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Transfer market: Milan-Kaka, it's love again. Big shot or heated soup?

Kakà, now 31 years old, has returned to wearing the shirt that made him great, abandoning in Madrid the coach who had made him great and who should have been ready to relaunch him, that Carlo Ancelotti who instead gave the green light to his transfer under free.

Transfer market: Milan-Kaka, it's love again. Big shot or heated soup?

He dreamed of returning to Milan, just as he dreamed of staying there in that tormented summer of 2009, when he was "forced" to leave Milan after the Champions League and Ballon d'Or to settle in Spain and wear the Real Madrid shirt for four anonymous seasons, in turn dreamed of since childhood.

Kakà's return to the Rossoneri is not a dream but a reality: what seemed unthinkable, more for reasons of engagement than for the amount requested to buy him (Real Madrid, who have just made a monstrous renewal for Cristiano Ronaldo, preferred free him at no cost in order to lighten the wage bill), it has now really happened. Kakà, no longer very young (he will be 32 before the end of the season) has returned to wearing the shirt that made him great, abandoning in Madrid the coach who had made him great and who should have been ready to relaunch him, that Carlo Ancelotti who instead has given the green light to its free transfer.

Alarm bell? Not really, given that he is delighted, convinced that he is playing more in a league that he knows and appreciates (here there is no competition from Ronaldo…), and through which he is confident he can win back the Seleçao shirt for play the World Cup at home in just under a year.

The Rossoneri fans are also very happy, remembering the triumphs of those years, from 2003 to 2009, the plays and above all the goals, 70 in 193 games, and many of which scored in the derbies against Inter. The Nerazzurri cousins, on the other hand, will be a little less happy, perhaps intimidated, while at the moment excited but then intimidated he too could be the young El Shaarawy, on whom Milan had bet a lot but who had already suffered the presence of Balotelli last season. Could Kakà's return be the end of the Pharaoh and of the AC Milan rejuvenation project? Or, on the contrary, an extraordinary added value, even if once again symptomatic of a market made on the wave of emotions and thinking from year to year and not from a planning point of view?

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