In his regular weekly column Inter fanatic Sam Olsen dives deep into the stories that matter to Inter’s fans looking to keep the spirit of discussion and dispute alive and well on the pages of Sempreinter.com.
“If after two victories and a draw with Napoli these things are being discussed, then I really don’t care what they say” Walter Mazzarri stated in a typically robust manner after being told of the banner that flew in Parma’s Stadio Ennio Tardini calling for the return of Roberto Mancini; and why would he care? He is Walter Mazzarri after all, perhaps the most underrated, completely misunderstood manager in the history of the Serie A! It isn’t his fault that things are not going his way after all he is just the coach. But for a raft of unfortunate events that constantly thwart his most technical and ingenious plans his team would have been headed toward a record run of draws. Inter after all had seemed to be flying after their miraculous last minute equaliser at home against Napoli, their uncomfortable 0-1 win away to the mighty Cesena and fortuitous 1-0 home win courtesy of a last minute penalty against high flying Sampdoria. A succession of results that any team would be proud of surely?
Mazzarri seemed to have got his team playing exactly how he had wanted to; do nothing all game, look as likely of scoring as the local geriatric home residents taking a short walk to the moon, and pick up the point via a penalty (Cessena/Parma) or the team deciding to actually play football rather than the usual tika taka for dummies (Napoli). Let’s face it, Inter have pretty much been poor in virtually every game except for the walloping of a Sassuolo side whose capitulation looks all the more incredible for every performance this Inter side has put in since, and a couple of efforts against a ragtag bunch of amateurs from Iceland.
Against Parma, Inter under Mazzarri managed to somehow scrape a little more grime from the bottom of the barrel. Unfortunately anyone who listened to last weeks SempreInter podcast Studio Inter, will realise that the result itself was all too predictable. Why wouldn’t it be? After all, we were playing the worst team in Serie A, who had managed to lose 8 of their last 9 games and who had looked to be already planning where they would head to for their summer holidays before the start of next season’s Serie B challenge. Against Mazzarri’s Inter however, they were suddenly transformed into world beaters; magicians weaving spells with their wondrous little feet. It was reminiscent of the match against Cagliari where Zeman’s team, barely able to comprehend how to kick the ball prior to the home match against Inter, was suddenly turned into an attacking machine at the San Siro. In that match you could almost see Mazzarri’s eyes cross as his brain struggled to figure out what was going on. In this match the shambolic manager showed he is a magician whose only trick is to make his own team disappear.
But what about the 70% possession I hear people scream, at least Inter won on that scorecard! Perhaps Mazzarri is turning this team into his own version of Barcelona, capable of passing the ball around in both a completely pointless and aimless fashion for 90 minutes. This Mazzalona’s sole ambition will be to bore both the opposition and fans to such an extent that the game will be called off, giving Mazzarri the much wanted draw. The simple fact is that over the entire 90 minutes all this beautiful possession that Mazzarri seems to value so much, secured one solitary shot on goal in the entire match, a fact that most sane people would realise means that something is not working with whatever strategy is being employed. Unfortunately Mazzarri seems to have ruled himself out of the ‘sane’ category, with his oft repeated post match comments in which he once against blames all and sundry for the performance and resolutely sticks to his well used, but under firing, guns.
What the players must be thinking is anyone’s guess. Some have said that the manager must have the support of his players for them to react so emphatically once going behind such as against Napoli, or to fight for a late winner against Sampdoria. That could be one explanation; the other is that on they are professional football players, who, despite what people say, are actually quite good at their job and want to win. Against Napoli, Hernanes, after spending the bulk of the match plodding around the middle of the pitch like a senile turtle, suddenly became a soaring eagle and flew into the box late knocking in the equalizer. Why he wasn’t charging into the box like that for the other 85 minutes of the game is anyone’s guess, well maybe Mazzarri knows, because he probably told him to sit deep and control the Mazzalona passing cycle.
