Napoli 2-2 AC Milan: Five things we learned – Halloween haunting and a tale of two flanks

By Oliver Fisher -

AC Milan were forced to settle for a draw in an entertaining Sunday night clash against Napoli at the Stadio Diego Armanda Maradona as they surrendered a two-goal first half lead.

Olivier Giroud returned to haunt Napoli as he scored twice inside the opening 31 minutes, with both goals coming from headers deep in the box after crosses from the right side.

Heading into the break Stefano Pioli’s men were coasting, but then Matteo Politano halved the deficit with a smart turn and powerful shot into the roof of the net and then Giacomo Raspadori’s free-kick completed a rapid comeback.

Napoli did go down to 10 men in the closing stages with Natan shown a second yellow card, but the Rossoneri were unable to force a later winner meaning they slip to third behind Juventus. Here are five things we learned from the game…

1. Halloween haunting

After failing to score an open play goal since the first game of the season, Giroud was in dire need of something to fall his way in order to recover his form, and it happened on a ground where he has had success in each of the last two seasons.

The Frenchman scored two near identical headers – the first from a Christian Pulisic cross and the second from Davide Calabria’s – but unfortunately they were not enough to give his side a much-needed victory after two defeats in a row against Juventus and PSG.

It was vintage Giroud, and the 37-year-old seemed to take confidence from those two goals as his hold-up play improved and he got more and more involved as Milan pushed for a third goal. Now, the challenge is to keep that going and not vanish again.

However, what added a sour note to the Frenchman’s evening was not only the comeback from Napoli but also Pioli’s choice to remove him towards the end to put Luka Jovic on, with the former Chelsea player not taking his coach’s decision well at all.

2. Lacklustre left side

Theo Hernandez and Rafael Leao have previously been devastating in games against Napoli, such as when the former created the opening goal of the Champions League quarter-final tie at San Siro and when the latter’s surging run set up Giroud to make it 1-0 in Naples in the second leg.

Leao had come under scrutiny for his recent performances given that he had not scored for over a month, since the win against Hellas Verona, and he did little to answer his critics with another frustrating performance.

Both the Portuguese winger and the French full-back showed what they have done for a few weeks now: they have flashes where they look like opening the game up, but take a bad touch or make the wrong decision in the moment when it matters most.

Comparatively, Milan’s right side of Pulisic and Calabria looked far more creative. They actually picked their head up to look for the best option, and rather worryingly they also appeared to have more chemistry despite this being their first season together and not their fifth.

It was another big game – after the ones against Inter, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain – where fans are right to question the status of some of the leaders in the squad given their inability to stand up and be counter in difficult moments.

3. A captain’s battle

Davide Calabria went into battle with Khvicha Kvaratskhelia numerous times last season and although he had help often as Milan doubled-teamed the winger, it would be fair to say the full-back came off well.

The Italian faced the Georgian once again at the Maradona just as he had begun to hit form again, and Calabria responded with a near perfect performance. He had a clearance, two interceptions, seven tackles and won nine out of 13 ground duels.

He also completed one of his two crosses and what a beauty it was; a ball that hung up in the air towards the far post where Giroud leapt above Rrahmani to nod in off the far post, serving as a reminder of his creative capabilities.

Whatever it is about facing Kvaratskhelia seems to bring out the best in Calabria’s one-on-one defending as he often remains patient, lets the 22-year-old do some fancy footwork, and then times his interventions to perfection.

Of course he has some way to go that he can perform at that level consistently against all opponents, but it was certainly an answer to the doubters who believed the tussle on Milan’s right flank would be a bloodbath.

4. SOS (Same Old Story)

The approach to winter has become ominous for Milan, given what has happened in each of the last three seasons with regards to injuries.

Simon Kjaer, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, Samuel Chukwueze, Mattia Caldara and Ismael Bennacer were all injured heading into the game, then Pierre Kalulu, Christian Pulisic and Marco Pellegrino each came off during it.

There have been 19 injuries since August, 12 of them muscular, revealing a very problematic trend. Mike Maignan, Rade Krunic, Luka Jovic, Noah Okafor, Davide Bartesaghi and Kalulu have all spent time out, among others, which has often left depth stretched.

A comparison was drawn up in a separate report which shows that the Rossoneri always seem to be in an injury crisis heading into the third game of their Champions League group stage campaign, and this year will be no different.

At the end of 2022 La Gazzetta dello Sport had calculated that from 1 July 2022 to 31 January 2022 Milan had racked up over 700 days of absence (almost 180 for Zlatan Ibrahimovic, almost 120 for Alessandro Florenzi, around 100 for Mike Maignan).

Something has to change, because having this many injuries reduces the ability to rotate, removes options from the bench to impact games and pushes the other players to their limit in terms of work rate which can make things spiral. Four seasons with such deep emergencies cannot be a coincidence.

5. How many times?

Milan should have been fully out of sight at half-time, and while going in with a two-goal lead is far better than most fans thought possible before the game given recent form, there was a sense of unease about the missed chances.

A third goal in that frantic 15 minutes before the interval would have surely been too much for Napoli to come back from given that the sold out crowd was already on their backs so much. The Partenopei were surrendering the ball at will in their own half, welcoming wave after wave of attacks.

