UK & World News

  • 31 January 2013, 12:13

Mario Balotelli: Milan Fans Clash With Riot Police

Footballer Mario Balotelli's return to Italy has already caused a storm - after fans celebrating his proposed move to AC Milan clashed with riot police.

An ecstatic crowd turned up to greet the outgoing Manchester City striker at a restaurant where he was due to dine with officials from his new club.

Video footage shows the 22-year-old - wearing a garish orange baseball cap and AC Milan scarf - jumping up and down with fans outside the city's Giannino restaurant.

But later on police used tear gas to disperse a group of fans who let off flares and pelted officers with bottles and chairs.

One police officer was taken to hospital with head injuries sustained during the rioting, according to reports.

Balotelli is in Milan to finalise a transfer worth an initial 22m euros (£19m) and has been swamped by fans and photographers since his arrival at the city's Malpensa airport.

Shortly after arriving he told the Milan channel: "I'd wanted to play for Milan for such a long time.

"Obviously I played for other teams and couldn't come. But when there was a chance, I ran."

There had been doubt over the viability of the deal earlier in January after Milan president Silvio Berlusconi branded Balotelli a "rotten apple".

But the remark was retracted and did not seem to be an issue as the player took the call from the scandal-plagued politician during his medical.

AC Milan's vice-president Adriano Galliani said: "It is a dream come true and something that we all wanted, with the president Silvio Berlusconi at the forefront."

Balotelli scored 30 goals in 80 appearances for Manchester City, but will be equally well-remembered for his four red cards, clashes with team-mates and a series of bizarre off-field mishaps.

The emergency services had to be called after a firework was set off in the bathroom of his home, triggering a fire, in October 2011.

The following day he famously celebrated a goal in the Manchester derby by revealing a t-shirt emblazoned with the question: "Why always me?"

In his last month in Manchester he briefly threatened to take City to a Premier League tribunal in a dispute over a club fine and had a training ground bust-up with boss Roberto Mancini.

Balotelli's mentor gave his blessing to the move after his team's game against QPR.

Mancini said: "It is important for Mario - to be back in Italy, back with his family and to play for Milan.

"This is for Mario because we love Mario and he deserves to have this chance."

 

Update:

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what do you think?

7 comments

Vladtheinhaler .

8:11am on 31/1/2013

Italian fans celebrated his proposed move........ so did the English, mate.

Score: 6

Jasmin Louise

9:20am on 31/1/2013

Hot headed idiots!!

Score: 4

NickJenkins3

9:20am on 31/1/2013

Egotist idiot, good riddance.

Score: 7

Grant Baines

10:01am on 31/1/2013

The prem needs characters like him, a league full of James Milners and Jordan Hendersons is just boring

Score: 6

Lorgar Aurelian

10:36am on 31/1/2013

I'll miss him. He was a character and you don't get many of them in football.

Score: 4

david

11:50am on 31/1/2013

PLEASE STOP paying these parasites 200.000 a week to kick a ball about ,,the world is in depression ,,people cant get a job ,and a lot of people are working for 5£ or less per hour,and the common working man cant make in his lifetime what these maradonas get for 6 weeks work,,a pro footballer should get up to 5.000 a week this should be more than enough to live the rest of there lives.15 years as a pro footballer is about what they play..and before people go nuts i have helped run a amatuer football team for 25 years and this is hard but rewarding,,till i see what pro footballers get paid

Score: 3
2 replies

executecodered

1:10pm on 31/1/2013

The wages are relative to the money that the sport generates, I agree that £200,000 per week is obscene, but I don't begrudge footballers the wages they get because if they were only paid up to £5,000 a week, where does the rest go? Profit for greedy owners I'd wager, people pay to watch this guys & It's a multi-billion dollar business, in a crass way, it is justifiable.

executecodered

1:29pm on 31/1/2013

*these guys..

johnny_1234

3:03pm on 31/1/2013

good riddance

Score: 2
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