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Coppa Italia (SEMI-FINAL)
21. April 2026. 21:00h
Inter Milan vs Como
Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milano, IT
2026
21
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Inter Milan - Como | Coppa Italia semi-final at San Siro with a place in the final at stake

Looking for tickets for Inter Milan - Como in the Coppa Italia semi-final? Here you can secure tickets for a night at San Siro where a place in the final is on the line after a goalless first leg. Check the key details on current form, standout players, the stadium and getting to Milan for matchday

Inter and Como for the final in Rome

Inter and Como arrive in Milan with a clear calculation: after 0:0 in the first leg of the Coppa Italia semi-final at Stadio Giuseppe Sinigaglia, the return match at San Siro decides who goes to the final and who stops one step short of it. Inter is the favourite in this story because of experience, squad depth, and home advantage, but Como has already shown this season that it is no longer a likeable outsider but a team that knows how to play on big nights and withstand pressure. Tickets for this match are in demand among supporters.

Inter reached the semi-final with a 2:1 win against Torino, while Como secured its place in the final four after a 1:1 draw against Napoli and a better penalty shootout. That says a lot about both sides. Inter got here through a match in which it took control and knew how to finish the job, while Como came through a night in which it had to survive pressure and remain calm until the end. In the return leg, such details often decide more than possession statistics themselves.

On 17 April, Inter is the leading team in Serie A with 75 points from 32 rounds, while Como is fifth with 58 and still very much in the race for the top of the table. The difference in depth and status exists, but the difference in confidence is not huge. A few days ago, Inter won 4:3 away at Como in the league and once again showed how dangerous it can be when it raises the tempo, but at the same time it also opened the question of how much space it leaves when the opponent manages to get out of the first wave of pressing.

What is at stake for both teams

For Inter, this is the kind of match that carries everything a great season must have - a fight for a trophy, a night under the floodlights, and a chance to confirm favourite status at its own stadium. A goalless draw in the first match means there is no safety net. One conceded goal can completely change the rhythm, and one early goal for Inter can turn San Siro into a ground where the visitor struggles to breathe. Seats in the stands are disappearing quickly.

For Como, the stakes are even more intriguing. By reaching the semi-final alone, the club has already arrived at one of the biggest cup nights of recent decades, but the way it got there changes the perspective. Cesc FĂ bregas's team is not travelling to Milan just to play decently and go out honourably. The scoreless result from the first match and the open picture of the return leg give it a real reason to believe it can take the match into a nervous finish, extra time, or even victory in regular time.

Inter has a very good run in league meetings with Como and history is heavily on its side, but the cup is a different format. In it, one spell of fifteen minutes is enough for the whole plan to go in another direction. Como already showed that against Napoli, and this season it has played bravely enough against stronger sides that it can no longer be pushed into a surprise narrative simply because its name is not from the very top of Italian football.

Who drives Inter's play

Under Cristian Chivu, Inter still looks like a team that functions best when it presses the opponent with a high rhythm and quickly activates the wide channels. In the current league season, the team's top scorer is Lautaro Martínez, and among the most important names in terms of output are also Marcus Thuram, Hakan Çalhanoğlu, and Federico Dimarco, who is also one of the main sources of the final pass. That can also be seen from the distribution of output: Inter does not depend on one man, but on a series of players who can decide the match from different zones.

Still, ahead of the return leg there is one major reservation. Lautaro MartĂ­nez missed the last league meeting with Como because of a calf problem, and several reports ahead of the weekend state that Inter is carefully timing his return. That does not necessarily mean he will not be in the squad for the cup, but it does mean that the attacking plan is less certain than usual. If Lautaro is not ready from the first minute, even greater responsibility falls on Thuram, and then on the second line, which must provide the finishing from deeper positions.

