Derby della Madonnina

Derby Milano
City or region Milan (Italy)
First contested Chiasso, 18 October 1908
Teams involved Milan & Internazionale
Most wins Milan (108)
Most player appearances Paolo Maldini (56)

Derby della Madonnina, or the Milan Derby as it is sometimes known, is a football match between the Italian clubs Associazione Calcio Milan and Football Club Internazionale Milano. It is a hotly contested local derby and is one of the most followed derbies in football.[1] Along with the Rome and Turin derbies, it is widely considered one of the major crosstown derbies in the Serie A, so much so that only selected referees may officiate whenever these teams meet. It is a biannual fixture in the Italian football league Serie A; the derby, however, has also taken place in the Coppa Italia and the UEFA Champions League.

It is called "Derby della Madonnina" in honour of one of the main sights in the city of Milan, the statue of the Virgin Mary on the top of the Duomo, which is usually called "Madonnina".

Contents

Rivalry culture

On December 16, 1899, Alfred Edwards and others founded the Milan Cricket and Football Club. Edwards, a former British vice-consul in Milan and a well-known personality of the Milanese high society, was the club's first elected president. Initially, the team included a cricket section, managed by Edward Berra, and a football section managed by David Allison. The Milan team soon gained relevant notability under Herbert Kilpin's guide. The first trophy to be won was the Medaglia del Re (King's Medal) on January 1900, and the team later won three national leagues, in 1901, 1906 and 1907. The triumph of 1901 was particularly relevant because it ended the consecutive series of wins of Genoa, which had been the only team to have won the title prior to 1901.

In 1908, issues over the signing of foreign players led to a split and the foundation of F.C. Internazionale Milano. In the past, Inter was seen as the club of the Milan bourgeoisie (nicknamed bauscia, a milanese term meaning "braggart"), whereas Milan (nicknamed casciavit, meaning in the milanese dialect "screwdriver", with both reference to the blue-collar worker, and to "awkward") was supported mainly by the city's working-class and trade unionists, a section of whom were migrants from Southern Italy.[2] However in the recent years this difference has mitigated, since Milan is now owned by former conservative Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi and Inter is owned by a centre-left businessman, Massimo Moratti.

During the 1960s, Inter was the more successful club, winning the European Cup twice in a row and the Intercontinental Cup twice in a row. However during the late 1980s and the 1990s Silvio Berlusconi's Milan was the more dominant team, with many victories both in Italy and in the European competitions.

The Mazzola and Rivera years

In the 1960s the Milan derby saw two big stars of Italian football come face to face. One of the most representative players of Inter was Sandro Mazzola, the son of the Torino player Valentino Mazzola (who along with most of his Torino teammates, died in a plane crash in 1949 after dominating Serie A for four seasons). His Milan counter-part was Gianni Rivera, nicknamed Golden Boy for his talent. This era saw brilliant derby matches and an increasing rivalry: while Milan won the European Cup in 1962–63, Inter followed it up with back to back success in the following years. Milan again won the title in 1968–69. During this successful period for both teams, Milan were coached by Nereo Rocco and Inter were led by Helenio Herrera, both coaching many notable players.

The rivalry continued in the Italian national team, where the two players would often not play together, with one usually being substituted by the other at halftime. Rivera ended up losing the starting line-up to Mazzola in the 1970 final against Brazil, in which Italy was defeated 1–4 by the South Americans. He would later enter in the 84th minute, after Italy was already crushed. Many coaches and fans saw this as a mistake by the then coach Ferruccio Valcareggi, as the more dynamic Rivera could have changed the shift of the match.

The 1990s and present years

Another notable rivalry era was in the late 1980s and early 1990s when the Dutch trio of Marco van Basten, Frank Rijkaard and Ruud Gullit played for Milan and the German trio of Andreas Brehme, Jürgen Klinsmann and Lothar Matthäus defended the Inter colors. Even though in that period Milan were dominating Italian and European football, this rivalry is mainly remembered for a famous 1990 World Cup match: the Dutch team had entered the competition as one of the favourites based on the fact that they had won the previous European Championship in 1988, and the trio had enjoyed great success at Milan at the European level with back-to-back European Cup titles in 1989 and 1990. Milan had won the 1988 Scudetto and Inter captured that title the following year.

