• 5 months ago
Transcript
00:00:00 At a certain point, one of us, with a slightly stronger tone,
00:00:05 said, "Roni, you're broke now.
00:00:07 Come on, wake up, give us a hand, at least do a run, something."
00:00:11 He said, "Now I score.
00:00:13 Then we won't talk anymore."
00:00:15 Once we stole Gattuso's phone
00:00:18 and started sending messages to everyone.
00:00:22 To journalists, to Braila, to managers, to people.
00:00:27 We sent them a message.
00:00:29 THE UNLOCKER
00:00:33 A new episode of Unlock the Room with Mr. Brocchi, Christian Brocchi.
00:00:40 What's the name of a coach who doesn't train at the moment?
00:00:44 Is he called "Mr."? Do they call you by name?
00:00:46 Some do, some don't.
00:00:48 But it's not a problem. The important thing is what they think of you.
00:00:52 What do they think of you?
00:00:53 How does a coach who's not training live?
00:00:57 Does he completely detach himself from the world?
00:01:00 How many games do you watch in a week?
00:01:02 As soon as I finished my last experience, I detached myself.
00:01:06 I needed to clean up, because a coach's role is very stressful.
00:01:11 On the outside, you understand, but you understand it relatively.
00:01:15 It's normal that now, not training,
00:01:20 because I had some opportunities,
00:01:23 but it wasn't what I liked,
00:01:28 what gave me the right emotion or the fire
00:01:31 that you need to do such a beautiful, but stressful job.
00:01:35 Now I do watch games, I like watching games,
00:01:39 I like meeting the players,
00:01:42 because the most important thing is to know the players,
00:01:46 from different categories, nationalities, leagues.
00:01:50 So, having a general knowledge for a coach is very important.
00:01:53 Cristian, we like to call you that, because you're a strange person.
00:01:59 I wanted to ask you, looking at this historical period,
00:02:03 without going into detail,
00:02:05 there's always this thing about players, results, how do you see it?
00:02:09 For me, first of all, it's fundamental to have an aspect.
00:02:14 Everyone plays to win.
00:02:17 So, it's not just about the player or...
00:02:22 - The result. - The result.
00:02:24 It's normal that each of us has a thought and a desire to achieve the result.
00:02:31 And the result has to be the victory.
00:02:33 Everyone has their own mentality, their own belief.
00:02:38 I, personally, am one of those who wants to achieve victory
00:02:42 through a game,
00:02:44 and not through a defensive phase alone and exclusively.
00:02:49 But because I consider football a spectacle,
00:02:54 and I like to see teams that play it face to face,
00:02:57 I like to see teams that control the game,
00:02:59 I like to see teams that have a mentality
00:03:04 that, when we speak in Italy, we call it the European mentality.
00:03:08 And I can't really understand why,
00:03:10 because now we're seeing that the new generation of coaches
00:03:14 have the desire to put something different on the pitch.
00:03:19 It's normal that this confrontation comes, more than anything,
00:03:24 from those who speak from the outside,
00:03:27 from those who express their own opinion.
00:03:30 It's right that those who go to the UTAI and watch from the outside
00:03:32 can express an idea.
00:03:35 I don't accept offences.
00:03:38 Offences from those who comment on your work,
00:03:43 I think there's a limit to everything.
00:03:44 Criticism is right, negative thinking about a job is right.
00:03:48 Offending is something different,
00:03:50 exasperating someone is something different.
00:03:53 Let's get to this, to start to go back in time.
00:03:57 What was your relationship with the media, the newspapers?
00:04:00 We were saying before, in the off-the-shelf,
00:04:02 your football was a bit like that,
00:04:04 between two great eras.
00:04:07 The start of social media,
00:04:09 the first TV stations that decide the time of the games,
00:04:12 so you started playing a lot in the evenings.
00:04:15 What was your relationship with interviews,
00:04:17 with the journalists, with the critics?
00:04:20 I've always had a great deal of respect.
00:04:23 A great deal of respect, and I've always said
00:04:27 that if I had made some friends in my career,
00:04:30 journalists and more, it would have been better.
00:04:32 Because there's no point in hiding.
00:04:35 Many players have used and still use, in their careers,
00:04:40 maybe a different way, a journalist friend.
00:04:45 But I've always had the idea
00:04:48 that I preferred to open a newspaper
00:04:50 and find an article that spoke of me,
00:04:53 in a positive way, because I've conquered it on the pitch,
00:04:57 rather than opening a newspaper and finding an article that spoke of me,
00:05:01 of a journalist friend,
00:05:02 whose objective was to do it for me.
00:05:06 Why? Because I thought more about myself,
00:05:08 my personal gratification, rather than showing
00:05:11 something different on the outside.
00:05:14 The time of the games has been determined
00:05:17 at a certain point in our careers,
00:05:21 but it has never disturbed me, honestly.
00:05:27 Most players prefer to play in the evening
00:05:30 rather than in the middle of the day.
00:05:31 This is out of the question,
00:05:33 but also for a biological reason,
00:05:35 a habit, a series of things.
00:05:38 Even if you often train in the morning.
00:05:41 But I don't know, the evening atmosphere
00:05:44 is always a particular charm.
00:05:47 I've touched up on social media.
00:05:50 I've touched them up and I tell you,
00:05:52 from a certain point of view, luckily,
00:05:55 from another point of view, you have to know how to live with it.
00:05:59 I've taken them full-on as a coach.
00:06:02 Maybe it was better to get used to it as a player first,
00:06:04 so as a coach I would have accused something less.
00:06:10 Because before, when social media wasn't there,
00:06:12 I think journalists were raised
00:06:17 in different ways, because they saw
00:06:22 and thought about what was positive and negative.
00:06:24 Now, I think, some articles,
00:06:31 websites, newspapers, and everything,
00:06:34 are conditioned more by the negative things
00:06:37 that social media brings you than by the positive ones.
00:06:39 Because I always say that out of the 10 messages
00:06:41 you receive on social media, if you receive 6 positive ones,
00:06:45 2 neutral ones and 2 negative ones that are really strong,
00:06:49 most people at this moment
00:06:52 take those two negative ones,
00:06:53 because it seems they make more news.
00:06:55 Cristian, I wanted to ask you, when you played
00:06:58 and you played thick matches,
00:07:00 and you were a smart player, tactically,
00:07:05 football-wise, maybe you didn't really look at it,
00:07:07 I mean, journalists, now we don't want to discredit our area,
00:07:12 but maybe you didn't see yourself and you didn't care
00:07:16 if you were getting negative comments,
00:07:20 when you say, "I ran 12.5 km,
00:07:23 I got 75 balls back and I got 5.5".
00:07:26 Look, between me and Fabio, if I was on a plane,
00:07:29 I would never say the name of a player
00:07:31 that we would laugh at and look at the votes,
00:07:33 and say, "Damn, he got 6 today".
00:07:34 You know that football fans publish the votes on the same day.
00:07:37 His answer was, "I think he stole 14 balls".
00:07:40 I think it's a situation where you probably found yourself too.
00:07:44 All those statistics that don't end up on the table,
00:07:46 all those situations that superficial criticism doesn't see.
00:07:50 Because, now, it's not the case of that Milan,
00:07:52 because he had great coaches who knew how to read the matches.
00:07:56 But the media, the football influencers,
00:08:00 especially today, when we look at the matches,
00:08:03 they see "6 balls", "5.5 balls".
00:08:07 And maybe they influence,
00:08:09 I'm not saying in the dressing room, because you were champions,
00:08:11 smart people, but outside,
00:08:13 they say, "Brocchi always gets 6".
00:08:15 No, I ran like crazy, I deserved at least 7.
00:08:18 Look, in my time,
00:08:21 the votes were also conditioned by the result of the match.
00:08:24 So, if you won, you had votes that were definitely higher.
00:08:26 If you lost, the votes were almost always negative,
00:08:31 because they were conditioned by that.
00:08:35 Personally, yes, sometimes,
00:08:38 if I noticed that a journalist
00:08:41 had something personal with me,
00:08:46 then, yes, it bothered me a lot.
00:08:48 So, maybe I'd take that journalist and say,
00:08:50 "Sorry, but why?"
00:08:53 But not for the 5 or 6,
00:08:55 maybe also for the comment.
00:08:58 I remember there was one
00:09:00 that I did in a particular year.
00:09:06 Even when I was, I'm not saying the best on the pitch,
00:09:09 the maximum vote I got was 6,
00:09:11 and the comment was never nice.
00:09:12 At some point, I had taken it,
00:09:14 but I had also answered in a slightly presumptuous way.
00:09:17 I put it on a piece of paper,
00:09:19 I never said a word about him again,
00:09:23 and then, at some point, he became a team manager.
00:09:28 At the end, I scored against this team,
00:09:30 he passed me by, I said hello,
00:09:33 I said good evening, and I left.
00:09:35 Because you want to win back.
00:09:38 But the thing that bothered me the most,
00:09:43 but also accompanied my career,
00:09:45 is that sometimes, despite the affection I feel
00:09:49 from those fans who have lived our years,
00:09:52 who have seen that,
00:09:54 even though I wasn't a starting player in Amovire del Milano,
00:09:57 because I had three sacred monsters in front of me,
00:09:59 Pirlo, Gattuso, Seedorf,
00:10:01 I took up an important space.
00:10:04 I played important matches,
00:10:06 Champions League semi-finals, Champions League quarter-finals,
00:10:09 important matches,
00:10:10 that if I hadn't been up to the task,
00:10:12 your team might have lost a qualification,
00:10:16 and then not be able to win the game.
00:10:20 And that was what led me to leave Milan at the end.
00:10:25 I wanted to leave Milan
00:10:27 because I wanted to win a cup with a different shirt.
00:10:29 Why?
00:10:30 Because it seemed that some players
00:10:32 who were a little more popular at times,
00:10:35 or had a name that was a little more important,
00:10:39 had won the Champions League.
00:10:41 Maybe they had played half of my games,
00:10:45 and I, who had played twice as much as someone else,
00:10:48 Emma Brocchi is not a starter, Emma Brocchi is not a player.
00:10:50 This was the thing that,
00:10:52 in my career, sometimes,
00:10:55 bothered me a little more.
00:10:56 In fact, I had decided to go to Lazio for this reason,
00:10:59 and then I won three more cups in Lazio.
00:11:01 So, Luca,
00:11:04 we would like to go back in time,
00:11:06 but we also want to follow your assists.
00:11:09 So, I would take a step back before the assist,
00:11:11 that is, when you go to the pinnacle
00:11:16 and you see that your teammate is no longer there.
00:11:17 I read.
00:11:18 Yes, yes.
00:11:19 But that was an episode...
00:11:21 Look, I'll tell you the truth,
00:11:22 I'm a person who respects others.
00:11:25 And even if, logically,
00:11:28 there's a derby in the middle,
00:11:29 there's something that Milan, Inter, the fans,
00:11:33 we know, right?
00:11:34 So, let's take this aspect away.
00:11:37 I did an interview
00:11:41 where my word,
00:11:45 which is the word "I hate",
00:11:46 was taken up again,
00:11:47 "Bro, I hate Inter", they said.
00:11:49 Because I had said that
00:11:51 I hated a person who had done something
00:11:55 at that moment,
00:11:56 and so the title was "Bro, I hate Inter".
00:11:57 From then on, throughout my career,
00:11:59 every time I played against Inter,
00:12:01 I would hear cheers, whistles,
00:12:03 and at a certain point I would say,
00:12:04 "Damn, how important they are to me".
00:12:06 Because it's not always said,
00:12:07 when there's a whole stadium whistling at you,
00:12:10 when there's a whole stadium
00:12:11 coming at you, insulting you,
00:12:14 it's not always said that if you're an opponent
00:12:17 this thing destabilises you or scares you.
00:12:20 Sometimes it even cheers you up.
00:12:22 We have an example.
00:12:23 Now he works here,
00:12:24 and he repeats it several times.
00:12:26 Exactly.
00:12:27 He invents this mantra of Ibra.
00:12:29 The problem is when your fans insult you,
00:12:33 then you do feel bad.
00:12:34 But when they're your opponents,
00:12:36 it's not a problem.
00:12:37 That thing, unfortunately,
00:12:38 did bother me, because...
00:12:40 In the end, Inter was the team
00:12:43 that had invested in me the year before,
00:12:45 buying me from Verona,
00:12:46 spending big amounts of money.
00:12:47 I arrived that morning,
00:12:49 and without having...
00:12:50 I find myself in this situation,
00:12:52 and it's normal to have a reaction.
00:12:54 It could have been Inter,
00:12:56 it could have been any other team.
00:12:57 It wasn't Inter,
00:12:58 it was the gesture of this person
00:12:59 that bothered me.
00:13:01 And this thing should be taken into account.
00:13:02 But then I've always said
00:13:04 that from every negative thing
00:13:06 comes a positive.
00:13:08 Thanks to that episode,
00:13:10 I went back home,
00:13:12 to my family.
00:13:13 I was the captain of various teams
00:13:16 throughout my career,
00:13:17 from the age of 9 to 19,
00:13:19 at Milan Aestettore Giovanile.
00:13:22 So, when I came back to Milan,
00:13:26 I still remember,
00:13:27 wearing a summer outfit,
00:13:30 a proper summer outfit,
00:13:31 I said, "I didn't even know
00:13:33 where I was going to be,
00:13:34 because it was really fast."
00:13:36 I went to Milan,
00:13:37 I felt the sensation,
00:13:38 I said, "I'm back home."
