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Inside Inter Milan's Asia tour: Antonio Conte already feeling the pressure

Written by 
Published in Soccer
Saturday, 27 July 2019 13:05

SINGAPORE -- It was clear that word had spread around town that Inter were on the way back from their morning training session. All of a sudden, a crowd gathered outside the JW Marriott, the Philippe Starck-designed hotel where the team were lodging in Singapore. Tens of Inter fans hung around the foyer, an eclectic bunch of people for which the South Korean artist Lee Lee Nam's seven-meter-high wall installation, popping and mixing in the entrance, felt like an analogy.

There were locals, expats and practically every nationality from the Southeast Asia region. Kitted out in new and old replica jerseys, the names and numbers on the back reflected what an odd time it is to be an Inter supporter. Aside from the guy who had bought stock early in Andrea Pinamonti, the teenage striker Inter sold (with a buy-back clause) to Genoa this summer, the other members of the blue and black flock congregating along this stretch of South Beach were identifying with an excommunicado, Mauro Icardi.

Icardi was not on the bus returning from Choa Chu Kang stadium, where Inter had completed the first of their daily double sessions. Sent home from Inter's first training camp of the offseason in Switzerland, Icardi had effectively been quarantined, made to train alone as far from the team as possible, while the club awaited in hope -- and, for now, in vain -- for the right offer to sell him. Stripped of the captain's armband in February after the latest in a series of provocations that split the dressing room, there is no way back for a player who, at 26, is already Inter's eighth all-time top scorer and had the chance to eventually succeed Giuseppe Meazza at the top.

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"The Icardi situation is very clear, the club was very clear," Antonio Conte would say in a news conference before the July 20 meeting with Manchester United in the International Champions Cup. "He is out of Inter's project." Despite there being more than 10,000 kilometres between them, Icardi would still find a way to irritate the club by making an impromptu trip to Ibiza while the rest of the squad were sweating it out in Singapore.

'Frustrated is a big word'

When Inter's transport finally arrived and the players and coaching staff filed into the lobby, security had to intervene to protect only one of the Inter party from the autograph and selfie hunters.

Raised in Belgium but of Indonesian origin, Radja Nainggolan has a huge following in this part of the world. He stopped, signed autographs and smiled, emerging as the biggest rival to the Inter colour-coordinated Lamborghini Urus parked outside the hotel for the title of most popular photo opportunity with fans. And yet when game day arrived, Nainggolan would not even make the substitutes' bench.

Conte and Inter's general manager, Beppe Marotta, had been clear at the coach's presentation to the media two weeks ago: Nainggolan is in the same boat as Icardi. He crossed the line last season. It doesn't matter that his skill set is exactly what Conte wants from a midfielder. The goal he scored to clinch Champions League qualification on the final day of last season apparently changes nothing. Nor does his presence on tour.

Those who thought it was indicative of a rethink on the club's part were wrong. For all the compassion shown to Nainggolan amid the news of his wife's fight against breast cancer, the club is not wavering its stance regarding his future. Conte has ideas for Inter's midfield, and they do not include the 31-year-old who likes a smoke and a late night on the town.

The prevailing sentiment in Singapore amounted to this: The team is here, just not the team everyone hoped to see. It was one thing for the fans to feel that way, another entirely to learn that no one felt it more than Conte. Barely a fortnight after his unveiling as Inter's new coach, he gave the opposite of the vibe of being on honeymoon in Asia, instead cutting the same figure he did for much of his second year at Chelsea.

Inter have already bought four players for Conte. Leaving aside the gnarled Uruguayan defender, Diego Godin, who joins for free after a sparkling stint at Atletico Madrid, they have committed €101 million in fees to sign the new recruits. If a series of performance-related bonuses are met and activated, the €49m deal for Cagliari midfielder Nicolo Barella could end up breaking the club record for most expensive signing ever. The problem, as Conte saw it, was writ large on the team sheets for the Lugano and Manchester United games.

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Starting up front in both matches were Samuele Longo and Sebastiano Esposito, the former a 27-year-old centre-forward about to go out on loan for a 10th time, the latter the next big thing out of Inter's academy, a 17-year-old playmaker already part of Mino Raiola's stable who, for all the hype, still looks like a boy playing a man's game.

