So, Christian Pulisic has a new manager at AC Milan. Is this a good thing? The American was truly excellent under Stefano Pioli for about 18 months, and has, in various stretches, looked good under three new managers since. Paulo Fonseca managed 24 matches and did a decent job with Pulisic. Sergio Conceicao was the battle-hardened interim guy who never really got the best out of him.
And now we have Max Allegri, the oft-maligned Italian, here for his second stint at Milan. Allegri is a curious manager. His teams are, typically, excellent defensively. They play Italian football as it was always envisioned: physical, hard-to-beat, opportunistic. Allegri sides will never blow you away. Instead, they're here to beat you down by pure attrition. A good Allegri team frustrates you, gives you nothing, and, basically forces you to give up.
In many ways, it's a defensive player's dream. But for attackers, it can be a bit limiting. When structure is everything, attacking players who like to play with freedom tend to suffer. And that is the crucial trade-off. Milan are going to be a nightmare to play against - but they're not going to score loads of goals.
That leaves Pulisic in a bit of a tricky situation. And Allegri doesn't quite know how to use him. Pulisic has already played a bit of everywhere under the new boss, Allegri floating him around from position-to-position as he finds the right spot. Twice, though, Pulisic has been used almost as a striker, often the furthest player forward in a team without an attacking focal point.
On paper, it doesn't make loads of sense. Yet analyze things a little deeper, and it could be an intriguing set up that gets something different out of Pulisic's arsenal.
GOAL US looks at how the USMNT star's game could change under the new manager.







