• “Hope Rekindled or Reality Check? Milan Stumble After Derby High and Leão Erupts, as Title Dreams Fades
    Mar 17 2026

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    Fresh off an electrifying derby win over AC Milan’s city rivals Inter Milan, hope was back in the air for the Rossoneri faithful. With the gap narrowing and momentum building, the Scudetto dream felt alive again… until a frustrating 1-0 defeat to Lazio brought everyone crashing back to reality.

    In this episode of Davy & Chin Talk Milan, the guys break down the emotional rollercoaster — from derby euphoria to Olimpico heartbreak.

    Was Rafael Leão justified in his on-field outburst, or did it expose deeper cracks within the squad? Davy defends Milan’s star boy, arguing he’s the one player expected to carry the team in big moments — but was he let down by his teammates and tactics?

    Meanwhile, concerns grow around Christian Pulisic’s goal drought and his lack of chemistry with Leão. Is it just a dip in form, or something more tactical?

    The conversation also turns to Massimiliano Allegri’s system. Is the rigid 3-5-2 setup limiting Milan’s attacking stars? And did switching to a 4-3-3 come too late — especially after Leão was subbed off just as the system began to favour him?

    Davy praises the team’s unity in the derby and highlights the surprising inclusion of Pervis Estupiñán, but questions remain about defensive vulnerabilities that ultimately cost Milan crucial points.

    With the title race slipping and Champions League qualification becoming the realistic goal, Chin and Davy go head-to-head:


    Is there still a twist in Milan’s season… or is this where the dream ends?



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    38 mins
  • Davy & Chin Break Down AC Milan’s Big Win, Rising Stars, Winter Transfer, and Scudetto Hopes
    Feb 6 2026

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    On this week’s episode of Davy & Chin Talk Milan, recorded a day after Milan’s convincing 3-0 victory over Bologna, we break down all the action. Goals from Ruben Loftus-Cheek, Nkunku, and Rabiot set the tone for an in-depth discussion on Milan’s approach compared to their draw against Roma the previous week. Davy praised the team’s attacking mindset, while Chin highlighted Bologna’s recent poor form as a factor in the dominant win.

    We dive into Max Allegri’s surprising lineup decisions, including Loftus-Cheek replacing Leao and Athekame stepping in for Alexis Salamakers, and discuss the continued use of the 3-5-2 formation. Despite absences, Milan’s clinical performance underscores Allegri’s effective game management, keeping them in the Scudetto conversation, even with a five-point gap behind city rivals Inter and 15 games remaining.

    The debate on Milan’s defence heats up with Koni Dewinter’s impressive form seemingly earning him Tomori’s spot in the starting XI. Davy acknowledges Tomori’s experience and unique contributions, while Chin appreciates Dewinter’s composure and balance on the field. Both highlight the contrasting strengths of these center backs, from Tomori’s power and pace to Dewinter’s calmness and consistency.

    In midfield, we examine Youssouf Fofana’s role alongside Rabiot and Modric. Davy values Fofana’s mobility and physicality over Ricci’s style, noting his ability to control the box despite occasional misses. Chin agrees but points out Fofana’s limited scoring. We also discuss the potential impact of Jashari next season and why Modric remains essential.

    The episode also touches on Milan’s winter transfer window, including the failed Mateta transfer due to medical reasons. While both agree the club wasn’t overly ambitious, they see it as reasonable given the squad depth and weekly match schedule.

    Davy remains optimistic about Milan’s Scudetto chances, while Chin is more cautious, focusing on securing a top-four finish. Tune in for thoughtful analysis, lively debates, and insights on Milan’s season so far.


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    36 mins
  • Davy & Chin Discuss AC Milan's Unconvincing Performance Against Roma, Allegri's Tactical Doubts, & Scudetto Reality Check
    Jan 27 2026

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    In last night’s episode of Davy & Chin Talk Milan, we break down AC Milan’s recent run of unconvincing performances, starting with the chaotic win away at Como. Chin believes Milan were fortunate to take all three points and questions whether Massimiliano Allegri is the right long-term solution. In his view, the current style clashes with Milan’s identity, relying too heavily on defensive football and counterattacks — an approach he doesn’t believe can succeed in Europe.

    Davy agrees the performances have been far from convincing, but offers a different perspective. He argues that Allegri is doing what’s necessary to grind out results and keep Milan on track for a return to European football next season. Given Milan’s recent transfer strategy, which doesn’t suggest a clear Scudetto push, Davy feels Allegri deserves some understanding rather than outright blame.

