fits, I would field him alongside Nesta but I wouldn't take any risks if the match eventually goes to extra time. Thus, I'd rather the goalfest occur during 90-minute-mark though. Time to deliver.
 

Rosanna03

Milan Icon
Joined
May 28, 2006
Messages
2,870
Reaction score
0
Location
Germany
Fav. Players
MALDINI, Pirlo
San Paolo said:
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOT!!

Better than winning the UCL Trophy!! Now I can go watch him :proud:


WOW, this is really fantastic, so Paolo will play for another year.
I'm really really really sooooooooooo happpyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy about it.
It is hard to find words for it, it is like a dream come true. :) :) :)

But you are totally right, this is better than winning the CL. :)

FORZA CAPITANO :proud: :proud: :proud:
 

Rosanna03

Milan Icon
Joined
May 28, 2006
Messages
2,870
Reaction score
0
Location
Germany
Fav. Players
MALDINI, Pirlo
Football means Milan

Friday, 18 May 2007
by Paolo Menicucci
from Milan

The UEFA Champions League final against Liverpool FC will not be Paolo Maldini’s last match as many football fans had feared. The AC Milan captain has decided to play on for another season, his 24th wearing the No3 shirt for the Rossoneri. When Maldini does retire in 2008, the club will keep his shirt for safe-keeping, guarding it in the hope of returning it to the family one day if his son Christian, the promising grandson of former Milan captain Cesare Maldini, breaks into the first team. Paolo, 38, spoke with uefa.com about Milan’s family dynasty and his hopes and expectations for his eighth European Champion Clubs’ Cup final.

uefa.com: After the defeat in 2005 is this final more special?

Paolo Maldini: Facing Liverpool is an opportunity to take revenge, but we have nothing against them. During my career I won most of the games I deserved to win. That night was not like that because we surely deserved to win and we didn't. However, we don't have to think about our opponents too much. We have to play our own game and then accept the result on the pitch. They are a dangerous side especially with [Steven] Gerrard and [Peter] Crouch.

uefa.com: What's the build-up to the final like?

Maldini: We are quite calm now. The tension will raise as we get closer to the game, starting from when we leave for Athens on Monday.

uefa.com: Three finals in four years. What is Milan’s secret in this competition?

Maldini: I think the secret is a completely different style of game and life in general. The whole club is different. This is the only club who keeps players even if they are over 35, looking at their talent without considering their age.

uefa.com: How many other finals would you like to play?

Maldini: I hope to play another one after this one in Athens because next season will surely be my last.

uefa.com: The final against Liverpool will be your eighth in the competition, the same number as Real Madrid CF legend Paco Gento. What do you think about reaching such a milestone?

Maldini: Honestly I never cared so much about records. I only think about winning as many trophies as possible and Milan gave me the chance to play so many finals in this competition. Believe me, it is not easy to reach the UEFA Champions League final.

uefa.com: Could you ever imagine achieving so much when you were younger?

Maldini: No, no. I just wanted to become a good Serie A player. When I was younger it was not very common to see Italian teams winning so many trophies in Europe. Milan and Inter had managed to win the trophy twice during the Sixties but otherwise there weren't many Italian teams who had been able to dominate in Europe.

uefa.com: Did your father Cesare give you your love for football?

Maldini: My father did not talk much about football with me. He thought mostly about teaching me as a man and about my education. I think I've loved football since the day I was born. This love pushes me to go on despite my age. I don't think my love for the game will ever die. However in order to achieve great results and always be at the top you have to be lucky enough to play with a great club and I have had this opportunity.

uefa.com: What is Milan for you?

Maldini: Milan is football for me. I have played for this club for my whole career, I was born in Milan, and my father had a very important career with this team. For me the word football means Milan.


uefa.com: Your own son plays for Milan's youth team. Do you think he will become a good player?

Maldini: At his age – he has not turned eleven yet – you can already see if he is capable and he surely is. If he manages to develop this talent and if has the ambition to reach great goals, the next step will be deciding whether he wants to try this career or not.

uefa.com: When you retire, Milan will retire your No3 jersey. Would you like to see your son wearing that shirt?

