Mauro Icardi

Should we Sell Icardi in the summer of 2019/20


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Jane The Virgin

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If he refuses real, and our management doesnt force him out (giving him the flue and the bench like sneijder), LGI material.
 

JJM

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Inter7

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If he refuses real, and our management doesnt force him out (giving him the flue and the bench like sneijder), LGI material.


He is already LGI in my books.... scored a hattrick vs Bilan and his fav opposition is rube.
 

javier_zanetti <3

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We need to sign him on new contract with 200-300M release clasue.
 

Shark

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If not Real Madrid then PSG will be at our door soon enough. I'd like to point to my post from back in August.

We have to update his release clause asap. Increase it to 150m -200m or something. Because I'm quite certain PSG are gonna come knocking in 2018.

Cavani is ageing and he isn't as much a star attraction as he used to be. How many young center forward stars are there? Lukaku just went to ManU for big money - he isn't leaving anytime soon. Similar case for Morata. Harry Kane wouldn't want to leave England plus he seems like a loyal guy. And Mbappe may join real this mercato.
Can't think of any other young high profile targets.

So that leaves PSG with Icardi. The current 100m clause should be peanuts for Qatar, and PSG could circumvent FFP again. To convince Icardi of their "project" with huge wages shouldn't be a problem as well.

Wanda will be a pain in the ass yet again I fear. I don't mind selling Icardi since we may have Schick lined up as replacement. If we do sell him, we need to milk the shit out of the buyer. Selling Icardi for 100m would be a joke in this crazy market.

Mbappe went to PSG. But they're still probably looking to replace Cavani.
Moreover, if Icardi's trend continues we can easily slap a 200m+ release clause. Some people were saying not to include a release clause at all, but I can see our owners giving discounts left and right because we're gentlemen and all.
 

JJM

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Bla bla he is staying here

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Candreva Crosses

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Imagine that young force in PSG daaamn, Neymar-Icard-Mbappe
 

varmin

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This rumour is most probably bs. I don's see Ronaldo feeding Icardi :) The only way is if Real plan to sell the former.
 

Besnik

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We are safe with Icardi though, he wants to stay here, besides I'm pretty sure Real Madrid will go all in for Harry Kane in the summer, meanwhile PSG have a complete attack department with Cavani, Neymar and Mbappe.
 

Skid Rock

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Moreover, if Icardi's trend continues we can easily slap a 200m+ release clause. Some people were saying not to include a release clause at all, but I can see our owners giving discounts left and right because we're gentlemen and all.

The thing is people treat the release clause as if it is some sort of savior from moneybags, which is precisely the opposite to what release clauses actually do in current market situation - they set a price tag for a player that makes it easier for clubs like PSG or Real or City to buy players they want really bad, as it gets the current club completely out of any negotiation on the transfer provided the club actually bids the price.

Meeting the release clause triggers a situation where the current owners have no right to decide the fate of their own player - only a slight chance to persuade, which they will have anyway. Neymar's case is exemplary - the guy had a 200m+ release clause, and no one expected that any club would seriously try to match it. Yet, PSG did not give a slightest shit (the only emerging issue was to scheme the cash-flows so that PSG could tell UEFA they could shove their FFP rules up their asses) - they matched the price tag. The rest is history. And what exactly did Barcelona earn from the transfer? 200m? That's absolute nonsense. It's a one year transfer budget, and to be honest, that's pretty insignificant for a team of Barca's level. The competition is just too high.

If one thinks setting a 200m release clause could help us keep Icardi or at least sell him at a reasonable price - one is very badly mistaken. Real did a good job like ages ago when they've set like 1bln release clause for Ronaldo. That is the release clause that actually tells every other club to suck a bag of dicks. 200m isn't. Even 300m isn't. Cause lets face it - if Real/PSG wants a great CF, they will choose among the best, and the choice is very limited, and very likely Icardi would be the cheapest option for the 300m we would be ready to sell him for. Big clubs will bid big time and selling Icardi for 300m will not earn us any money, as we would lose our captain, our main star, the player that wins us matches. We'd need to spend precisely the same amount to offset the potential effect (competitive, financial and marketing), and there's no guarantee the team will remain on the same level. So what's the point of selling him for 200-300 mln? What issues would it help us to solve?

If we really want to keep Icardi, it's rather 500m+ release clause (that would get us rid of any financial issues for years to come) or none at all, so that everyone could kiss our ass.
 

JJM

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best thing Inter did in the past 5 years... was buying Icardi for 13mil...then comes Perisic,Skriniar,Borja...
 

Hasan

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If Real comes with release clause he's gone. There is absolutely no way that Wanda will miss all that glamour plus 7-8 millions contract that we can't follow.

"I'll always be Interista but bla bla bla " and goodbye :)
 

Javier'sSon

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best thing Inter did in the past 5 years... was buying Icardi for 13mil...then comes Perisic,Skriniar,Borja...

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tonyclifton

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Based on statistics alone, Icardi is already LGI in my book. So deadly, he is like the less robust version of Vieri. I used to find reasons to criticize him back then, but damn how many times has he proven me wrong.
 

Javier'sSon

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The numbers don't tell the whole story but they do give a sense of just how lethal Mauro Icardi is as a striker.

Still only 24, two years ago he became the youngest Capocannoniere since Paolo Rossi in 1978. The Argentine has already scored more than 100 goals in Italy. This is his fourth season in a row in double figures and we're only in November. He's the first player to achieve that with Inter since Christian Vieri. And if Icardi completes another hat trick to go with the one he netted in the Derby della Madonnina in October -- the first in this storied rivalry since the days of Diego Milito -- he will move into the top 10 Nerazzurri goalscorers of all-time in Serie A.

