Barcelona 2-2 AC Milan (3-4p): Three things we learned – dream attack and a dose of reality

By Oliver Fisher -

AC Milan concluded their preseason tour of the United States with another victory, this time against Barcelona in Baltimore and this time via a penalty shootout.

Milan were excellent in the opening 25 minutes and found themselves two goals up when Christian Pulisic squared for Luka Jovic and then Pulisic himself lifted a shot over Ter Stegen from a narrow angle to double the lead.

However, keeping Robert Lewandowski quiet proved to be a task that the Rossoneri would fail to complete, as he responded quickly to halve the deficit and got another goal in the second half to draw Barca level.

Having finished 2-2 after 90 minutes the game went to penalties, and Lorenzo Torriani was the hero making two saves in a 4-3 shootout win, after having made a number of decisive interventions during the game as well. Below are three things we learned from the final USA friendly.

The ‘champagne attack’

The positive aspects of Milan’s performances were concentrated in the first half, maybe the first half-hour, and they are mostly centred around how well the front four players seemed to click.

There were times last season when fans called for a trident of Chukwueze-Pulisic-Leao behind the striker, and they got to see it in action against Barca, with Jovic leading the line.

Looking at the two goals, the potential was absolutely there to see. For the first a brilliant run by Yunus Musah saw Chukwueze feed Pulisic who squared to Jovic for a tap-in, then for the second it was Leao who found the American with a lovely weighted pass.

Beyond the goals themselves, the movements of the other forwards seemed to free Leao for his typical adventurous runs to the byline. Pulisic seemed to know when to drift to the right and left to interplay, and the whole unit felt very dynamic.

There are obvious caveats such as the presence of Alvaro Morata as a more link-up based forward and also what it means for the balance of the side, but for those 25 minutes it was nice to see Chu-Pu-Le put on a bit of a show.

A sense of reality

Unfortunately, we can’t act as though everything was perfect as – preseason or not – a two-goal lead was coughed up and the second half performance was far from good to watch.

The whole approach seemed a bit confused. Jovic was withdrawn which meant we saw Pulisic as a striker for a while, with Fonseca admitting that Loftus-Cheek was meant to be alongside him as two attacking midfielders, then Noah Okafor played in that role.

The management of the second half was far from ideal as the limitations of Milan’s ‘play out from the back no matter what’ approach were highlighted. Barça’s young players looked fresh, they pressed and the Diavolo were not composed.

Barcelona took possession of the ball and created several chances as the spaces between the lines opened up, while Milan created nothing. The difficulties of certain individuals was highlighted too, but we won’t dig them out because fatigue and a lack of like-for-like substitutes didn’t help the shape.

It is perhaps the first sign that against high-level teams that perhaps do not press intensely but they do so smartly and cut off the options, Milan’s midfield and defence seem to panic. Hopefully, with more training work and game practice, it becomes positive habits rather than negative.

What we already knew

Milan management: if you are reading this, there are 10 days until the season starts and this squad is not complete. In fact, the gaps that were obvious at the start of the transfer window remain.

The midfield is unbalanced, as we knew months ago let alone heading towards the first game of the season. Youssouf Fofana/another defensive presence have not arrived, it is the most glaring thing to address, and yet haggling over a target that terms were agreed with months ago continues.

At the moment the jury is out on whether Loftus-Cheek and Musah can realistically play in the double pivot because friendlies do not give us enough signs, but Bennacer certainly looks far more natural based on the sample size we have.

Then there is the right-back role, where the injury to Alessandro Florenzi was obviously unfortunate and unforeseen, but again there have been painfully slow negotiations for Emerson Royal – who is hardly a groundbreaking signing – over €1-2m differences.

The result: Saelemaekers starting in that position, getting a humbling from Raphinha and perhaps damaging the confidence that he had built up playing in literally the opposite position on the field (left wing).

Zlatan Ibrahimovic told us that Alex Jimenez will be Theo Hernandez’s deputy, yet Filippo Terracciano is the one who was used there last night and he really struggled throughout, looking very limited and trying some bizarre things such as backheels on the halfway line.

Then there is the back-up striker issue. Jovic and Okafor were both impact subs last season and play better off someone, but the Swiss looks a better fit for the role than the Serb.

Camarda didn’t get any minutes which is understandable given his summer workload, yet it is another issue where there is all talk – or speculation at least – and no concrete action. Time is running out.

Tags AC Milan Barcelona Milan

21 Comments

  1. Hey @Ollie nice write up and I love the direct call out to MGMT.

    Check your headline tho. The score should. 2-2

  2. How does Okafor look as a better fit for the backup striker role than Jovic?
    Last season Jovic produced more than Okafor, and then yesterday he played better and scored.
    Jovic might play better with another striker next to him but he is still a natural striker, while Okafor is a natural winger who likes to face up and take on defenders instead of playing with his back to the goal.
    How is Florenzi injury unforseen?
    This is his 4th season as a Milan player. Out of 4 seasons he missed 2 of them entirely because of major surgeries and in the 1st season he had another 2 minor surgeries that caused him to miss 3 months. Not to mention his injury issues at Roma, the reason why they let him leave.
    Unfortunate? Absolutely 💯.
    Unforseen? Nah.
    Milan needs to sign a left back or if they can’t get rid off Ballo Toure, might as well play him. He isn’t good but he is still much better defensively than Terracciano or Jimenez.
    The midfield yesterday looked much better without Bennacer, than with him.
    Also, Barcelona might have the best youth academy. The quality on the ball those young players have that played yesterday is great. Milan needs to hire one of their coaches to work with the Primavera.