When the Netherlands met Germany in the World Cup, the match was played at the home ground of Inter and Milan, the San Siro, and for many it seemed like a national team version of Milan derby. The high tempered game ended in defeat for the Dutch as Rijkaard got sent-off after spitting on German forward Rudi Völler. Germany won the game 2–1 with two of the Inter players Klinsman and Brehme scoring, a moral victory for Inter fans.

Milan, however, continued to have success both locally and internationally: they built a squad under Fabio Capello's lead later nicknamed as the invincibles, that won Milan's fifth European Cup in 1994, when they beat Johann Cruyff's Barcelona "dream team" 4-0 in one of the most one sided European finals ever. Capello's Milan reached the final of the European competition three times in a row.

On the other hand, Inter's long wait for a major title began after 1989, only to end in 2006, when the Calciopoli scandal stripped Juventus of the 2005–06 title and handed it to the team. Inter went on to win the 2007 Serie A title as well, with a record-breaking run of 17 consecutive victories, on the way winning both fixtures against Milan. The second Milan derby was notable, as Ronaldo had previously starred with Inter in the late 1990s.

Red-and-black superiority at international level

If in the domestic gathering the two teams are about at the same point, in worldwide stage Milan dominate over Inter undoubtedly. This was confirmed twice, in 2003 and 2005, during the matches between them for the UEFA Champions League. In the semi-finals of the 2002-03 season, both derbies finished equal (0-0;1-1), but Milan won on "away" goal, as the away side in the second leg. One of the most notorious derby matches was the second leg of the Champions League quarterfinal on April 12, 2005. With Milan leading 1–0 thanks to an early Andriy Shevchenko goal and a clear 3-0 scoreline on aggregate, Inter's hardcore supporters became infuriated, after a controversial decision by referee Markus Merk. Various debris were subsequently thrown onto the pitch, but soon escalated to lit flares.

As Dida attempted to clear bottles in order to take a goal kick, a flare hurtled down from the upper deck and struck him. Merk halted the match at the 74th minute. After a 30-minute delay, in which firefighters were called in to remove the burning flares from the pitch, the match was restarted. Dida, however, was unable to continue, and was substituted by Christian Abbiati. Less than a minute later, though, Merk finally abandoned the match after more flares and debris rained down. The match was awarded as a 3–0 victory, totaling a 5–0 aggregate, to Milan. Inter were fined justifiably €200,000 (£132,000) – the largest fine ever handed down by UEFA – and were ordered to play their first four Champions League matches behind closed doors in the 2005–06 season as punishment.

The historic black-and-blue quintuple

Inter's historic 2010 year rekindled the flame of rivalry on several levels:

