Inter thump Como to top Serie A ahead of Liverpool visit

Inter Milan’s French Marcus Thuram celebrates scoring his team’s second goal with Lautaro Martinez during their Italian Serie A match against Como at San Siro stadium in Milan, on Dec. 6, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 06 December 2025
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Inter thump Como to top Serie A ahead of Liverpool visit

  • Strike partnership Lautaro Martinez and Marcus Thuram scored in each half
  • “Today we showed how good we are against a really good side in Como,” said Martinez

MILAN: Inter Milan moved top of Serie A on Saturday after hammering high-flying Como 4-0 at the San Siro, ahead of the visit of struggling Liverpool in the Champions League.
Strike partnership Lautaro Martinez and Marcus Thuram scored in each half before Hakan Calhanoglu and Carlos Augusto netted late as Inter eased to a victory which pushed them two points ahead of AC Milan and Napoli who are both yet to play.
Champions Napoli host fierce rivals Juventus on Sunday night while Milan will be favorites to leapfrog back over their local rivals at Torino on Monday.
“Today we showed how good we are against a really good side in Como,” said Martinez.
“We showed just how hungry we are to get as many points as we can... it’s a really good win for us.”
Saturday’s win was the perfect warm-up for Tuesday’s clash with Liverpool, which could be key to whether Cristian Chivu’s team secure direct qualification for the last 16 of the Champions League.
A good sign for Chivu was the strong display by Luis Henrique at right wing-back, which has been a trouble position for Inter since Denzel Dumfries’ picked up an ankle injury last month.
It was Henrique who was key to Martinez’s opener in the 11th minute, the Brazilian surging into the area from his own half, cutting back inside and perfectly feeding his captain who netted a league-leading seventh goal of the Serie A campaign.
And in the 59th minute Thuram added to his brace in Inter’s midweek cup thumping of Venezia with his first league goal since returning from a hamstring injury suffered in September.
France forward Thuram poked home from close range after Federico Dimarco’s corner caused chaos for Como, who had started the second half the better team and should have levelled from one of two great chances for Tasos Douvikas and Alex Valle.
Cesc Fabregas’ Como drop down a place to sixth, six points behind Inter after falling to their first defeat since August, which was made emphatic by Calhanoglu firing home his seventh goal of the season in the 81st minute and Carlos Augusto’s fine volley shortly afterwards.
“It’s hard to analyze when you’ve been beaten 4-0. It’s a heavy defeat... but honestly I didn’t see a huge difference between the two teams tonight,” insisted Fabregas.
“A result like today’s helps you develop... A heavy defeat is when you grow the most and when you learn the most.”

- Fiorentina’s crisis continues -

Fiorentina plunged deeper into crisis with a 3-1 defeat at promoted Sassuolo which left them bottom of the division without a single win this season.
Once the home of players like Gabriel Batistuta and Rui Costa and sixth-placed finishers last season, Fiorentina have collected just six points from 14 matches.
And even with the backing of some 4,000 traveling fans the “Viola” were dreadful in Reggio Emilia, collapsing to an eighth league loss of the league campaign after going ahead through Rolando Mandragora’s ninth-minute penalty.
Cristian Volpato levelled for Sassuolo with a deflected strike five minutes later. Tarik Muharemovic gave the hosts a deserved lead on the stroke of half-time when he was given the freedom of the Fiorentina penalty area to head home his first Serie A goal.
From that point Fiorentina showed nothing to suggest a comeback and Ismael Kone sealed the points for Sassuolo in the 65th minute, shortly after Volpato had a screamer ruled out for a soft looking foul on Fabiano Parisi.
That decision incensed eight-placed Sassuolo’s coach Fabio Grosso who was subsequently sent off for dissent.
Grosso’s counterpart Paolo Vanoli, who took charge of Fiorentina a month ago, screamed on the sidelines to no avail as his team stayed six points from safety with just over a third of the season done.
Raffaele Palladino looks to continue his good start as Atalanta coach, a job he took last month after quitting Fiorentina in the summer, at Verona in the day’s late fixture.


Teen burnout to Olympic gold: Alysa Liu ‘looking to inspire others’

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Teen burnout to Olympic gold: Alysa Liu ‘looking to inspire others’

  • Newly crowned Olympic women’s figure skating champion Alysa Liu says she wants her story to “inspire others” after the golden return of a former child prodigy who suffered burnout
MILAN:Newly crowned Olympic women’s figure skating champion Alysa Liu says she wants her story to “inspire others” after the golden return of a former child prodigy who suffered burnout.
Liu stepped away from figure skating aged just 16 years, tired of the endless training and wanting to live the life of a normal teenager.
But she returned to the rink even stronger two years later, and on Thursday night the 20-year-old produced an electrifying performance that put the US women back on top of the Olympic women’s podium for the first time since 2002.
“Honestly, it was more than just work, it was experience,” Liu said after her second gold of the Milan-Cortina Games having helped the US defend their team title.
“The last time I was skating, it was so rough. I genuinely can’t begin to start (talking) on it. It took a lot to get to this point, and studying psychology has really helped. I love psychology.”
The daughter of a Chinese political refugee, Liu started skating at the age of five with her life consumed by the sport as a child.
The Californian won her first senior US title aged 13, landing a rare triple axel jump and breaking Tara Lipinski’s record to become the youngest national champion.
For her first Olympic Games four years ago Liu’s preparation was disrupted by Covid. After testing positive she missed the US trials but was still selected for the Beijing Games where she finished sixth.
The following month, in the absence of Russian skaters she won the bronze medal at the 2022 world championships, giving the United States its first world medal in the women’s event since 2016.
But just a few weeks later Liu announced that she was ending her career, saying she felt she had achieved all her goals in the sport.
Away from competition, she got her driver’s license, enjoyed holidays, went to concerts and experienced something she had not before — a normal teenager’s life.
“Honestly, I didn’t have many people to look up to,” she explained.
“I only really had myself, and I think that’s all I needed. I got ‘alone’ time (during the pandemic). I got to think a lot.
“When Covid hit, that’s when I had my first ‘what to do with myself’ moment. It was like a ‘lightbulb’ moment.
“I was also going through puberty and my brain helped with that process (of understanding herself). A lot has happened in four years.”
Mental health awareness
She began to miss skating and competition and laced up her skates again for the 2024-2025 season.
In her very first year back, she won the world championship title shocking three-time reigning champion Kaori Sakamoto.
For her second Olympic Games, the 20-year-old skater approached things with a “completely different” mindset compared to Beijing.
“This time just feels so completely different. I know who I am as a person now,” she said.
Showing her own style with her streaked “Halo” hairstyle, she opened her competition by winning the team title.
Then, in the individual event, she placed third in the short program, just 2.12 points off the lead.
Two days later, she skated a magnificent free program to the disco sounds of Donna Summer and lit up the Milano Ice Skating Arena.
She gave the United States their first Olympic title in the women’s event since Sarah Hughes in 2002 and first medal since Sasha Cohen’s silver in 2006.
“I have no idea how I am going to deal with it (the fame). I’ll probably wear some wigs when I go outside,” she laughed.
“I think my story’s more important than anything to me and that’s what I hold dear and this journey has been incredible.
“I hope with all this attention I can raise awareness about mental health in sports, and mental health more generally.
“I think my story is very cool. Hopefully, I can inspire some people.
“All I want in my life is human connection and, damn, now I am connected with a hell of a ton of people.”