Tragedy strikes Italy again
Italian football suffered another tragic blow on Sunday as a Parma fan died after being run over by a bus on a weekend that saw AC Milan's Champions League hopes take another costly dent.
Matteo Bagnaresi was run over at a service station by a bus carrying Juventus fans after skirmishes broke out between rival sets of supporters.
It was the second time this season that a fan died at a service station, with Rome DJ Gabriele Sandri accidentally shot by a policeman back in November after clashes broke out between Juve and Lazio fans at a motorway rest stop.
That incident sparked violent protests around several grounds with two matches being subsequently postponed.
Authorities decided to postpone the Juventus-Parma clash on Sunday in a bid to help avoid a repeat of November's ugly scenes.
On the pitch Milan crashed dismally 2-1 at home to Atalanta, leaving their hopes of snatching fourth place from Fiorentina, who lost 3-1 at Udinese, looking decidedly shaky.
"We have to move on this week and get ready for the next match. Hopefully Kaka will be back. We're got to keep working in taining but we need to defend better," said Milan coach Carlo Ancelotti.
"We have to be careful. We lost to Sampdoria at home, and now this makes two (home) losses in a row. It makes things very complicated for us."
The result was no less than the visitors to Milan's San Siro stadium deserved as they completed a league double over the reigning European champions.
Sergio Floccari opened the scoring at the second attempt after Ferreira Pinto skipped down the right and crossed to the near post.
Floccari shook off his marker, veteran Paolo Maldini, and saw his first effort saved by Australian goalkeeper Zeljko Kalac but he was alert enough to flick home the rebound from a tight angle on 32 minutes.
Ten minutes later and Atalanta doubled their lead as a brilliant piece of control from Floccari, who then fed Antonio Langella.
He kept his cool to flick the ball over the onrushing Massimo Oddo's lunging challenge and then calmly side-footed home.
Milan had the ball in the net early in the second half but veteran Dutch midfielder Clarence Seedorf's effort was rightly ruled out for offside.
Atalanta should have made the game safe midway through the half but after a fine break from Ferreira Pinto, Cristian Doni woefully skied his shot with the goal at his mercy.
Massimo Ambrosini then had another Milan strike harshly ruled out for a foul on goalkeeper Ferdinando Coppola.
Maldini scored with a header five minutes from time and Andrea Pirlo had the chance to snatch a point for the hosts in the last minute after Ambrosini was felled in the box but he saw his penalty saved by Coppola.
Milan remain four points behind Fiorentina in the race for the crucial last Champions League qualifying position but they have lost their last two home matches and only the Viola's own stuttering form is keeping them in with a faint hope.
Udinese's victory actually moved them up to fifth, a point ahead of Milan while Sampdoria, seventh after a 2-0 win at Empoli, are behind Milan only on goal difference - making it a four-way battle for the last Champions League spot.
"It's a very, very delicate situation." said Fiorentina coach Cesare Prandelli. "It's a very difficult position to be in but all our work is going towards finishing fourth."
On Saturday leaders Inter Milan and second-placed AS Roma were both held to 1-1 draws.
Roma came back from the disappointment of conceding an early own goal through Matteo Ferrari to level matters at Cagliari with a Francesco Totti free-kick.
Their cross-city rivals Lazio then did them a favour by hitting back through Tommaso Rocchi after Hernan Crespo had given Inter the lead at Rome's Stadio Olimpico.
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