The solution, as Conte saw it, could be found down the sideline in the United dugout at the National Stadium. Romelu Lukaku wore a blue and black training top and left the ground with Inter's emerald-coloured away shirt, but he remains a United player. Asked if he was frustrated about the lack of progress in closing a deal for the Belgian striker, Conte said: "Frustrated is a big word." Over the course of his answer, it became clear it was not big enough.

Inter haven't bought all the players he wants, nor have they sold all the players he wants rid of. Lukaku and Edin Dzeko are not on board yet. Icardi and Nainggolan still are. Buyers for Joao Mario and Borja Valero are yet to be found, and the clock is ticking. Without the money from their sales, Inter can't deliver Conte's top targets.

"I'm optimistic," Conte bluffed. "Still, I expected we'd be further along. Problems need solving. We're behind and need to get our act together because, as I like to say, time waits for no one. You all know how important it is to me to have the players at my disposal."

Conte's strategy of ratcheting up the tension continued after the 1-0 loss to United, as he concluded publicly that Ivan Perisic doesn't have the stuff to play as the left wing-back in his system. Conspiracy theorists among the press pack speculated whether or not this constituted signalling of a different kind. Less Perisic representing a bad fit for Conte's system, more of a "GoFund Lukaku" alternative.

The pressure is on, and Conte appeared to question whether decision-makers at the club felt it as much as he did. His reputation as a serial winner -- with three Serie A titles as Juve boss and a Premier League title with Chelsea since 2011-12 -- means people are expecting instant success, and Conte knows it. Inter's season ticket allocation at San Siro sold out in a flash, and nine years without any silverware has only heightened anticipation. Millions of Inter fans consider Conte the best chance of ending that drought.

'When the games that matter come around, we'll be ready'

In Nanjing, China, the home of Inter owners Suning, Conte seemed to walk back his demands, striking a more realistic and diplomatic tone providing expectations are lowered, too. Anyone familiar with Conte, though, knows he will not settle for second place and the messaging within the camp is very different from that without.

"I'm confident," Antonio Candreva said after the United defeat, and he isn't the only one. His teammate, midfielder Roberto Gagliardini went further. "I'm convinced it's going to be a great year for us. It's only the beginning and there's a lot of work to do, but when the games that matter come around, we'll be ready."

As for Barella, he didn't have to join Inter. Former club Cagliari accepted an offer from Roma before coming to agreement with the Nerazzurri, but there was never any doubt in his mind about where he wanted to go. "I was totally convinced by Inter's project, I'm an ambitious kid," he said. "I think I've joined an ambitious club with a great coach, a great club. They want to improve, I want to improve, so I think I've joined the best club for me."

There's still a lot of work to do on and off the pitch. United, Juventus and Spurs all attracted more fans in Singapore. The Straits Times described Inter's arrival as "generally an inconspicuous affair," and but for a couple of thousand at the National Stadium, the crowd was almost entirely red. "Today was Old Trafford," Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said. "It felt like we were at home. The atmosphere was unbelievable."

When Inter's goalkeepers came out to warm up, Tommaso Berni applauded the crowd, thinking the roar from the stands was for them. Little did he know United's players were running out behind him. The International Champions Cup hype man, busy highlighting the players to look out for, elicited a big reaction while listing off the names of David de Gea, Paul Pogba and new signing Aaron Wan-Bissaka. When he switched to Inter, it was evident Samir Handanovic and Stefan de Vrij, both fine players in their own right, didn't capture the imagination in quite the same way.

The absence of a superstar with a truly international profile hit home to all but the magnificent Inter Club Indonesia, who did the Curva Nord proud. Led by a megaphone-wielding capo ultra, they marched to the ground, sang Inter songs and unfurled the choreography they brought with them from Jakarta.

In Nanjing, Inter's "second home," roughly 5,000 fans greeted the team at the airport. Juventus anticipated that Wednesday's Derby d'Italia would be a bit like playing at San Siro, so it came as a something of a surprise that their Chinese fans outnumbered Inter's. Call it the Cristiano Ronaldo effect. Put it down to this decade belonging to Juventus, the irresistible draw of glory, and factor in the efforts made to internationalise the club.

All told, it served as a reminder of the task ahead of Conte and Inter. The "little war machine" he created at Juventus is now a global juggernaut, and taking it down represents the biggest challenge of his career.

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