    1. Point taken on the Jovic-Okafor thing, that’s down to personal opinion but I just prefer Okafor’s skill set. But point refuted on Florenzi. Yes he’s had some injuries before but you can never plan for a season taking into consideration the idea that he *might* get a season-ending injury. And before the retort comes about players being more prone to re-injuring ligaments again after doing it before, that’s factually incorrect. It really is both unfortunate and unforeseen. Even if I’d have planned for the season without him anyway.

      1. You don’t plan before the season for a season ending injury, but you should plan for an injury prone player to get injured.
        Florenzi is a poster child for an injury prone player.
        This is his 3rd ACL tear over the last 7 years. On top of that, he had a hamstring tear that caused him to miss almost all of 22/23 seasons. That means he missed at least half of the last 7 seasons just because of those 4 major injuries. There were also other smaller injuries. Like i said in 21/22 he has 2 other surgeries that caused him to miss more than a month each time.

        1. The goalposts of the question are shifting. It simplifies down to: should Milan have expected Florenzi to get a season ending injury and have seen that in advance? The answer is no.

          1. The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior.
            So, should Milan have expected Florenzi to get a season ending injury and have seen that in advance?
            Based on his past track record when it comes to injuries, yes.
            This is his 4th major injury that is season ending based on recovery time. And with him getting older, the chances of getting injured are even higher.
            No one can forsee a player getting injured before they do, but for certain players the expectations to get injured are way higher.
            If Theo, Leao or Reijnders get injured, it’s unfortunate and unexpected.
            If Florenzi, Maignan, Okafor and Bennacer get injured, it’s unfortunate but not unexpected.

    2. We can’t play Ballo Toure. He is 25 and to play he need to be included in the first team squad list.

      The squad right now, without Origi and Ballo Toure, is 24 players where we can only register 23 (because we only have 6 from 8 homegrown players needed). So we need to sell/loan one non-homegrown player from current squad.

      GK (2) :
      – Mike Maignan
      – Marco Sportiello 🇮🇹

      CB (5) :
      – Fikayo Tomori
      – Matteo Gabbia🇮🇹
      – Strahinja Pavlovic
      – Malick Thiaw
      – Pierre Kalulu

      RB (2) :
      – Davide Calabria🇮🇹
      – Alessandro Florenzi🇮🇹

      LB (2) :
      – Theo Hernandez
      – Terraciano🇮🇹

      DM/CM/AM (6) :
      – Tijjani Reijnders
      – RLC
      – Ismael Bennacer
      – Yunus Musah
      – Tommaso Pobega🇮🇹
      – Yacine Adli

      RW (2) :
      – Samuel Chukwueze
      – Christian Pulisic

      LW (2) :
      – Rafael Leao
      – Alexis Saelemakers

      CF (3) :
      – Alvaro Morata
      – Luka Jovic
      – Noah Okafor

      1. Thanks, that’s a great summary. So currently no space for Aldi and any other incoming player means one more non Italian has to get sold / cut from the list too. So Royal and Fofana/another mid would both need a slot to be freed up; hard to see where they come from.

      2. Also thanks! I’d been trying to build this but felt I was missing people (I was).

        Extra points for the Italian flag!

      3. Thanks for this. This analysis highlights why sending out D Maldini & Colombo on loan/sale seems like a strange decision. We are in dire need of more Italian players in the squad. They may not have been starters but were worthy squad depth options that tick the box for list requirements.

  3. Went from don’t worry early days in transfer window to holy smokes.
    Our squad has been incomplete even since last year’s 10+ signings. Still incomplete this year. These guys have poor planning and squad construction abilities and that’s including Zlatan. Unfortunately he has to start taking some of the blame here. Especially as he’s the only one who has the technical knowledge. If Milan management really do read these things they’d know who keeps it a buck and who don’t around here lol

  4. You can knock management all you want about the dragging out negotiations,( the previous management did the same), but the fact is that last year’s squad was stronger and deeper than the previous seasons, and even if they don’t make another signing , the current squad is already stronger than last season’s with the additions of Morata and Pavlovich and the only loss being an old Giroud, and I’m sure they are not done yet. The point is the squad is getting stronger each year and that is all you can really ask for.
    And where are all the haters that were screaming about how ownership was going to sell Theo and Leao and Maignan??? They’ve just moved on to complain about something else. It’s just what they do.

  5. The question that arises for me is where to put Reijnders also because Pulisic could slot in the no.10 role. Is he really going to be used as one of the double pivots? Because then we need a proper DM not a defensive minded runner like Fofana since Reijnders is defensively non existent and he’ll need to cover for the Dutch as well.

    Midfield is completely out of balance here either for 4231 or 433 but the latter would be more appropriate considering the type of midfielders we have.

    1. As you pointed out with Pulisic as a 10 the midfield has become a puzzle with players of different characteristics.
      We have Bennacer (a pivot) , Reijnders (technical b2b),RLC(b2b) Pobega & Adli (replaceable players).Musah can actually be converted into an aggressive ,combative ball winner alongside a needed DM to balance and protect the backline.
      To make it more confusing we are apparently in for Kone who is another technical pivot not in the defensive Midfielder mould?

  6. Offense is sorted out. We have all the chess pieces. defence is a mess. we need a holding midfielder and general cohesion in the back.

Comments are closed

Serie A Standings

Live football scores . Current table, fixtures & results.