00:13:39 I got emotional again,
00:13:41 like when I was a kid,
00:13:42 I relived when I took the bus
00:13:44 to the Lotto square
00:13:45 to go and train in Milan.
00:13:47 A series of things
00:13:48 that were really wonderful.
00:13:50 And the fact that I scored
00:13:52 at Milan,
00:13:53 scoring the first goal,
00:13:55 I'm not a bomber,
00:13:56 was the crowning glory
00:13:57 of a dream of a kid
00:13:58 who started at Buccinasco,
00:14:01 made a major career
00:14:04 and scored with the shirt
00:14:05 where he grew up.
00:14:06 We'll talk about that later.
00:14:06 I'll just add something here.
00:14:08 This morning,
00:14:09 we watched the highlights
00:14:10 of that Brescia-Milan.
00:14:13 It's incredible, in my opinion.
00:14:14 I mean, apart from the fact
00:14:15 that Milan is also emotional for us,
00:14:17 even when you come back today,
00:14:19 it seems like
00:14:21 almost a paradise on earth.
00:14:22 It's a magical place,
00:14:24 you understand why it unites history,
00:14:27 it's a modern place,
00:14:28 but you still see
00:14:29 that it keeps some pictures
00:14:30 from certain times,
00:14:31 certain rooms that have not been touched,
00:14:33 it really sucks up
00:14:35 all that has been.
00:14:36 Do you know what we used to say
00:14:37 in those years
00:14:38 when we were in Milan?
00:14:39 Before 2003.
00:14:41 We were there,
00:14:42 we looked at the photos
00:14:43 and we said,
00:14:43 "Look, we'll put some of our photos there."
00:14:45 So that's a stimulus
00:14:47 for the kids who are there now.
00:14:48 Seeing the pictures
00:14:50 of the years when you won,
00:14:52 of the cups you won,
00:14:54 it's a stimulus,
00:14:54 because at least for us personally,
00:14:56 it stimulated us.
00:14:58 And when we started
00:14:59 to see some of our photos
00:15:00 attached to Milanello,
00:15:02 we started to become aware
00:15:03 that we had done something important
00:15:04 for an impressive club.
00:15:07 You said it,
00:15:09 every player is born
00:15:10 with a sympathy, etc.
00:15:12 But Milan was your family,
00:15:13 because you spent
00:15:14 over 10 years
00:15:16 in the youth sector.
00:15:17 I'm asking you,
00:15:18 what did the youth sector
00:15:19 in Milan leave you with?
00:15:20 How did you get there?
00:15:22 And then you went to play
00:15:24 in the other part of Milan.
00:15:25 Milan is a respectable city,
00:15:26 it's a very sporty derby,
00:15:29 but when you wear this label
00:15:31 of a man who grew up in Milan,
00:15:33 how do you switch
00:15:34 as a professional?
00:15:35 Because it's clear that
00:15:36 you play for Inter
00:15:37 and you're at the total disposal
00:15:39 of Inter.
00:15:40 I was brought there
00:15:41 to make a mistake,
00:15:43 in terms of my youth and everything.
00:15:45 I come from a family,
00:15:46 I've always said,
00:15:47 an Inter family.
00:15:49 But at nine years old,
00:15:51 I arrive in Milan
00:15:52 and I start seeing an incredible Milan.
00:15:54 I had the ticket to go and see
00:15:56 Inter and Milan
00:15:57 and I went to see Milan.
00:15:58 What year was it exactly?
00:15:59 Well, I'm from 1976,
00:16:02 so it was in 1986.
00:16:04 So it was the year
00:16:06 of Silvio Berlusconi.
00:16:07 '85, '86, exactly,
00:16:09 those years.
00:16:10 So I always go to see Milan.
00:16:12 In the year of the Inter's
00:16:14 Scudetto, the one with Trapattoni,
00:16:15 my dad worked on the road,
00:16:17 my parents were separated.
00:16:18 When my dad came back to Milan,
00:16:20 logically, where he took
00:16:21 his son, we went to see him
00:16:23 and he took me to see Inter.
00:16:24 I liked football,
00:16:25 I played and all that.
00:16:26 I went to see Milan,
00:16:27 but when my dad came back,
00:16:29 we had seen that year.
00:16:31 So when I arrived at Inter,
00:16:33 a manager told me,
00:16:34 'Please,
00:16:36 you've been at Milan for 10 years,
00:16:37 you have to see this.'
00:16:38 So I said,
00:16:39 'I'm from an Inter family,
00:16:40 I saw the Scudetto and Trapattoni,
00:16:42 so, Brocchi Interista,
00:16:43 Brocchi Interista, Brocchi Interista.'
00:16:45 Those mistakes are
00:16:47 divine,
00:16:48 because you should never
00:16:49 talk to the lads,
00:16:50 you should never ask them
00:16:52 which team they are,
00:16:53 which team they are,
00:16:53 because then,
00:16:55 you get into a situation
00:16:56 where you're too young
00:16:58 and you don't know how to manage,
00:16:59 or maybe a word is too much
00:17:02 and a word is less than enough.
00:17:03 But I must say,
00:17:07 I was very happy,
00:17:08 because from a certain point of view,
00:17:11 the happiness that a great team
00:17:13 like Inter had spent
00:17:14 so much money on me
00:17:15 was something special.
00:17:17 And objectively,
00:17:18 Milan didn't do that
00:17:19 that year.
00:17:21 So I have a lot of respect
00:17:22 for those who
00:17:24 had their eyes on me.
00:17:25 But the emotion I had
00:17:26 on my return to Milan
00:17:28 is indescribable,
00:17:29 because when you're 14
00:17:31 and you go to Milan for the first time,
00:17:33 you get in there
00:17:34 and you're excited,
00:17:35 you've spent 4 or 5 years there,
00:17:37 the first training sessions
00:17:38 with the first team,
00:17:39 when they call you tomorrow,
00:17:40 you have to train with the first team,
00:17:42 the excitement of the first evening,
00:17:44 the first training session
00:17:45 I had with the first team
00:17:46 of Milan,
00:17:49 where we had gathered
00:17:51 5 or 6 guys from Primavera,
00:17:52 I was in the small rooms,
00:17:53 the ones in the back,
00:17:54 on the other side,
00:17:55 and now I'm back there with you.
00:17:57 It's something really beautiful
00:17:59 and wonderful.
00:18:00 Cristian, who called you
00:18:02 to say "Milan wants you,
00:18:04 I've been talking to you since you were a kid"?
00:18:07 Look, since I was a kid
00:18:08 it was strange,
00:18:10 because an observer at Milan,
00:18:12 but I don't know who,
00:18:14 that day,
00:18:15 in that match,
00:18:16 came to see the opposing team.
00:18:18 What match was it?
00:18:19 It was Buccinasco against,
00:18:20 I don't even remember the name
00:18:22 of the other team.
00:18:23 I was 8 years old.
00:18:24 Instead of taking the guys
00:18:29 from the team I was going to see,
00:18:31 they called me to do the draw
00:18:33 for my team's number 3.
00:18:36 At the time,
00:18:37 there were draw-in draws.
00:18:39 If you went to the draw,
00:18:40 they would take many players,
00:18:42 they would play 11 against 11,
00:18:45 there were the observers on the bench
00:18:46 watching,
00:18:47 and then the best ones
00:18:49 would select them and maybe
00:18:51 call you for the second draw
00:18:53 to play another match.
00:18:54 So, that's how it started.
00:18:56 My first fans,
00:18:58 there was Zagatti,
00:19:02 the legendary Faustino Braga,
00:19:04 people who knew about football,
00:19:08 they understood.
00:19:10 From then on,
00:19:12 I was lucky
00:19:15 to have good coaches,
00:19:18 they took me right away.
00:19:19 They took all three of us.
00:19:22 Then we played our first season,
00:19:23 and at the end of the season,
00:19:24 my two teammates
00:19:26 didn't confirm their names,
00:19:27 and I was left.
00:19:30 But your dad told you,
00:19:32 who told you
00:19:33 "Milan wants you"?
00:19:34 No, the company, Bucinasco,
00:19:36 because they called me
00:19:37 to go to the draw.
00:19:38 Then, once the draw was over,
00:19:41 they would talk to the company
00:19:42 and to my parents.
00:19:45 I was lucky
00:19:47 to go to Milan,
00:19:48 because my grandfather
00:19:50 retired that year
00:19:51 and had to make a choice,
00:19:52 to keep working
00:19:55 to pay for the house,
00:19:57 we didn't live on the gold.
00:19:59 Or, since they took us in three,
00:20:02 Milan gave us a refund.
00:20:04 So, basically,
00:20:04 my parents and the other two kids
00:20:07 agreed to the refund of all three of us.
00:20:08 Autists.
00:20:09 My grandfather went,
00:20:10 and he practically became
00:20:11 the driver to take us.
00:20:13 Then, after the first year
00:20:14 went so well,
00:20:15 the other two kids were gone,
00:20:17 my grandfather cut their salary
00:20:19 by two thirds,
00:20:21 but he kept doing it
00:20:22 until he was 14,
00:20:24 when he couldn't go alone,
00:20:25 because even when he was born,
00:20:27 it wasn't the most comfortable
00:20:29 with the vehicles and everything,
00:20:30 at my house.
00:20:31 He was there,
00:20:32 and if it weren't for my grandparents,
00:20:33 I wouldn't have been able to continue.
00:20:36 Did your father see you play
00:20:37 in Serie A, your grandfather?
00:20:38 Yes, he saw me.
00:20:40 My grandparents were my first fans.
00:20:42 But also...
00:20:46 my father,
00:20:47 certainly with a very strong character,
00:20:50 a very strong person,
00:20:53 always lived it with a detached emotion.
00:20:58 He never wanted to show me,
00:21:01 but he had an incredible pride.
00:21:03 My father did it alone,
00:21:06 he worked all his life,
00:21:08 he was a shipyard worker.
00:21:10 Despite this,
00:21:11 he always continued to do his job,
00:21:13 he always did everything he had to do.
00:21:15 He had an incredible emotion for me,
00:21:18 and he expressed it, of course,
00:21:21 in some moments in his own way.
00:21:22 My mother, on the other hand,
00:21:23 made me study.
00:21:25 Once she didn't let me go to train
00:21:27 for a week,
00:21:28 until you don't study,
00:21:29 you don't go to train anymore,
00:21:30 the year before going to Milan.
00:21:32 That was a great lesson,
00:21:33 which I'm trying to pass on to my children.
00:21:36 And the good thing was
00:21:37 to have a family that always followed me,
00:21:40 always,
00:21:41 it never missed a game or something,
00:21:43 but it never allowed itself to tell me,
00:21:45 "Do this, do that,
00:21:47 it's better if you do this,
00:21:48 it's better if you do that".
00:21:49 That was my luck.
00:21:50 How much did your parents
00:21:52 help you grow up?
00:21:52 I mean, I remember your dad
00:21:53 was a shipyard worker,
00:21:55 and you, not to trivialise
00:21:57 the footballer Brocchi,
00:21:59 but you were someone who worked a lot, right?
00:22:01 Yes, although maybe characteristically
00:22:02 this thigh,
00:22:03 I got it from my mother,
00:22:06 because my mother is a good hammer,
00:22:10 she was always one,
00:22:11 she too,
00:22:13 my mother was between 18 and 19 years old
00:22:17 when I got pregnant,
00:22:21 and my father had two more,
00:22:23 so they were young boys,
00:22:24 who got married,
00:22:25 and at the age of six,
00:22:27 being so young, they split up,
00:22:29 and I was one of the boys
00:22:31 nowadays,
00:22:31 and it was normal, unfortunately.
00:22:33 But in my time,
00:22:35 I was the only one in the class,
00:22:36 it wasn't like that,
00:22:37 but I've always grown up
00:22:39 with a lot of love,
00:22:41 they've always been there for me.
00:22:43 My mother has certainly given
00:22:44 something important to my life,
00:22:46 from the point of view of
00:22:47 the desire to assert yourself,
00:22:49 the desire to achieve goals,
00:22:51 and seeing my father
00:22:52 doing that job,
00:22:53 and having that thing,
00:22:55 they've certainly influenced
00:22:57 my growth,
00:22:58 from the point of view of
00:22:59 wanting to achieve something.
00:23:01 Great.
00:23:01 But let's start with your career
00:23:04 as a professional,
00:23:04 because you were a sixth grader,
00:23:07 so you were close to home,
00:23:08 Lumezzane,
00:23:09 the old C2,
00:23:11 then the C1,
00:23:11 you went through a setback,
00:23:13 then Verona in Serie B,
00:23:15 the classic example of Gavetta.
00:23:17 So, I'd like you to tell us
00:23:19 about that period,
00:23:20 and then I'll get to a topic
00:23:21 I mentioned earlier,
00:23:22 when you totally forget
00:23:24 your passion as a kid,
00:23:25 and start living as a professional,
00:23:26 when you really get to
00:23:28 the first team,
00:23:29 when you understand
00:23:30 you can be a footballer,
00:23:31 when you gradually
00:23:33 forget about your passion,
00:23:35 let's call it passion,
00:23:35 let's call it commitment.
00:23:37 No, this was my...
00:23:39 how I lived those years
00:23:43 was my strength,
00:23:44 so, I went to the first two years
00:23:47 of my professional career,
00:23:49 after the Milan spring,
00:23:51 and that was my first disappointment
00:23:55 in the football world,
00:23:56 because I said, "Damn,
00:23:57 I spent ten years
00:23:58 in the youth academy in Milan,
00:23:59 captain of the spring team,
00:24:01 captain of the Beretti team,
00:24:02 captain of the...
