
When Fabio Capello says something about AC Milan, it lands differently. This isn't a pundit filling airtime — it's a man who managed the club, won titles there, and understands exactly how the place is supposed to function. So when Capello tells Football Italia that the blame for Milan's current struggles needs to be shared around, and that none of it surprises him, that's not a throwaway line. That's a verdict.
Capello's comments, reported by Football Italia, are deliberately broad — and that broadness is the point. He isn't singling out the manager, or the board, or the players. He's saying the rot is collective. In a club culture that often looks for a single scapegoat when results turn, that framing is quietly devastating.
The fact that it doesn't surprise him is arguably the more damaging part. Surprise implies an anomaly. The absence of it implies a pattern — one that Capello, watching from outside, has apparently seen building for some time.
Milan's 2025-26 campaign has been a slow unravelling rather than a sudden collapse. The kind of inconsistency that makes it hard to point at one fixture, one decision, one signing and say: there, that's where it went wrong. Results have dipped, performances have frustrated, and the gap between Milan's resources and their output has become increasingly difficult to explain away.
That context matters when reading Capello's remarks. He isn't reacting to a bad week. He's reflecting on a trajectory.
What makes a former title-winning manager's intervention significant here isn't the criticism itself — Milan have had plenty of that this season. It's the framing. Systemic failure is harder to fix than a single bad appointment or a run of injuries. It requires the kind of honest internal audit that clubs in discomfort rarely rush towards.
Capello has been there. He knows what a functioning Milan looks like from the inside. The fact that he looks at the current version and sees something unsurprising — something that tracks — should give everyone connected to the club pause.
He didn't say it was unfixable. But he didn't say it was simple either.
When Fabio Capello says something about AC Milan, it lands differently. This isn't a pundit filling airtime — it's a man who managed the club, won titles there, and understands exactly how the place is supposed to…
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