MILAN — Clear words, a path laid out. In an interview with Sky Sport, Gerry Cardinale breaks his silence and relaunches the Milan project: an international vision, financial sustainability and an implicit promise — a lasting return to the top.
“Milan is not just a team”
The RedBird chief sets the tone right away: Milan is a global brand, not merely a football club.
The goal is to build long-term value, both on and off the pitch.
A statement that reaffirms the American philosophy: structural growth, revenues, commercial development. But without losing sight of sporting results.
Sustainability yes, but without giving up on winning
Cardinale defends the adopted model:
- Balanced books as the foundation of the project
- Targeted investments, not uncontrolled spending
- Young squad and asset development
The message is clear: no financial recklessness, but guaranteed competitiveness through planning and scouting.
Stadium issue: “A crucial step”
Once again, the central theme of the interview is the stadium:
- Infrastructure deemed essential for growth
- Desire to provide Milan with a modern home
- Openness to various solutions, but with a clear timeline
For Cardinale, without a privately-owned stadium, the gap with Europe’s top clubs remains hard to close.
On the pitch and results: the demand is clear
It’s not just about business. The Rossoneri owner raises the bar:
- A competitive Milan in Italy
- A consistent presence in the Champions League
- Concrete ambition to win trophies
An indirect pressure on the technical staff as well: results remain the top priority.
The Rossoneri moment
The interview comes at a delicate stage of the season:
- The team in the race for European qualification
- Some inconsistency in results
- High media attention on tactical decisions and the transfer market
Cardinale does not go into operational details but reaffirms his trust in the club’s structure.
The bottom line
American vision, European heart.
Cardinale does not promise immediate revolutions, but rather solid and lasting growth. The Milan of the future, in his words, will be stronger because it is more stable.
The challenge now is to turn the project into results. Because at San Siro — and beyond — the time for ideas is short: winning is what matters.