00:24:04 I thought that Milan
00:24:06 could have a better chance
00:24:08 than me,
00:24:09 but maybe in those years
00:24:10 they had a better chance
00:24:10 than three or four other guys,
00:24:13 and they sent me to the youth academy
00:24:16 for more property,
00:24:18 but with a...
00:24:20 Rebuyment?
00:24:21 Yes, they said,
00:24:22 "Before selling it to another team,
00:24:23 you have to ask us,
00:24:24 and we at that point,
00:24:25 because there were not
00:24:26 all the things yet,
00:24:27 but the agreements were those."
00:24:29 So, a little disappointment,
00:24:30 but the luck I had,
00:24:32 I never thought about...
00:24:36 "I want to win the Champions League,
00:24:38 I want to get there,
00:24:39 I want that obsession,
00:24:42 or if that one comes,
00:24:44 I'll get there too,
00:24:45 or I'm stronger than that one,
00:24:47 or all these things.
00:24:49 Why my teammates
00:24:51 who were with me in the spring,
00:24:53 where this is not stronger than me,
00:24:55 and yet they went to play there?
00:24:56 I never said that.
00:24:58 I always prepared the game
00:24:59 on Saturday or Sunday,
00:25:02 with enthusiasm, desire and commitment.
00:25:04 So I started running,
00:25:05 working,
00:25:07 doing everything I could do
00:25:09 for...
00:25:09 In fact, I did the first two years
00:25:10 at the Pro Sesto,
00:25:11 the third year I could go to Serie B,
00:25:13 because they wanted me
00:25:14 in Serie B,
00:25:15 but I had the military service.
00:25:17 That year, there was still
00:25:18 the military service.
00:25:19 So I decided
00:25:20 not to go to Serie B,
00:25:22 I got in touch with Lumezzane,
00:25:24 because they wanted me,
00:25:25 and they were wonderful people,
00:25:26 we shook hands and I said,
00:25:27 "Ok, I'm coming to Lumezzane,
00:25:29 you pay me a tot,
00:25:31 if next year
00:25:32 a team comes to Serie B
00:25:34 that gives you the same money
00:25:35 you paid me this year,
00:25:37 from there or more,
00:25:38 but at least the ones you took out,
00:25:40 you can't say no
00:25:42 and you let me go."
00:25:43 Mister, I have a big question
00:25:44 in the middle of your speech,
00:25:46 which I really care about.
00:25:47 I imagine...
00:25:49 Let's talk about 30 years ago,
00:25:52 when you made the leap
00:25:53 to the first team, maybe.
00:25:54 Yes, '29.
00:25:54 30 years ago,
00:25:56 a young captain
00:25:58 of a Milan spring
00:26:00 went to Serie B,
00:26:02 and he approached,
00:26:03 I imagine,
00:26:04 I'm sure,
00:26:05 with great respect
00:26:06 to the veterans of Serie C,
00:26:08 which we know
00:26:09 are old-fashioned,
00:26:11 and you have to be very careful.
00:26:12 At the time it was like that.
00:26:14 And now I'm asking you,
00:26:15 and now,
00:26:16 how has the world changed in this sense?
00:26:19 I don't want to talk about respect,
00:26:21 but I'll put it in there.
00:26:23 Yes, in my opinion,
00:26:24 it's not a form of respect,
00:26:26 because even today's kids
00:26:29 when they enter a dressing room,
00:26:30 maybe outside,
00:26:31 outside not,
00:26:32 but inside a dressing room,
00:26:34 even today's kids
00:26:35 have a kind of respect.
00:26:38 Then there were the stupid kids in my time,
00:26:40 and there are still stupid kids today,
00:26:42 but that's another story.
00:26:44 But I'm telling you,
00:26:45 seeing the older players,
00:26:48 the ones who had to bring home
00:26:49 their salary at the end of the month,
00:26:50 because they had to support
00:26:52 their wives and children,
00:26:53 and in Serie C,
00:26:54 salaries aren't that high.
00:26:57 So,
00:26:58 it's a different kind of hunger,
00:27:01 a different goal,
00:27:03 because you're still living
00:27:05 what you dream of,
00:27:06 your game,
00:27:08 something you've wanted to do
00:27:09 since you were a kid.
00:27:10 But maybe there's someone who
00:27:12 has already taken a step forward
00:27:15 and is doing it
00:27:16 because he has to bring home his salary,
00:27:17 because he has to support his family,
00:27:19 because he has to create a future.
00:27:20 So, it's definitely not easy.
00:27:23 Today's kids are a bit lighter
00:27:25 on this.
00:27:27 Even if I have to be honest,
00:27:28 I can't go against
00:27:31 today's kids.
00:27:32 When you talk,
00:27:33 they're only on social media,
00:27:35 they've moved away from those things.
00:27:38 It's not the kids' fault,
00:27:40 it's our society's fault in general.
00:27:42 Because when we're done,
00:27:45 the first thing I'll do
00:27:47 when I get up to leave
00:27:49 is this.
00:27:51 I'll take my phone,
00:27:52 I'll do this and start looking
00:27:53 at the things I have to look at.
00:27:55 Imagine if the three of us
00:27:57 took this object away.
00:27:59 We'd be in great trouble too.
00:28:01 So, it's society that has evolved
00:28:05 in a way...
00:28:06 I always say there are three steps.
00:28:07 There's a step between my grandparents
00:28:12 and my parents.
00:28:14 A step between my parents and us.
00:28:18 Two steps between us and our children.
00:28:22 Because society is moving too fast now.
00:28:25 It's moving too fast.
00:28:26 So, while between us and the various generations
00:28:28 there was only one step,
00:28:30 between us and our children there are two,
00:28:32 because everything has accelerated.
00:28:34 And these kids sometimes take the blame
00:28:37 that is actually linked to the world we live in
00:28:40 and to what they have to...
00:28:43 where they were used to, where they grew up
00:28:45 and how they grew up.
00:28:46 I have this question here,
00:28:47 the first one I wanted to ask you.
00:28:49 Now we're a bit...
00:28:50 It's nice to go back to the memories,
00:28:53 so we're jumping left and right.
00:28:56 Speaking of today's youth,
00:28:57 I often hear a lot of disquisitions
00:29:01 about the strongest,
00:29:02 but I hear about your generation...
00:29:05 There's only one.
00:29:06 I have no doubt, I've always been with you.
00:29:09 Now he's making me go crazy, it's Ronaldo.
00:29:11 It's Ronaldo.
00:29:12 And I tell you this, when I hear and see,
00:29:14 forgive this personal deviation,
00:29:15 but in this podcast we'll come out of it too.
00:29:18 I say, when I hear "It's Cristiano Ronaldo",
00:29:21 let's leave Messi out of it,
00:29:22 but Cristiano Ronaldo,
00:29:24 rather than this, rather than that,
00:29:26 even from kids who have seen Ronaldo play like us,
00:29:30 one, if you hear Maldini, Costa Curta, Nesta,
00:29:34 and they say, "Ronaldo is impossible."
00:29:36 But I remember the last Ronaldo at Milan,
00:29:40 who, let's be clear,
00:29:41 with all due respect to a phenomenon,
00:29:42 was not in shape,
00:29:43 he scored two goals on the pitch, walking.
00:29:45 When you get to that level,
00:29:48 not counting Ronaldo, Inter,
00:29:50 or the year before,
00:29:51 you lived it at Inter and you lived it at Milan,
00:29:54 and that's why I'm asking you,
00:29:55 help me, this personal battle,
00:29:57 which I've never started,
00:29:57 but I want to start and end with you,
00:29:59 explain to all the young people,
00:30:00 and even less, what Ronaldo was like.
00:30:03 I'll put the young people in place in just a second.
00:30:08 Today, there are those who are pro Messi
00:30:12 and those who are pro Ronaldo.
00:30:15 The great thing about Ronaldo the phenomenon
00:30:17 is that you have to think,
00:30:19 so pro one, pro the other,
00:30:22 you have to think that you'll never agree.
00:30:26 There's only one person in the world
00:30:27 who can agree with you,
00:30:29 and that's Ronaldo the phenomenon,
00:30:30 because he had exactly the technical qualities,
00:30:33 the spirit and the things of Messi,
00:30:36 and Cristiano Ronaldo's physical strength,
00:30:42 and the sense of goal.
00:30:43 Let's put Messi and Ronaldo together,
00:30:46 and he's exactly in the middle,
00:30:48 between one and the other.
00:30:50 But there's a moment...
00:30:51 Everyone would agree.
00:30:52 There's a moment when, seeing him on the pitch,
00:30:53 it was obvious to everyone,
00:30:54 from the VHS, from the live, from the stadium,
00:30:57 but you, who had him in the dressing room...
00:30:58 I'm sure that, looking at him on the VHS,
00:31:01 I understand the guys, even today,
00:31:03 those who haven't seen him much,
00:31:05 who can't put him at Messi's level
00:31:09 or at CR7's level.
00:31:11 I understand these guys,
00:31:15 but we, who saw him with our own eyes,
00:31:18 who faced him in the game,
00:31:19 we played together,
00:31:21 or we trained together.
00:31:23 He's an alien.
00:31:26 He was something...
00:31:27 and we saw strong players,
00:31:29 because we had some strong players in Milan,
00:31:32 but he was something...
00:31:34 he was something unthinkable,
00:31:38 something out of the ordinary.
00:31:40 Can you give us two frames of your Ronaldo?
00:31:42 Ronaldo with his knees...
00:31:44 Look, at Inter, when I was there,
00:31:47 he was injured,
00:31:48 it was his first major injury.
00:31:50 The problem is that he...
00:31:51 I'll give you an example,
00:31:52 I remember the times,
00:31:54 but in February or March,
00:31:55 between the end of February and the beginning of March,
00:31:57 he could start again with the team,
00:32:00 do some training,
00:32:02 some games, not 100%.
00:32:04 We were in a very difficult moment,
00:32:07 we were doing very badly that year.
00:32:09 He came to play the game
00:32:11 and they said, "He can't play,
00:32:12 he can't play, he's always slow."
00:32:14 That's all.
00:32:15 He took the ball,
00:32:16 "Tshum, tshum, tshum, goal."
00:32:17 "Tshum, tshum, tshum, goal."
00:32:19 "Tshum, tshum, tshum, goal."
00:32:20 And we said, "Why can't he play?"
00:32:23 Because it was something,
00:32:25 it was something incredibly big.
00:32:29 It was something...
00:32:30 He would move the ball,
00:32:31 boom, he'd say, "I'll do this," and he'd do it.
00:32:33 And then he'd play some moves
00:32:36 that you didn't even think about,
00:32:37 and he'd already done them.
00:32:39 So, that was a gift.
00:32:42 That's a gift, guys.
00:32:43 You don't train that, that's a gift.
00:32:45 Messi has a gift.
00:32:47 Ronaldo had a gift,
00:32:49 because you don't train those things.
00:32:51 It's something incredibly big.
00:32:53 And in Milan, I remember in a game...
00:32:56 but I'm not going to say, "Pass it to me,"
00:33:00 don't tell me which game,
00:33:02 because it wouldn't be nice,
00:33:03 but I can say it.
00:33:05 Ronny was a bit...
00:33:08 indecent.
00:33:09 He wasn't taking a ball.
00:33:12 He wasn't doing that.
00:33:14 At a certain point, Ronny, come on,
00:33:16 come on, Ronny, he's so cool.
00:33:18 Because another quality of Ronny
00:33:20 was his sympathy.
00:33:21 You loved him.
00:33:22 You know, sometimes he was really nice,
00:33:25 you loved him so much.
00:33:27 "Come on, Ronny, that's the way."
00:33:30 He'd look at you once,
00:33:32 look at you twice.
00:33:33 At a certain point,
00:33:34 one of us, with a slightly stronger tone,
00:33:38 said, "Ronny, you're broken now.
00:33:41 Wake up, give us a hand,
00:33:43 at least run a bit."
00:33:44 He'd look and say, "Now I score a goal.
00:33:47 Then don't talk anymore, though."
00:33:49 And he'd do that.
00:33:50 He'd turn around, take the ball,
00:33:53 bam, goal.
00:33:55 He'd turn around and say, "OK?"
00:33:57 Oh, Ronny.
00:33:58 No, incredible.
00:33:59 They were players who did what they wanted.
00:34:01 How was he in the dressing room?
00:34:02 Very nice, very nice.
00:34:05 He was a wonderful boy.
00:34:07 Even today, when we see each other,
00:34:09 he comes to say hello, he laughs,
00:34:11 he always has that smile.
00:34:13 No, he was really a boy...
00:34:15 He was incredibly important to me,
00:34:18 that's why I call him "him".
00:34:19 Let's talk about Serie B,
00:34:20 Verona.
00:34:22 You met Cesare Prandelli,
00:34:23 who you always said was a teacher for you,
00:34:25 perhaps the coach who left you the most.
00:34:27 Absolutely.
00:34:28 It was one of the first games in Serie B.
00:34:30 You probably started to understand,
00:34:32 even if you hadn't the focus of reaching
00:34:34 who knows how high,
00:34:35 you thought about game after game,
00:34:36 but it was the second Serie B,
00:34:38 it was an important square like Verona,
00:34:40 and you played against Milan.
00:34:41 Yes, and then you realise I'd played in Lumezzane,
00:34:44 where there were few people to see you.
