In Udine you only had to hear Allegri's shouting, his fists on the tables, his calls. But during the match against Torino, the glass of his sky box blocked the sound. But if you look closely at his movements and his calls, you can tell that it was still an Allegri show.
The arrival
Massimiliano Allegri ran up the stairs of the press stand at the 'Olimpico - Grande Torino' a few seconds before kick-off. The whole central stand, packed with Milan fans, stood up to take pictures of him, greet him, and express surprise at his presence. He responded with his usual smile and a wave toward the stand and the press area. Then he stopped, full focus, and went inside his small room with a match analyst and his bodyguards, who handled their job with discipline, to protect him.
The match
As per Milan News, one detail sounds unusual, Allegri was far more angry at Udine when he was leading 3–0 than he was yesterday at 2–0 down. He had likely understood the key point, overturn the match with clarity, not with anger. That is what he did. He lived through the first half without strong gestures, looking at the computer, giving a few calls that faded in the silence of the room, and keeping a direct link with the bench. Then at halftime he picked up the phone and made the call, change the system. Rabiot pushed higher, Loftus-Cheek played close to him, and Nkunku acted as the striker. Milan gained from that right away. During this, Landucci and the staff had one clear instruction for the players at halftime, speak with calm, give confidence, reinforce belief. No shouting, no heavy criticism, only tactical talks, motivation, and one message, you turn this around. Maybe for this reason, after the calls ended, Allegri sat with calm for the rest of halftime and waited for the teams to return. Then he enjoyed the second half and the win.














