2021-22 FIRST HALF : RUNNING WITH THE BIG BOYS
The first half of the 2021-22 season would see Fiorentina live up to their potential, at least in Italy, as the team would pick up right where they left off last season. Vincenzo Montella would have the most trouble dealing with the Champions League, at first they appeared to be out of their element but managed to right the ship and put up some stunning results.
CHAMPIONS LEAGUE DRAW
GROUP F
Manchester City (England)
Lyon (France)
Fiorentina (Italy)
Shakhtar Donetsk (Ukraine)
This did not work out well for Fiorentina, but it could clearly have been worse. Manchester City, still managed by Pep Guardiola, continue to be a global force and are heavy favorites to win this group and the Champions League. Lyon are going to be very tough competitions, led by Julian Draxler they have a talented squad that should help them get by Fiorentina. Shakhtar Donetsk are not going to be easy to beat, especially in Ukraine, Fiorentina will likely need to beat them twice if they have any chance of advancing.
MATCH OF THE FIRST HALF
Champions League (A) : Manchester City 1 - Fiorentina 2
With Fiorentina ripping through Serie A the Champions League was a rude awakening. They opened up the group by losing 1-0 to Manchester City and 2-0 to Lyon before halting their descent with a 1-1 draw at Shakhtar Donetsk. The loss to Lyon was particularly disappointing as they outplayed the hosts but gave up both goals on set pieces. The team that showed up in the Champions League looked completely different from the one crushing Serie A up to that point, the draw with Shakhtar Donetsk put Montella in a never ending series of must-win games to finish out the group. Fiorentina was able to do that at first, beating Shakhtar Donetsk 4-0 while Lyon and Manchester City drew 1-1 to give Montella a terrible gauntlet to run.
The 1-0 loss to Fiorentina at home was not encouraging for a trip to the Etihad. With Manchester City looking up at Lyon, who beat them in their first meeting, Fiorentina was now standing between Guardiola and a place in the next round. Manchester City came out in their 4-1-2-3, a formation Montella has trouble with, and few expected Fiorentina to be able to pull this one off.
At first it looked like Guardiola would get his way, Pol Lirola went down at 11’ and had to come off for Federico Marino. One of Fiorentina’s best players, and a key member of the attack, being removed early put the momentum in Guardiola’s corner. Federico Marino didn’t seem to care too much about being thrown in against one of the best teams in the world, in fact he would thrive during the first half. It helped that Manchester City didn’t look like themselves as Fiorentina took it to the hosts. The first shot was fired at 33’ when Marino brought the ball up wide, drawing two defenders near the corner of the box and passed back to Riccardo Orsolini. He drove forward himself, now unmarked, and sent a low cross to the back post level from the front of the goal area. It curled beyond Manchester City’s back line and found Talles Magno for a surprising 1-0 lead. Maybe the shock of being down put them off, or maybe things were really turning against them, but Marino and Magno would combine just a few minutes later on a similar exchange to go up 2-0. Magno’s ability to lurk out wide and crash inside at just the right time had been key to shocking their hosts.
Manchester City’s lax manner in the first half was cleared up after the break, being down 2-0 also helped Guardiola motivate his squad. Manchester City looked like they would not be denied, and a cross from Kevin De Bruyne to Bernardo Silva started the turnaround at 62’. Bernardo would take the ball out of the air and score a stunning goal from the far right of the box, left unmarked it was easy for him to square up to the ball and hammer it past Drągowski. Only down 2-1 with almost 30’ to go, it certainly felt like the hosts had this game in hand. Drągowski was about to have the busiest half hour of his life, with City pouring it on and practically living in Fiorentina’s third of the field. All the possession, all the tiki-taka, didn’t actually amount to much more after the Bernardo goal. They looked very threatening and in charge, but little of it turned into shots on goal and Fiorentina’s back line and deep midfielders managers to keep them mostly out of the box. Every rushed pass in the face of pressure found Jagiello or Castrovilli, and the counter attack was on.
