Every few months, Italian football rediscovers its favorite headline: “Inter Milan in crisis.” It’s a script as old as the club itself.
One loss, one injury, or one managerial change, and the chorus begins again, doubt, panic, speculation. Inter is finita (Inter is finished)!
But this time, reality has overtaken the negative narrative. After Simone Inzaghi’s departure and a wobbly start to the season, Inter Milan was once again written off.
Yet within weeks, the team has flipped the story entirely. Under Cristian Chivu, the so-called “club in transition” has quietly rebuilt itself into one of Europe’s most consistent and disciplined sides.
A 4–1 dismantling of Cremonese at San Siro confirmed it. This wasn’t just a win, it was a proof of the team identity, structure, and resilience.
This was a match with only one direction. Lautaro Martínez opened the scoring, but the night belonged to Inter’s Ange-Yoan Bonny. The Frenchman made his first San Siro start with a goal and an assist.
Federico Dimarco tore up the left side of the field with his trademark intensity, while Nicolò Barella sealed the evening with a powerful midfield strike.
Even a late goal from ex-Inter striker Bonazzoli couldn’t alter the story: this was Inter’s most complete performance of the season.
Since their last defeat, against Juventus, Inter have scored 13 goals and conceded only 2, playing with balance, belief, and purpose.
As Gazzetta dello Sport put it: “Il manifesto di come l’Inter si sia lasciata alle spalle il ‘Mar di Inzaghi’ per iniziare a solcare onde diverse.”
In English: Inter has left behind the turbulence of the Inzaghi era to sail smoother, stronger waters.
And the numbers back it up. Chivu has rotated 22 players in just eight matches, building depth and trust across the squad.
A managerial choice that demonstrates confidence rather than desperation. Inter’s play now feels coordinated, collective, and controlled, everything a true leader’s project should look like.
While Inter grows stronger, its traditional rivals seem trapped in cycles of frustration. Juventus, the club perennially shielded by sections of the Italian press, continues to unimpress.
After five consecutive draws, including a dull 0–0 against AC Milan where the Rossoneri even missed a penalty, Juve looks flat and uninspired.
They’re a team struggling to rediscover its soul and fighting to survive the league stage of the Champions League.
Inter, meanwhile, has collected five straight wins in all competitions, climbing to third in Serie A and looking every bit like a title contender once again.
Cremonese arrived at San Siro unbeaten and ambitious. They left humbled and outplayed.
The contrast between Inter’s precision and Juve’s stagnation captures the current Serie A mood: the supposed crisis club is the one actually growing.
Meanwhile the “stable” giants are paralyzed by indecision.
Cristian Chivu’s rise to the first team has surprised many, but it shouldn’t. He embodies the same humility, discipline, and intelligence that defined his playing career.
Under him, Inter’s football has found balance: disciplined defense, rapid transitions, and an even stronger identity.
He doesn’t shout, he builds. He doesn’t posture, he prepares. Chivu’s leadership is built on clarity, not charisma, and it’s working.
What we’re witnessing is not just tactical improvement but cultural restoration.
Inter no longer feels like a collection of talented individuals reacting to pressure; it feels like an organization operating on purpose.
Inter’s resurgence isn’t just a sports story — it’s a leadership case study that CEOs, entrepreneurs, and policy leaders can learn from.
What Inter teaches is that crisis management is not about noise or denial, it’s about patience and getting to work.
When you focus on values instead of headlines, the results eventually speak louder than any rumor.
This is the essence of Italian resilience, the art of rebuilding with pride, turning mediatic noise into focus.
The same mindset applies to business, politics, or personal growth: you don’t silence critics with words, but with results.
Inter’s current run is not a coincidence; it’s the product of accumulated leadership decisions, of saying no to panic, yes to patience, and trusting the process even when others don’t see it yet.
From “crisis” to control, Inter Milan is offering a masterclass in leadership and focus.
Under Chivu, the team has rediscovered what Italian excellence truly means: discipline without rigidity, ambition without arrogance, and confidence without complacency.
Therefore, as Juventus stalls and Milan struggles for consistency, Inter quietly moves forward, one calculated victory at a time.
In sport, business, or life, there’s a timeless lesson here: when everyone else is chasing noise, those who stay composed write the next chapter.
In conclusion, Inter Milan isn’t just back, they’re back in charge.
By: Andrea Zanon
Andrea Zanon is the co-founder of Confidente. He is an international advisor who has worked for financial institutions and entrepreneurs on sustainability, international affairs and development.
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