The National - News

ERIKSEN HAS A POINT TO PROVE AFTER HIS SKETCHY START AT INTER MILAN

▶ Midfielder’s move from Tottenham has not turned out as hoped, with Ludogorets next, writes Ian Hawkey

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Northern Italy is in a state of alarm. Precaution­s against the spread of coronaviru­s, with more cases confirmed in the region than anywhere else in Europe, have altered the routines of public life.

Tonight, at San Siro, where Inter Milan take on Ludogorets in the second leg of their Europa League last-16 tie, there will be no paying spectators.

Inter’s eagerly awaited collision with Juventus in Turin on Sunday may also be played behind closed doors.

For one new resident in Milan, it must seem a bewilderin­g time. Christian Eriksen moved to the city at the end of January, his decision to join Inter made after much agonising over his choices.

He left Tottenham Hotspur, where his contract was due to expire in June, six months after claiming a silver medal in the Champions League.

He has joined an Inter who in December were demoted to the Europa League after finishing third in their Champions League group.

He left Spurs just as they came into urgent need of high-class, experience­d attacking players.

A month after his €20m move he recognises that Inter are still working out how best to use his gifts and experience. Eriksen has so far started just two of Inter’s six games since he joined.

If he is in the XI against Ludogorets this evening, however, it will not necessaril­y be a signal that manager Antonio Conte is fully convinced of Eriksen’s immediate importance to Inter’s plans.

Conte will rotate heavily – Inter have a 2-0 advantage over Ludogorets from the first leg in Bulgaria – with the fitness of key men for the Juventus fixture his priority.

The Derby D’Italia has much hanging on it. If it is to be played in eerie silence, with no crowd because of the public health emergency, it may even be broadcast, as a one-off, on free to air television because of the huge interest in the outcome.

Inter, third in the Serie A table, trail Juve, champions the last eight seasons, by six points, although following the postponeme­nt of last weekend’s fixture against Sampdoria – another coronaviru­s precaution – Inter have a match in hand.

Eriksen has already had a crash-course in the emotional rollercoas­ter that life at Inter tends to be.

After a rather ostentatio­us unveiling at La Scala, the Milan opera house, he made his home league debut in an extraordin­ary Milan derby, and would have been forgiven for thinking he was fortunate to have sat on the bench throughout its first half.

Conte went into the dressing-room at half time livid, with Inter 2-0 behind to mid-table AC Milan. From the bench, Eriksen then watched a thrilling comeback. He joined it, as a substitute, with Inter 3-2 ahead, promptly rapped a freekick from 30 yards against the underside of the Milan crossbar and was among the first to throng around Romelu Lukaku when Inter’s fourth goal made a remarkable turnaround safe.

At that point, Eriksen felt his move from Spurs to Italy an excellent, exhilarati­ng decision.

His new club went to the top of the table that night.

A week later, they had slid to third, after being on the wrong end of a comeback, by second-placed Lazio, who were 1-0 down to Inter at half time.

Eriksen came off the bench for the last 13 minutes, with Inter 2-1 behind, and was unable to make a difference.

Speaking afterwards, Conte argued that it was too much to expect him to, either, so soon after his arrival in a new country, a new league.

“We shouldn’t think one player is going to change the destiny of the team,” Conte said, and added, in what was interprete­d as a criticism of the 28-year-old Dane. “We have got to where we are without Eriksen.”

Four nights later, in Razgrad, Eriksen completed his first 90 minutes under Conte.

He scored his first Inter goal, picking out the bottom corner with characteri­stic precision to open the scoring against Ludogorets. “That will give him confidence. He is a player who can lift the quality of our team” said Conte, leavening the praise with a challenge.

“He still needs to get to the form he had at Tottenham, and to improve his physical condition.” The instructio­n is clear: the Dane will have to sweat for his chance to line up from the start at Juventus.

 ?? Reuters ?? Christian Eriksen scored his first goal for Inter Milan in a 2-0 victory against Ludogorets in the first leg
Reuters Christian Eriksen scored his first goal for Inter Milan in a 2-0 victory against Ludogorets in the first leg
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