Perfil (Sabado)

Higuaín signs for AC Milan, paying price for Cristiano Ronaldo’s switch to Juventus

- – TIMES/AFP

Argentina striker Gonzalo Higuaín on Thursday moved to AC Milan in a three-player swap deal between the seven-time European champions and Juventus that will see Leonardo Bonucci return to Turin after just a season away.

Milan signed 30-year-old Higuaín on a one-year loan deal worth a reported 18 million euros (US$21 million) that gives them the option to buy the striker next summer for a further 36 million euros.

Italy centre-back Bonucci has been swapped for promising Mattia Caldara just weeks after Caldara arrived at Juve following his transfer from Atalanta, which was agreed in January 2017.

Higuaín left Juventus, where he won two Serie A titles and scored 40 goals in 76 league appearance­s, following the shock signing of Cristiano Ronaldo from Real Madrid that made the Argentine internatio­nal surplus to requiremen­ts.

Italian media reported that Higuaín’s transfer had been structured to allow Milan to comply with UEFA’s Financial Fair Play regulation­s, which they fell foul of last season.

Last season, Milan scored only 56 goals in Serie A, a figu- re which put them at a serious disadvanta­ge compared to major rivals Juventus, Napoli and Roma as well as bitter city rivals Inter Milan who all claimed Champions League places.

“A new adventure begins,” said Higuaín after undergoing his medical.

The move opened the door for Bonucci to return to Turin, whe- re the defender won six league titles and reached two Champions League finals.

The 31-year-old Bonucci returns to Juve after just one season with Milan, who could only finish sixth last season and missed the Champions League despite spending over 200 million euros (US$233 million) on new players last summer.

Milan are trying to bounce back after a troubled spell following the sale of the club to Chinese owners in April last year, but poor performanc­es on the pitch were compounded in recent months by fears over their financial survival.

UEFA booted them out of next season’s Europa League for violating the financial regulation­s, only for the ban to be overturned by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport on July 20 following hedge fund Elliott Management’s takeover earlier in the month.

The US firm took control after the Chinese consortium led by Li Yonghong that ran Milan, long rumoured to be struggling financiall­y, failed to repay 32 million euros lent by Elliott.

Elliot has pledged to inject 50 million euros to bring financial stability to the club.

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