Slowed by injuries, the 40-year-old Ibrahimovic has played
in only four Serie A matches this season and scored two goals.
It’s a sign of maturity for one of the youngest teams in the
Italian league, which is chasing its first Serie A title in a decade.
“It’s a great roster. All of the players are strong and can
overcome absences,” Milan coach Stefano Pioli said after his injury-hit team
struggled to a 1-0 victory over Torino on Tuesday.
While Milan was missing injured forward Ante Rebic,
Ibrahimovic came on for only the final four minutes.
“We fought for every ball as if it were the last, which is
what you need to do in such tough matches,” Pioli said.
The victory was Milan’s sixth straight and it meant that the
club matched its best start in history, having also won nine and drawn one in
1954-55.
France veteran Olivier Giroud, who scored an early goal
against Torino, has been a key addition this season.
Simon Kjaer, another of Milan’s few over-30 players, has
also been key — as evidenced when he thwarted Torino’s attempt at a late
equalizer.
Kjaer, the captain of European Championship semifinalist
Denmark and one of the 30 Ballon d’Or nominees, was given a contract extension
through 2023-24 on Wednesday.
“My dream is to win something before I leave,” Kjaer said.
A title certainly appears within reach for Milan, although
it’s worth noting that the club led Serie A after 21 matches last season and
then faded behind city rival Inter Milan with Ibrahimovic injuring his left
knee in May.
Pioli’s squad appears grittier this season. In its last
three games, Milan came back from two goals down to beat Hella Verona 3-2;
produced two late goals in a 4-2 win at nine-man Bologna; and then produced
only two shots on goal but still beat Torino.
Goalkeeper Mike Maignan, who was brought in to replace the
departed Gianluigi Donnarumma, is out until January following surgery on his
left wrist, but Ciprian Tatarusano has stepped in and kept a clean sheet
against Torino.
Goalkeeper Mike Maignan, who was brought in to replace the
departed Gianluigi Donnarumma, is out until January following surgery on his
left wrist, but Ciprian Tatarusano has stepped in and kept a clean sheet
against Torino.
Another key factor for Milan has been stability on the
bench, with Pioli in his third season after a turbulent stretch that saw
rapid-fire coaching changes with Clarence Seedorf, Filippo Inzaghi, Sinisa
Mihajlovic, Cristian Brocchi, Vincenzo Montella, Gennaro Gattuso and Marco
Giampaolo following each other in rapid succession.
The stability has coincided with the promotion of former
Milan great Paolo Maldini to technical director in 2019.
Milan has even cut its financial losses in half over the
last year, despite the coronavirus pandemic, after a stretch of financial fair
play violations that saw the Rossoneri voluntarily withdraw from the 2019-20
Europa League.
The only Serie A match that Milan hasn’t won this season was
a 1-1 draw at Juventus in September. There have also been struggles in the
Champions League, where Milan has lost all three of its group matches.
More big tests are coming up with a visit to Jose
Mourinho-led Roma on Sunday and the derby with defending champion Inter the
following weekend sandwiched around a Champions League game with Porto at the
San Siro.
“We’ve got three big, stimulating matches next week,” Pioli
said. “We’ve got to keep on trying to play better.”
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