Galliani Hints At £55m Kaka Sale
Adriano Galliani revealed in a meeting with shareholders today that AC Milan are ₤24 million in debt, and hinted that it could be necessary to offload Brazilian superstar Kaka in order to balance the books.
The 63-year-old has all but assumed the role of club president since Silvio Berlusconi vacated his post earlier this week.
And in an attempt to assuage the fears of investors as the Rossoneri prepare to mount an assault on the summer transfer market, Galliani insisted that all it would take is one player sale to wipe out the club’s debt – though not just any player, of course.
“To get the books back in order it would be enough to sell Kaka to Real Madrid for £55m,” he said.
The earnestness of Galliani’s statement is debatable, but the shockwave of speculation that it will undoubtedly send rippling throughout the football world is not.
It has been mooted that Milan may no longer be the spending power they once were, as they have failed to introduce any great amount of youth or superstar quality into their squad in recent times – Alexandre Pato being the obvious exception.
Some saw the ₤30 million sale of Andriy Shevchenko to Chelsea in 2006 as a sign that Milan had crested the hill, and news that they could look to offload Kaka will only further ingrain the belief some hold that the Rossoneri cannot afford to keep their marquee players.
Adriano Galliani revealed in a meeting with shareholders today that AC Milan are ₤24 million in debt, and hinted that it could be necessary to offload Brazilian superstar Kaka in order to balance the books.
The 63-year-old has all but assumed the role of club president since Silvio Berlusconi vacated his post earlier this week.
And in an attempt to assuage the fears of investors as the Rossoneri prepare to mount an assault on the summer transfer market, Galliani insisted that all it would take is one player sale to wipe out the club’s debt – though not just any player, of course.
“To get the books back in order it would be enough to sell Kaka to Real Madrid for £55m,” he said.
The earnestness of Galliani’s statement is debatable, but the shockwave of speculation that it will undoubtedly send rippling throughout the football world is not.
It has been mooted that Milan may no longer be the spending power they once were, as they have failed to introduce any great amount of youth or superstar quality into their squad in recent times – Alexandre Pato being the obvious exception.
Some saw the ₤30 million sale of Andriy Shevchenko to Chelsea in 2006 as a sign that Milan had crested the hill, and news that they could look to offload Kaka will only further ingrain the belief some hold that the Rossoneri cannot afford to keep their marquee players.