Milan vs Cagliari: the result, the title race, and the football kit worth owning
AC Milan edged Cagliari 2-1 at the San Siro on Saturday, May 15. A late Leao winner kept Milan within striking distance of Inter for the Serie A title. Cagliari, fighting relegation, get nothing for a performance that probably deserved a point.
How the game actually went
Milan started in their usual 4-2-3-1 with Leao on the left, Pulisic on the right, Reijnders behind the striker. Cagliari sat deep in a 5-4-1, looking to counter through their lone striker. Standard relegation-survival ball — frustrate the favorites, take what comes.
Cagliari got their goal first, against the run of play. A defensive mix-up in the Milan backline let their striker in for a tap-in around the 30-minute mark. The crowd at San Siro went quiet. For 15 minutes Milan looked nervous.
The equalizer came from a Reijnders set piece in first-half stoppage time — header from Tomori at the back post, no question goal. From there Milan controlled most of the second half but couldn't break Cagliari's low block until Leao cut in from the left in the 84th minute and curled one into the far corner. The kind of goal only Leao scores. The kind Milan needed.
What the result means for the title
Milan stay three points behind Inter with three matches left. Mathematically alive. Realistically requiring an Inter slip-up that Inzaghi's team hasn't shown signs of producing. Milan's last three games are winnable; Inter's are tougher. The 5% chance is real.
For Cagliari, the loss is a body blow. They sit in the relegation zone now and need to win at least two of their last three to have a chance. Their remaining fixtures include Inter at home, which is essentially a free loss. Survival looks unlikely.
The kit I'd actually own as a casual fan
If you're going to own one piece of football kit, don't buy a current-season replica jersey. They're $130 of polyester that will look dated in 18 months. Three better options:
A vintage Italian football jersey. A 90s Milan home jersey on eBay with proper red-and-black stripes runs $40-80 and looks better with every passing year. The 1994 Milan kit in particular is genuinely timeless.
A wool football scarf. Italian-made bar scarves from any of the historic clubs. A wool Milan scarf with the 1899 founding date is the kind of object that pairs with a wool coat at a December match. $30-50.
A pair of decent training shoes. Not match cleats — the everyday astroturf or sala shoes. Adidas Sambas at $100 are the cult classic and they look right with jeans, joggers, and a casual jacket.
What to watch in the run-in
Milan's three remaining games: Genoa (away), Roma (home), and Venezia (away). On paper all winnable. Roma is the real test — they're playing for European qualification and won't roll over. If Milan drop points there, it's over.
Inter's run-in is harder: Lazio (away), Como (home), and a final-day visit to Torino. Lazio is the one where Inter could slip. If they do, and Milan are perfect, the title goes to a final-weekend showdown.
For the neutral fan, the next two weekends are when Serie A turns from "interesting season" to "memorable season." Pour something Italian. Get the pizza going.
If you're new to Italian football
Three weekends to fall in love with the league. Paramount+ has the US rights. The 9am Eastern Saturday games are the catalogue of slow-build tactical chess matches that don't translate to American highlight reels. Watch a full 90 minutes once. The pacing is different from the Premier League and once you adjust, it's genuinely better viewing.
A book on Italian football history is the cheap way in. The John Foot "Calcio" book is the standard. $20, two evenings, and you understand why Italian fans care this much.
Milan and Cagliari were never the highlight match of the weekend. They're the match that tells you how the season is actually structured. The big clubs fighting the small clubs for survival on the same pitch — that's the league. The title race is the headline; survival fights are the actual football story.
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