Will AC Milan challenge in Serie A again after 'summer of dreams'?
By James Walker-Roberts
Franck Kessie (L) is one of Milan's big summer signings
After a spectacular summer
in the transfer market, AC Milan will start 2017/18 with almost an
entirely new-look side. But who are their new arrivals and are they
primed to challenge for silverware again? James Walker-Roberts takes a
look...
Silvio Berlusconi got the ball rolling back in April when he paved the way for a new era at Milan by selling the club to Chinese investors. Although Berlusconi said he
left with "pain and emotion", the sale reportedly required the Chinese consortium to spend 350m euros on improvements, and they have wasted little time in attempting to reach that figure.
"I've never known a summer like this," Milan midfielder Giacomo Bonaventura told Gazzetta dello Sport. "We've bought players who, at the start of the transfer window, you think 'yeah it'd be nice if they came'… well they really did come!"
Even former Inter Milan president Massimo Moratti has been impressed. "Milan are moving very well in the transfer market and, to be honest, I didn't expect that," said Moratti last month.
The transfers appear to have brought optimism back after one of the most fruitless periods in the club's history. Season ticket sales have soared, head coach Vincenzo Montella has called it "a summer of dreams", while new Milan CEO Marco Fassone told Sky in Italy: "To arrive in April after 31 years of the incredible management of Berlusconi and [previous general manager Adriano] Galliani, there was a lot of tension.
"But to see now that our work is giving results, that we hope to see also on the pitch, and the affection that the people share with us every day in the street, online. It means people have enthusiasm for AC Milan."
It’s been, and still is, a summer of dreams. But the beauty is that my dreams have come true, and yet we’re still not done...the club are doing something extraordinary.
Vincenzo Montella to Gazzetta dello Sport
Yet not only does the former Italy international - only recently a year into the job - have his work cut out with so many new additions, but Milan have plenty of ground to make up. They finished sixth in Serie A last season, 28 points behind champions Juventus and 23 behind Napoli in the final Champions League qualification place.
And will it be an entirely new-look XI on the first day of the 2017/18 season?
Donnarumma, 18, is set to stay between the sticks, having signed a new deal until 2021 and then apologised to fans for the furore surrounding his future. "I never had any doubts in my head about staying," claimed the Italy international recently.
Milan CEO Fassone suggested that it was a different story. "It was maybe one of the most difficult things we did. One day we will tell the entire story, quite curious, complex, one of those that gave us greatest satisfaction," he said.
In front of Donnarumma, Montella has said he could play with a three-man defence. "I have so many players, I think they're capable of offering different tactical solutions," he added.
If it is three then they could be Italy international Alessio Romagnoli, Mateo Musacchio, signed from Villarreal this summer, and Bonucci, who is surely the standout signing of the summer in Serie A, maybe even across Europe, having joined on a five-year deal from Juventus.
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