    The conversation then shifts to Milan’s 1–1 draw against Roma at the Olimpico, where both hosts agree Milan were second best and arguably lucky to come away with a point. Davy believes the issue isn’t Allegri’s formation but his player selection — pointing to the lack of chemistry between Nkunku and Leão, especially in transition, where possession was repeatedly lost and build-up play suffered. Chin, however, places the responsibility squarely on Allegri, arguing that the players look uncomfortable executing a system that doesn’t suit their strengths.

    We also discuss Modrić’s fatigue and Allegri’s limited options from the bench. Davy stresses that squad players must step up when key starters are tired or out of form, noting that Milan’s bench has failed to provide the necessary impact in recent matches.

    Finally, we debate the Scudetto race. Chin admits he’s already lost belief in a title challenge, convinced that Inter Milan looks unstoppable and that Milan’s inconsistency will be costly. Davy, while acknowledging the growing gap, insists the title race isn’t over yet — even with Milan sitting five points behind their city rivals.

    A balanced, passionate, and honest discussion on where Milan stand — and where they might be heading.


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    51 mins
  • Dropped Points, Boring Football & a Late Striker Fix – What’s Really Wrong With Allegri's Milan?”
    Jan 14 2026

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    Davy & Chin Talk AC Milan is back in action — and so are the debates.

    In this first podcast episode of the New Year, the boys dive deep into Milan’s summer mercato and ask the big question: Did Milan over-trim the squad and fail to fix key problems?

    Davy believes the Rossoneri made a major mistake going into the season with Santiago Giménez as the only recognized striker, leaving the attack unbalanced. Chin agrees the striker situation was risky — but argues that trimming the squad was necessary given Milan’s reduced fixture list this season.

    The conversation heats up as the duo breaks down Milan’s struggles against bottom-table teams, where 11 crucial points were dropped, with opposing views on what’s really to blame:

    Is it the lack of a proper No. 9?

    Are players like Leão and Nkunku misused outside the box?

    Or is Max Allegri’s rigid and cautious 3-5-2 system killing creativity and flair?

    The episode also covers Milan’s frustrating performances against Genoa and Fiorentina, where four points slipped away, before turning to the arrival of Niclas Füllkrug from West Ham — what he brings and whether he’s enough to change Milan’s fortunes.

    The show wraps up with a preview of Milan’s upcoming away clash against Como and what Allegri’s men must do to avoid another costly slip.

    And lastly, Chin disappoints Davy with his Scudetto prediction.

    This is Davy & Chin Talk AC Milan.


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    37 mins
  • How Milan Beat Inter: Discipline, Maturity, Pulisic Winner, And A Night Of Magic From Mike
    Nov 24 2025

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    A derby decided by patience, structure, and one ruthless run into the box. We open with gratitude for 5,000 downloads, then dive straight into how Milan absorbed Inter’s early pressure, trusted the block, and leaned on Mike Maignan’s brilliance to keep the door open until Christian Pulisic slammed it shut. Allegri’s plan looked nothing like the frantic derbies of the past: compact lines, disciplined wingbacks, and selective pressure that turned emotion into control.

    From there, we tackle the theme that now defines Milan’s season: big-game excellence vs small-game frustration. The 3-5-2 thrives when opponents want the ball, but against low blocks, the lack of a true No. 9 and limited creativity becomes the sticking point. We debate shape vs personnel, why a January striker is non-negotiable, and how a fit Pulisic-Leao pairing changes the geometry of every attack. Our midfield breakdown centers on role clarity—Modric’s composure, Rabiot’s positioning, and why Fofana should be a destroy-and-give operator instead of a do-everything box-to-box.

    At the back, we examine Tomori’s recovery safety net, Gabbia’s positioning, and Pavlovic’s aggression, plus the emergence of Battezzaghi as a smart, disciplined wingback who reads wingers’ strong feet and wins small duels that matter. We also get into the spiky Tomori-on-the-ball debate, not to pick sides but to show how build-out choices shape chance quality. Then it’s the title race: why Roma look like a durable dark horse but lack big-game wins, what Napoli and Inter signal for the winter stretch, and why a one-game-per-week schedule magnifies chemistry and sharpness.

    If you want tactics you can actually spot on the pitch, honest player assessments, and a clear view of where a title push lives or dies, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a fellow Milanista, and tell us: should Milan change shape against low blocks, or double down and sign a pure No. 9?

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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Davy & Chin Discuss Milan's Toothless Attack vs Pisa, and Preview AC Milan vs Atalanta
    Oct 27 2025

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    San Siro felt warm again as Pioli returned to applause, but the glow faded fast once the football started telling the truth. We break down a nervy win over Fiorentina and a costly draw with Pisa to reveal a simple, stubborn reality: Milan controls games without turning that control into clean, repeatable chances. The biggest fault line runs through the No. 9—Leão’s two recent goals help, yet playing him centrally mutes the very chaos that makes him elite on the wing. Meanwhile, Santi Gimenez’s drought is now a tactical and psychological problem, not just a cold streak.