00:34:46 In the Pro Sesto,
00:34:48 where there are not many people,
00:34:51 when I arrived in Verona,
00:34:53 the first game, you turned around
00:34:55 and saw that corner, the stadium was full,
00:34:57 it was something different.
00:34:59 So, that was the first step,
00:35:00 but with excitement.
00:35:02 I mean, every time I got the ball in Verona,
00:35:06 and I'd start, maybe I'd get a ball back,
00:35:09 I'd start and I'd hear this "whoa",
00:35:11 this "bolja",
00:35:13 and these things are important for a kid,
00:35:16 they make you feel better,
00:35:17 you're in the middle of your physical strength,
00:35:19 you don't feel anything,
00:35:20 you'd go up against the walls.
00:35:22 So, that was the first important step,
00:35:26 even if I still didn't realise
00:35:29 I could get there.
00:35:32 I definitely had a goal,
00:35:34 which was to win,
00:35:36 or to repay, rather than win,
00:35:39 to repay the trust that a coach like Prandelli
00:35:42 had put in me at all costs in Verona.
00:35:44 It was his first purchase.
00:35:45 I was Prandelli's first purchase in Verona,
00:35:48 and Prandelli's first purchase in Florence,
00:35:50 30 years later.
00:35:52 So, I wanted to repay
00:35:55 the trust he had put in me.
00:35:56 It was an incredible year,
00:35:58 we won the league with a team
00:35:59 that didn't have to win the league,
00:36:00 it wasn't built to win the league,
00:36:03 it was built to amaze
00:36:05 and maybe create some young players,
00:36:07 because that was the club's mentality.
00:36:09 And so it was.
00:36:10 We won and we certainly created some players.
00:36:14 So, sorry, Fra,
00:36:16 but it was always more adrenaline than fear,
00:36:18 more exaltation than pressure.
00:36:20 I'll tell you the truth,
00:36:21 in my life,
00:36:23 in a football match or in a moment,
00:36:27 I've never been afraid.
00:36:29 Fear has never existed for me.
00:36:31 There was definitely...
00:36:33 - Tension. - Tension.
00:36:36 In some matches,
00:36:38 there was more tension than in others.
00:36:40 Maybe this tension,
00:36:42 if you can't manage it,
00:36:43 sometimes you can play bad jokes,
00:36:45 so maybe you can play a bad match,
00:36:47 and even if you trained very well,
00:36:50 if you did everything you had to do,
00:36:53 maybe you play badly one match,
00:36:54 two matches, three matches,
00:36:56 but because maybe it's the tension
00:36:58 that leads you to not being free.
00:37:01 But fear, I've never been afraid to play football.
00:37:03 Instead, we ask you,
00:37:04 is it a case that that Verona player,
00:37:06 Prandelli, a coach,
00:37:08 had in his rose the following future coaches?
00:37:12 Brocchi, Aglietti, Corini, Colucci, Italiano.
00:37:15 Is it a case, or when you're a great coach,
00:37:18 of course you need something in you, but...
00:37:22 I'll tell you, like in my Milan,
00:37:23 many of my former teammates
00:37:26 talk about Ancelotti,
00:37:29 and they become coaches,
00:37:31 in that Verona,
00:37:33 all these names you gave me
00:37:34 talk about Prandelli,
00:37:36 because in your career,
00:37:38 there's always a coach
00:37:39 who gave you something more than the others.
00:37:41 I say, for example, I was incredibly lucky,
00:37:43 because it's true that I say Prandelli,
00:37:45 because on a tactical level
00:37:48 and on a preparation level,
00:37:49 in the game, also from a mental point of view,
00:37:51 he's the one who made me make the quality leap.
00:37:53 On a tactical level, he taught me a lot.
00:37:56 Right?
00:37:57 But more than anything, because I had Lippi,
00:38:00 I had Ancelotti.
00:38:02 I mean, Ancelotti,
00:38:03 he didn't have to play with us
00:38:04 and do who knows how many tactical jobs.
00:38:08 Because the team was a formed team,
00:38:11 a team of great champions,
00:38:12 a team that had a game identity
00:38:13 that he had given us.
00:38:15 But he was a great coach
00:38:17 in many ways,
00:38:18 and even the things we did on the pitch
00:38:20 were all designed
00:38:21 to make us play in that way.
00:38:23 But there was no exasperation
00:38:25 about the tactical teaching,
00:38:27 because many of us already had the basics
00:38:30 that allowed you to do
00:38:31 what he asked you to do.
00:38:33 While Prandelli had to build,
00:38:34 and that's why we,
00:38:36 that group of former ELAS players,
00:38:41 had him in the lead,
00:38:43 because we were young
00:38:43 and he definitely left us something.
00:38:45 But how did you approach a coach
00:38:47 to make you perform?
00:38:49 Did he have to be more of a psychologist,
00:38:50 more of a friend, more of a father,
00:38:51 more of a shepherd?
00:38:53 He had to be honest.
00:38:54 He had to be honest.
00:38:56 He had to have a relationship with me.
00:38:59 For me, coaches have to have
00:39:01 relationships with players.
00:39:02 There are coaches who say
00:39:04 "I don't want to have relationships
00:39:04 with players.
00:39:05 This is how I do it.
00:39:06 I don't care.
00:39:07 If you're okay with it,
00:39:08 then go away."
00:39:09 It's a choice.
00:39:10 I'm not saying it's right or wrong,
00:39:13 it's a choice.
00:39:14 I, on the other hand,
00:39:16 in my years with coaches
00:39:17 with whom I had a relationship,
00:39:19 and they had a relationship,
00:39:20 not just with me,
00:39:21 but with the team,
00:39:23 those are the years where,
00:39:23 who knows why,
00:39:24 we got results.
00:39:26 While in a couple of seasons
00:39:28 when the coach was cold,
00:39:32 detached,
00:39:33 he never gave you...
00:39:36 Yes, he'd make a joke
00:39:37 every 20 days,
00:39:38 but you knew it was forced.
00:39:41 He didn't create that empathy
00:39:43 with the team.
00:39:44 We didn't get results.
00:39:46 So I think this is
00:39:49 a very, very important factor.
00:39:51 I'd say that,
00:39:53 you mentioned Ancelotti,
00:39:54 I'd open this whole
00:39:55 huge parenthesis.
00:39:57 We could stay here.
00:39:59 How was Carlo?
00:40:00 He was wonderful.
00:40:02 Wonderful because,
00:40:03 and I'm telling you,
00:40:04 he wasn't a non-movable star.
00:40:06 Otherwise,
00:40:07 those who have always played,
00:40:09 who have played
00:40:11 all the starting games,
00:40:12 talk about him as a wonderful person,
00:40:14 but it's easier for them to say it.
00:40:16 I had a wonderful relationship.
00:40:19 In seven years,
00:40:20 maybe only a couple of times,
00:40:23 there was a period
00:40:25 that was less beautiful
00:40:27 between me and him,
00:40:28 because maybe at that moment
00:40:30 I deserved something more
00:40:32 and he didn't give it to me,
00:40:34 but he was aware of it,
00:40:36 because it was an open book.
00:40:38 So when he was in trouble
00:40:42 with you because he knew
00:40:43 you were right,
00:40:44 he made you understand,
00:40:45 but he didn't tell you.
00:40:46 So at that point,
00:40:47 you couldn't do anything.
00:40:49 He was a wonderful man,
00:40:51 he could make everyone feel good,
00:40:52 he could make you feel important.
00:40:55 I always remember,
00:40:57 in an interview he did at IEA,
00:41:01 he asked which player
00:41:03 he'd underrated the most,
00:41:04 and he said Christian Brocchi.
00:41:05 And that's an incredible compliment
00:41:08 from a great coach like him.
00:41:10 Why?
00:41:11 Because he knew
00:41:12 he could always count on me.
00:41:14 In the end,
00:41:16 as I said before,
00:41:18 in those quarterfinals with Ajax,
00:41:20 in the first leg semi-final with Inter,
00:41:24 if Brocchi,
00:41:24 instead of being one of the best on the pitch,
00:41:27 had been the worst on the pitch,
00:41:29 maybe the games would have ended differently,
00:41:33 also because of a single player.
00:41:34 Mister, I wanted to ask you,
00:41:36 if you were a player,
00:41:38 and as you see players today,
00:41:40 when they don't play,
00:41:41 is it right to explain why,
00:41:44 or does the coach have to explain?
00:41:47 And on the contrary,
00:41:48 if the player comes,
00:41:49 with respect,
00:41:50 to ask why I don't play,
00:41:52 what I can improve,
00:41:54 how does a coach see it?
00:41:56 This is the most difficult part.
00:41:58 I think there are two different worlds.
00:42:01 Those who say they don't have to explain,
00:42:03 because if you don't play,
00:42:04 it's because it's a technical choice,
00:42:05 so it's useless to say
00:42:06 because you don't play,
00:42:07 it's a technical choice.
00:42:08 On the other hand, there are those
00:42:10 who like to talk
00:42:11 and give an explanation.
00:42:13 I always say that
00:42:15 either you do it like this,
00:42:15 you never give an explanation,
00:42:17 and it's the same for everyone,
00:42:19 or if you decide to go into it,
00:42:22 you have to tell the truth.
00:42:25 You have to be 100% honest.
00:42:28 This time it's not good, you say.
00:42:30 No, because if you go
00:42:32 and talk to a player
00:42:34 and tell him about it,
00:42:35 the players are not stupid.
00:42:37 So, you either tell the truth,
00:42:38 and you accept the dialogue,
00:42:40 or if you have to say something negative,
00:42:44 something...
00:42:46 not negative, sorry,
00:42:47 something not true,
00:42:50 to get out of that dialogue,
00:42:52 it's better not to talk,
00:42:54 because the player will leave,
00:42:55 and if he feels taken aback,
00:42:58 it also affects the relationship
00:43:00 and the esteem,
00:43:01 so the player might...
00:43:02 I don't know if you remember,
00:43:03 but we saw in the last few years
00:43:05 of your career,
00:43:05 that the debut in Serie A
00:43:07 on the Milan bench
00:43:08 by Carlo Ancelotti,
00:43:10 the starting XI, Christian Brocchi.
00:43:12 With Piacenza?
00:43:12 Yes, Piacenza.
00:43:13 I missed a goal.
00:43:15 Yes, Ancelotti's first chance...
00:43:18 Did you expect to play as a starting XI?
00:43:20 How did it go?
00:43:21 I knew there was a vacancy
00:43:23 in those days,
00:43:24 I had done well
00:43:25 in the Coppa Italia match,
00:43:27 so he put me in a role
00:43:29 that was a bit unusual,
00:43:30 because we played 4-4-2,
00:43:32 I played wide on the left,
00:43:34 and I remember that cross
00:43:35 that went down against him,
00:43:39 it seemed to me,
00:43:41 high, that went down,
00:43:43 I came running,
00:43:44 I tried to hit it...
00:43:45 You still remember it?
00:43:46 Yes, because...
00:43:47 Because you stayed in?
00:43:48 Because I stayed...
00:43:49 I had a few goals,
00:43:52 the missed ones,
00:43:55 or the ones that went out like that,
00:43:57 I have them as memories.
00:43:59 I remember that one,
00:44:00 because that's a matter of a centimetre.
00:44:03 That's a centimetre.
00:44:04 That mistake is a centimetre,
00:44:07 so it's not good or bad.
00:44:09 I think Lobont's is even less than a centimetre.
00:44:12 Lobont's is one of the greatest...
00:44:13 How do you remember it, coach?
00:44:15 I remember it because...
00:44:19 I scored in the C2,
00:44:20 I scored in the C1,
00:44:21 I scored in the B2,
00:44:22 I scored in the A2,
00:44:23 I scored in the Europa League,
00:44:25 even though I didn't score many goals in my career.
00:44:28 I don't think that's even true.
00:44:30 And he missed the Champions League goal.
00:44:34 And what a game!
00:44:35 And that was a goal.
00:44:36 That was a goal, for God's sake.
00:44:37 With the VAR...
00:44:39 It was in, but it was in so much.
00:44:41 I had two episodes in my career like that.
00:44:44 The Champions League with Ajax,
00:44:47 and the one in a Naples-Lazio,
00:44:49 decisive for the Champions League,
00:44:51 where we lost 4-3, I think.
00:44:54 And a beautiful shot from off the box,
00:44:59 he crosses, he goes in,
00:45:00 the ball comes out,
00:45:02 and they didn't score a goal for me there either.
00:45:03 So, two in my career aren't that few.
00:45:07 Listen, but that Milan-Ajax thing,
00:45:09 it's incredible.
00:45:11 It's something really beautiful,
00:45:13 something beautiful because...
00:45:15 I remember it as if it were yesterday,
00:45:19 because I remember it was always a bit of a pride of mine.
00:45:24 That game with Ajax and the derby against Inter,
00:45:27 because quarter-finals and semi-finals are two fundamental games,
00:45:31 it's not a one-time thing.
00:45:33 They're games from the inside out,
00:45:35 they're really tough games.
00:45:36 That game was really beautiful,
00:45:38 played well, with a commitment.
00:45:43 But you know what I had?
00:45:44 The luck I had in my career
00:45:47 is that when I wore the shirt,
00:45:50 I looked and said,
00:45:52 "Every single person who's sitting here looking at me
00:45:55 would like to be in my place.
00:45:57 How can I not give everything I have?"
00:45:59 That doesn't mean you played well,
00:46:01 you couldn't make a mistake,
00:46:03 but on a level of desire,
00:46:06 of energy,
00:46:07 of spirit, of dedication,
00:46:10 of what a player must have,
00:46:12 that he must respect all these people who came there,
00:46:15 who pay to look at you,
00:46:17 who travelled miles to look at you,
00:46:19 and who would like to be in your place.