Maldini: If somebody wears that shirt again, it will surely be one of my sons. I think it would be a very good story.

©uefa.com 1998-2007. All rights reserved.


A great interview from our great Capitano :) :) :)
Can't wait to see him lift up the trophy once again :proud: :proud: :proud:

:devil2: FORZA PAOLO :devil2:
 

crazymilangirl

Busy, Busy, Busy
Joined
Apr 20, 2006
Messages
5,842
Reaction score
0
Location
Europe
Fav. Players
Maldini, Kaka, Gourcuff, Gattuso, Pirlo, Nesta, Seedorf and Superpippo!!!!
OMG..i swear i just watched this ^^^interview on tv..like 20 mins ago
anyway his father spoke, desailly spoke, gattuso of course, kaka ALOT, inzaghi and ancelotti ;)
we're all positive about this and it was sooo great watching some old maldini clips...just that teh 2005 one just broke my heart all over again :head: but imma let bygones be bygones and cant wait for the final..its going to be something special even though we are lucky enough to have maldini with us next season
 

kats

Starting Eleven
Joined
Mar 19, 2007
Messages
339
Reaction score
0
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Maldini out (to) put the record straight
Kevin Palmer

There are occasions when fate seems to play more than a minor role in the outcome of a sporting event and Paolo Maldini is convinced AC Milan fell foul of such an intervention two years ago.

Paolo Maldini: The 38-year-old legend (GettyImages)

Maldini scored the opening goal of the 2005 Champions League that looked set to be an embarrassing one-sided affair as Carlo Ancelotti's men stormed into a 3-0 half-time advantage, yet by the end of extra-time and with the scores tied, almost unbelievably, at 3-3, Liverpool sealed their fifth European title with a penalty shoot-out win.

It's no surprise that May 25th 2005 is etched into the folklore of Liverpool FC like few others in their long and illustrious history, yet Maldini views the date in a very different and decidedly darker light. While World Cup Final defeats and many a high profile setback have littered a career that has also featured so many highs, he has little hesitation when selecting the game that hurt him more than any other.

'I still find it hard to believe what happened to us against Liverpool in Istanbul two years ago,' concedes the 38-year-old. 'When you are three up at half-time, you expect to win 99 times out of a hundred, but then something amazing happened and from our point of view, it was something terrible.

'We were playing so fluently and it seemed that nothing could stop us. Then it all exploded in our faces. In six crazy minutes we were pegged back and it was like living through a nightmare. I've had lots of disappointments in my career, but this was on another level.

'Their keeper (Jerzy Dudek) was in a state of grace. Not only was he decisive in the penalty shoot-out, I'll never know how he made that double save from Andriy Shevchenko late in extra-time. I still think about this now at night. How could this happen to us?'

With 600 Serie A games under his belt and, remarkably, over 150 appearances in Europe's top club competition to his name, Maldini's relives his memories of that never to be forgotten night in Turkey as if he is telling the tragic tale of a death in his family and in many ways, that's just what it was. For this Milanese icon, such a collapse was a very personal tragedy.

As Milan tossed away Championship League glory in such dramatic fashion, Maldini was rocked to his core and his memories of the hangover that followed should serve as his ultimate driving force as he prepares to meet the same opponent in the 2007 running of UEFA's showpiece event.

Dignified as ever, Maldini refutes suggestions that 'revenge' will be on his mind as he shakes hands with Steven Gerrard and bids for his fifth European Cup winning medal on Wednesday, but he admits the Istanbul effect should focus any wavering minds.

'Professionals are good at putting bad results behind them, drawing a veil over the past and moving on to the next challenge, but this was a result which was particularly hard to come to terms with,' says the defender who won his first European crown back in 1989.

'We felt we were the best team on the night as we created more chances. We were flying and it seemed as if nothing could stop us. Then it all exploded in our faces. In six crazy minutes we were pegged back and it was like living through a nightmare.

'In some ways, everything was going too well for us and then it all fell away. You come away with an empty feeling and then face the whole summer, your whole life, wondering how it happened. Usually there's a rationale to victories and defeats. Play well and you reap the benefit, but in 2005 that wasn't the case. It was a result that defied explanation.

