Italian journalist Riccardo Trevisani slammed Inter Milan following their shocking defeat at the hands of Udinese.
The Nerazzurri enjoyed a flying start to the new campaign, roasting Torino by five unanswered goals on the opening day of the season. Marcus Thuram and Co. looked unstoppable, as they announced their intention to retain the title they lost to Napoli last season.
Therefore, all bookmakers considered Inter the heavy favourites to beat Udinese on Matchday 2. This includes Easybet, South Africa’s most trustworthy betting platform.
When Denzel Dumfries gave the Champions League finalists the lead, the San Siro crowd were hoping for another large result. However, they were in for a shock, as the Friulians pulled off a sensational comeback.
It all began when Dumfries gave away a penalty in the 29th minute. Keinan Davis successfully converted from the spot to draw Udinese back on level terms.
In the 40th minute, Arthur Atta cemented himself as the Zebrette’s ultimate hero, scoring a memorable winner. The visitors were able to withstand the pressure and escape with three valuable points in the bag.
For his part, Trevisani argues that this contest illustrated the Beneamata’s mental weaknesses, as they weren’t able to recover from the penalty episode.
“I completely agree with something Chivu said: they suffered a lot psychologically from the negative episode of Dumfries’ penalty,” said the pundit during his appearance on Fontana di Trevi via FcInterNews.
“Inter won 5-0 against Torino and took the lead against Udinese. They were 6-0 [on aggregate] and there is no tsunami on the horizon. Dumfries’ handball and the penalty for Udinese cannot upset their psyche.
“This is a major mental problem that Inter have been struggling with for some time. It stems primarily from the players’ failure to realise that they were very strong in a given context and when things were going well.
Riccardo Trevisani Credits Simone Inzaghi For Helping Inter Milan Players Overperform
Trevisani went on to argue that Inter were never as strong as perceived. On the contrary, it was Simone Inzaghi’s system that brought the best out of the players who aren’t necessarily elite.
“They’re not the strongest team of all, period. They’re the strongest if they do certain things. If they don’t do those things, the players themselves aren’t at that level.
“Darmian, Acerbi, and Dimarco are all players brought to play ten-tenths of a second by the previous coach.
“Inter soared to a high level, and then, everyone said they’re the strongest and how come they didn’t win four Scudetti.”
Nevertheless, Trevisani insists that Inter remain a top-level side, so he’s expecting more from Chivu.
“What I don’t agree with is saying, ‘Oh well, I have these guys and I have to deal with them’. We must remember this is a team that, until three months ago, everyone was saying was the strongest on planet Earth and should have won every game 7-0.
“So they can’t be that bad. They’ve even improved in terms of depth.”
As if the soul has in its nature material properties, other than the humanly projected ones, onto a psychoid nature… Psyche? Strenght? Puny human what are you if a truck hits you? The figurative truck in this sense; the whole world. Weak?
Being exhausted has that effect on any psyche. Lack of rest or weak psyche? Causal aetiology?
Psyche, in its figurative nature, is never a cause in itself.
Trevisani can choke on a dick! How much more money did PSG spend on their roster compared to Inter. The fact that they made it to the UCL final proves they are not weak. Some of these journalists need to get punched in the face so they STFU. This is not journalism. It’s just the opinion of a piece of shit that no one knows or cares about.
Oh no…some guy blasting hate..how will i sleep at night. He should focus on his match fixing team and steer clear of the bisconte. What a troll