00:46:21 That's the best thing ever.
00:46:23 It's always been like that for me.
00:46:24 That game, I remember it vividly,
00:46:28 when we went to win the draw,
00:46:31 and then the 3-2 came from nowhere,
00:46:33 they took the ball and left,
00:46:34 I couldn't run anymore.
00:46:37 In that area, I don't run to give a sign,
00:46:42 because sometimes it's the run of a player.
00:46:45 In my career, I've seen it happen.
00:46:48 In the difficult moments of a game,
00:46:50 when you're down to ten minutes, five minutes,
00:46:53 a player who runs to give you a sign,
00:46:58 gives a sign to his teammates,
00:47:00 to the people,
00:47:02 and to the opposing team.
00:47:04 Ah, Rino Manchester is something...
00:47:06 Rino's, he did it a few times.
00:47:09 I had a clear memory of that occasion,
00:47:14 when I see teams that are drawing,
00:47:17 losing, and have to recover.
00:47:18 And I don't see a player
00:47:20 who, five minutes from the end,
00:47:22 the ball comes out and does that stupid gesture.
00:47:26 It's not about saying, "Change the game there."
00:47:30 It's the sign you give that's important.
00:47:33 Some people believe in these things,
00:47:34 me,
00:47:35 some people say, "What are you saying?"
00:47:38 Giroud often has these back-and-forth moves,
00:47:40 trying to get a ball back,
00:47:42 which maybe isn't really his,
00:47:43 to give those signs.
00:47:44 It's a sign.
00:47:45 Guys, it's not something you do
00:47:47 because you get the ball back, dribble everything,
00:47:51 and you have to score.
00:47:52 No, you know it's a stupid run,
00:47:54 but even when you have to get the ball back,
00:47:57 you know it's a back-and-forth,
00:47:59 and three seconds before it doesn't change anything.
00:48:02 But it's what you give.
00:48:04 You're telling your teammates,
00:48:07 let's believe in ourselves,
00:48:08 you're telling your opponents,
00:48:10 "Let's score."
00:48:12 You're asking the fans for help at home.
00:48:16 You're scaring them away.
00:48:19 I want to stay on Inter,
00:48:20 and then I'll leave you with what we want to talk about.
00:48:25 It's a bit bad to talk about Inter,
00:48:26 because we're in Milan,
00:48:27 but there's a lot of respect between the fans.
00:48:30 That's the beauty of Milan,
00:48:31 there's a lot of respect between the two clubs.
00:48:34 But I have two questions for you,
00:48:35 having lived here, at Inter.
00:48:38 First, about Pirlo.
00:48:39 If you saw he was a player who could come on,
00:48:42 and everyone at the time didn't want to demonise anyone,
00:48:44 because at Milan, Juve, great players came on,
00:48:46 Henry, Vieira, with their parables.
00:48:50 But I wanted to ask you about Pirlo,
00:48:52 and how you lived in the Milan dressing room, 6-0.
00:48:57 Well...
00:49:00 Fortunately, I wasn't there.
00:49:06 So I lived outside, that 6-0,
00:49:10 and I didn't live...
00:49:11 But in the dressing room...
00:49:13 So I missed that part.
00:49:16 But honestly, regardless of everything,
00:49:19 it's true that there's a lot of respect between the fans in Milan.
00:49:23 It's true, but it's also true that you want to win.
00:49:26 Of course.
00:49:27 Because it's fair, the derby is always the derby, guys.
00:49:30 Regardless of the respect,
00:49:31 which is also a matter of intelligence,
00:49:33 but still, he took advantage of it.
00:49:36 The desire to win, the desire...
00:49:38 Some sort of quarrel between friends is also there,
00:49:42 but winning six goals in a derby is a lot.
00:49:45 It's something that hurts,
00:49:48 it's something you don't get rid of so easily,
00:49:52 because...
00:49:53 Maybe...
00:49:56 Maybe in Milan, the fans,
00:50:01 after the next derby,
00:50:05 or two derbies later, if you win the other one,
00:50:08 you start to let it slip away.
00:50:10 The player stays in the team for a while,
00:50:12 because it's something special.
00:50:14 Pirlo?
00:50:15 Pirlo, on the other hand...
00:50:18 What can I say?
00:50:19 Andrea...
00:50:20 I played against him when we were young,
00:50:23 and you could see him with his elegance, his shots.
00:50:27 But he played as a three-pointer,
00:50:30 and I'll tell you the truth,
00:50:31 as a three-pointer, Andrea was strong,
00:50:34 because he had those qualities.
00:50:36 But I think he was missing something in those years,
00:50:42 which could have been due to his youth,
00:50:45 or because he needed to go down that path.
00:50:49 But he was a very strong player,
00:50:51 a very strong three-pointer,
00:50:53 but he was still missing something.
00:50:55 And I think he earned that something
00:50:58 in his position on the pitch.
00:50:59 Because a count is when he takes the ball
00:51:02 with his shoulders turned,
00:51:04 or half-open with his body,
00:51:06 a count is when he takes the ball
00:51:08 and looks at everything.
00:51:09 When Andrea takes the ball and looks at everything,
00:51:13 we can say goodbye.
00:51:15 Good night, dreamers.
00:51:17 Speaking of winning derbies,
00:51:19 I'd like to close that incredible May 2003,
00:51:22 because it's in everything.
00:51:25 I don't want to talk about the story,
00:51:27 or the feelings,
00:51:30 but an anecdote from those six days.
00:51:32 When you're on the break,
00:51:34 and all of Italy, all of Europe,
00:51:36 but more than Europe, it's Milan.
00:51:38 Because you feel it when you turn on the TV,
00:51:40 when you turn on the radio, when you go by car,
00:51:41 when you get in the taxi, when you go to Milanello,
00:51:43 when you leave home.
00:51:45 There was an incredible tension.
00:51:48 But you told me before, the desire you had.
00:51:50 I also think of that room, Turino,
00:51:52 and Cristiano Milanello.
00:51:54 I'm telling you, someone is diminishing my thing,
00:51:57 because they say, "Of course, because in the final
00:52:00 you knew you wouldn't start as a starter.
00:52:02 So you had something less."
00:52:06 No, no, it's not like that.
00:52:09 In that first match of the Euroderby,
00:52:13 there was an adrenaline rush,
00:52:15 there was something in the air.
00:52:16 Milanello was magical.
00:52:18 When we were walking, even the corridors,
00:52:23 even the corridors of Milanello
00:52:24 seemed to be telling you something.
00:52:27 If I think about it, it's a real shock,
00:52:30 because it was a really beautiful week.
00:52:36 Beautiful, beautiful.
00:52:37 For me, it was even more beautiful
00:52:41 than the night before the final,
00:52:44 where you met Juve in the final,
00:52:46 and you could still lift the Champions League.
00:52:48 So it was another confirmation of that.
00:52:53 But that time, in the Euroderby,
00:52:55 it was the first Euroderby,
00:52:58 you played a Champions League final,
00:53:00 for many, the first one.
00:53:01 Moreover, you weren't at the top,
00:53:06 like Rosa, at that moment.
00:53:08 There were so many things,
00:53:10 and we needed what we were.
00:53:13 Group, strength, personality, fear,
00:53:17 which shouldn't be there, and it was beautiful.
00:53:19 There was no room in the hotel.
00:53:21 We were, me, Abbiati and Gattuso, always.
00:53:23 We had made a triple in Milanello.
00:53:25 We were the only triple.
00:53:26 Usually there are single rooms,
00:53:27 or maybe a couple of doubles.
00:53:29 We had made a double or a triple,
00:53:31 and for years, the three of us stayed in the same room.
00:53:34 And I can assure you it was a beautiful night,
00:53:36 because we didn't sleep much,
00:53:37 but not because of that,
00:53:40 but because we couldn't wait for the next day.
00:53:43 That trip from Milanello,
00:53:45 when we left to get to the stadium,
00:53:48 are memories that I still have vividly in my head,
00:53:51 really, really beautiful.
00:53:53 There was tension, but there were smiles between us,
00:53:56 there were some forced jokes
00:53:59 that you used to make to calm the tension.
00:54:01 Who was the one who was the most tense?
00:54:03 A bit of everyone, a bit of everyone.
00:54:05 We were a really nice group,
00:54:06 we had fun.
00:54:07 In the first days of Ancelotti,
00:54:09 the evening before the game,
00:54:10 and I was used to it,
00:54:11 I was used to the evening before the game with Prandelli,
00:54:14 he would sit there and watch everyone,
00:54:16 who laughed more, who laughed less.
00:54:17 He was someone who kept us in check.
00:54:20 He said, "Oh, if he comes to our Milan now
00:54:23 and sees us the evening before the game,
00:54:25 he'll send us home."
00:54:26 We laughed, we joked, we made fun of each other.
00:54:30 Then, the training started,
00:54:32 boom,
00:54:33 seriousness, commitment,
00:54:35 it was all like that.
00:54:36 There was a big joke,
00:54:38 there were millions of them,
00:54:40 maybe half a million.
00:54:41 We can only tell one story,
00:54:46 always,
00:54:47 and at a certain point,
00:54:48 without saying what we wrote,
00:54:50 but once we stole Gattuso's phone number
00:54:53 and started sending messages to everyone,
00:54:57 to journalists, to Braida,
00:54:59 to managers, to people,
00:55:02 and we sent...
00:55:04 Tell us one, come on.
00:55:05 At a certain point,
00:55:07 he got the answers,
00:55:08 he said, "You can't understand,
00:55:10 it's a video, it's a video."
00:55:11 Didn't he always get it?
00:55:12 With Andrea, he got some good slaps.
00:55:16 In the last years, when Odo arrived,
00:55:18 he got some good slaps too,
00:55:19 from Rino,
00:55:21 but they were all funny,
00:55:24 you know?
00:55:25 Funny things.
00:55:26 In fact, even Andrea,
00:55:28 when he made jokes,
00:55:29 he'd take them around,
00:55:29 he'd take them by the hair,
00:55:31 he'd pull them,
00:55:31 it became a bit of a...
00:55:34 a bit of a nice joke.
00:55:37 But it was...
00:55:38 What did you talk about?
00:55:39 You also talked about,
00:55:41 I imagine, like three roommates,
00:55:43 I imagine, PlayStation,
00:55:44 and I imagine also brotherly talks,
00:55:46 you know?
00:55:47 The PlayStation was Pierlo and Nesta,
00:55:50 who had PlayStation fixed in their room.
00:55:54 We didn't have PlayStation,
00:55:55 but we did talk about our stuff,
00:55:58 we had a relationship.
00:55:59 When you're a real group,
00:56:01 good and bad things,
00:56:02 good and bad moments,
00:56:04 your teammates are also useful,
00:56:07 and we were very close
00:56:09 and helped each other a lot.
00:56:11 What do you three have in common?
00:56:12 I mean, you can see it from the outside,
00:56:14 because Abbiati, you and Gattuso,
00:56:17 you're three people...
00:56:18 The first thing that comes to mind
00:56:19 not knowing you in depth,
00:56:21 obviously, is "true".
00:56:22 I think of Gattuso,
00:56:23 he's been here for years.
00:56:24 It's the only thing that unites us.
00:56:26 Ah, ok. I got it.
00:56:27 Exactly. Why?
00:56:29 Because we're true people,
00:56:31 in fact, we met.
00:56:33 Then, Abbiati in one way,
00:56:35 Rino in another,
00:56:37 and I'm in another one again.
00:56:38 Each of us is different.
00:56:41 Now, then...
00:56:43 I saw Abbiati last week,
00:56:45 I hadn't seen him for a few months.
00:56:47 As soon as we see each other again,
00:56:48 my eyes shine, his eyes shine.
00:56:50 What's your name?
00:56:51 No.
00:56:51 No, no, no, no, no, no.
00:56:53 But it's just...
00:56:54 sometimes the eyes speak, right?
00:56:56 And that's it, there's no need to say more.
00:56:58 I saw him last week,
00:57:00 we hadn't seen each other for a few months.
00:57:02 The nice thing I always say,
00:57:03 not just about the three of us,
00:57:04 but about our whole Milan,
00:57:06 is that life leads you to not being able to hang out.
00:57:08 Maybe you don't feel like it,
00:57:09 maybe you don't see yourself.
00:57:11 But if we were to call each other here,
00:57:13 right now,
00:57:13 we're all in this room,
00:57:15 all of us, from that group of mine,
00:57:17 from that Milan,
00:57:19 we'd start talking, laughing, joking,
00:57:22 as if we'd seen each other yesterday in Milan.
00:57:24 Because there was something,
00:57:26 a really important alchemy.
00:57:27 There were no WhatsApp groups,
00:57:28 you created them later?
00:57:30 No, they weren't a priority, for sure.
00:57:32 Maybe they weren't.
00:57:33 The priority wasn't that one, at that moment.
00:57:36 Listen, the eyes speak.
00:57:39 The eyes of Sheva Manchester are a frame that I think...
00:57:42 You don't, because you haven't seen it on TV.
00:57:45 I imagine you saw it later,
00:57:46 but for a fan of Milan, it's almost an icon.
00:57:49 I'm not asking you about that game,
00:57:51 I'm asking you about the aftermath.
00:57:52 Because, no, Fran, we're used to coming back
00:57:55 often right after the game,
00:57:56 so we'd arrive in Milan at night.
00:57:57 If I'm not mistaken, you stayed in Manchester.