Tijjani Reijnders had the chance to slide the ball to his left or right after a run towards the edge of the box but saw a shot blocked, then the Dutchman somehow missed the target from near the penalty spot after Theo’s cut-back as he aimed for the right upright.

Yunus Musah’s opportunity wasn’t as clear cut though he still had time and space to fire a low shot from inside the box – going for the far post might have been better than trying to sneak it in at the near post.

The chances were all spurned, the third goal never game and Milan took their foot off Napoli’s throats in the process. They would pay for that, and how many times have missed chances been costly this season?

Tags AC Milan Napoli-Milan

13 Comments

  1. Calabria has always been good in 1v1, but he has problems with wingers who are more athletic than him.
    Kvara is a hell of a player but he isn’t a great athlete which makes it an even field in the 1v1 duel and Calabria contains him.
    Great game by Davide, defensively and offensively.

  2. Another very disappointing draw. I hope this doesn’t send the team on a tailspin the way the Roma draw did last season.
    The injury problem is going on 4 years now. Clearly they are doing something wrong in the way they are training and preparing for matches, but if they haven’t figured that out by now I don’t think they will.
    I’ve been hard on Calabria but he was excellent in this match. It seems when he faces a top offensive player and he really focuses on defense he does well. It’s when he tries to get too involved offensively is when he gets caught out of position and gets in trouble. he needs to bring that same defensive focus every match and let Theo worry about getting forward.
    Leao has such amazing talent and potential but his decision making is really poor and it doesn’t seem to be getting any better. Wondering if it might be the right time to sell. The club could get a lot of money for him. Could move Pulisic to the left, his natural position where he will be even better than he’s been on the right With the money we could sign a really good striker and a couple very good defenders which we need. Just a thought.

  3. The first 45 by Milan were some of the best so far this season. If we play like that we will be hard to stop. BUT we look fragile when we get scored on. We allowed Napoli back into the game they had no business getting back into. Giroud’s comments were telling. Pioli needs to get a better hold of the locker room.

    I would argue that the resilience from Milan in the Scudetto winning season was more on Ibra than Pioli and as such, Milan must absolutely bring him back. Because Pioli clearly doesn’t have that touch.

    1. Agreed about the first 45 mins.

      The notion that actual manager of the actual Scudetto winning side didn’t have an actual impact on the actual physical, mental and tactical preparation is hard to accept….

      1. I agree with his entire sentiment. We had a leader and legend on the pitch and in the locker room in Ibra who hates losing and has a winners mentality. While also having a leader and legend off the pitch in Maldini who’s been there and done that.

        We are absolutely missing that.

  4. There really isn’t a lot to see here.

    It was a 2:2 draw away at Napoli and we are 3 points behind Inter.

    This result will not to determine our season nor will any of the results against the big teams.

    It will be the results against the teams we’re supposed to beat that will determine our season.

    Last season (and most seasons) we dropped points to the bottom sides. Those cost us 15-20 points.

    Last season had we beaten the likes of Cremonese (even once) we’d have finished second behind a record beating Napoli.

    The only thing I’d note is that the much celebrated ‘depth’ is probably causing us more problems than it’s solving.

    Had we just signed Okafor and not bothered with Jović and Romero (and possibly even Chukwueze) then Okafor could’ve been our super-sub and he could’ve got lots of game time without disrupting the flow too much.

    But instead we have Okafor AND Jović AND Romero AND this ridiculous rule about 5 subs (where now the latter stages of every game turns into one of those farcical international friendlies) AND Pioli of course uses all of these because:

    a) they’re there;
    b) he’d be lambasted if he didn’t; and
    c) the stupid rule that lets managers make 5 subs (half the starting line up!).

    Sure Pioli is also to blame but we can’t expect people to exercise restraint can we?

    That’s why sports and societies have rules. Kids don’t do crack.

    1. Same old comment about hating the new signings.

      Please, please say something interesting. You’re a broken record and your point is tired.

      1. Where did I say I hate the new signings or any Milan player?

        My comment was calling for people to relax but just pointing out we made too many subs.

        Had we just brought ok Okafor then Giroud or Leao or both could’ve stayed on.

        Do you agree with that?

  5. Theo’s best football was when he was playing with Rebic on the left flank, not with Rafa.
    Just go back and look at the records for the past 4 seasons. Theo was able to bomb forward because Ante was willing to be the bulldog on the flank and defend.

    With Rafa, Theo needs to hold himself back more because he knows he has more defensive duties.

    1. That’s a good observation. Just proves that playing for the team makes the others play better too. And being selfish and cocky will make the others look worse than they actually are.

  6. Leao took no10 shirt and bigmouthed to be our new leader. Leaders show their qualities when things go bad. He showed his nature in last games all right. The loudest in the room is usually the weakest in the room.

    Anyway, it goes to show that 4231they played against Napoli is the way. They were attacking and pressing from all sides since minute one. Turning point was Kalulu’s injury and then Pulišić who was taken off. But doesn’t matter which formation Pioli puts on, lack of proper DM will always be a problem.

  7. Overall, it was a step in the right direction. Yes there were injuries and individual mistakes but there was more fire, good play, less reliance on the left flank, and goals. Basically, everything we fans called for, we got. Pioli is a good coach and even when he makes mistakes, he finds a way to steady the ship. We’re not in a bad situation in the table, but the performance and attitude was worrying. Now, we got a good response against Napoli with players demanding more of each other and hopefully we build on that.

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