That is why Marcus Thuram is the first name to watch from the warm-up onward. In the recent league meeting with Como he scored two goals, and over the season he has been one of Inter's most productive attackers. His value is not only in finishing, but also in the fact that he opens space for others, drags centre-backs away, and forces the opponent to defend deeper than it wants. If Como squeezes the centre too much, Thuram gets space in the channels. If it defends too deep, Inter gets more balls around the penalty area.There is also Çalhanoğlu, a player who often directs matches like this without too much noise. His first touch and his ability to speed up or slow down the tempo from midfield are extremely important against a team like Como, which likes to close the centre and wait for a mistake. When Inter looks calm, it is often because Çalhanoğlu keeps the match under control. When it looks dangerous, very often the first impulse has again come from him.

How Como can threaten

This season, Como has collected enough serious results for it not to be written about as a passing story. In the league numbers, Anastasios Douvikas and Nico Paz stand out in particular, while an important part of the attacking picture is also provided by Martin Baturina and several players who attack the second wave well. Douvikas brings goalscoring directness, Nico Paz operates between the lines and can carry the ball into the final third, while Baturina often provides the kind of calmness that is decisive away from home against a favourite.

FĂ bregas's team does not play only by dropping back and waiting. In the first semi-final match it held the rhythm without fear, and in the recent league meeting with Inter it showed that it can land a serious blow even when the match descends into chaos. Como led then, scored goals, and forced Inter to react. That is an important signal for the return leg, because it shows that the visitor does not have to wait for one single counterattack but can also create problems through organised attacks, especially if Nico Paz finds space between the lines.For Como, the transition after winning the ball is especially important. Inter likes to push its full-backs and midfielders high, and that is exactly where space appears behind the first line of pressure. If Como withstands the initial surge and manages to produce a few clean exits through the middle, it can force the home centre-backs to defend in more space than suits them. In that picture, Douvikas is important as the final player, but those who prepare the last pass for him are equally important.

The tactical picture of the return leg

The expectation is that Inter will start as the home side that wants to impose the rhythm immediately. That does not necessarily mean a charge from the first minute, but territorial control - long periods of possession, many balls to the flanks, and constant pushing of the opponent towards its own third. On nights like this, Inter looks for two things: an early goal or at least the feeling that the match is being played in one half. When it gets that, San Siro becomes an additional player.

Como will probably look for a different tempo. It suits it if Inter does not find the first goal for a long time and if nerves begin to do the work for the visitor. Then every longer Como move, every won set piece, and every save by the goalkeeper raise the impression that the upset is getting closer. If, on top of that, Nico Paz and Baturina manage to keep the ball long enough for the team to move up, Como can turn the match into a much more uncomfortable evening than Inter would like.A detail from the first match is also important here. There were no goals there, but there was enough defensive discipline on both sides to show that neither team wants to lose balance. The return leg can therefore have two faces. In the first, Inter scores early and opens the match. In the second, the game stays on the edge for a long time, so the value of set pieces, second balls, and individual reactions grows minute by minute. For the viewer, that is excellent news, because matches like this rarely remain flat from the first to the last minute.

San Siro as part of the story

Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, or San Siro, remains one of those arenas that carry the weight of a match by themselves. In its official club presentation of the stadium, Inter states the current capacity as 75,817 seats, and it is precisely that size which, in evening cup matches, creates the impression that every wave of attack and every whistle from the stands is felt more strongly than elsewhere. That is not empty romance, but a concrete thing: the sound in this stadium quickly merges with the rhythm of the game and often intensifies the sense of pressure on the visitor.

San Siro has seven main entrances, and at major events the number of access points can be expanded. That is an important piece of information for anyone coming for the first time, because around the stadium just before kick-off it can get very crowded. For a match like this, it is sensible to count on arriving earlier, security checks, and more walking than it seems at first glance on the map. It is worth securing tickets in time.