00:57:59 Yes, we always did,
00:58:00 but all the Champions League games,
00:58:01 we'd stay up late,
00:58:02 and then the evening after the game,
00:58:04 we'd come back in the morning.
00:58:06 Because that's something that changes.
00:58:07 It depends on the airport.
00:58:08 Lately, if the airport is open a bit more,
00:58:11 if not, it closes.
00:58:13 Yes, it depends.
00:58:14 We had a partnership,
00:58:16 we preferred to sleep there,
00:58:18 because you had the opportunity,
00:58:19 you'd wake up in the morning,
00:58:20 go straight to Milan,
00:58:21 do the training session,
00:58:23 you'd play, and then go home.
00:58:25 It was a practice that we had in our days.
00:58:28 But I'll tell you,
00:58:30 the good thing is that,
00:58:33 I think we were...
00:58:35 At that moment, we won the Champions League,
00:58:38 and for many of us, as I said,
00:58:40 it was the first time.
00:58:42 So, you wanted to win this Champions League,
00:58:44 and make a small dedication.
00:58:47 Each of us would have had
00:58:48 I don't know how many people
00:58:51 to whom we could make a gesture,
00:58:53 a look, a word, something.
00:58:56 I remember my wife and family...
00:58:59 Who were your family?
00:59:00 We had in the stands,
00:59:01 I had my girlfriend,
00:59:03 then there was the wife and girlfriend part.
00:59:07 There were some parents,
00:59:09 there were friends.
00:59:12 Each of us wanted to give
00:59:14 to someone in their life,
00:59:16 who had been with them until then,
00:59:18 something to say "thank you".
00:59:21 Nice.
00:59:21 That gesture,
00:59:23 of the Champions League,
00:59:24 that you show,
00:59:25 is like saying "thank you",
00:59:26 because you win a trophy,
00:59:29 which is the dream of every player,
00:59:32 to win the Champions League,
00:59:33 and you won it
00:59:35 also thanks to the help of other people,
00:59:36 who shared your life with you.
00:59:39 If I think about my grandparents,
00:59:42 if I think about my dad, my mom,
00:59:44 if I think about the people
00:59:45 who were close to me
00:59:46 since I was a kid,
00:59:48 seeing their son
00:59:49 lifting the Champions League...
00:59:50 What do your sons say
00:59:51 when they see you lifting the Champions League?
00:59:53 It's different.
00:59:54 Because there was no clear eye.
00:59:56 I have the eldest son who is Milanese,
00:59:57 really Milanese, Milanese, Milanese.
01:00:00 He likes it.
01:00:01 The youngest, on the other hand,
01:00:02 since his wife is Milanese,
01:00:03 his son is a great Milanese,
01:00:05 I am Milanese,
01:00:05 you know that very well,
01:00:06 that sometimes in all families
01:00:08 the youngest arrives and says
01:00:09 "oh yes, you are all Milanese",
01:00:11 and I am Juventus.
01:00:13 So, unfortunately,
01:00:14 I was able to bring him back
01:00:15 from our side,
01:00:16 then Cristiano Ronaldo arrived,
01:00:18 he was a kid at school
01:00:20 and he screwed us.
01:00:21 But they certainly realize it,
01:00:25 my youngest son,
01:00:26 we have a picture at home,
01:00:28 him inside the Champions League.
01:00:30 We have this picture here,
01:00:31 he is...
01:00:32 Can you imagine him entering the Champions League?
01:00:34 And we have this picture here.
01:00:35 And he is the Milanese one, in fact.
01:00:37 And they certainly give importance,
01:00:41 and they know it,
01:00:42 but when you don't see them in person
01:00:44 you don't have the same perception.
01:00:47 But when Rino says
01:00:48 in that interview after Manchester,
01:00:49 "there were days when he told me
01:00:50 'let me win, let me win'",
01:00:52 it's also for this reason.
01:00:53 I mean, in the evening before Manchester,
01:00:56 do you think about Buccinasco
01:00:57 or do you think about it later?
01:01:00 I'll tell you,
01:01:01 when he said "let me win, let me win",
01:01:03 I think about two things.
01:01:04 One, I knew I wasn't going to play that game.
01:01:08 So I said to Rino, "let me win",
01:01:10 because I told him,
01:01:12 "I've played the semi-final,
01:01:13 I've played the quarter-finals,
01:01:15 everything fades away".
01:01:18 No, Rino was on the pitch,
01:01:19 Rino for me was...
01:01:21 I didn't play because Rino was playing,
01:01:23 but I was on your side.
01:01:24 You were on Rino's side?
01:01:26 I was on Rino's side.
01:01:26 We warm up on the pitch before the games,
01:01:29 I would go out and help Rino warm up.
01:01:32 That was the strength of our group,
01:01:34 that was also the strength of some players in our group.
01:01:37 I was one of them,
01:01:39 because it was fair,
01:01:40 because Rino was stronger than me.
01:01:43 Rino was stronger than me.
01:01:44 It's the truth.
01:01:46 I was strong too,
01:01:48 some say yes, some say no.
01:01:50 From Milan to Florence,
01:01:51 I've always been a moving star,
01:01:53 from Lazio I've always been a moving star,
01:01:55 from Verona I've always been a moving star.
01:01:57 At Milan I had these sacred monsters in front of me,
01:02:00 so I played less because they were there.
01:02:03 Rino was stronger, he played fair,
01:02:05 I was on his side.
01:02:07 He knew that when I was on the pitch,
01:02:10 he didn't have to have problems,
01:02:11 so that was a great strength.
01:02:13 I've heard, perhaps in a story,
01:02:15 three teams that I lived...
01:02:18 The thing I read,
01:02:19 maybe in something that the players
01:02:21 in the dressing rooms argued about,
01:02:23 they didn't have a relationship,
01:02:25 so they managed to win.
01:02:26 All the teams that won,
01:02:28 at the base there was a group of friends,
01:02:30 a group that was fine,
01:02:31 an alchemy that was being created.
01:02:33 You can't buy that one with money,
01:02:37 with technical choices,
01:02:38 but the managers must be lucky
01:02:41 to buy players who, without knowing it,
01:02:44 manage to create that alchemy
01:02:47 that leads you to win.
01:02:49 And when you lose?
01:02:50 Because you were in Manchester,
01:02:52 I was in Athens,
01:02:54 I was in the Merida stand,
01:02:55 also in Istanbul.
01:02:57 How do you deal with that?
01:02:58 In your career, how do you react to those days?
01:03:00 Rino has often told the story
01:03:02 of Dr. Gagnani, who closes him and says,
01:03:04 "You're not moving from here."
01:03:05 Because Rino wanted to quit,
01:03:06 he wanted to leave anyway.
01:03:07 Of course, because if you do something
01:03:10 with a real passion,
01:03:11 if you do something because you want to,
01:03:13 as I said before,
01:03:15 sometimes if there's a Milan fan
01:03:18 who says something negative about me,
01:03:22 I feel bad about it.
01:03:24 Not because you said something negative,
01:03:28 but because you don't know
01:03:29 how important that shirt is to me,
01:03:32 how much I gave my life for that shirt.
01:03:35 Right?
01:03:36 And we were all very close at that moment,
01:03:39 we all had something really strong.
01:03:41 So, when we lost that final in that way,
01:03:45 because you have to know how to lose,
01:03:47 but when you lose a final and you say,
01:03:49 "OK, I lost, they were better than us,"
01:03:52 or "We lost in a deserved way,"
01:03:56 you get nervous, but you played a game
01:03:59 and you lost it.
01:04:00 Guys, you can't always win football.
01:04:02 OK, a goal is to lose it the way we lost it.
01:04:05 By dominating.
01:04:06 That thing hurts.
01:04:07 We won 2-0 against Liverpool in 2007,
01:04:11 playing badly,
01:04:13 and we lost in 2005,
01:04:16 playing a really good game.
01:04:20 So, you understand?
01:04:22 I mean, you...
01:04:23 Unfortunately, that's football.
01:04:24 We want to emphasize the fact
01:04:27 that you said it several times,
01:04:28 but maybe someone still doesn't get it,
01:04:30 there's the legend of the end of the first half.
01:04:31 But, let's face it,
01:04:34 that's absolutely...
01:04:37 A way to emphasize it.
01:04:39 But you imagine Paolo,
01:04:41 or you imagine Billy,
01:04:42 or you imagine someone else.
01:04:44 I can tell you,
01:04:46 I say Paolo and Billy, so it's credible.
01:04:49 But I could tell you,
01:04:50 you imagine me, you imagine others,
01:04:53 I assure you, no.
01:04:54 Absolutely not.
01:04:55 No.
01:04:56 But when Dirk Kooij signed you for Athens...
01:05:00 When?
01:05:01 When Kooij signed you for Athens,
01:05:02 2-1, 87th, 88th,
01:05:04 what did you think?
01:05:07 I have to tell you the truth.
01:05:09 I never doubted
01:05:13 that we couldn't win that cup in 2007.
01:05:16 Even before it was 2-0?
01:05:18 Yes.
01:05:19 If you asked me, before the final,
01:05:21 I'd say, "We'll win."
01:05:23 It can't be, we'll win.
01:05:25 Because it was too much,
01:05:27 not to have the win we deserved.
01:05:30 And above all, for the team we were.
01:05:32 Fate and destiny,
01:05:34 what did you see?
01:05:35 I saw it in us,
01:05:36 but we were a group...
01:05:39 We had incredible personalities,
01:05:42 an incredible attachment to the shirt,
01:05:44 a strong group,
01:05:46 we couldn't not win it.
01:05:48 It was too much...
01:05:52 We were too focused,
01:05:56 we were too much everyone.
01:05:59 I think we were performing at 110%,
01:06:03 each of us.
01:06:04 That game reminds me of Inzaghi,
01:06:08 who was he before these games?
01:06:11 The dressing room,
01:06:12 always the same, because...
01:06:14 They always say,
01:06:15 "Inzaghi didn't have to play,
01:06:18 because he was at Pezzi,
01:06:19 he had to play Gilardino."
01:06:22 Then Ancelotti says,
01:06:23 "No, Pippo is always..."
01:06:25 Pippo you never have to listen to him
01:06:27 before the game.
01:06:29 Because otherwise
01:06:30 he always has some problems.
01:06:32 I laugh because Pippo is my brother,
01:06:34 so I can make some jokes about this.
01:06:38 Once he has a fever,
01:06:40 once he has a sore throat,
01:06:41 once he has a little thing,
01:06:43 he has to put the shirt,
01:06:44 the wool out, the cotton on the skin.
01:06:46 Now when he hears me he calls me.
01:06:49 But the truth is that Pippo
01:06:52 was very reliable in these games,
01:06:55 because he knew that if there was
01:06:57 a rebound, a ball,
01:06:58 a right move to make, he was there.
01:07:01 How do you explain it to Inzaghi?
01:07:03 As a footballer,
01:07:04 because he was a great player.
01:07:05 I explain it to him in one word,
01:07:07 passion.
01:07:09 Inzaghi is passion.
01:07:10 Pippo lived, and still lives,
01:07:14 fortunately now he has become a father
01:07:16 and instead of thinking 24 hours a day
01:07:19 about football,
01:07:20 he might think about his children
01:07:22 for a few hours, I say.
01:07:23 Because he was an impressive thing.
01:07:26 Even as a boy,
01:07:27 if he went out with a woman,
01:07:28 he talked about football.
01:07:29 Sure.
01:07:31 Some of my friends knew him
01:07:33 and told me,
01:07:34 "Can you tell him if he can't talk to us tonight?"
01:07:38 And now, fortunately,
01:07:40 a beautiful wife,
01:07:42 a father,
01:07:44 and he has a bit of everything,
01:07:46 and maybe he can get away from that.
01:07:49 But he really had passion,
01:07:51 passion, passion.
01:07:52 He asked you,
01:07:53 he knew how to tie the opponent's defenders' shoes,
01:07:56 what kind of heels they used,
01:07:57 what the sponsor was,
01:07:58 if one was stronger,
01:08:01 or the other was stronger,
01:08:02 the slower one, the faster one.
01:08:03 Yes, we all knew those things,
01:08:05 but he really got into details
01:08:07 that we didn't even think about.
01:08:08 So it was real passion.
01:08:09 We're not even halfway through your life,
01:08:12 but we want to speed up a bit,
01:08:13 because we'll be here for hours and we'll repeat it.
01:08:15 There was the 3-0 in Manchester,
01:08:16 which was the perfect game to get to that one.
01:08:18 Is there anything you particularly remember?
01:08:21 I only remember that
01:08:23 I have to thank everyone a bit,
01:08:25 because in a first-leg game,
01:08:26 I make a wrong control in midfield.
01:08:29 It's true that after me,
01:08:30 we could have recovered and not scored.
01:08:33 But when those things happen to you,
01:08:35 unfortunately, in life,
01:08:36 there are those who have made a wrong decisive penalty,
01:08:38 who have scored a wrong goal,
01:08:39 who have done something wrong,
01:08:40 it can happen to everyone.
01:08:41 But we got to that game,
01:08:43 which was in the same condition
01:08:47 I said before, of the final.
01:08:49 In that game,
01:08:52 you knew it, you knew it.
01:08:55 There was too much...
01:08:56 We knew by now,
01:08:57 when you have a group
01:08:58 that has been playing together for many years
01:09:00 and every year they change
01:09:03 in two or three,
01:09:05 but the game is tough.
01:09:07 You can feel these things.
