Inter continues its march towards Saturday's Champions League final in Istanbul against Manchester City, but also in Milan the atmosphere begins to get hot and not only because of the weather. At the bar as on public transport, the wait for the big match of the Nerazzurri is palpable, between discussions of the fans on how to get to Turkey for the lucky ones who have bought tickets and the classic superstitions of those who will remain in the city in front of the TV. With a third option, represented this time not by the classic giant screens in Piazza Duomo but by the opening of San Siro to the fans, with tickets for the Meazza already sold out within seven hours.
Immediately sold out the sale of over 40 thousand coupons for those who had chosen to watch the game at the stadium on a giant screen of over 400 square meters that will be installed at the first orange ring, with the rest of the plant that will then be open to fans. Spectators will be able to sit in the red, green and blue sectors and in the lawn, with tickets on sale starting from 10 euros and up to 20 euros of the first ring and the parterre: coupons, however, burned by the Nerazzurri fans, with the sold out that arrived within about seven hours after the opening of sales at 10 am.
And there will also be the mayor of Milan, Giuseppe Sala, a great Inter fan at the Champions League final. "I will go to Istanbul - confirmed the Milanese mayor on the sidelines of a press conference - I have an invitation from UEFA and I will certainly go there". Regarding what could happen in the city on the night of the match and the measures that the City plans to put in place, Sala added that "there will be a big screen at San Siro and this is very good, this already limits the problem a lot. Then we will have to see how the game goes," the mayor concluded.
Meanwhile, for those who will be at the Ataturk stadium on Saturday, there is a sort of "dress code" indicated by the Inter Curva Nord: the invitation is to wear a blue shirt to be "one thing with the team and with our history. It is not an obligation and it is not a duty but it is an example of unity that we want to convey to the boys from the first moment they take the field," the Nerazzurri fans wrote on their Facebook page.