that's a good question, i never think about it. may be they have 3 changing rooms, one for inter, one for milan, n the other for the guest club who's playing with them!i guess u can find the answer for ur question in www.acmilan.it, or go to inter milan's official website, goodluck....
2006-07-18 05:34:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The rivalry
On December 16, 1899, Alfred Edwards and others founded the Milan Cricket and Football Club. Edwards, a former British vice-consul in Milan and a well-known personality of the Milanese high society, was the club's first elected president. Initially, the team included a cricket section, managed by Edward Berra, and a football section managed by David Allison. The Milan team soon gained relevant notability under Herbert Kilpin's guide. The first trophy to be won was the Medaglia del Re (King's Medal) on January 1900, and the team later won three national leagues, in 1901, 1906 and 1907. The triumph of 1901 was particularly relevant because it ended the consecutive series of wins of Genoa, which had been the only team to have won the title prior to 1901.
In 1908, issues over the signing of foreign players led to a split and the foundation of F.C. Internazionale Milano. This started a now historical rivalry between the two cross-town clubs, a rivalry especially heated since Inter broke off from AC Milan. The most notorious scoreline in the history of this fixture came in 3 March 1918, when Milan thrashed Inter 8 goals to 1. In the past, Inter was seen as the club of the Milan bourgeoisie (nicknamed bauscia, a milanese term meaning "braggart"), whereas AC Milan was the working-class team (nicknamed casciavit, meaning in the milanese dialect "screwdriver", with both reference to the blue-collar worker, and to "awkward") and was supported mainly by workers, trade unionists and migrants from Southern Italy.[citation needed]. However in the recent years this difference has mitigated, since Milan is now owned by past conservative Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi and Inter is owned by a centre-left businessman, Massimo Moratti.
During the 1960s, Inter was the more successful club, winning the european cup twice in a row and the Intercontinental Cup twice in a row. However during the late 1980s and the 1990s Silvio Berlusconi's Milan was the more dominant team, with many victories both in Italy and in the European competitions.
2016-06-12 12:33:50
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I've never been to the changerooms, but I can tell you that their fans are kept apart during the games. They totally *hate* each other. Funny, after all they are from the same city... But I guess it happens in all the cities that have two football teams, especially if both of them are strong.
2006-07-17 18:17:22
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answer #3
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answered by thecatphotographer 5
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