Daniele Dallera, on the pages of Corriere della Sera, commented on Milan's defeat against Fiorentina yesterday:
"Fonseca, on the eve of the match with Fiorentina, insisted on telling everyone that he saw 'improvements, a team in growth...'. Yes, he was talking about his Milan. They were promptly beaten by Fiorentina, conceding goals that would make kids at a football school go crazy if they made such mistakes."

He added:
"The second goal by Fiorentina, scored by Gudmundsson, came from a goal kick by De Gea, which the Rossoneri will dream about at night, having saved two penalties (here Fonseca isn’t to blame: it’s up to Theo and Abraham). It's right for a coach with great ambitions to be a visionary, to see-understand-interpret beyond human limits, and who knows, his eyes may legitimately notice 'improvements.' But one must not exaggerate; it’s dangerous to detach from reality. And Milan's situation is concerning."
Two certainties for Milan, explains the journalist:
"It's difficult to evaluate this team; they alternate good plays with unforgivable actions, especially tactically and mentally. Two certainties emerge: if they continue to play like this, thinking that defense is optional, like those unnecessary and annoying features in new cars (they exist and are even costly), they won't get far. The second: we fear that Fonseca's position, with the national team break, will come into question again. And it’s natural for it to be this way. It’s a law of football."
Video shows Pulisic asking to take the penalty as Abraham ignores him
