Montaza, who was bought by former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi in 2018, was promoted to the first football division for the first time in its history after beating Pisa in the playoffs and advancing to Serie A on Sunday. And after his 2-1 home win on Thursday, Montaza secured his first promotion after a dramatic second leg that was decided 4-3 after a 2-3 extension in Pisa. The stadium through the eyes of Berlusconi, who led Milan in its time, a gold medal and led it from 1986 to 2017.

“It’s a great joy,” Berluskoy told DAZON. Monsa was founded in 1912 and did not qualify for Serie A. Now we have won and Montasa has the team that deserves him and next season he will face Italy’s top league. And the 85-year-old Italian billionaire continued with boundless ambition: “You know? We want to win the league title and qualify for the Champions League. ” Berlusconi bought Monza a year after he sold Milan, which became a local and continental giant in his state, winning the Champions League five times and the national championship eight times.
Three rising Monza, Lecce and Cremonese will replace relegated Venice, Genoa and Cagliari.

Berlusconi entrusted the management of Montaza to his right hand man, Adriano Galliani.

Finished fourth in the second division, Monza was in addition to clubs finishing between third and eighth. Monza near Milan was still in third place when Berlusconi bought it in 2018 for $ 3.4 million. It was promoted to the second division (Serie B) in 2020. He failed to advance to the elite league last year, losing in the playoffs despite a strict contracting policy that included Ghanaian Kevin-Prince Boateng and troubled striker Mario Balotelli.
Berlusconi has entrusted the management of the club to his right hand in the years of Milan’s success to Adriano Galliani, 77 years old. He signed with coach Giovanni Stropa, 54, the former AC Milan and Monza player who led Crotone to the First Division in 2020.
His climb was not easy in the last leg, as he was 0-2 behind Pisa after just nine minutes of the second leg, but he gradually recovered and went into extra time to solve it on goals. from Luca Maroni (96) and Danish veteran striker Christian Getkjer (101).