'Of course, I've had my share of disappointments in football. Losing to Brazil on penalties in the 1994 World Cup Final, France coming from behind to beat Italy in the Euro 2000 Final. Defeat in Champions League Finals against Marseille and Ajax. I've had lots of disappointments in my career, but Istanbul was on another level.

'It's surreal that Milan and Liverpool are again involved in a Champions League Final. Revenge is a strong word when talking about sport. Personally, I've nothing against the Liverpool players or their manager, but it's clear that all of us who experienced the enormous letdown of Istanbul are doubly determined to put the record straight in Athens.'

While the likes of Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho and Milan boss Carlo Ancelotti have done their bit to undermine Liverpool in their pre-match briefings, Maldini has far too much class to stoop to such levels. Indeed, his praise of Liverpool and, in particular, one of their most maligned players is fulsome.

'One of Liverpool's great strengths is the tactical work of the coach, Rafa Benitez,' says. 'We'll be facing one of the most solid and well-drilled teams around. As for their players, Steven Gerrard is an obvious danger man, but I would also pick out (Peter) Crouch. Anyone who is that tall has to be a handful in the air.

'Still, we honestly don't like to focus unduly on the opposition. At Milan, the emphasis is on making sure we get our game exactly right, just like we did in the semi-final against Manchester United.'

There was a theory that Maldini's eighth appearance in the Final of this competition would represent his final bow on the big stage, but his determination to carry on for another season has been justified by his steady performances throughout this turbulent campaign for Milan.

Even at the age of 38, there are few better defenders in the world and while his status as a legend of the game will not be affected by the events in Athens this week, the image of him lifting that famous silver trophy into the sky once again may just become the iconic moment he is best remembered for.

For one who has achieved so much, it needs a big game to get his pulse racing, yet he admits his participation in another Champions League Final is far from certain. 'Naturally I'm excited by the prospect of captaining Milan in my third Champions League Final, but it's too early to say I will definitely be on the pitch in Athens,' he concludes.

'My left knee was swollen after our game at Catania and I'll have to wait and see how it goes. I'm following a personalised training programme and feel confident I'll be available. However, if it's not right, I'll not hesitate in giving way to someone else. The team has to come first.

'I have good memories of Athens. Back in 1994, we beat Barcelona there 4-0 in the Champions League final. Barca were the favourites that night. They had Romario and Stoichkov, while we were missing both Franco Baresi and Billy Costacurta in defence, but we put in one of our greatest performances. You see, Milan are a team for the big occasion.'

In Paolo Maldini, AC Milan they have the ultimate big game performer.

SOURCE
 
Last edited:

acerвιc wιт

Milano Siamo Noi!
Joined
Mar 29, 2003
Messages
11,622
Reaction score
0
Location
Sydney, Australia
Fav. Players
Paolo Maldini, Thiago Silva, Serginho, Kaká, Gennaro Gattuso, Kevin Prince Boateng & Filippo Inzaghi
Cesare and Paolo Maldini Interview which I uploaded
 

kevin_dk

Milan Legend
Joined
Oct 14, 2005
Messages
9,925
Reaction score
4,238
San Paolo said:
Cesare and Paolo Maldini Interview which I uploaded
Thank you for the vid! I can't hit the sack mate. I just can't. It was kind of silly for me, I hit the youtube window on here and opened up another window so there were 2 same videos running at a same time. I was like "why is the audio doubling :eek: ? And one is going after another, wth :head: ?", and it has Italian in the background so I was like screwed up with the listening haha. I figured it out in the end :D . SBS :D , this reminds me the days in Melbourne :proud: . Once again, thank you.
 
Last edited:

will

Primavera
Joined
Oct 11, 2006
Messages
214
Reaction score
0
Location
London
Fav. Players
Ronaldinho, Pirlo, Iniesta.
thanx for the video :) a true milan hero
 

acerвιc wιт

Milano Siamo Noi!
Joined
Mar 29, 2003
Messages
11,622
Reaction score
0
Location
Sydney, Australia
Fav. Players
Paolo Maldini, Thiago Silva, Serginho, Kaká, Gennaro Gattuso, Kevin Prince Boateng & Filippo Inzaghi
Sure you guys, your welcome. Anytime.
 

kuniang

Beginner
Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
98
Reaction score
0
Fav. Players
Maldini, Kaka, Nesta, Seedorf, Gattuso, Pirlo, Canna, Buffon, Totti
i really don't know how it'd feel; a Maldini-less Milan. it broke my heart to think that he never gets to lift the world cup but a 5th CL cup iz on the way! forza capitano!
 

