A.C. Milan

Associazione Calcio Milan (commonly referred to as A.C. Milan or simply Milan, is a professional Italian football club based in Milan, Lombardy, that plays in Serie A. Milan was founded in 1899 by English lace-maker Herbert Kilpin and businessman Alfred Edwards among others.The club has spent its entire history, with the exception of the 1980–81 and 1982–83 seasons, in the top flight of Italian football, known as Serie A since 1929–30.

With 18 officially recognised UEFA and FIFA titles, they are the second most successful club in the world in terms of number of international titles, together with Boca Juniors and Real Madrid, and behind Al Ahly with twenty titles. Milan has won a joint record of three Intercontinental Cups and one of its successor, the FIFA Club World Cup. Milan have also won the European Cup/Champions League on seven occasions,second only to Real Madrid. They have also won the UEFA Super Cup a joint record five times and the Cup Winners’ Cup twice.Milan has won every major competition in which it has competed, with the exception of the Europa League (in this competition they have lost two semi-finals in 1972 and in 2002). Domestically, with 18 league titles Milan is the joint-second most successful club in Serie A behind Juventus (31 titles), along with local rivals Inter. They have also won the Coppa Italia five times, as well as six Supercoppa Italiana triumphs.

Milan’s home games are played at San Siro, also known as the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza. The stadium, which is shared with long-lasting city rivals Internazionale, is the largest in Italian football, with a total capacity of 80,018. Inter are considered their biggest rivals, and matches between the two teams are called Derby della Madonnina, which is one of the most followed derbies in football.[11] As of 2010, Milan is the third most supported team in Italy, and the seventh most supported team in Europe, ahead of any other Italian team.

The owner of the club is former Italian Prime Minister and controlling shareholder of Mediaset Silvio Berlusconi. The vice-president is Adriano Galliani. The club is one of the wealthiest and most valuable in Italian and world football.It was a founding member of the now-defunct G-14 group of Europe’s leading football clubs as well as its replacement, the European Club Association.

Supporters and rivalries

Milan is one of the best supported football clubs in Italy, according to research conducted by Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Historically, Milan was supported by the city’s working-class and trade unionists.On the other hand, crosstown rivals Internazionale were mainly supported by the more prosperous and typically Milanese middle-class.[36] One of the oldest ultras groups in all of Italian football, Fossa dei Leoni, originated in Milan.Currently, the main ultras group within the support base is Brigate Rossonere. Politically, Milan ultras have never had any particular preference,but the media traditionally associated them with the left-wing, until recently, when Berlusconi’s presidency somewhat altered that view.

According to a study from 2010, Milan is the most supported Italian team in Europe and seventh overall, with over 18.4 million fans. AC Milan had the ninth highest average attendance of European football clubs during the 2010–11 season, behind Borussia Dortmund, FC Barcelona, Manchester United, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Schalke, Arsenal, and Hamburg.

Genoa fans consider Milan a hated rival after Genoa fan, Vincenzo Spagnolo was stabbed to death by a Milan supporter in January 1995. However, Milan’s main rivalry is with neighbour club, Internazionale; both clubs meet in the widely anticipated Derby della Madonnina twice every Serie A season. The name of the derby refers to the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose statue atop the Milan Cathedral is one of the city’s main attractions. The match usually creates a lively atmosphere, with numerous (often humorous or offensive) banners unfolded before the start of the game. Flares are commonly present and contribute to the spectacle but they have occasionally led to problems, including the abandonment of the second leg of the 2004–05 Champions League quarterfinal match between Milan and Inter on 12 April 2005, after a flare thrown from the crowd by an Inter supporter struck Milan keeper Dida on the shoulder.

January Transfer Window

For a team that has no European obligations, AC Milan have a massive squad. There are 28 players listed on the first team on the team’s official website.

That’s an incredible number—and an unmanageable one. With only one game a week to work with—plus whatever the Coppa Italia might bring—it’s impossible to give all those players time on the field. Having to chase the European-qualification positions only makes things worse. The best players need to be on the field as much as possible in order for Milan to move up the table.

That makes things hard on manager Sinisa Mihajlovic, part of whose job is to keep everyone on the team as sharp as possible. He hasn’t had much of a chance to rotate in some fringe players. When he took last Tuesday’s Coppa match against Serie B side Crotone to do just that, it very nearly came back to bite him—the 18-time Italian champions needed extra time to put away a team that has never seen Serie A.

Mihajlovic needs this squad pared down. He has enough on his plate clawing this team back toward respectability to have to also figure out just how to rotate nearly two-and-a-half-dozen men.

Fortunately, there are quite a few players would can be seen as candidates for a sale or a loan. We’re going to look closer at five of the men the Rossoneri should take the opportunity to take off the books, whether that be temporarily or for good.