A night to forget, a morning to restart from
The final matchday of Serie A left San Siro wrapped in silence, broken only by chants of protest. The defeat against Cagliari — a side already mathematically safe and with nothing left to play for — confirmed AC Milan’s failure to qualify for the Champions League, condemning the Rossoneri to the Europa League next season. A result that triggered an immediate and furious reaction from the Milanista faithful.
Protests inside and outside the stadium
Even during the match, the 74,000 fans at San Siro did not hold back their whistles and protest chants. At the final whistle, the situation escalated into a full-blown organised demonstration, with banners and chants directed at the entire board. Representatives of the Curva Sud ultra group displayed clear messages against Giorgio Furlani, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Geoffrey Moncada and Paolo Scaroni.
The scenes outside the ground confirmed a climate of deep frustration and disillusionment among the fanbase, who are demanding a concrete signal from the ownership. Words are no longer enough: actions are what matter now.
Allegri in the press conference: the same answers, the same questions
After the match, the only face from the club to appear in front of the cameras was manager Massimiliano Allegri. The coach handled the press conference with his usual composure, without committing to anything. When directly asked about resignation, his answer was blunt: «Now is not the moment — we need to analyse things with a clear head.» A reply that did little to calm the mood.
No other director made a public appearance. No statement, no dialogue with supporters. A silence that, at this stage, speaks louder than any words could.
What the fans are demanding: out with those responsible
In the hours that followed, the voice of the Milanista fanbase grew louder and more unified: immediate resignations for those deemed responsible for what is being called a disastrous season. The names in the firing line are clear:
- Giorgio Furlani, the club’s CEO, held accountable for the overall mismanagement of recent years;
- Zlatan Ibrahimovic, senior advisor, whose role has failed to deliver the expected results;
- Geoffrey Moncada, head of scouting and technical area, accused of building an inadequate squad;
- Paolo Scaroni, club president, seen as out of touch with what the fanbase needs;
- Massimiliano Allegri, head coach, called to answer for the team’s collapse in the second half of the season.
The seasonal balance sheet is heavy: after an eighth-place finish the previous campaign, Milan close this year outside the top four, sliding towards the Europa League despite a squad built to challenge for Champions League football.
The turning point: Milan deserves better
The Rossoneri supporters have once again shown an unwavering attachment to their colours. This protest does not come from hatred, but from a deep love for a club that has written unforgettable chapters in the history of world football. AC Milan has the resources, the history and the passion of its people to become great again: what is needed now is for the right people to be placed in the right positions.
As we noted in our recent coverage of the potential revolution at AC Milan, the signs of imminent change were already in the air. Now the fanbase is demanding those changes become a reality — and fast.
The Rossoneri faithful do not give up: they protest, they rebel, but they always come back — to San Siro, to push their team forward. Because Milan is bigger than anyone who runs it. And it is from that awareness that the rebirth must begin.