Rosanna03

Milan Icon
Joined
May 28, 2006
Messages
2,870
Reaction score
0
Location
Germany
Fav. Players
MALDINI, Pirlo
This night made the dream come true, not only from Paolo also from so many Milan fans.
The dream was always to see Paolo to lift up the cup once again.
He did it and the whole world was watching.
I was really crying heavily.
If this is a dream I want never wake up.

And as this gift would be not enough our capitano gave us another one as he carry on for another season.

PAOLO MALDINI: 'It is always wonderful'
5/23/2007
ATHENS - Milan captain Paolo Maldini spoke after lifting the UEFA Champions League trophy: 'It is the fifth time, but it is always wonderful. I have the fortune to play in a great team that has given me the opportunity to make up for the disappointments that are nevertheless fewer in number than the good times. I want to play another Champions League, another league season and the World Club Championship that escaped me the last three times. Ending like that would be fantastic.'
source: acmilan.com


FORZA CAPITANO :proud: :proud: :proud:
 

acerвιc wιт

Milano Siamo Noi!
Joined
Mar 29, 2003
Messages
11,622
Reaction score
0
Location
Sydney, Australia
Fav. Players
Paolo Maldini, Thiago Silva, Serginho, Kaká, Gennaro Gattuso, Kevin Prince Boateng & Filippo Inzaghi
Paolo ale, Paolo Maldini!!

5th UCL crown is just unbelievable. :proud:
 

Don Shevdini

Primavera
Joined
Feb 27, 2006
Messages
221
Reaction score
0
My god that vid was the ice of the cake... PRICELESS!!!


FORZA PAOLO! TU SEI IL GRANDE DI GRANDI.
 

kuniang

Beginner
Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
98
Reaction score
0
Fav. Players
Maldini, Kaka, Nesta, Seedorf, Gattuso, Pirlo, Canna, Buffon, Totti
censorthiis said:

great stuff!! i love how the boys ran pass and kidnapped him from the journos.

what a legend Maldini is! 5th CL title for this legend! :proud:



still look as good as the day i saw him when i was 15 and a crush ever since. :D
 

Milanista

Milan Legend
Joined
Dec 27, 2004
Messages
5,409
Reaction score
2
Location
la fossa
Fav. Players
03 , 08
wow. 38 years and still so handsome. i bet his son will grow up handsome just like his father :D
 

radioactivenerd

Gol de Pablitooooo
Joined
Aug 9, 2006
Messages
4,731
Reaction score
0
Location
London, UK
Fav. Players
Maldini, Batistuta, Crespo, Aimar, Roberto Carlos, Totti, Ayala, Rui Costa, Nesta, BARAJA
Goal.com said:
Maldini – A Born Winner After triumphing for the fifth time in the Champions League, Maldini stated he wants to play the European Super Cup and the Intercontinental Cup, admitting he’ll go on for at least one more year, despite his left leg is not that fit anymore.

He was supposed to retire at the end of the current season, but it looks like he’s decided there is still plenty of time to think about hanging his boots. The Milan captain has discovered the elixir of life, which can be summarized in only one sweet and merry word: victory…

In Italy to be the offspring of a famous person, being it a journalist or a physician or a professor, means very often that you can have an easy life, following the path already set by your parent.

I’m obviously grossly generalizing, but it’s not that uncommon that the son of a law professor begins a career at university or the daughter on an actress starts performing as well.

Unfortunately some of the lucky children get the job mainly because of their illustrious parents, not for their own merits, but it’s not always like that.

Paolo Maldini is one of those exceptions, as he started playing football just because he liked it and he had a good potential – to say the least...

His father Cesare Maldini, who went on to Coach the Azzurri, was a key player in Nereo Rocco’s rock-like defence back in the sixties.