And what of Icardi? I am sure he often forgets he is actually playing football when he wanders the pitch like a lost child, such is the dearth of opportunities that come his way. He stands up there making his runs, probably knowing that they don’t matter because the ball will not be coming to him unless he goes back and gets it himself. He must surely be on his phone every night to his agent asking if Sampdoria are after a new striker because he wants to move on to a bigger club, rather than feed off scraps at this mid-table battler that Mazzarri is turning Inter into.
The sad thing facing all Inter fans is that, despite everything Mazzarri says to the contrary, Inter are not getting any better, they are getting worse. The fatigue, the injuries, they are all smoke and mirrors. Sampdoria, Parma, Cagliari, Torino, Palermo, Saint Etienne, none of these teams are world beaters; far from it in fact, most of the players in these teams would not even get customised heads in football computer games, they would simply be a bunch of generic drones bouncing around your screen. If someone gave me the choice of having Inter’s playing roster and schedule, injury list included, over any of the line-ups of these teams, I would take Inter’s faster than Moggi fixes a match. Yet Mazzarri still complains about the tough hand he has been dealt.
A quick look at the fixture list only appears to exacerbate a bad situation, after another potential bore fest against St Etienne and a banana skin against Verona, this Inter must play Milan and Roma before the month’s end, two games that could potentially heap more Mazzarri induced embarrassment on the club. With the coach burying his head in the sand and refusing to change either his tactics or formation, but putting his faith in the hope that doing the same thing over and over and over again will suddenly create change, there seems little hope of Inter putting up a challenge for the top five let alone the top three this season. The only hope is for Thohir, who must bear some responsibility for the crisis with his ill advised gift of a new contract to Mazzarri, bites the bullet and lets him go, a scenario that most Nerazzurri can only pray will happen.
Do you agree with Sam? Discuss below.

I think we are overly critic of the players who keep getting played in a wrong formation / position / system. First we criticized the old players, so we got rid of them (not that we didn’t need a change of generation). Now we are criticizing the young ones, but it’s not their fault their manager plays them in a stupid formation or doesn’t explain their role on the field good enough, and most important, doesn’t have the motivational skills a coach should possess.
I firmly believe in Mourinho’s approach to the game, and that is to be as close to every player as possible and make them believe they are as good as they can be. Trust me, that is Mou’s greatest strength, he’s a motivator. A team’s attitude and positive results are simply a product of a highly motivated team. He bought Diego Milito, an ok-ish forward from Genova, and by the end of the next season he scored two in the final of the Champion’s League. Did ANYONE expect Milito to explode the way he did? I certainly didn’t. He bought Wesley Sneijder, a totally demotivated player that rarely got playing chances at RM and turned him into a contender for World’s Best Player (which he should have won that year!). Etoo, Lucio, Maicon, Motta etc.. the list goes on and on and on…
Well said sir, well said! Mazzarri needs to leave ASAP, but the point is not to kick him out of the sinking ship, but it should be to replace him with an experienced captain who can fix the situation. All we know is kick him out RIGHT now, find an interim coach if the best is not available.
That is the dilemma. It is easy to say kick him out but the question is who to replace him with. I liked Spaletti when he was at Rome but I wonder whether these players would suit his style.
One good solution would be to make an agreement with a very good manager for the summer (Simeone etc) and go on, till then, with someone temporary.
A mediocre manager could make things worst than now…
that was… beautiful. couldn’t have said it better myself
Thanks mate!
Yep, it is absolutely true we haven’t improved, more like we’ve gone through some sort of devolution since Mazzarri’s arrived. I don’t think the players are particularly fond of him, though they may not dislike him as much as us fans.
He’s going, sooner or later. I hope he’s gone as soon as Inter have a long term plan and a good idea about his replacement.
You hope he goes as soon as inter have a long term plan ? This is inter’s 4th season without a plan do you really expect that to change anytime soon ! Every year is a year ZERO !! If inter can save this ship from sinking with Mazzarri steering it that should be asking enough – maybe even too much !!
I believe you miss my c…k more than Branca.
