Albert Gudmundsson he has a great desire to show off at Fiorentina: the brace against Lazio made it clear that he is the superstar and his teammates must rely on him to resolve matches, even if at times there has been controversy.
Gudmundsson and the arguments with Kean and Cataldi, as well as with Retegui
Il Corriere Fiorentinoin today’s pages, refers precisely to the occasions in which, for free kicks or penalties, the Icelander demanded the ball even though there were other beaters eager to take responsibility for kicking. At Genoa there was Retegui, at Fiorentina it was already the turn of Kean (in the second penalty against Lazio) and Cataldi (for a free kick from the edge against Empoli). Could this attitude, in the long run, hurt the locker room?
Giovanni Galli puts Gudmundsson on guard
I wouldn’t want Kouame’s imperfect Italian to lead to his words being misinterpreted after the match; I saw Gudmundsson behave a bit too much like a protagonist, he shouldn’t feel like a star: if your teammates elect you then it’s fine, but if it’s not like that you risk becoming arrogant. Fiorentina never took control of the match yesterday afternoon, something needs to change, especially in the middle of the pitch and in the attacking midfield.