With stoppage time counting down Manchester City came on like a heart attack, Fiorentina looked like they were playing in slow motion against an aggressive attack that looked bound to score at any moment. With 4’ of stoppage time announced, at 90+3’ Raphaël Varane sent a hard low cross into the box from near the end line and Leroy Sané slipped in and put it in the back of the net. Chaos broke out, with Manchester City bursting into a celebration and Montella losing his temper on the nearest ref. The flag was up, and now it was Guardiola’s turn to lose his temper. A lengthy discussion ended with the officials confirming that Sané was offside, a few kicks of the ball was enough to blow the whistle and the game was over.
The win would be absolutely massive, saving Fiorentina from being eliminated and giving them another must-win game to stay alive. Fiorentina and Manchester City were now tied on (7) points, but Fiorentina had the advantage by (1) goal on differential. Manchester City would face Shakhtar Donetsk last, and Fiorentina would face Lyon, winning by more than Manchester City would be quite a hurdle.
PURPLE STREAK
Outside of the Champions League Fiorentina looked more like Juventus and less like a team trying to win their first league title. In September, already 1st in the league, Fiorentina went right through Roma and Inter with 2-0 wins that rarely looked in doubt. Even when Lyanco was sent off at 79’ against Roma the team looked comfortable holding the lead. A 2-2 draw at Atalanta, the first game of September, actually turned out to be the start of a surprising defensive streak. A 3-0 win over Milan in December marked (12) games in a row without conceding in the league, the streak was broken in a 2-1 loss to Juventus that still left Fiorentina (4) points clear in 1st.
Their defensive performance wasn’t the only surprise, although they did finish with Serie A’s best offense last year, they were winning big almost every week. A bizarre 0-0 draw at Empoli in the Derby dell’Arno was the outlier at that time, Fiorentina would score (4) or more in (7) games which included an 8-0 demolition of Cittadella. They weren’t just blasting relegation fodder, Lazio (4-0) and Torino (4-0) would also end up on the wrong end of I Viola. As the calendar would turn to 2022 Fiorentina would sit 1st in goals scored (53) and 1st in goals allowed (6), a stunning total over (18) league games. Montella has managed to build a team able to weather problems on both sides of the ball, could this be the season that earns I Viola their first scudetto?
In the Champions League the surprise win over Manchester City turned out to be the spark I Viola needed, following that up with a resounding 4-0 win against Lyon at home. Manchester City went down 2-0 to Shakhtar Donetsk before storming back to a 4-2 win, but the goal differential killed them and Fiorentina finished 2nd in the group with Lyon first. They would be unlucky to draw Arsenal in the next round, but after taking down one English giant they should be ready to face another.
FIRST HALF AWARDS & PLAUDITS
Martin Terrier is starting to feel some heat with Daniel Maldini having one hell of a season at Milan. Maldini is 2nd in scoring in Serie A with (12), just behind Pedro with (13), and he looks more than ready to take over the second squad LW slot. Terrier’s days might be numbered, which is probably why he’s been vocal about not getting enough starts. In terms of Serie A, every position award went to a Fiorentina player but Lirola somehow managed not to make the Team Of The Year.
European Golden Boy : Daniel Maldini - (13) Goals / (4) assists
Serie A GK of the Year : Bartłomiej Drągowski
Serie A Defender of the Year : Pol Lirola
Serie A Midfielder of the Year : Filip Jagiello
Serie A Forward of the Year : Pedro
INJURY REPORT
Overall, a rather lucky half season in terms of injuries. Yes, there were a few that hurt but a whole position never got hit and the fixtures worked out to where Montella never had to dip into the youth system for long. Losing Luca Pellegrini for (4) weeks at the beginning of the season hurt, but Florentino Firenze and Smoke Monday managed to fill in rather well. Losing Erick Pulgar late in the first half, for (7) weeks, to a broken rib turned out to be the worst situation. At one point Filip Jagiello and Gaetano Castovilli, now a 1st squad regular, were both exhausted and Marco Benassi was suspended. Rather than grind Jagiello and Castrovilli into dust Montella had to call up Daniele Albano and Franck Blanc to man the DLP/BBM midfield pairing.