  • Address: Piazzale Angelo Moratti, Milan

  • Capacity: 75,817 seats

  • Closest arrival by metro: M5 to San Siro Stadio station

  • Alternative: M1 to Lotto station, then continue on foot towards the stadium

  • Bus connections to the stadium: lines 49, 64, and 78 are listed among the practical arrival options

  • Parking: there are authorised parking spaces around the stadium, but layout and availability depend on the organisation for the specific match



How to get there and what to expect around the stadium

San Siro is approximately 6 kilometres from the centre of Milan, and that is one of the better pieces of news for supporters who are in the city only briefly. The metro is the simplest solution, especially the M5 to San Siro Stadio station. Those arriving from other parts of the city often combine the M1 to Lotto and then walk the rest of the way. On match day, that is more practical than looking for a driving route through heavy traffic.

Parking requires caution. There are organised and authorised car parks around the stadium, but the entry regime and layout can change depending on the event. That means arriving by car makes sense only if you set off early enough and check the traffic information for that day in advance. For most away supporters and neutral visitors, public transport will be the calmer option.As for entrances, for big matches at San Siro the same rule applies as at most large stadiums: do not count on arriving at the last moment. Official notices for the specific match usually come out closer to the match date, but it is already clear now that security checks will be increased and that arriving earlier can save a lot of nerves. This especially applies to supporters coming to the stadium for the first time and still needing to find their way around sectors and access points.

Milan for the supporter before the evening match

Milan is a city where it is easy to combine a football outing with the rest of the day. Since the stadium is relatively close to the centre, it is possible to spend part of the afternoon in the city and then transfer to the stadium by metro without too much complication. That is important for travellers who arrive only on match day or stay one night. The rhythm of the city and the rhythm of the match come together quite naturally here.

For the supporter travelling to this match, the most important thing to know is that the evening will not revolve only around ninety minutes of football. This is a semi-final return leg, the stadium is large, the approaches are full, and the level of anticipation will be noticeable even before dark. That is why the best experience is usually gained by heading towards San Siro without rushing, with enough time to get in and to catch the atmosphere before the teams come out onto the pitch.

What could decide the evening

The first question is simple: will Inter manage to turn the match into its own rhythm before Como catches its breath. If the home side closes down space early, wins the ball back quickly, and gets Thuram or Dimarco into one-against-one situations, the match can move towards Inter long before the finish. If that does not happen, space opens for the second scenario - a long evening in which every set piece and every mistake carry more weight than usual.

The second question is related to the line-ups. Inter has more solutions, but the potential status of Lautaro MartĂ­nez is still a key detail. If he is ready, Como's defence has to watch two threats at the same time, and that changes everything, from the height of the last line to the way the box is defended. If he is not ready for full minutes, Como gets one more reason to believe it can survive the first wave and keep the match open for as long as possible.

The third question bears the name Nico Paz. When Como plays bravely, he is often the player who connects midfield and attack. His ability to receive the ball under pressure and turn towards goal can be the visitor's most important tool for escaping the squeeze. Inter will therefore try to shorten the space between its lines and force Como to attack with longer balls, not through combinations on the ground.If you are looking for a match in which the real cup stake can be felt both in the stands and on the pitch, this is exactly that kind of evening. Inter has a trophy obligation, Como has the chance for a breakthrough that would be remembered for a long time, and the opening 0:0 from the first match means that the return leg offers no hiding place. Ticket sales for this match are ongoing.

Sources:
- Inter.it - date and context of the return leg, result of the first match, Inter's path to the semi-final, stadium data, and coach Cristian Chivu
- Lega Serie A - current Serie A table as of 17/04/2026
- ESPN - Inter's and Como's statistical leaders in the 2025/2026 season and confirmation of the cup quarter-final results
- Como 1907 - confirmation of Cesc FĂ bregas's status as head coach and the club statement on Nico Paz's health condition
- AC Milan / San Siro Stadium / ATM Milano - capacity, stadium access, main entrances, public transport, and practical arrival information

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3 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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