AC Milan’s transition from last season to the current one made a change of pace, ideas, and perspective necessary. The decision made at the end of May 2025, which brought head coach Massimiliano Allegri back to the Rossoneri, stemmed precisely from this need: to regain certainty. In a sense, the right coach at the right moment. Someone who had already been through similar situations, someone used to navigating, "at cruising speed", to quote Max himself, through difficult, heavy seasons filled with pressure.

Order in the chaos:
He had already done it at Juventus, and he did it again at AC Milan, restoring order where chaos had previously reigned, while also becoming a central figure in building the new squad, contributing to the arrival of major names such as Luka Modric and Adrien Rabiot.
Until a few weeks ago, the Rossoneri’s plan seemed perfectly aligned with its objectives. Start again with Allegri in order to return to the UEFA Champions League competition and perhaps even try to play a leading role in the title race. Then something jammed. Because Massimiliano Allegri’s Milan slowly began to lose balance and conviction.
From the moment the Scudetto race definitively slipped away, the team collapsed above all from a mental standpoint. It was precisely there that all the other limitations emerged: a squad incapable of handling pressure, but also a team that too often remained without alternatives, without a Plan B, without a real technical or tactical change of direction in difficult moments. And this is where Max Allegri, inevitably, carries significant responsibility, as relayed via those at Milan Press.
The belief inside the fanbase, however, has not fully faded, with many still convinced a Champions League spot is within reach, even turning to markets and prediction platforms, looking for smooth cashouts thanks to 1xBet minimum withdrawal as part of the broader match build-up culture around the club.
The moment to prove it:
With two matches remaining, Milan now finds itself incredibly at risk even for fourth place, after squandering a substantial advantage over the chasing teams. This is the moment for responsibility and mental strength; this is the moment when Allegri must show why he was chosen to lead this rebuilding process.
If Max truly is the man of certainty, pressure, and high-stakes finales, this is the moment to prove it. Otherwise, beyond the rhetoric, the aesthletes of football and the result-oriented pragmatists alike, those who had raised those doubts from the very beginning will inevitably be proven right.















