SempreInter.com editorialist Richard Hall explores the main differences between Honorary President Massimo Moratti and current owner and President, Indonesian media-mogul Erick Thohir.
“We asked where is the strong man in the boardroom…and nothing. We asked for clarity…and nothing. There are only two possible conclusions, dear president: absence or incompetence.” (An Internazionale banner – Curva Nord)
This banner on the Curva Nord in 2012 was devastatingly honest. More than an adequate question to be set before the then President Moratti. It mindfully avoided putting the blame on Moratti’s head, yet at the same time, in one fell swoop got straight to the heart of the problem. It did not shout ‘sack the coach out’ nor did it demand ‘sack the board’; it presented the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
It took a whole year and another Coach, before Massimo Moratti finally handed over the reins of power at the club to Erick Thohir. The steady decline that Inter had been on was typified by a ninth place finish. Orchestrated by ‘young pup’ Andrea Strammacioni, the season soon fell apart. The promise of a new dawn was quickly thrown out by the treble winning veterans in the dressing room. As the pledges of ‘NextGen youth’ dwindled like a candle in Stramacioni’s window, it was soon blown out by Moratti, as he indulged the death rolls of his ageing heroes.
A year had been lost, debts mounted around the Milanese club as the wages poured into the pockets of a team that should have been disbanded after the treble winning season. There were the exceptions of Javier Zanetti and Esteban Cambiasso who continued to impress on occasion.
Walter Mazzari’s appointment by Moratti as head Coach, was met with few cheers and perhaps even fewer hopes. Even if he could, like a brilliant sculptor, manipulate this squad into his 3-5-2 formation it would still be insipid and carry stragglers. The season at the half way point seemed both stagnant and aroused the same discussion as he last. Jonathan’s crossing and defensive lapses, the enigma of Yuto Nagatomo and curious case of Zdravko Kuzmanovic.
It was in this moment that Moratti did what many thought would be the impossible and moved aside for Erick Thohir. Perhaps like Napoleon, when Moratti’s Old Guard fell, it was time to retreat, at least he wouldn’t have to move to Elba.
Since then changes have slowly been emerging and despite the cynicism of some Nerazzurri, they have been for the better. There is a freshness and new lease of life that has surrounded the Giuseppe Meazza this summer. Much of this is down to their new Indonesian Chief.
Firstly Thohir has money to spend, the purchase of Hernanes was an early indication that he wanted to improve the squad. Since the Goldman Sachs bank has given him the go ahead to purchase the club and clear its debts he has the chance to make Inter a force. According to Italian media sources the new Inter chief, will invest €200m into the club. This will allow the Indonesian to become a majority shareholder and clear the debts accrued under Moratti as previously mentioned.
The level of Thohir’s footballing knowledge is unknown to anybody that isn’t close to him. Even if however, he knows every goal scorer of the Treble winning season, he will still have more perspective than Moratti. Moratti had fallen too deeply for his heroes and as the banner stated, even the Ultras had realised in 2012 that it was the end. This perspective will allow Thohir to go from day to day working in a new direction that isn’t intertwined with the men who did so much for the club back in 2010.
Understanding of global markets is another huge asset the President brings. This is an area that has not just been missed by Inter but by many clubs in Serie A. Thohir is well known in Indonesia and with Inter’s supporters club in that country being the largest on the continent, there is certainly potential to maximise the Asian market. This combined with his knowledge of how to develop teams in the US (DC United and NBA’s Philadelphia’s 76ers) as well as basketball teams in his own country, all gives him a great deal of experience to pass on to the Nerazzurri marketing team.
Timing has also been an asset for him. This perhaps is luck? Perhaps not but either way it has allowed him to make changes that Moratti may have thought about doing but did not have the courage. One example is that Diego Milito, Cambiasso and Captain Javier Zanetti have moved on and this allows him a real fresh start. His team have now got a superb mix of youth and experience and look like they could challenge next season, for Europe and even the Champions League. Zanetti moving to the board room also is a clever move, whilst the departure of Antonio Conte from Juventus and the Milanese implosion will also help.
