The RedBird purge hits Milan hard

If you thought the vibes at Casa Milan were heavy before, you haven't been paying attention to the last forty-eight hours. RedBird Capital reached into the blender and smashed the button, officially terminating Massimiliano Allegri, Giorgio Furlani, Igli Tare, and Geoffrey Moncada.

It is a total decapitation of the leadership structure that most of us expected to stick around, or at least survive until the end of the summer window. The official announcement confirms the end of an era that barely had time to get off the ground.

Missing the mark on the pitch

Let’s call this what it is: a desperate reaction to a season that fell well short of expectations. Allegri was brought in to provide consistency and high-level tactical acumen, but the football on display often looked like it was stuck in 2012 while the rest of Europe moved on.

Targeting the front office trio of Furlani, Tare, and Moncada suggests RedBird has zero patience for the current recruitment strategy. Reports indicate this is just the first wave, signaling to everyone at the headquarters that no job is safe.

The silence tells the story

Igli Tare was spotted leaving the headquarters earlier today, and his response was about as brief as possible. When asked about his departure, he offered minimal comment, likely because he knows that in this business, shouting from the rooftops doesn't save your career.

Tare’s exit felt like a grim walk to the gallows. It’s the kind of quiet, awkward departure that becomes the watermark for how a club is currently spiraling.

What happens next?

RedBird needs a miracle worker, not just a sporting director. Swapping out the entire brain trust with the transfer market rapidly approaching is either a stroke of genius or a complete act of self-sabotage.

Firing the coach and the scouts two days before the UCL Final is definitely a choice. You have to wonder how the squad stays focused when the entire organizational structure just got nuked.

We are looking at a total reset of 100 percent of the decision-making power. Most clubs take months to plan this kind of transition, but Milan is deciding to burn the bridge while they are still standing on it.

If this new leadership doesn't land a massive signing or find the perfect tactician by mid-June, the fanbase is going to lose their minds. The pressure is 10 out of 10, and there is no room for a learning curve anymore.