
Ronaldo’s diagnosis is very clear. Milan’s head of medicine Jean-Pierre Meersseman revealed: “After Ronaldo’s injury we decided at once to transfer the player to the Galeazzi hospital in Milan [one of the best orthopaedic hospitals in Europe]. There’s little to say about the seriousness of the injury – unfortunately they confirmed that it was a rupture to the tendons of his left knee. He will definitely need surgery. We are all distraught at what’s happened“. Recovery times for an injury like this span from 9 to 12 months.

Indeed it will. As you are reading these lines, Ronaldo will have probably already left Milan, in order to meet with Dr. Saillant‘s medical team in Paris, the same one that rebuilt his right knee 8 years ago. Milan’s head of medicine, Jean-Pierre Meersseman, and the head of the Sports trauma department, Dr. Walter Pascale, tried to reconstruct the events which lead to Ronaldo’s injury (“He was hit from behind, and likely lost balance on his standing leg“) and declared that the player’s left knee had been bothering him all year, despite the fact it didn’t prevent Ronaldo from training. Dr. Pascale however pointed out he DOES NOT consider this a career-ending injury for Ronaldo: “The previous surgery in 2000 had been a perfect success, and during the past 8 years medical techniques for these kinds of injuries have considerably improved. If everything goes well, he should make a full recovery“. Some much-needed optimism… for Ronaldo’s sake.
For more post-game reports on Ronaldo’s injury, see the following articles:
- Ronaldo’s Career Virtually Over (Goal.com)
- Official – Ronaldo tendon severed (Channel4 Italia)

On the other end, Livorno’s Giancarlo Camolese set up his team with a determined 3-5-2 formation; a thick midfield designed to contain the Rossoneri’s creative verve, but with quick wingers ready to feed the striking duo with fast counter-attacks. When you have finishers of the caliber of Diego Tristán and Francesco Tavano (just check out the latter’s goal vs. Genoa this week-end), danger is never too far away.

For Livorno, not much to report either: a lone strike by Francesco Tavano very close to the crossbar, sending shivers down Kalac’s backside, but not much else. That shot by the way, was the only evidence today for the Livorno striker’s presence on the field, as the lad unfortunately had to be substituted before the break, complaining about a muscular problem.

After the goal (and almost crying at his players’ unproductivity) Carlo Ancelotti decided to shake things up a bit, something which at that time translated into replacing his entire striking front: out with Gilardino and Paloschi, in Filippo Inzaghi and Ronaldo. 4 minutes later, good news finally arrived for the Bianconeri: José Luis Vidigal handballed inside the box, resulting in a penalty-kick for AC Milan. On came the expert Andrea Pirlo, who tied the game to 1-1. 
Serginho came on for his injured teammate, but there was little this match had left in the way of scoring. There were two good chances for either side to be quite honest, one for Milan (a 76th minute Inzaghi diving header saved by Amelia) and one for Livorno (a stoppage-time Pulzetti one-on-one chance with Kalac, which the Livorno player didn’t manage to connect with properly), but no goals. The final 1-1 result is a good draw earned by the Amaranto and a missed opportunity for the Rossoneri, who are now left 1 point behind 4th-ranked Fiorentina in the Serie A standings. That Champions League qualification spot won’t be easy to get to, and with Ronaldo out of the picture, even harder.
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1-1 [Match Highlights] |
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| GOALSCORERS: 50′ Pulzetti (L), 61′ pen. Pirlo (M) | ||
| MILAN (4-3-1-2): Kalac — Oddo, Bonera, Kaladze, Favalli — Gattuso, Pirlo, Ambrosini — Gourcuff — Paloschi (57′ F.Inzaghi), Gilardino (57′ Ronaldo, 61′ Serginho). (bench: Fiori, Cafu, Simic, Jankulovski). Coach: Ancelotti. | ||
| LIVORNO (3-5-2): Amelia — Grandoni, Knezevic, Galante — Pulzetti, Vidigal (84′ Pavan), De Vezze, A.Filippini, Pasquale — Tristán (76′ Rossini), Tavano (45′ Diamanti). (bench: De Lucia, E.Filippini, Bogdani, Vailatti). Coach: Camolese. | ||
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Marco Pantanella is the Chief Editor of Soccerlens and an Author & Editor of the mCalcio blog
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