    We get specific on profiles and partnerships. Leão thrives wide with space to burst; he struggles as a back-to-goal reference against compact blocks. Pairing him with a true striker or second forward (Nkunku deserves a start) restores width, penalty-box presence, and better spacing for late runners. Creativity remains thin without Pulisic and an often-absent Loftus-Cheek, and the midfield loses its balance when Rabiot sits: Modric can’t conduct if Fofana is forced to progress instead of protecting. Saelemaekers wins praise for availability and work rate—incremental growth matters—but the final third still needs a sharper edge.

    We also look ahead. Atalanta in Bergamo is precisely the kind of match where selection clarity matters: choose profiles that create one more clean chance than the low block concedes. January should be precise, not busy—one efficient box striker who attacks crosses and second balls, and a versatile defender to protect wide-central channels. Overbuilding risks minutes crunch in a World Cup year; one backup per position is the sweet spot. Turn sterile dominance into sharp chances, and the table will move.

    If you’re riding this title chase with us, tap follow, share the show with a fellow Milanista, and drop your take: start Leão wide with a true 9, or keep the experiment alive? Your call could be the difference between grit and glory.

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    39 mins
  • Davy & Chin Discuss Juventus Stalemate, Leão's Debate, Maignan’s Future, and Previews Milan vs Fiorentina
    Oct 13 2025

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    Turin gave us a clean sheet, a roar from Maignan, and a knot in the stomach about missed chances. We walked through that draw with Juventus from both angles—control and composure on one hand, a lack of bite on the other—and used it to ask bigger questions about how this Milan wins the matches that define a season.

    We get candid about Rafael Leão: the movement is back, the threat is real, but the finishes have to land. In a 3-5-2, the margins are thin; your forwards must be ruthless and your off-ball work relentless. We break down what that means for Leão’s role, what Giménez still offers with pressing shape.

    Midfield minutes matter now. Modrić can still run a game at 40, but we talk about protecting his legs, creating a clear pathway for Ríči, and keeping Fofana’s engine central to the press. We also tackle the Maignan contract straight on: elite shot-stopper, distribution that starts attacks, timing that swings results—this is a spine decision you want settled early. With Saelemaekers out, we examine the right flank, where Athakame’s defensive stability needs help from patterns, not isolation, to generate better chances.

    Then it’s Fiorentina. Pioli returns under pressure, which makes this one tricky, but the plan is simple: keep the defensive platform intact, flip play quickly to their weak side, and get Pulisic and the striker on the end of clean looks. We share our predicted approaches up top and the in-game tweak that can tilt tight matches.

    If you’re tracking AC Milan tactics, Allegri’s rotation philosophy, Leão’s development, Maignan’s future, and the Serie A title race, this is a deep, no-fluff breakdown. Listen, subscribe, and drop a review—what’s your XI for Fiorentina, and who should start up front?

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Beating Napoli, Building Belief: Milan’s Statement Win, Allegri’s Simplicity, and Pulisic’s Spark
    Sep 29 2025

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    One goal in three minutes can rewrite a week’s worth of doubt. We break down how Milan seized control against Napoli with a crisp transition, a disciplined midfield triangle, and a back line that finally looks like a unit. Christian Pulisic stands out for his decision speed and relentless box arrivals, while Luka Modrić—yes, at 40—quietly conducts the match by dictating tempo, closing lanes, and telling everyone where to stand. Add Rabiot’s engine and Fofana’s late runs, and the 3-5-2 feels less like an experiment and more like muscle memory.

    We also go deep on the details that decide big games: how an early lead feeds Allegri’s “keep it simple” plan, why Napoli kept getting pushed wide, and what changed once the left flank started closing space on Politano. The penalty and red card? We dissect the sequence without losing the larger point—organized suffering wins titles. Through it all, Maignan’s presence reduces chaos, and the back three’s consistency keeps the box calm.

    Up front, the conversation turns pragmatic. Leão’s return adds gravity even as he plays his way to full sharpness, while Santi Giménez’s work rate meets the non-negotiables but raises questions about his finishing. We talk striker profiles, January needs, and how to preserve Modrić’s legs without losing the blueprint. Depth is solid in midfield, thinner at wingback, and promising at center-back if young profiles are developed in the right roles.

    This is a turning-point performance that raises the ceiling: clearer identity, smarter transitions, cleaner game states, and two match-winners who tilt defences. We close by eyeing Juventus with a simple mandate—own the middle, manage loads, and trust the structure. If you felt the belief grow, you’re not alone. Subscribe, share with a fellow Milanista, and drop your Juve prediction in the comments.

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    1 hr and 17 mins