The sure fact is that Mazzari is for a team that has the 6th place as a goal, or to avoid being relegated. He can’t do anything with a team of Inter, Juventus or Milan size. He used to play counter attacks with Sampdoria and Napoli.
The same thing with the same success does Mihajlovic (Sampdoria) and Stramazzioni (Udinese) this year.
All these are not Inter coaching material. Inter needs someone to give the players some confidence and play dominant football, creating 3-5 chances and score 2-4 goals.
If you’ve been watching Inter playing the last 1.5 years you see that when the winger is ready to cross, there are 1 or 2 (maximum) Inter players in the box surrounded by 4-5 opposite ones. Mazzari understood that after 1.5 year and asked Hernanes or Kuzmanovic to go forward when it is about crossing. If this coach is professional the i am a professor!
The fact that i don’t really know, is which manager should fit perfectly for this Inter. Though i know that a 4-3-3 is needed more than ever!
Salutations from Greece
I know that inter didn’t miss c**K because they got alot of it during the parma game !! the next coach should play 4-2-3-1 so if you go with that formation then Seedorf and Spalletti are your best options.
I agree. We have a real lack of players getting into the box. I also think we do not play fast enough to take advantage of Icardi’s strengths which is getting the ball in behind. Our build up play is so slow that by the time it gets to Icardi he is surrounded by several defenders. We need more players making runs into the box, a more dynamic attacking system and more aggression in the pressing game.
4-3-3 would be interesting with Palacio, Osvaldo and Icardi working in tandem, particularly with Dodo overlapping on the left. But I think you would need to leave out either Hernanes or Kovacic in that case as you would need to play two deeper midfielders, maybe Medel and M’Vila. That is unless you trust Kovacic or Hernanes to play deeper and hold their own defensively!
come on man!!! bash him all you like but facts remain we were 9th the season before he arrived, he brought us to Europe (5th), if thats not an improvement then what is!?! :/ maybe we are in a “devolution” this season but not since he arrived!, give credit where its due he brought us up from 9th place to Europe and it was by no means an easy feet as the squad’s morale was down in the gutters with no proper market to speak of considering the change of ownership.
Ah, sorry, I’ve misexpressed myself. What I meant was not that he wasn’t an improvement to our state before he arrived. Results clearly show otherwise, though whether him arriving or Stramaccioni staying would have been better is a matter for discussion as Strama clearly had unprecedented problems with the players’ fitness (though, on the other hand, his own training programmes could have been part of the problem… it goes on, this discussion 🙂 ).
My point was that Mazzarri’s Inter has been stuck on the same level since he arrived – that he’s made no progress whatsoever to what he set as foundations when he arrived, especially this season, when everyone expected him to have an easier job having had the time to get to know how the club works, being bought some players that he liked (Osvaldo, Medel), not to mention the fact that he had more time to work with players like Hernanes (that was significant market activity for a time like that, Hernanes is supposed to be a game changer), Icardi, Kovacic etc.
Like I’ve said before, what worries me most is that the team is vulnerable at the hands of pretty much any opponent they face, and on most days they’re no danger at all when going forward. Whatever way you present it, he’s not been good enough (especially considering the fact that he’s the highest-paid coach in the league!) and he will be gone by the beginning of next season.
You’re absolutely right.
There is no progress since Mazzari arrived. The players are better, the time was enough to get know each other and we see an Inter team that gets in every match so defensively put in the field, as if we are going to play against Barcelona or Bayern.
There is more. He plays 3-5-2 Vidic, who is more than 10 years training and playing with great success on systems with 4 at the back, and makes him look like a clown.
Hernanes is a diamond. He can do unbelievable things with the bal. What to say about Kovacic or Handanovic?
All of these players are being misused and can’t perform under this system, which is to be played on amateur leagues.
Good points! There does not seem to be enough flexibility to be able to change the system around when he needs to. It almost looks as if he is trying to over coach the players. Putting square pegs into round holes if you will!