Stability has been brought about in the way he trusted Coach Walter Mazzarri. The ex-Napoli boss underwhelmed last season and seemed often out of ideas and stagnant. Little by little the new Inter President has breathed new life into his Coach and as they prepare to face the new season his squad look to be as invigorated as he is. The energy and vison seems to have seeped through to the players and with continued trust in both, Inter look like they could prove tough to beat next term.
Thohir may have raised eyebrows at first, just like the American owners did at Roma. This is short sighted however as the difference and feel of this pre-season far outweighs the negativity and doom and gloom of the past.
Inter are reborn, they are hungry and they have a clear vision. The banners on the Curva Nord may well read differently this year, their President is neither absent nor incompetent.
Do you agree with Richard? Discuss below in the comments section.

I believe our President has an excellent planning for Inter. He will do the best for this club.
My concern right now for the coach, we do not have a coach who knows how to put the players and develop them in the right place….shame on this…
Doesn’t mean to kill the enthusiasm, but talking about DC and Sixers, how good are they at MLS and NBA? Nothing too great in my opinion. Hopefully Inter is a different case for Thohir, hopefully….
actually thohir wasn’t the one who in charge of those both organization. He wasn’t the one who running the club. If you read in DC fan blog, they mentioned it quite a lot. But, these three teams have something in common, all of them are the falling giants. But lets hope inter won’t end up like sixers today. It would be awful.
Thohir is doing a fine work cleaning up after Moratti & co. BUT
he must spend on a star player, not just because we are lack of quality, also because making Inter a well-known brand (by that i mean to attract more fans around the globe) needs someone recognised by people. right now, apart from true Inter fans, i think people could only name Vidic from our current squad. we need at least one, rather 2-3 world class players that people can relate to, without them, it is hard to connect to Inter right now. OR as Dortmund did, we should attract fans with beautiful, attacking football… oh wait, with Mazzarri we won’t ever see an eye-catching display
anyway, M’Vila, Dodó, Medel, Vidic, Osvaldo (,Rolando) doesnt sound bad, but right now, NONE of them could be anywhere near the starting line up in a team fighting for titles (both national and international)
For now, i think a star isn’t a priority, we should spend smart & get back to champions league as fast as possible & to achieve that doesn’t mean we should spend big. Napoli under mazzari making mediocre player with no name into a gold mine, Juve get vidal cheaply & pogba for free, Roma does that too. Inter have the material, lets hope Mazzari could spark his magic like he do with Napoli.
Great article Nima! You guys should start the podcast soon 🙂
thohir is bringing us where we should be a long time ago
As I said on many previous occasions, people that backed Moratti as a president are clearly insane. The guy had a worse business model than a 7 year old, made so many stupid decisions based on impulse and only did things for short term success – how is that good for a football club president? The only “quality” he did have was his love for Inter, but the love for the club can certainly make you blind when deciding things, and I’m glad that Thohir’s view is foremost a business one. I think that he is our last chance at bringing this club out of the rubble.
Moratti came from different era.
he’s not perfect president/owner, but he did what he could and reap his success on 22-05-2010.
and I really grateful for that moment.
but then the world is keep on moving, and like everything in this world had their own time, Moratti got his time, and it’s over.
Nice article! The key will be Thorir having a plan that focus’ on longer term goals rather than panic whenever something goes wrong. It all seemed very spur of the moment. Personally I would like to see a more progressive manager than Mazzarri as he seems to hesitant as you mention but the continuity might be good for a couple of seasons to get the other aspects in place!
Clear editorial, hope it will enlighten anybody who read… Learn from the past, working smartly and sustainably with vision for the future… Viva il Presidente… Forza Internazionale….
Tohir is buisness man and he knows his job
Nice article. Btw Inter fans China is the largest in Asia, more less 70 millions, Indonesia not even close to 1/2 of them..
its all about patient
The main advantages Thohir in Indonesia is lifting the corporate enterprise performance declined sharply later Thohir got him looming. you simply believe only with inter Thohir and waiting time into the top five in Europe.
in tohir we trust! forza inter