The National - News

Gattuso is looking over his shoulder in Milan hotseat

▶ Under-pressure manager faces a crucial few days at home and in Europe

- IAN HAWKEY

Gennaro Gattuso’s 50th match as manager of AC Milan is a big one. Home, this Sunday, to Juventus, the Serie A leaders and champions, the side who have dropped just two league points this season. Gattuso’s 49th has plenty riding on it too. In Seville tomorrow, Milan’s chances of a extended European journey this season are at stake.

Defeat in San Siro two weeks ago to Real Betis, who top Europa League Group F, set back the campaign, and, if the suggestion­s being floated by influentia­l media in France are to be believed, deepened concerns within a Milan boardroom where there have been many recent comings and goings about whether Gattuso, the former Milan playing hero, has the pedigree for the job. The magazine France Football reported that Arsene Wenger, free since leaving Arsenal in June, is being lined up for a return to management at Milan. Wenger called the story “fake news” while confirming he intends to be working as a coach in 2019.

Scepticism about Gattuso the manager accompanie­d him into the job, largely because previous roles had been either poorly chosen or not strikingly successful.

At Milan, he made an extraordin­ary start 11 months ago, when claiming only a point in his first Serie A match in charge following the sacking of Vincenzo Montella.

Their opponents, rock-bottom Benevento, launched their goalkeeper upfield for an injury-time set-piece and the desperado tactic paid off, Alberto Brignoli achieving his moment of fame as the soaring, scoring gloveman who embarrasse­d Rossoneri royalty on the day of Gattuso’s coronation.

Things have certainly got better since, and Milan’s current fourth place in the Serie A table is an improvemen­t on eighth, where Gattuso picked the club up from, and the sixth-placed finish of last season, which qualified Milan for the Europa League.

Steady, incrementa­l gains, and so far, enough to have kept Gattuso in a notoriousl­y unstable job longer than six of the eight other men who have coached Milan in the past 10 years. By making it to 49 games, he has outlasted Leonardo – now a director of football at the club – Pippo Inzaghi, Sinisa Mihailovic, Clarence Seedorf and a couple of caretakers who filled in during a tempestuou­s decade.

Gattuso’s galvanisin­g, contagious passion is the managerial quality that does not surprise; the rigour with which he set about making a Milan a tougher team to beat persuaded sceptics, although the defensive discipline that characteri­sed the later stages of 2017/18 has fallen away somewhat this season.

Saturday’s 1-0 win against Udinese, a third successive Serie A victory, was the first clean sheet Milan have managed in the league.

It was hard-earned. Gattuso, ever fiery, was banished to the stands as Milan chased a very late winner in Udine for a verbal confrontat­ion with an assistant referee, although he will not be banned from the touchline against Juventus.

He hopes to approach that D-Day with an even temper and armed with a healthier situation in the Europa League. Milan can undo the damage from the Betis blitz at the end of last month – the Spaniards were 2-0 up 10 minutes after half time; Milan pulled a late goal back but finished in a frayed state, Samu Castillejo sent off for a lunge at Gio Lo Celso – with a win today, but the manager is mindful that team selection needs to bear the weekend’s fixture in mind.

Gonzalo Higuain, Milan’s de luxe goalscorer, is nursing a back strain and may be left out to save himself for his first meeting with Juve since leaving them, on loan, to make way for Cristiano Ronaldo.

Milan have lively cover, in Patrick Cutrone, and, perhaps, the intriguing possibilit­y of box-office reinforcem­ents to the forward line come January. A short-term contract for 37-year-old Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c, of LA Galaxy, has been discussed within Milan, and the idea encouraged by the player, who spent two rewarding seasons at the club, and shared in the last Milan scudetto, in 2011.

Gattuso has distanced himself from speculatio­n about his former teammate. He is focused on ensuring Milan can, by the new year, offer European football to any potential recruit. Lose in Seville, and they could slip to third in the group, behind Olympiakos, who Milan must visit on Group F’s final matchday.

“We need wins to lift pressure and to make sure, that for the players, the ball does not feel like a 100kg weight,” Gattuso said, evocativel­y.

 ?? AP ?? Genarro Gattuso’s AC Milan side face Real Betis in the Europa League followed by Juventus in Serie A three days later
AP Genarro Gattuso’s AC Milan side face Real Betis in the Europa League followed by Juventus in Serie A three days later

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