He is one of the best strikers in the world and yet his profile in the game doesn't reflect that, at least outside of Italy. It actually lags behind his talent. Icardi is often an afterthought in discussions about the world's most devastating No. 9s. He's better known for a love triangle and publishing a book that set Inter's ultras against him.

In the opinion of Inter coach Luciano Spalletti, a lot of people have got the wrong idea about Icardi. He's a centre-forward misrepresented and misunderstood. "In the box, Mauro's the best," Spalletti says. "Off the pitch, he's a grandissimo professional." True, the book in particular showed poor judgement. But when it comes to how Icardi lives, trains and prepares for games, his manager hit the nail on the head.

Take this summer for example. Icardi missed nearly all of preseason after sustaining an injury at his first Argentina training camp in four years. And yet he returned on the eve of the campaign looking sharper than ever, scoring a brace in each of his first two games. Big ones too in wins against Fiorentina and away to Roma. Think about that for a moment. Icardi had barely trained with the team all summer, working out on his own. To get into the condition he found himself required great discipline.

He now speaks and acts like a captain too. There was a time when Icardi would put an anonymous performance down to the shortcomings of his teammates and the inadequate service he received. Throwing them under the bus. If we return to the book one last time, calls to strip Icardi of the armband were very loud indeed amid all the furore it caused. Make no mistake, it has been quite the learning curve. But Icardi has matured in how he conducts himself and in terms of putting side before self.

The assist stats were already an indication of that in the first half of last season. This year you can point to the goal-line clearance he made in the 1-0 win against Genoa, which Spalletti considered "worth a goal" in its value to the team. Actions like that, together with the experience he has accumulated over the last year, seem to have helped Icardi assume more presence and authority as a leader. He doesn't care who scores as long as the team wins, a lesson learned from last season. "I scored 24 times," he embittered, "but we didn't get into Europe."

A little ticked off after Inter nearly threw away a 3-0 lead in a 3-2 win against Sampdoria, Icardi was self-critical after the game despite scoring another brace. He was angry with himself for hitting the post in the first half and misplacing a few too many passes. "I've got to improve in these things," he said. The disappointment writ large on his face and those of his other teammates after the draw with Torino before the international break spoke volumes about the mentality ingrained by Spalletti in such a short period.

For some reason, it feels more significant to highlight these aspects of Icardi's season than the 13 goals he has scored in 13 games. They show character development. We all know about how clever and dangerous a finisher he is for Inter. What a great header of the ball he's become. His innate appreciation of time and space. How he senses a centre-back or goalkeeper's weakness in a split second, calculating the right angle and best shot to select in the blink of an eye. A lightening quick thinker, the former Inter centre-back Daniele Adani says "Icardi steals time" from defenders. Often all he needs is a sniff. His first goal in the derby came with his first touch in the penalty area. We're talking acute concentration, elite predatory instincts. Icardi is like the shark that finds the one drop of blood in the ocean.

In some respects, it was entirely predictable he would go to another level this season. Spalletti turned Francesco Totti into a goal machine and transformed Edin Dzeko from flop to Capocannoniere last year. The brief with Icardi was different though. He has always been prolific. Not every other year. Always. Spalletti has worked on making him more complete. The seven assists he laid on last year should be enough to silence those who insist he is a goalscorer and that's it.

But Spalletti has got Icardi coming short and pulling wide to destabilise defences, drag centre-backs with him and open up space for midfield runners. He has him just outside his own penalty area instead of on the halfway line when Inter are defending a corner. Spalletti wants Icardi involved at all times. Watch his second goal against Milan. Icardi nicks the ball from Lucas Biglia in his own half, starting a move that he finishes with a frankly incredible mix of contortion and coordination.

Hidden a little because of Inter's inability to qualify for the Champions League during his time at the club, not to mention Argentina's unwillingness to give him more than seven minutes of game time until Jorge Sampaoli's appointment, it hasn't stopped Europe's elite from registering their interest in Icardi. He has a €110 million buy-out clause in his contract for clubs outside of Serie A. When Undici put it to Icardi that the figure looks cheap, he laughed: "After the last transfer window maybe you're right. But this is what we discussed with the club and decided to do. Everyone at the club knows how I think, though, and what I want. We're all very cool about it."

Spalletti naturally thinks Inter need to make the clause inaccessible. "Mauro should get the highest clause possible, like Isco's [€700m] and all the other top players." However, Spalletti shouldn't worry. True, loyalty probably isn't the first word that springs to mind when people think of Icardi but his loyalty to Inter has never been in question. If he didn't love the club he would have moved on by now. Serie A's decadence, the absence of Champions League football, and his fallout with the ultras were reasons enough to go. But he elected to stay and unlike some of his peers, Icardi, while realistic that things could change, never answers a question about his future with "you never know." He commits to Inter. "I see myself here. I hope to go on a long journey with Inter. I want to win something with this shirt."

Of course, the influence of Javier Zanetti, now vice-president, is strong. Icardi not only respects Inter's former captain for his place in the club's history and the fact he's a fellow Argentine but because "he showed an attachment for Inter and stayed until the end of his career." How depressing and simultaneously refreshing is it that saying something along those lines should make Icardi seem different.

It's about as odd as the football world not fully waking up to the size of Icardi's talent. Winning something, playing at the World Cup and the Champions League will surely change that. It's about greater exposure. It's only a matter of time.

http://www.espn.co.uk/football/ital...tarting-to-get-global-recognition-he-deserves
 

JJM

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Release clause 1billion EU eh?!

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Quantum

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He should be appointed prime-minister of a sovereign nation or something. What a guy.
 
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