The Star Malaysia

It’s going to be exciting

Ronaldo raring to go as Serie A kicks off amid optimism

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I am going to prove that I am a top player. I am very ambitious and I like challenges. Cristiano Ronaldo

MILAN: Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to Juventus, coach Carlo Ancelotti’s homecoming and Parma’s return to the top flight a mere three years after going bankrupt have made the Serie A season one of the most eagerly-awaited in recent years.

After years of falling attendance­s and top players choosing to ply their trade elsewhere, there is a feeling that Serie A might be regaining some of its old allure.

Italy will even be back to four teams in the Champions League group stage this season – although that is thanks to a controvers­ial re-formulatio­n of the competitio­n by UEFA rather than a significan­t improvemen­t in performanc­es by Serie A clubs.

Most of all, there is a hope that Serie A will continue where it left off last season, with Napoli moving ever closer to ending Juventus’ recent domination which has led the Turin side to win seven successive titles.

Last season, Serie A was the only one of the five major European leagues to produce a genuine title contest, with Napoli’s brave challenge finally ending two rounds from the end.

Napoli struck the first blow during the close season when they hired Ancelotti to replace Chelseabou­nd Maurizio Sarri in an impressive coup that confounded more than a few pundits.

After winning domestic league titles in France, England and Germany and the Champions League with Real Madrid, Ancelotti seemed to have outgrown Serie A.

Ancelotti, who also won Serie A with AC Milan, seemed more comfortabl­e at big clubs with spending power and where major titles were pretty much guaranteed, yet has now been lured to a club which last captured the Serie A crown in 1990.

Napoli have lost influentia­l midfielder Jorginho but the bulk of their side remains intact and there are hopes that, even if his team are not as entertaini­ng to watch, Ancelotti can provide the killer instinct that was missing under Sarri.

Never ones to be upstaged, however, Juventus hit back in style with their signing of 33-year-old Ronaldo who, like the Turin club themselves, shows no signs of resting on his laurels.

“I am going to prove that I am a top player,” said Ronaldo, who is set for his debut at Chievo tomorrow in the season-opening game.

“I am very ambitious and I like challenges.”

The Turin side also re-signed Leonardo Bonucci, one year after he left for AC Milan, to re-form the so-called BBC defence alongside

Andrea Barzagli – still a formidable presence at 37 – and Giorgio Chiellini.

The capital city is also hoping to mount another challenge this season although AS Roma, third last term, have once again sold a top player with goalkeeper Alisson moving to Liverpool, as Mohamed Salah did one year ago.

Lazio, on the other hand, have managed to retain the services of playmaker Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, a much-needed boost after their narrow failure to qualify for the Champions League.

The two Milan sides are also

expecting to have a say.

Inter, who led last year’s title race until early December, have spent heavily in their bid to launch a serious challenge this season, bringing in Belgian midfielder Radja Nainggolan and highly- rated 20-year-old Argentine Lautauro Martinez.

They were also involved in an unsuccessf­ul chase for Real and Croatia midfielder Luka Modric, although coach Luciano Spalletti refused to be dishearten­ed.

“I am already very happy with what I have at my disposal,” he said. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? Still ambitious as ever: Juventus’ Cristiano Ronaldo shows no signs of resting on his laurels.
— Reuters Still ambitious as ever: Juventus’ Cristiano Ronaldo shows no signs of resting on his laurels.

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