“an Inter team that gets in every match so defensively put in the field”
I think clueless and without an idea what needs to be done – is a more appropriate description. If we played defensively we wouldn’t have lost games or concede the embarrassing goals we have.
I wanted to say that Mazzari looks first at the back of his ass, and tries not to concede. And if Inter scores first, then looks how to keep that score and forgets what does offence mean.
Of course the term “defensively”, doesn’t mean not conceding, eventually…
He moved the team up to 5th but I think the overall results and points scored were 6 points better. In the 2012/13 season we actually looked ok for half the season then it all fell away. The problem I have with Mazzarri is that the team do not seem to be improving, you look at the style of play, the way the players operate with each other and the body language on the field, and to me, it all seems to be wrong.
with no cup competition last year are you really proud of Inter finishing 5th place?? last year in a 4 game stretch between Bologna-Samp-Parma-napoli inter collected 3 points and no wins……in 4 games in January Inter collected only 2 points and no wins……in a 4 game stretch between Atalanta-Udinese-Livorno-Bologna inter collected 3 points no wins……between Juve-Roma-Napoli-Cagliari inter collected 5 points out of a possible 24 points and no wins and you are satisfied with only 5th place ????????? that 5th place finish is an embarassment to serie A soccer….with all these dropped points how did inter even finish 5th ?? and you are proud of that result – that speaks for how desperate inter fans are to see their team win again. If strama was coach inter would have been in 3rd-4th place easily!!!!!!!!!!!
Well well well. I read you comments week after week and wonder why you keep coming back. After reading this one, which is actually well thought out, backed up by evidence and fair in its assumptions, I think I understand. As a Juventus fan you have obviously decided to spend time in forum filled with people who make sense and can discuss football in an intelligent and thoughtful manner. Something that you generally dont see in Juventus sites which are mostly full of trolls and twelve year olds who believe that the sun is orbiting the Earth.
In regards to your statement of being happy with 5th and last season. No I am not happy or proud of last season. I thought, like this season, Mazzarri was overly cautious and too often settled for draws and is a manager who is suited to taking an average team and doing well with them. Unfortunately things had gotten to the point last season with the poor squad, the disorganised state of the backroom and the injuries, that 5th became a reasonable result. Now, with a squad that is much stronger on paper with much more potential, and having spent a season together I expect more but I am not sure Mazzarri is capable of taking them to the next level. His default mode if safety first. I look at Juventus under Conte and the passion and aggression and attitude he instilled in that team. He was the right man at the right time for that club. Mazzarri I believe is not for Inter.
Despite your allegiance to that other side I hope one day you will see the error of your ways and join some real fans in supporting Inter!
As far as Conte goes, he’s a great coach, excellent motivator but as a fan, i did not want to see my team go in debt to buy better players to play a lame 3-5-2. That and he wanted Iturbe ….. paying 30 mill for Iturbe is way too much! 3-5-2 doesn’t work in Europe and italy proved it doesn’t work in the world cup and if you look at Mazzarri’s interpretation of a 3-5-2 it definetely does not work ! it’s cheaper to get a coach like allegri who can take a talented squad, teach new tactics and put his own stamp on the team. That is how a team grows. Yes I am happy with Allegri he was my first choice to replace conte but my second was Strama …… ironically they both like the 4-3-1-2 formation
i totally agree with you in context that your comment applies to this season, i think last season he improved us a lot and those problems were not that obvious like now, Young players were improved, im talking about Icardi and Kovacic, players like Nagatomo and Jonathan scored and assisted in numbers i couldn’t even dream for and i thinks its partly down to the coach, and he had to give an identity to our play so he didnt change much from his favorite formation, i dont why he doesnt change that formation now for example when most of our wing backs are injured and this is something i dont like about him, at the same time im not in favor of sacking him just yet and i think he can turns it around, anyway our start this season is nothing short of a clusterfuck and i dont know if its down to the injuries, the preparation or the coach/players going retard but i would wait for the season to end before i can completely judge him on his work this season, that is just my opinion