He won only a European Cup, in 1963, when a double by Brazilian striker Josè Altafini, now a well known commentator for Italian Sky, did the trick and Milan defeated Eusebio’s mighty Benfica at the Old Wembley Stadium – the one with the towers, not the Blairian arch...

Maldini junior has got a far better record in the European competitions, having won five European Cup – or Champions League, I should say… But honestly, and we’re sure Cesarone will not mind, it’s not only a question of trophies. It’s a question of qualities.
Paolo is more talented than his father, who trained him in the unlucky – for Italy – France 1998 World Cup. He’s got a better technique, a good ability at scoring goals and he’s faster paced.

He’s also more of a marathon man than his daddy who retired when he was 35, and more versatile, as he can play wing-back and centre-back.

Maldini senior could perform as a full back and that was it. In fact Paolo has set the all time record for Serie A, playing the incredible amount of 600 games, to which he added 28 goals.

In his career he’s only performed for Milan, while Cesare started in his home town with Triestina and finished wearing a Granata shirt in Turin.

Having spent 23 seasons in the same club, Maldini is definitely a rare bird in the world of sports, especially now, in the “corporate football era” where players are promiscuous and clubs seen with a less passionate feeling of belonging with millions in play.

Before leaving the national team, in the aftermath of another national tragedy, the Korea defeat in 2002, he collected 126 caps (another all time record for Italy), hitting the back of the net seven times.

Those figures speak for themselves, even though we could go on mentioning a few more records (eight Champions League finals, 74 appearances for Italy wearing the captain arm band, seven Scudetti, etc.).

His Serie A debut took place in a cold January afternoon, in Udine and the Milan Coach at that time, former fifties Swedish star Nils Liedholm, had no doubt: Maldini was glory bound.

It was 1985 and Maldini was only 16 – he’s turning 39 next June – but you could actually tell he was more than a good prospect.

What at that time Liddas – as Liedholm, now a much respected wine maker, is nicknamed – didn’t know was that AC Milan were also destined to shine in Italy and Europe like no other club would do.

The following two decades were going to be the most successful of the Rossoneri history. Paolino Maldini was there, playing in the back with the likes of Baresi and Stam, Tassotti and Costacurta, Nesta and Panucci.

He was, actually he still is, a living advert for our sport. His tackles raised to a legendary status, his quick runs on the left side of the pitch are simply memorable, while his fair play has a few equals in the rest of the world.

Unfortunately he shares the same destiny of other former Milan team mates, like Massaro, Donadoni, Baresi, Albertini and a few more: he’s never won a World Cup.

He lost a final on penalties in 1994, when he had to comfort Baresi, who had missed from the penalty spot and was crying like a baby.

To be precise he was also defeated by France in the Euro 2000 last act, but that doesn’t hurt as much as the World Cup failures.

One more stain on the nearly immaculate career of Maldini could be the absence of his name on the list of the Ballon d’or winners.

But I don’t think that’s too important, firstly because in Italy that trophy is a bit overrated and secondly because Maldini’s name is well present in the history of football anyway, with or without a Ballon d’or making a fine show on his bookshelf.

Maybe some of the sweetest words on Maldini marvellous career were uttered a few days ago by Materazzi, a symbol of his cross town rivals.

“It’s a pity Paolo, the best defender in the last two decades, hasn’t won the World Cup. I’m really sorry for him. I actually managed to lift that cup and he didn’t, it’s incredible”.

Maldini is not the only superstar without a World Cup success. That club has got a few illustrious members, like Best, Di Stefano and Cruijff, just to name a few.

But you cannot achieve everything in your life, can you? At least he can put a tape on and watch a European Cup final. He has plenty of tapes to choose from and a new one as well.

It says 2007, V for Vendetta, V for victory…and who would argue that the veteran has earned a place not just in the hearts of Rossoneri or Azzurri fans, but in true football fans' hearts wherever they live…forever.
Awesome article.
 

