Having concluded the championship run, for a few weeks theInter and its fans seem to have fallen into the script of Groundhog Day. In the successful and entertaining 1993 film, which gave birth to a real genre made up of missable remakes in various ways, meteorologist Bill Murray is forced to relive the same day over and over again. In the long run, he manages to break the film’s spell which at the beginning seemed like a great fortune, then becomes a sort of torment and finally turns out to be an opportunity to become a better version of himself.
If it will end like this also with the exhausting affair of the loan contracted in 2021 by Suning with Oaktree, 380 million euros including interest, to be repaid by 20 May. Given banking times, that means today. The script has been more or less the same for some time: first a new loan with Pimco seems to be around the corner, then some hitch occurs and even today it closes tomorrow. There isn’t much time left, so the final word will be written soon. The latest twist sees Oaktree himself putting up resistance. Suddenly, the theme becomes that everyone wants Inter.
The truth is that few people know the truth, and they have signed a confidentiality agreement which makes the leaks rarefied, as well as relatively reliable, certainly not the fault of those who try to collect them. The certainty is another: the loop will break shortly, and as strange as it may seem, the best guarantee of a club is not always the ownership, but rather the management. In the case of Inter, even in the event of a change of hands, it would be unthinkable to touch the management. And so all in all the fans can rest assured.