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RE: Inter's tentacles face the final stress test

in #sports5 days ago

Assalamu-Alaikum!

"Quite an interesting perspective there. The referee gathering at San Siro may come off as suspicious, sparking valid concerns about fairness. However, let's be honest, this is not something new to Inter alone. Italian football has a longstanding tradition of controversial incidents — remember Calciopoli shaking Juventus to the core? Almost every top club has faced their own share of scandals, from financial gains to influencing referees.

The underlying problem lies in the system itself: weak institutions, concentrated power, and biased media coverage from all angles. What truly matters is ensuring fair treatment for all, regardless of whether it's Inter today or Juventus two decades ago. Fans deserve a cleaner sport, free from personal vendettas. Let's hope this investigation is conducted with thoroughness and transparency this time around. ⚽"

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The Calciopoli trial concluded, after three levels of jurisdiction, with a number of established facts:

  • No league match was fixed;
  • The behaviour of Inter’s directors was worse than that of Juventus’s directors, but the wiretaps remained hidden for five years – just long enough for the statute of limitations to run out.

From that day on, Italian football changed forever. The true story of Calciopoli is not the one they told, but another: those who never won (Moratti and Inter) sought a pretext to get rid of their rivals.
Today, the picture that is emerging is far more serious: a web of corruption has formed around Inter, involving the mafia, politics, finance and sport.
But this has always been Inter’s story: a club accustomed to resorting to any means, to rigging everything just to win.