List of matches of the last decade

Season Date Home team Score Away team Competition Home goal scorers Away goal scorers
2002-03 01-09-2002 Milan
1–0
Inter "Pro Vittime di Linate" (friendly) Tomasson 69' -
23-11-2002 Milan
1–0
Inter Serie A Serginho 12' -
12-04-2003 Inter
0–1
Milan Serie A - Inzaghi 11' (pen.)
07-05-2003 Milan
0–0
Inter UEFA CL - -
13-05-2003 Inter
1–1
Milan UEFA CL Martins 84' Shevchenko 45'
2003-04 05-10-2003 Inter
1–3
Milan Serie A Martins 79' Inzaghi 39', Kaká 46', Shevchenko 77'
21-02-2004 Milan
3–2
Inter Serie A Tomasson 56', Kaká 57', Seedorf 85' Stanković 15', Zanetti 40'
2004-05 24-10-2004 Milan
0–0
Inter Serie A - -
27-02-2005 Inter
0–1
Milan Serie A - Kakà 77'
06-04-2005 Milan
2–0
Inter UEFA CL Stam 46', Shevchenko 76' -
12-04-2005 Inter
0–3
Milan UEFA CL Shevchenko 30'
2005-06 11-12-2005 Inter
3–2
Milan Serie A Adriano 24', 93', Martins 61' Shevchenko 39', Stam 85'
14-04-2006 Milan
1–0
Inter Serie A Kaladze 71', -
2006-07 28-10-2006 Milan
3–4
Inter Serie A Seedorf 53', Gilardino 79', Kaká 94' Crespo 17', Stanković 22', Ibrahimović 50', Materazzi 72'
11-03-2007 Inter
2–1
Milan Serie A Cruz 56', Ibrahimović 76' Ronaldo 40'
2007-08 23-12-2007 Inter
2–1
Milan Serie A Cruz 36', Cambiasso 64' Pirlo 18'
04-05-2008 Milan
2–1
Inter Serie A Inzaghi 53', Kaká 58' Cruz 78'
2008-09 28-09-2008 Milan
1–0
Inter Serie A Ronaldinho 36' -
15-02-2009 Inter
2–1
Milan Serie A Adriano 29', Stanković 43' Pato 72'
2009-10 26-07-2009 Inter
2–0
Milan WFC (friendly) Milito 4', 75' -
29-08-2009 Milan
0–4
Inter Serie A - Motta 29', Milito 36' (pen), Maicon 46', Stanković 70'
24-01-2010 Inter
2–0
Milan Serie A Milito 10', Pandev 67' -
2010-11 14-11-2010 Inter
0–1
Milan Serie A - Ibrahimović 4' (pen.)
02-04-2011 Milan
3–0
Inter Serie A Pato 1', 62', Cassano 90' (pen.) -
2011-12 06-08-2011 Milan
2–1
Inter Supercoppa Italiana Ibrahimović 60', Boateng 69' Sneijder 22'

NOTES:

1. 45 minutes friendly matches not included.

2. 2005 Champions League 2nd leg Match awarded 3-0 to Milan after crowd trouble by Inter fans.

Biggest wins

The winning team scored four goals or above with two or more goal difference from the defeated team (unofficial matches not included).[3]

Milan

Inter

* All time goal difference record

Head to head (only in main active competitions)

The following table lists the history of meetings between Milan and Inter, updated to the most recent derby of 6 August 2011.

Matches Milan wins Draws Inter wins Milan goals Inter goals
Campionato
176 60 52 64 239 255
Coppa Italia
23 9 7 7 32 22
UEFA Champions League
4 2 2 0 6 1
Supercoppa Italiana
1 1 0 0 2 1
Totals
204 72 61 71 279 279

Trophies

Team Domestic European Worldwide Total
Serie A Coppa
Italia
Supercoppa
Italiana
Total European Cup
Champions League
Cup Winners' Cup Europa League
UEFA Cup
Fairs Cup
Super Cup Total Club World Cup
Intercontinental Cup
Milan 18 5 6 29 7 2 - 5 14 4 47
Inter 18 7 5 30 3 - 3 - 6 3 39

Top Goal scorers

Player Club(s) League Cup Europe Total
Andriy Shevchenko Milan 8 3 3 14
Giuseppe Meazza Inter, Milan 13
Gunnar Nordahl Milan 11
István Nyers Inter 11
Enrico Candiani Inter, Milan 10
José Altafini Milan 7
Alessandro Altobelli Inter 7
Roberto Boninsegna Inter 7
Benito Lorenzi Inter 7
Louis Van Hege Milan 7
Aldo Boffi Milan 6
Aldo Cevenini Milan, Inter 6
Attilio Demaria Inter 6
Sandro Mazzola Inter 6
Pietro Serantoni Inter 6
Kaká Milan 5 - - 5
Ronaldo Inter, Milan 5 - - 5
Filippo Inzaghi Milan 4 - - 4
Dejan Stanković Inter 4 - - 4
Clarence Seedorf Inter, Milan 4 - - 4
Zlatan Ibrahimović Inter, Milan 3 1 - 4

Players played for both teams

Milan then Inter
Inter then Milan

Notes

External links