Cristian Chivu Reflects On Inter Growth After Turbulent Start And Title Push
Inter move towards a 21st Serie A title and a likely new deal for Cristian Chivu, with Cagliari visiting San Siro on Friday. A victory would keep Inter at least nine points clear of Napoli, with six league games left, and underline the progress made during Chivu’s first season in charge.
The club are reported to be ready to reward Chivu with an extended contract, a salary increase and greater influence over transfer decisions. Those plans highlight how Inter’s hierarchy now view Chivu very differently from September, when pressure built after three defeats in the opening four matches in all competitions.

Inter start matchday 33 nine points ahead of last season’s champions Napoli, and are within reach of the Scudetto. Cagliari face a different fight, entering the game six points above 18th-placed Lecce. The visitors hope to widen that gap and move closer to safety, after an important 1-0 victory over Cremonese.
Cagliari’s recent form has been inconsistent. Before beating Cremonese, they collected only two points from eight league fixtures. That poor sequence followed three straight wins over Juventus, Fiorentina and Hellas Verona. Survival remains in their hands, but another loss, combined with results elsewhere, could pull them back towards the relegation places.
Chivu was appointed after Simone Inzaghi departed following the Champions League final defeat to Paris Saint-Germain and joined Al-Hilal. Many observers questioned Inter’s decision, pointing to Chivu’s limited experience at senior level. Early results appeared to support those doubts, as Inter struggled to adapt and slipped down the table during September.
The narrative around Chivu’s work changed after a dramatic 4-3 loss to Juventus in the Derby d’Italia that month. Despite defeat, Inter showed attacking fluency and resilience. Chivu has since produced a sustained improvement in performance and results, guiding Inter to the top of Serie A and building one of the division’s most potent attacks.
Reflecting on that shift during Thursday’s pre-match press conference, Chivu said the Juventus match reshaped opinions. Inter’s dressing room also responded, with senior players backing Chivu’s methods. That unity has allowed the squad to handle tactical changes, injuries and fixture congestion, and keep control of the title race heading into the closing weeks.
"I can be anything, but I'm certainly not a fool, he said. I adapt. Life has taught me to adapt to moments and narratives, to the role I occupy and the leadership role I have. If, at the beginning, what I wanted to convey to the group made me say certain things or in a certain way, along the way, that changed. Everything changed and I adapted. When we started, we were apparently going to finish eighth, I was inexperienced and they wanted to kick me out after five games, already thinking about who had to come in. And instead, we went on, thanks to a group of men who aspired to be competitive from the beginning. I think it all started after the Juve game. That's where the narrative changed."
Inter vs Cagliari Chivu’s man management and dressing-room culture
Chivu also discussed how handling personalities has shaped Inter’s rise this season. The head coach stressed the need to protect the squad from constant criticism. Chivu highlighted the importance of building confidence, especially during difficult periods, and of ensuring every player feels valued, including those who do not start regularly.
Asked about his approach to man management, Chivu said: "Negativity sells, we live in a culture that despises people being content. I have to make the players feel important and loved. The most important thing in life is not to repeat you mistakes. And when you succeed, it means that you have improved and gained experience. You have to always have the desire to be better than the day before."
That philosophy has supported a deep squad where rotation has become normal. Several players have delivered key contributions in different competitions, while Inter’s collective focus has rarely dipped. The response after the early-season setbacks highlighted that mentality, with Inter steadily climbing the standings and sustaining pressure on rivals.
Inter vs Cagliari players to watch in Serie A clash
Marcus Thuram remains central to Inter’s attacking threat. Thuram scored twice in the thrilling 4-3 win over Como in Inter’s most recent league outing, taking his Serie A tally to 10 goals this season. Thuram has now reached double figures in three straight Serie A campaigns, confirming consistent output at this level.
That run places Thuram in select company at Inter. Since the 1929-30 season, only Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Stefano Nyers had previously managed at least three consecutive seasons with 10 or more Serie A goals for the club. Nyers achieved the feat across five straight campaigns, while Ibrahimovic reached it in three.
On the Cagliari side, Sebastiano Esposito carries both narrative interest and attacking responsibility. Esposito is on loan from Inter with an option to buy and is eligible to play against the parent club. The forward could line up opposite younger brother Francesco Pio Esposito, adding a personal dimension to Friday’s match.
Esposito has contributed three goals and one assist in Cagliari’s last five league matches, matching his output from the previous 13 Serie A games, when he provided four assists. Across this season, Esposito has six goals and five assists in the league, beating his previous best return of 10 goal involvements with Sampdoria in Serie B in 2023-24.
Inter vs Cagliari statistics, history and win probability
Inter’s attacking record against Cagliari is long-standing. Inter have scored in each of their last 26 Serie A home meetings with Cagliari, totalling 57 goals, an average of 2.2 per game. Only against Udinese, from 1959 to 2010, have Inter enjoyed a longer scoring run at home versus a single top-flight opponent.
Chivu’s side have already scored 75 league goals this season, at least 19 more than any other Serie A team. In the era of three points for a win, Inter have exceeded 75 goals after 33 matches only once, registering 79 in the 2023-24 campaign. Their current numbers again place them among Serie A’s strongest attacks.
Inter have found the net at least four times in five home league games this season. Over their previous 66 top-flight seasons combined, they bettered that in a single campaign just once, scoring four or more in six different home matches in 2020-21. Those figures underline why Cagliari enter as clear outsiders.
OPTA’s model reflects that imbalance between the teams’ seasons so far.
| Outcome | OPTA win probability |
|---|---|
| Inter win | 74.7% |
| Cagliari win | 9.9% |
| Draw | 15.4% |
Inter approach the Cagliari game with the Scudetto close and statistical trends behind them, while Cagliari balance the pressure of a relegation fight with the chance to disrupt the leaders. The meeting also acts as another measure of Chivu’s growth, both as a tactician and as a figure shaping Inter’s dressing-room culture.


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