Pirlo Fan

Milan Veteran
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
1,593
Reaction score
2
Location
Barbados
Fav. Players
Pirlo, Gattuso, Kaka, Nesta, Fabregas, Cannavaro, Buffon, Ribery, Berbatov
I also read that article. Great analysis of Maldini's achievments and unfortunate shortcomings.
 

chelitalia

entre los dos
Joined
May 24, 2006
Messages
410
Reaction score
0
Location
Singapore
Fav. Players
Rossoneri - Azzurri - Sheva - Rui Costa
kuniang said:
great stuff!! i love how the boys ran pass and kidnapped him from the journos.

what a legend Maldini is! 5th CL title for this legend! :proud:



still look as good as the day i saw him when i was 15 and a crush ever since. :D


yeah our boys are just so cute and playful. btw, what are they shouting?
 

kuniang

Beginner
Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
98
Reaction score
0
Fav. Players
Maldini, Kaka, Nesta, Seedorf, Gattuso, Pirlo, Canna, Buffon, Totti
censorthiis said:
'Chi non salta Nerazzurro è è!'


they're really obsessed with those interscums aren't they?? :D :D
 

chelitalia

entre los dos
Joined
May 24, 2006
Messages
410
Reaction score
0
Location
Singapore
Fav. Players
Rossoneri - Azzurri - Sheva - Rui Costa
kuniang said:
they're really obsessed with those interscums aren't they?? :D :D

Apparently, they are just reacting to what inter players did when they took the title

"Yet the Nerazzurri were clearly heard chanting ‘Who doesn’t jump is Rossonero’ when they took the title. Also, Mancini, President Massimo Moratti and captain Javier Zanetti publicly said they hoped Milan would lose the European Cup Final against Liverpool."


Source: Mancini slams foolish Milan
 

censorthiis

Milan Veteran
Joined
Sep 17, 2006
Messages
1,904
Reaction score
0
chelitalia said:
Apparently, they are just reacting to what inter players did when they took the title

"Yet the Nerazzurri were clearly heard chanting ‘Who doesn’t jump is Rossonero’ when they took the title. Also, Mancini, President Massimo Moratti and captain Javier Zanetti publicly said they hoped Milan would lose the European Cup Final against Liverpool."


Source: Mancini slams foolish Milan
Wankers, the lot of them. Hypocritical and mostly irreversibly damaged.

'Chi non salta Rossonero' has no nice ring to it; it doesn't sound quite as lovely or right as our chant—which was the other thing I was going to say, by the way; half the time, I don't believe it's used so much as an insult to Inter as it is simply a natural Rossoneri chant—definitive and of pride.
 

kuniang

Beginner
Joined
May 7, 2007
Messages
98
Reaction score
0
Fav. Players
Maldini, Kaka, Nesta, Seedorf, Gattuso, Pirlo, Canna, Buffon, Totti
that's the irony of it all...they can jeer all they want at Milan yet when it's done back against them they whine and the insecurity complex comes back in full force. BIYATCH is all they are! Chi non salta NerazzurroMERDA è è! :o
 

Helena

Beginner
Joined
Dec 1, 2002
Messages
66
Reaction score
0
Location
Sweden
Fav. Players
Maldini,Nesta etc.
Is it today Il Capitano goes to Belgium for his operation??
 

Pirlo Fan

Milan Veteran
Joined
May 2, 2006
Messages
1,593
Reaction score
2
Location
Barbados
Fav. Players
Pirlo, Gattuso, Kaka, Nesta, Fabregas, Cannavaro, Buffon, Ribery, Berbatov
I believe it is. There will probably be an announcement on the official site as to whether its succesful or not.
 

Helena

Beginner
Joined
Dec 1, 2002
Messages
66
Reaction score
0
Location
Sweden
Fav. Players
Maldini,Nesta etc.
5/29/2007
MILAN - AC Milan comunicate that players Paolo Maldini and Alberto Gilardino travelled to Antwrep today for surgery under Professor Marc Martens. The captain underwent an operation to his left knee caused by inflammation of the cartilage around the femoro-rotulea while Gilardino had meniscal cysts removed from the outside meniscus of the right knee.

from acmilan.com
 

Fyrstnissen

Sempre Rossoneri!
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
391
Reaction score
0
Location
Denmark
Fav. Players
Gattuso, Maldini, Kaka and Gourcuff
Hope it will prove to be a succes so that he can play regularly in his last season!
Forza Paolo! :star:
 

Schedule
Top