01:09:09 You understand them when you say
01:09:11 "Today this team can't make a mistake in the game"
01:09:13 and you couldn't make a mistake in that game.
01:09:16 Lazio, you've been playing for five years,
01:09:18 you get into a discussion
01:09:20 and you cry when you leave Milan.
01:09:22 How was that moment?
01:09:23 There's the chance to go to Lazio,
01:09:25 I say "I want to go and win a cup
01:09:28 with a different shirt than Milan's,
01:09:29 otherwise I'll end my career"
01:09:30 and they say "Of course you won all the cups,
01:09:32 you played in that Milan".
01:09:34 "Ah, but you didn't play much,
01:09:36 we saw that actually..."
01:09:38 I'm just underlining it,
01:09:40 because we looked at the numbers.
01:09:42 You were 6, 4, 8 in the career
01:09:44 every year of goal,
01:09:45 so it's not true that you didn't play much.
01:09:47 Don't get too upset.
01:09:48 Anyway, that's my choice.
01:09:50 I call Dr. Gagliani and tell him this,
01:09:52 he says "Christian, you here,
01:09:54 you don't know how I am,
01:09:56 you want to leave, go away,
01:09:58 but if it were up to me,
01:10:01 you'd end your career here".
01:10:02 I was 32,
01:10:03 so ending my career
01:10:04 would mean I'd stay in Milan for life,
01:10:06 no problem,
01:10:07 and being in the youth sector,
01:10:08 in the UEFA list,
01:10:09 there's room for the youth of the youth sector,
01:10:11 so I would never have left.
01:10:13 But that summer, Milan took Flaminì,
01:10:15 so one more player,
01:10:17 paid a lot,
01:10:18 and I said "I want to go and win
01:10:19 with a different shirt".
01:10:20 I leave Lazio and I choose to go.
01:10:23 So I go to Ancelotti, I tell him
01:10:25 and I have to say goodbye to the guys.
01:10:27 Realize that at home
01:10:28 no one knew,
01:10:29 neither my wife nor I had spoken to anyone.
01:10:33 So I'm in Milanello,
01:10:34 I speak to Ancelotti,
01:10:35 I go there in the middle of the pitch
01:10:37 and logically my teammates
01:10:39 show affection,
01:10:41 someone started crying,
01:10:42 someone held back their tears,
01:10:44 a big hug and everything,
01:10:46 and it was a really...
01:10:48 I think that,
01:10:50 together with the greeting
01:10:54 I had after Lazio,
01:10:55 were two really emotional moments for me.
01:10:58 So much so that I did from there,
01:11:00 I did a bit of the hard work,
01:11:01 I said goodbye and everything,
01:11:03 then I walk, I take the viaduct,
01:11:04 I go up to get my car,
01:11:06 I get in the car,
01:11:07 I get out of Milanello,
01:11:08 I didn't have time to leave Milanello
01:11:10 where no one was there,
01:11:11 I started crying
01:11:13 and I basically stopped crying
01:11:15 once I got into my house,
01:11:18 where I enter the house crying,
01:11:19 they ask me what's wrong,
01:11:20 I say "I have a flight at 5,
01:11:22 I have to go to Rome,
01:11:23 I went to Lazio".
01:11:24 And what did they tell you at home?
01:11:26 I've always done this,
01:11:28 since I grew up with parents
01:11:29 who never told me what to do,
01:11:31 they always respected my choices.
01:11:33 Even at home,
01:11:34 at work,
01:11:36 I never liked the wives
01:11:38 who intervened in the husband's choices,
01:11:40 I don't judge them,
01:11:43 everyone is free to do what they want,
01:11:45 but I decide my own work.
01:11:47 And so, because only we,
01:11:48 in the first person,
01:11:49 know what you really need,
01:11:51 what you need or what you don't need.
01:11:53 Even if you try to explain it to your wife,
01:11:55 your children, your parents,
01:11:56 they never understand it
01:11:58 until they experience it.
01:11:59 And so I go to Lazio.
01:12:01 In the first year,
01:12:02 I win the Italian Cup.
01:12:04 With the goal?
01:12:05 No, the first year against Sampdoria.
01:12:07 Then, the following summer,
01:12:09 we play the Italian Super Cup
01:12:11 with Inter in the treble
01:12:13 and we win the Italian Super Cup.
01:12:15 So, in the span of a year,
01:12:17 since I left Milan…
01:12:18 You had already reached the goal you had set for yourself.
01:12:20 Very good.
01:12:21 Always aiming,
01:12:23 always aiming,
01:12:24 so it was something really great.
01:12:25 Listen, have you ever thought
01:12:27 or when did the will,
01:12:29 the idea, the ambition
01:12:31 to become a coach come to you?
01:12:33 Actually, this is a fault,
01:12:36 I use the term "fault"
01:12:38 with the smile of Dr. Gagliani,
01:12:39 that when I stop playing
01:12:41 because of an injury,
01:12:43 I stopped playing because of an injury,
01:12:45 which is not that Matuselen's fault
01:12:47 that everyone says.
01:12:48 I had already gotten injured a year before.
01:12:50 I did everything
01:12:52 to be able to continue playing
01:12:54 because it was my passion,
01:12:55 I still felt good.
01:12:56 I was still a Lazio star
01:12:58 when I got injured at that time,
01:13:00 so I was fine,
01:13:01 I wanted to continue playing.
01:13:02 Unfortunately, after that injury,
01:13:04 I couldn't do it anymore.
01:13:06 My foot didn't hold,
01:13:07 I tried to do my best
01:13:09 in the world,
01:13:10 I couldn't aim.
01:13:12 That Matuselen's fault
01:13:13 was just the final word
01:13:15 to a nightmare
01:13:16 that had started a year earlier.
01:13:18 Gagliani calls me right away
01:13:20 and says,
01:13:21 "When you left Milan,
01:13:22 I told you you had to come back.
01:13:24 I'd like you to be the coach
01:13:26 of a team
01:13:27 in the Milan youth team next year."
01:13:29 What does this make you understand?
01:13:33 What club is Milan?
01:13:35 Why did Milan win so much
01:13:37 in the Berlusconi-Gagliani era?
01:13:39 Why do I say that Milan is my family?
01:13:43 As many people who have spent years
01:13:45 in our family say.
01:13:48 And why when you behave well,
01:13:50 when you are a person
01:13:51 who has given everything for that shirt,
01:13:53 who has always respected people,
01:13:57 who has never behaved badly,
01:13:59 they always give you back.
01:14:01 So he called me and said this.
01:14:03 At a certain point I said,
01:14:05 "I didn't know I wanted to be a coach,
01:14:07 I didn't have this thing
01:14:08 of saying I want to be a coach."
01:14:10 I said, "I'll see when I quit,
01:14:11 I'll understand,
01:14:12 because I want to keep playing."
01:14:13 So I started this new adventure
01:14:15 and from there it was
01:14:16 a succession of good things.
01:14:18 First year in the academy,
01:14:20 we won the championship,
01:14:21 we did a couple of tournaments,
01:14:22 very nice ones,
01:14:23 with Real Madrid, Valencia,
01:14:25 other teams, we won tournaments.
01:14:27 It was a great feeling.
01:14:29 The following year,
01:14:30 I was sent to the Primavera.
01:14:32 I did a very nice spring BNU.
01:14:36 We were a team that gave me satisfaction,
01:14:39 we were getting the guys out,
01:14:40 we were making the guys grow.
01:14:41 At that moment,
01:14:42 we were working with a goal
01:14:44 which was to train the young
01:14:46 for the first team.
01:14:47 We played underage,
01:14:48 so you couldn't win the championship
01:14:49 in the spring,
01:14:50 because you were playing against teams
01:14:52 that were 10 years old,
01:14:54 almost,
01:14:55 with all the different components
01:14:56 of the team,
01:14:57 and those levels are too much.
01:14:59 But, in short,
01:15:00 we were getting some young players out.
01:15:03 I was taught because it struck me,
01:15:05 because I turned the page,
01:15:06 I did +7, +8 at the age level,
01:15:09 Rizzari, Felicioli, Locatelli,
01:15:11 Mastalli, Crociata, Zanellato,
01:15:12 Vido, Cutrone,
01:15:13 they are all players who played in Serie A
01:15:15 or who play in Serie B,
01:15:16 who were...
01:15:17 San Ruma, Calabria, Messi?
01:15:18 Messi, even if...
01:15:20 I think it's a separate matter.
01:15:22 I think it's a separate matter.
01:15:23 Calabria, yes.
01:15:24 Calabria, maybe a separate matter,
01:15:26 because he was already an important player
01:15:28 in Pippo's spring.
01:15:30 Donnarumma would have become a goalkeeper
01:15:33 as he is,
01:15:36 even without us.
01:15:38 But I assure you that
01:15:40 his arrival earlier
01:15:43 is also thanks to Cristian Brocchi,
01:15:46 even if he was a coach
01:15:48 who forced you and forced you
01:15:50 to play with your feet
01:15:52 right from when you were a kid,
01:15:55 and who still had a hard time
01:15:57 in the youth team
01:15:58 in those first years,
01:16:00 which was the difference
01:16:01 that made the big left-back
01:16:04 decide to give him this opportunity.
01:16:08 So, he too,
01:16:09 that path he took with me
01:16:12 in those years,
01:16:13 with all the methodological area he had,
01:16:15 was certainly important
01:16:16 to bring him to the first team early,
01:16:18 not to make him a goalkeeper
01:16:19 that he would have become anyway.
01:16:22 The last question I ask you,
01:16:24 then I'll leave you to it,
01:16:25 is who was your relationship,
01:16:27 human and professional,
01:16:29 with Sinisa Mialovic?
01:16:30 Because you worked with us
01:16:31 a step below,
01:16:33 because you trained in the first team
01:16:34 and Sinisa trained in the first team.
01:16:36 Then you formally replaced him,
01:16:37 but that's a speech
01:16:39 that deviates from what I want to do.
01:16:41 What approach did you have?
01:16:43 Because I imagine that with Milanello
01:16:44 the relationship was daily.
01:16:46 No, instead,
01:16:47 that's always a bit...
01:16:49 I had a wonderful relationship with Sinisa,
01:16:51 beautiful.
01:16:52 When we met, we talked.
01:16:55 He didn't need many guys
01:16:56 in that year,
01:16:58 because he had a squad
01:16:59 with the right number.
01:17:00 So, usually,
01:17:01 these continuous relationships
01:17:04 happen when the first team
01:17:06 needs players from the first season.
01:17:09 In that year,
01:17:10 there wasn't much need for that.
01:17:13 So, when we decided,
01:17:15 we talked,
01:17:16 we had a good relationship,
01:17:17 and we had known each other since before.
01:17:19 And you know what?
01:17:21 It's too easy
01:17:23 to say nice things about Sinisa now,
01:17:28 but Sinisa was a man of substance,
01:17:30 Sinisa was a man of importance.
01:17:32 One evening,
01:17:34 I remember that one of the first times
01:17:36 an article had to come out
01:17:38 saying that I had to go there,
01:17:40 that I had been to dinner with the president,
01:17:42 and I said "Yes, I'm going to Sinisa",
01:17:43 and Sinisa said "No, that's not true".
01:17:45 I said "I assure you that I am".
01:17:47 And it wasn't true,
01:17:48 because we had written something that wasn't true.
01:17:50 He said "What do you mean,
01:17:52 tonight there's dinner with the team,
01:17:55 I'll bring the guys to have dinner,
01:17:56 come to dinner with us".
01:17:57 That evening, I went to dinner with him,
01:18:00 his staff and the whole first team,
01:18:02 to say...
01:18:03 Why? Because there was loyalty,
01:18:04 he knew that I was a real person too,
01:18:06 we had a very tight and sincere relationship,
01:18:08 and we didn't tell each other lies.
01:18:11 When there were moments
01:18:12 where we had to tell each other
01:18:13 what had happened,
01:18:15 we talked about it and it happened.
01:18:17 On the topic of Milan Spring,
01:18:19 many players,
01:18:20 for the sake of the Milan youth sector,
01:18:22 many coaches didn't make it,
01:18:24 because to make it to Serie B and Serie A
01:18:25 means to make it,
01:18:26 others didn't, for various reasons.
01:18:28 I gave two names,
01:18:29 Mastur, who didn't make it,
01:18:31 and maybe I remember
01:18:32 in that spring,
01:18:33 when I was commenting on it,
01:18:34 there was Torrasi, who was very strong,
01:18:35 he had a couple of injuries,
01:18:37 and he didn't make it.
01:18:38 So, he didn't make it,
01:18:39 he made it to Serie B,
01:18:40 he'll make it back,
01:18:41 because he's a top player,
01:18:42 but the path of young players,
01:18:45 given the bad luck,
01:18:47 and given the fact that
01:18:48 they don't really use their qualities to the best of their ability.
01:18:51 There aren't many places.
01:18:54 The qualities you need
01:18:56 are not only technical,
01:18:58 the qualities you need
01:18:59 are not only physical,
01:19:00 the qualities you need
01:19:02 are also,
01:19:03 and in good part,
01:19:05 at the level of personality
01:19:07 and mentality.
01:19:09 Not all the players are ready
01:19:11 to make a leap
01:19:13 in the big football.
01:19:15 Not all the players
01:19:18 are able to
01:19:20 take that step forward
01:19:22 from a point of view
01:19:23 of consistency,
01:19:28 of life,
01:19:31 of priorities.
01:19:32 I've seen many players
01:19:33 who, in the early years,
01:19:35 as professionals,
01:19:38 lived the pre-match life
01:19:39 like they did in Milan.
