Football Season Guide

Internazionale

In


Davide Frattesi (mid)(Sassuolo, loan made permanent); Josep Martínez (gk)(Genoa); Carlos Augusto (def)(Monza, loan made permanent); Marko Arnautovic (att)(Bologna, loan made permanent); Piotr Zieliński (mid)(free agent); Mehdi Taremi (att)(free agent); Martín Satriano (att)(Stade Brestois, end of loan); Joaquín Correa (att)(Olympique Marseille, end of loan); Gaetano Oristanio (mid)(Cagliari, end of loan); Andrei Radu (gk)(Bournemouth, end of loan); Filip Stankovic (gk)(Sampdoria, end of loan); Eddie Salcedo (att)(Lecco, end of loan);

Out


Lucien Agoumé (mid)(Sevilla, loan made permanent); Gaetano Oristanio (mid)(Venezia); Mattia Zanotti (def)(Lugano); Valentín Carboni (mid)(Olympique Marseille, on loan); Franco Carboni (def)(River Plate, on loan); Nikola Iliev (mid)(Botev Plovdiv); Zinho Vanheusden (def)(KV Mechelen, on loan); Sebastiano Esposito (att)(Empoli, on loan); Ebenezer Akinsanmiro (mid)(Sampdoria, on loan); Davy Klaassen (mid)(released); Stefano Sensi (mid)(released); Alexis Sánchez (sp)(att)(released); Juan Cuadrado (sp)(mid)(released); Emil Audero (gk)(Sampdoria, end of loan);  

The past season is one to remember for Inter as they managed to bring home their 20th Scudetto and their 8th Italian Super Cup, while having an early exit from the Champions League, at the hands of Atletico Madrid following a penalty shootout, and the Coppa Italia, losing to Bologna. Inter immediately took the domestic league by storm, winning 10 out of the initial 12 fixtures, and, having set themselves at the top of the table, they would never leave it until the end of the campaign. They always looked in control and never slipped during the season, finishing the campaign 19 points above second-placed Milan. They held both the best Serie A attack, with 89 goals, and the best defence, having conceded only 22 times. Definitely a good job for coach Stefano Inzaghi, who was close to be sacked in the previous season, at his first year in charge. Having dominated the league with such ease and having undergone a major change at the club, with some American fund taking over, Inter decided to act as little as possible in the transfer campaign. First of all, they let go an array of players, whose contribution was too limited in the previous campaign. This was certainly the case of midfielders Sensi, too injury-prone, and Klaassen or winger Cuadrado, who hardly ever played either. Aging striker Sanchez also left, while back-up goalie Audero returned to his parent club. In terms of new arrivals, they invested on a back-up for Sommer in goal, hiring Martinez from Genoa, and then signed 2 players on a free, in midfielder Zielinski, who is likely to replace Mikhitaryan, now close to 35, and Taremi, who is set to become their main back-up striker, with aging Arnautovic being told to find himself a new club. However, Inter invested the most acquiring midfielder Frattesi permanently: with 8 goals and 7 assists overall, he proved a precious asset from the bench.

Target


Inter obviously are the main candidate for the Scudetto but it won’t be easy this time around: the concurrency grew and the management invested too little on the market despite an aging squad.