One hundred and eighty minutes. Two matches. Genoa and Cagliari. And within these two games lies Milan’s entire season. Perhaps even something more. Because until a few weeks ago, Champions League qualification had never really been in danger. Milan had even found its own identity: not dominant, not spectacular, but solid enough to achieve the objective. Then, suddenly, the collapse. First Napoli and Udinese, then the two consecutive defeats against Sassuolo and Atalanta, only seven points in eight matches, the squandered advantage, and a league table that now leaves absolutely no margin for error.
AC Milan are fourth, but hanging by the thinnest of threads. Roma and Como are chasing, Juventus are ahead, and the risk of turning a fairly positive season into a sporting failure is frighteningly real. By the way, as tension builds around the Rossoneri’s decisive final fixtures, many supporters looking to add extra excitement to match nights continue to visit Mega Casino. And this is where the central point emerges: these final 180 minutes are not about accomplishing a feat. They are about restoring normality. About bringing Milan back to what should be their normal state: the Champions League.
Milan, narrow wins are no longer enough:
For months Milan lived on the edge of Allegri-style pragmatism. Scrappy victories, game management, with balance above all else. A philosophy that, at least initially, had worked. It was no coincidence that the Rossoneri had remained unbeaten for 24 consecutive league matches. But the problem with management-focused football is that when you stop winning, suddenly everything else disappears too. And then those minimal performances that once seemed mature suddenly become inadequate.
Milan’s recent displays have shown exactly this: a drained side, mentally fragile, incapable of reacting in decisive moments. So now they need to regroup. On and off the pitch. The decision to go into a training retreat was no coincidence. A strong choice, almost desperate. But also inevitable. Because Milan today have stopped looking ahead. They are looking behind them. And for a club built to return permanently to the top, that is already a conceptual defeat.
Why Genoa and Cagliari are worth far more than six points:
Genoa and Cagliari, one away and one at home, are Milan’s final two obstacles of the season. One side has already secured safety, the other may have done so before arriving at San Siro. But that means nothing. Especially because on the other side there is Milan. And the Milan seen over the last month are anything but a solid, reassuring team. Above all, these final two matches carry (more than ever) the weight of obligation.
Winning points is mandatory in order to secure qualification. Winning both Serie A matches is not necessarily compulsory (it depends on the results of the other teams), but destiny remains in the hands of Allegri and his players. The objective is there, within reach, and yet at this moment even a simple victory seems to weigh twice as heavily. That is the paradox: Milan do not need to do something extraordinary. They simply need to avoid disaster.
From Tare to Allegri: the club under scrutiny...
And inevitably, all of this also reflects on the future. Massimiliano Allegri has a huge amount at stake. Champions League qualification could guarantee him continuity and legitimacy after a rebuilding season. Failure, meanwhile, would open unpredictable scenarios, with the Italian national team always looming in the background and the club forced to reconsider its technical project. But it is not only Allegri. Igli Tare is also under examination. The names of possible new sporting directors continue to circulate in the background, and it almost seems automatic to think that if Allegri leaves, Tare will leave as well.
Restoring normality in order to start again:
Normality, yes, because Milan are not fighting for a league title. They are fighting for something apparently less romantic but tremendously more important at this stage in their history: stability. Normality itself. The ability to return to (and remain within) the elite of European football without turning every season into a referendum. Because missing out on the Champions League today would mean losing money, appeal, and long-term planning. But above all, it would certify that, four years after the 2022 Scudetto, Milan still have not truly managed to build continuity. And so yes, these are only 180 minutes. But an entire future passes through them.