01:19:41 Unfortunately, things change,
01:19:44 because, as I said before,
01:19:46 when you face people
01:19:47 who do it for work,
01:19:49 when you face...
01:19:51 you go and play in stadiums
01:19:53 where people,
01:19:56 if you make a mistake,
01:19:57 criticise you.
01:19:58 It's not like when you play in the spring,
01:20:00 even if there's a crowd,
01:20:01 there are 2000 people,
01:20:03 they don't criticise you.
01:20:04 Because it's not like you have the hearts against you in the spring,
01:20:06 even if there's a crowd in the spring.
01:20:08 You start to live
01:20:09 situations from a big perspective.
01:20:10 Not all players have the skill,
01:20:12 the strength and the consistency
01:20:13 to come out of these situations.
01:20:15 And above all,
01:20:16 I always say,
01:20:17 and I'm saying this to young people,
01:20:19 I'm going to talk to young people
01:20:21 and I like it a lot,
01:20:23 that you always need to build
01:20:25 a plan A and a plan B in life.
01:20:27 And plan A is not football.
01:20:29 Plan A is the study.
01:20:31 Plan B is life.
01:20:32 Why?
01:20:33 Because if you have a plan A,
01:20:34 which is important,
01:20:35 which is the study,
01:20:36 you need it for two reasons.
01:20:37 One,
01:20:38 because if you're not good at football,
01:20:40 you can still have a life of a certain kind
01:20:42 or try to do certain things
01:20:44 and take certain important paths.
01:20:46 Two,
01:20:47 because nowadays,
01:20:49 the thinking players
01:20:51 are the ones
01:20:53 who manage to have
01:20:55 more ease of getting involved,
01:20:57 not only at the technical level,
01:20:59 but also at the management level,
01:21:02 from a point of view of mental openness,
01:21:04 from a point of view of being ready
01:21:06 to go into a world
01:21:08 that is completely different
01:21:10 from what you've experienced.
01:21:11 And so,
01:21:12 the biggest difficulty for our young people
01:21:14 is that.
01:21:15 While you say these things,
01:21:16 I just thought of Pobega and Gabbia.
01:21:18 But let's go a little further,
01:21:19 in the sense of people who are
01:21:21 thinking,
01:21:22 from this point of view.
01:21:23 I'm sure they weren't the strongest
01:21:26 in their team.
01:21:27 Indeed.
01:21:28 You didn't think they were the strongest.
01:21:30 You thought they were good players,
01:21:32 but then the difference,
01:21:34 what did it do?
01:21:35 Something else.
01:21:36 To finish,
01:21:37 Monza in general,
01:21:38 you did well,
01:21:39 you got great results,
01:21:42 anything to add on that experience?
01:21:44 I think that Monza
01:21:46 didn't go well,
01:21:49 but logically,
01:21:51 when you,
01:21:52 in the second year,
01:21:53 after winning the C,
01:21:55 you can't go straight to the B,
01:21:57 it seems that things...
01:21:59 Actually,
01:22:00 winning the C Series,
01:22:01 there are teams that spent the same money
01:22:03 as Monza in the C Series,
01:22:04 and didn't go for 4 or 5 years.
01:22:06 We went for the first real attempt,
01:22:08 making an incredible journey.
01:22:10 In the B Series,
01:22:11 we got close,
01:22:13 unfortunately,
01:22:14 the Salernitana,
01:22:15 with a penalty at the 96th minute.
01:22:16 A game...
01:22:17 A big one.
01:22:18 Exactly,
01:22:19 a non-played game
01:22:20 and won on the board.
01:22:21 And a game
01:22:23 where we faced a team
01:22:25 that had nothing to say,
01:22:27 so in terms of energy,
01:22:28 in terms of things,
01:22:29 we were definitely
01:22:30 two different worlds.
01:22:31 Unfortunately,
01:22:32 we came in third
01:22:33 and we didn't manage
01:22:34 to do that step
01:22:35 that could have been worth
01:22:36 something really big.
01:22:37 But for the construction
01:22:38 of what was
01:22:39 the Monza Society,
01:22:40 I think we did
01:22:41 a wonderful job,
01:22:42 because we started
01:22:43 from having nothing,
01:22:44 or little,
01:22:45 and we built
01:22:46 something important.
01:22:48 So much so,
01:22:49 that when I arrived,
01:22:50 Stroppa also complimented me
01:22:52 for everything we had created
01:22:53 there in Monza,
01:22:54 and it was needed
01:22:55 to become
01:22:56 an important Society,
01:22:58 because Milan had built
01:22:59 its success on that,
01:23:00 and in Monza,
01:23:01 Verrussoni and Gagliani
01:23:02 did the same thing.
01:23:03 I'm happy
01:23:04 to have been part of it.
01:23:05 And Palladino?
01:23:06 Did you imagine it?
01:23:07 Palladino,
01:23:08 I'll tell you the truth,
01:23:09 I trained him,
01:23:10 so to speak,
01:23:11 because he arrived
01:23:12 and was unlucky,
01:23:14 then he recovered
01:23:16 and had to play a game
01:23:18 two days before
01:23:19 the first game
01:23:20 he had to play,
01:23:21 he had a little problem again
01:23:23 and so he never played
01:23:24 with me.
01:23:26 The thing you noticed
01:23:27 was that you noticed
01:23:28 in your team
01:23:30 the players
01:23:31 who, when you explain,
01:23:32 when you speak,
01:23:33 are attentive
01:23:35 and want to understand
01:23:36 what you're asking them
01:23:37 and why.
01:23:38 I have exercises
01:23:40 that I propose
01:23:41 as a coach,
01:23:42 maybe a little more advanced,
01:23:44 maybe a little more studied
01:23:45 in detail,
01:23:46 to change a little something,
01:23:47 but that I stole
01:23:48 from the coaches I had.
01:23:49 And you see the players
01:23:51 who want to be coaches
01:23:52 from that,
01:23:53 from how they listen to you,
01:23:54 from how they look at you
01:23:55 and from the questions
01:23:56 they ask you.
01:23:57 And he was definitely
01:23:58 one of those who looked,
01:23:59 observed and understood.
01:24:00 Christian,
01:24:02 I'll give you the beer, Luca,
01:24:03 let's play the pyramid game
01:24:04 that is now so popular
01:24:05 on social media.
01:24:06 I'll tell you,
01:24:07 chosen with Luca Fazzini,
01:24:08 we put together
01:24:10 some average players
01:24:11 in a word that doesn't exist,
01:24:12 because you weren't
01:24:13 average players,
01:24:14 middle-aged players,
01:24:15 who was more defensive,
01:24:16 who was more offensive,
01:24:17 so we discussed
01:24:18 per minute who to put.
01:24:20 10 of the history of Milan,
01:24:22 not the present,
01:24:23 but let's go in order
01:24:25 and when you write,
01:24:26 you'll tell us
01:24:27 first row, second row,
01:24:28 third row, fourth row.
01:24:29 Let's start with Ambrosini,
01:24:31 where do we put him?
01:24:32 In this pyramid
01:24:33 of 10 central midfielders
01:24:35 who were defensive
01:24:36 in the history of Milan.
01:24:37 But now,
01:24:38 not knowing the others,
01:24:39 I'll put him in third row,
01:24:40 Ambro,
01:24:41 he's my friend,
01:24:42 don't be offended.
01:24:43 Ok, I think it's ok.
01:24:44 Can I write it?
01:24:45 Go.
01:24:46 Then we have Gattuso.
01:24:47 Gattuso I'll put...
01:24:49 I can tell you,
01:24:51 I'm sorry for the others,
01:24:53 because I know
01:24:54 that some of them are good,
01:24:55 but I'll put him here.
01:24:56 First place.
01:24:58 First place Gattuso,
01:24:59 and I think you're never wrong.
01:25:01 You're never wrong.
01:25:02 Desailly.
01:25:03 Desailly in second place,
01:25:05 then we put you in the middle,
01:25:08 so we see Brocchi.
01:25:10 I would put myself here,
01:25:13 for what I've been through,
01:25:16 for what I've given,
01:25:17 and for all the love
01:25:19 I've had for these guys.
01:25:21 But with respect to
01:25:22 the great players
01:25:23 that will be here too,
01:25:24 I'll put myself here.
01:25:25 So, let's say it
01:25:27 for Spotify friends,
01:25:29 you would have put
01:25:30 Braccetto with Gattuso,
01:25:31 Braccetto with Gattuso.
01:25:32 I would have continued in my...
01:25:33 A single room.
01:25:34 I would have continued in my story.
01:25:37 So fourth row.
01:25:38 So fourth row for Brocchi.
01:25:39 Lodetti,
01:25:40 that young people
01:25:41 maybe don't remember.
01:25:42 Young people,
01:25:43 that's why I'll put him here.
01:25:44 Look.
01:25:45 In third place Lodetti.
01:25:47 You remember,
01:25:48 Tonali instead.
01:25:49 Yes, Tonali yes,
01:25:50 but he did too little.
01:25:52 We'll put him in fourth.
01:25:53 Then we have great players,
01:25:55 because we thought
01:25:56 many players,
01:25:57 but who was so great
01:25:58 but played little,
01:25:59 who...
01:26:00 So,
01:26:01 we'll put you there,
01:26:02 De Jong.
01:26:03 De Jong, yes,
01:26:05 but the same thing.
01:26:07 Because they had
01:26:09 a great career,
01:26:10 but at least they were
01:26:11 a little bit few.
01:26:12 I understand your reasoning.
01:26:13 Fourth, exactly.
01:26:14 Van Bommel.
01:26:15 Van Bommel
01:26:19 played at a certain point
01:26:21 in the world
01:26:22 in the position of one,
01:26:23 if not the strongest,
01:26:24 one of the three strongest
01:26:25 in the world,
01:26:26 who was going to be a pier.
01:26:27 So for this one
01:26:28 I'll keep him too.
01:26:29 Almost like it was a fault.
01:26:31 Fourth place.
01:26:32 Fourth place.
01:26:33 And then the last two
01:26:35 are Rijkaard,
01:26:37 let's put him,
01:26:38 and then I'll tell you the last one.
01:26:40 No, but Rijkaard, guys.
01:26:42 I was a kid,
01:26:43 I didn't see him,
01:26:44 he was too strong.
01:26:45 Yes, I'll put him here.
01:26:46 Second place.
01:26:47 Second place.
01:26:48 The last one is
01:26:49 Frank See.
01:26:50 See, at the end,
01:26:51 even not knowing the names.
01:26:54 Gattuso, one,
01:26:55 Desai, Rijkaard, two,
01:26:57 Ambrosini, Chessino, Dessi,
01:26:59 three, Brocchi,
01:27:01 between one and four,
01:27:02 and then of course De Jong.
01:27:04 We left out Flamini,
01:27:05 Mutari,
01:27:06 it's not bad,
01:27:07 it's not bad, it's good.
01:27:08 It's good.
01:27:09 Even knowing the names,
01:27:11 he wouldn't have gone so far.
01:27:13 Cristian, we're almost at the end,
01:27:14 but our format,
01:27:15 our podcast,
01:27:16 has two more moments.
01:27:17 So, we'll keep this one
01:27:19 because we have some more,
01:27:20 so we'll keep them with love.
01:27:22 We have this little game here,
01:27:24 I'd say one,
01:27:25 paper,
01:27:26 random questions,
01:27:27 taken from the deck.
01:27:28 Let's pick one and answer it.
01:27:29 You read it out loud.
01:27:31 Damn,
01:27:34 which historical figure
01:27:36 would you like to chat with?
01:27:37 I'll tell you, Paolo Coelho.
01:27:39 Can you explain it a bit?
01:27:42 Because since I was a kid,
01:27:44 I've read all his books,
01:27:46 he always gave me,
01:27:48 in my moments of greatest confusion,
01:27:54 of greatest nervousness,
01:27:56 he always gave me that serenity
01:27:58 I needed and I always liked it.
01:28:00 So, I'd say him.
01:28:02 Thank you very much, Cristian.
01:28:03 We're not done yet,
01:28:04 because we,
01:28:05 those who watched the first podcast,
01:28:07 those who didn't,
01:28:08 if I go and watch it,
01:28:09 we have a magic lamp.
01:28:10 We can give a spoiler,
01:28:11 who will come out of the magic lamp?
01:28:13 Obviously,
01:28:14 the genius comes out of the lamp,
01:28:16 Savicevic.
01:28:18 Can you express three wishes?
01:28:20 Professionally,
01:28:23 we hope to be able to find
01:28:26 a project that's right for me,
01:28:29 for the person I am,
01:28:30 and for what I've already done,
01:28:31 which has perhaps been recognized
01:28:33 only partially.
01:28:34 As far as my private life is concerned,
01:28:36 only and exclusively
01:28:38 the health of my children,
01:28:39 which is something wonderful for me,
01:28:41 for my children,
01:28:42 as I think everyone does,
01:28:44 I would do any kind of thing,
01:28:46 I wish them all the best,
01:28:47 I hope they can play football too,
01:28:49 they care about us.
01:28:50 As far as my private life is concerned,
01:28:54 I hope to have that serenity
01:28:59 that has distinguished
01:29:01 the best years of my life,
01:29:02 thanks to which I was able to get
01:29:06 to do what I did best,
01:29:09 and I think that if I had to find
01:29:11 that serenity in my life right now,
01:29:13 I would probably still be able
01:29:15 to enjoy life for many years to come.
01:29:17 [Music]
01:29:22 (static)
01:29:24 (whooshing)

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