In French they would say: “Sortie par la petite porte” (exit through the small door). The hypothetical Grande Inter who has been utterly dominating the Serie A for the past 3 seasons will, for another year, remain but only a mirage in European context: an unachieved dream which the millions of Nerazzurri fans will look at nostalgically from afar, as they enjoy the success of yet another domestic league Scudetto at the end of the year. Wondering: what could have been…
Today, Inter Milan were simply insufficient. Insufficient to overturn a two-goal deficit from the first leg, insufficient (for their most important match of the year) at maintaining the entirety of their troops focused, insufficient at challenging the Reds of Liverpool. Inter manager Roberto Mancini had said this needed to be a “perfect night” and frankly, had the Nerazzurri capitalized on a few of their enormous first half chances, it might very well have been. In the end however, the goal by Fernando Torres brought an end to the Italian dreams of perfection, and together with the card shown to Nicolas Burdisso, contributed in painting this Milan night with colours of very bright Red.
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Tactically, compared to Italian & English press common expectations the day preceding the match, both Rafael Benitez and Roberto Mancini left very in the way of surprises. With Steve Finnan out of action, the Reds manager was forced to shift Jamie Carragher to right-back position and insert Slovakian center-back Martin Skrtel beside Sami Hyypiä. Fabio Aurelio won the race with John Arne Riise for a left-back spot, while Javier Mascherano and Lucas Leiva were confirmed as the two-man defensive midfield.
This time however, unlike the first leg at Anfield road the pair would have lot more work to cover, on account of Dejan Stankovic‘s advanced position at the heart of the Inter midfield. That was Mancini’s main modification to commonly employed tactics tonight, alongside perhaps the use of Cristian Chivu in center defense and Nicolas Burdisso on the wing (positions usually switched around in the domestic league).
With a sold out San Siro stadium litterally painted in Black and Blue, the atmosphere and tension in the ‘Temple of Italian Football’ were at their peak tonight. Inter Milan needed goals, and they needed them fast: the main course on the menu tonight was attack & assault, assault & attack. A man of Javier Zanetti‘s experience understood this perfectly, and exemplified Inter’s offensive spirit by leading his troops’ assault on the Reds Army. However, even the best of intentions are sometimes insufficient, when you’re left to face with Liverpool’s attentive defensive organization.


With that said, for the 10 minutes following their 1-man disadvantage, Inter played considerably well and could have even opened the score in minute 58, as Skrtel gifted the ball to Ibrahimovic on the edge of the box, leaving the Swedish striker in a one-on-one situation against Pepe Reina. Incredibly however, Zlatan put the ball wide and that was effectively the end of Inter’s night. 
With his team’s morale shattered, Mancini proceeded to make the few (unnecessary at this point) substitutions of the night, giving some playing time to Pelé (for Vieira) and Suazo (for Ibrahimovic). Before the Swede exited the field, he had yet another opportunity to score at least the consolation goal, when a great Chivu through-ball left him with space on the left side of the Liverpool. Alas much like the rest of his shooting attempts and free-kicks tonight, Zlatan’s shot was high and wide.
The match thus ended with tears and shaking heads among Nerazzurri ranks, in a night which saw Liverpool’s 3-0 aggregate win take them to the UEFA Champions League Quarter-Finals, and make this year’s Premier League’s domination in top-flight European football complete (in addition to Liverpool, England counts Chelsea, Arsenal, and Manchester United still in contention).

I guess I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Roberto Mancini’s post-match declarations, in which the Inter coach announced he would be leaving the team at the end of the year. To my mind, that is evidently the heated reaction of a very disappointed manager, and should be taken with a very large grain of salt. With that said, the Italian press is already having a ball with hypotheses of possible replacements. Names mentioned so far? Cesare Prandelli, Rafael Benitez, and a certain… José Mourinho.
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Marco Pantanella features on the Editing team of Soccerlens and is the Author & Chief Editor of the mCalcio blog.
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