IN A semi-final for the ages, it ultimately belonged to the oldest player on the pitch.
Francesco Acerbi defied his veteran 37 years and centre-back defensive instincts to turn home Inter Milan’s dramatic 93rd-minute equaliser and force extra-time against Barcelona.



Yes, Davide Frattesi grabbed the winning goal to .
But old-timer defender .
And that cute, near-post effort to get in front of Ronald Araujo and find Wojciech Szczesny’s top corner may well be his own personal crowning moment of a career that has seen it all.
Born in the outskirts of Milan in February 1988, Acerbi is now 90 minutes away from completing the circle by leading I Nerazzurri to European glory.
But his road to the San Siro â the site of this goal that will live long in the memory of all Inter fans â is far longer than the 15 miles from suburban Vizzolo Predabissi.
And it features battles on the pitch with the world’s best strikers but more importantly off the pitch, too, with cancer, depression and alcohol.
JOURNEYMAN CAREER
Acerbi started out in Serie C at Pavia in 2006 and even featured in the semi-professional Serie D on loan at Renate.
A loan to Spezia’s youth team followed before permanent spells at Reggina, Genoa and Chievo, where he eventually made his top-flight debut.
came calling in 2012 and he was briefly team-mates with the likes of Robinho and Mario Balotelli.
But after just six months of struggling for minutes, he was sold to Genoa, who immediately loaned him back to Chievo.
It wasn’t until Acerbi signed for Sassuolo in 2013 that he finally had stability, spending five seasons there before four at Lazio.
He initially joined Inter on loan in 2022-23 where he was reunited with ex-Lazio boss Simone Inzaghi and made the move permanent the following summer.
That transfer took his tally to 14 spells with ten different clubs.
FRAN THE MAN
Acerbi scored an all-important header against bitter rivals and former employers AC Milan in April 2024.
That helped his side to a 2-1 win which saw them confirmed as Serie A champions for the 20th time.
A year earlier, towards the end of his loan season, Acerbi came in for huge praise for his performance in the final.
but the Italian centre-half managed to keep Erling Haaland quiet and off the scoresheet.
HEALTH STRUGGLES
However, Acerbi’s toughest challenges have come away from football.
His father died during his short stint at Milan, triggering depression which led to him turning and even relying on alcohol to numb the pain and suffering.
Then upon signing for Sassuolo in 2013 at the start of the next season, Acerbi was diagnosed with testicular cancer.
A regular health check-up flagged unusual blood test results and he immediately underwent surgery to remove the tumour.
But having returned to training and competitive action, he failed an anti-doping test.




Acerbi denied taking any banned performance-enhancing drugs and it transpired the irregular hormone levels were because the cancer had come back again.
As a result, the defender had two months of chemotherapy at the start of 2014.
But Acerbi actually credits the two bouts of cancer for “saving”; him from the depression and alcholism.
He candidly explained to La Repubblica in 2019: “After my father died, when I was playing for Milan, I hit rock bottom.
“It was as if I’d forgotten how to play, or why I was playing. I started drinking and, believe me, I’d drink anything.
“It might seem like a terrible paradox, but the cancer saved me. I had something new to fight against, a limit to overcome.
“It was as if I got to start life all over again and saw the world in a way I’d completely forgotten. I stopped being scared.
“I was thinking to myself, ‘What will you do if it comes back again?’ ‘I’ll face it again,’ I replied.
“Chemotherapy was like stepping into a parallel world, the entrance to which is closer than you could possibly think, so you never leave it again. It’s a world of pain and of courage.
“I think having that illness improved me as a person, cancelling out remorse and regret.
“I became an observer of my surroundings. I eliminated the superfluous, the negative, but also the illusions. I stopped dreaming big and started to focus on simple targets.”;
EURO HERO
Incredibly, Acerbi made his senior international debut in the same year he underwent the chemotherapy.
But by 2019, he had still only managed to add two further appearances â one in 2016, one in 2018 â before being brought back into the fold by Roberto Mancini.
And while Acerbi won’t go down as one of the all-time great Italian defenders with the likes of Paolo Maldini, Fabio Cannavaro, Leonardo Bonucci, Giorgio Chiellini et al, he was awarded the top Order of Merit in Italy after being part of the Euro 2020-winning squad.





He set up the extra-time winner against Austria in the round of 16 then was an unused sub in the quarters, semis and final, where the .
Acerbi, though, has not added to his 34 caps since 2023 and pulled out of the squad in March 2024 after allegations he made racist comments to Napoli’s Juan Jesus during a Serie A match earlier that month.
A Serie A sports judge dismissed the case citing a lack of evidence as Acerbi escaped punishment, a decision furious Napoli labelled “astonishing”;.
BARCA DRAMA
Acerbi hit the headlines for all the right reasons, though, with his goal against Barcelona â four months on from marrying Claudia Scarpari, the mum of his two daughters.
Inzaghi deployed him in the in the desperate hunt for a goal.
And just like the Manchester United man against Lyon, .
Incredibly, that was his very first career goal in European football in his 66th appearance across the Champions League and Europa League.
To make the finish even more impressive and remarkable, the left-footed 6ft 4ins unit scored with his right foot.
So it was no wonder he ripped his famous black-and-blue shirt and then his underlayer off in sheer unbridled delirious delight to reveal his tattooed torso.
Acerbi’s many inkings will tell their own stories.
But the image of the seasoned and battle-scarred pensioner unsure how to celebrate his magic moment other than jumping gleefully on to his knees punctuates a truly turbulent tale of football with the most emphatic of exclamation marks.




