Inter drop points in Turin as Dortmund punch Champions League ticket
Inter Milan surrendered a two-goal advantage to draw 2-2 at Torino on Sunday, 24 hours after Borussia Dortmund secured their place in next season's Champions League with a commanding home win over Köln.

Inter Milan dropped points in Turin on Sunday, surrendering a two-goal lead to settle for a 2-2 draw against Torino at the Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino. The result, secured when Nikola Vlasic struck an equaliser late in the second half, offered a rare blemish on an otherwise dominant season for Simone Inzaghi's side — who confirmed the Serie A title as a mathematical certainty long before Sunday's kickoff.
The result matters most as context: Inter have coasted to the Scudetto with a squad that has cycled effectively between domestic obligations and a deep Champions League run that sees them face Barcelona in the semi-finals this week. Sunday's slippage in concentration, however, raises questions about squad rotation heading into two of the most significant weeks of the club's season.
The two-goal fade
Inter arrived in Turin having taken a firm grip on the match inside the opening half-hour. The nature of the concession — a soft goal that invited Torino back into a contest that had appeared settled — will frustrate Inzaghi more than the point itself. Vlasic's finish, described in the Italian press as a composed strike after Inter's defence failed to clear their lines, exposed the kind of momentary lapse that elite European opponents will punish more severely than Torino did on Sunday.
The draw does nothing to threaten Inter's position at the summit of Serie A. It does, however, provide a data point: Inzaghi's side have shown vulnerability when protecting leads in away fixtures, a trait that Barcelona will have noted as they prepare for Wednesday's first-leg encounter at the Stadio Olimpico.
Dortmund's qualification — a cleaner afternoon
Twenty-four hours earlier, Borussia Dortmund removed any lingering doubt about their Champions League prospects with a 4-0 home victory over Köln. The result, which sealed a top-four Bundesliga finish with matches to spare, was described by Sky Sport Germany as a professional, focused performance that left no room for the nervy finish that had characterised Dortmund's season in previous weeks.
The timing is significant. Dortmund's qualification, confirmed before the final round of matches, grants Nuri Şahin's side a crucial fortnight of preparation without domestic distractions. Having navigated a turbulent mid-season spell that included losses to Sporting CP and a humbling defeat against Bayern Munich, Dortmund have steadied — and Sunday's performance suggested a team that has found its attacking rhythm at precisely the right moment.
The semi-final against Barcelona presents a stark contrast: Dortmund's gegenpressing physicality against a side that has dazzled in the Champions League this season. The clubs meet in the last four for the first time since 1997-98, when Dortmund progressed en route to their sole European Cup title.
European qualification as financial architecture
The subtext to both results is economic. Champions League qualification delivers a revenue package — broadcast rights, matchday income, and the prestige premium — that reshapes a club's planning horizon for the following season. For Dortmund, a club that has consciously managed its books while competing at the top tier of European football, Sunday's confirmation was a vindication of a squad-building model that prioritises sustainability over splashes.
For Inter, the domestic league is effectively settled. The question for the final weeks is whether fatigue and rotation costs them in Catalonia — or whether the deep squad Inzaghi has built proves sufficient to sustain two fronts simultaneously. Sunday's draw suggests the margin is thinner than Inter's comfortable league position implies.
What remains open
The sources do not specify whether Inzaghi rotated his squad significantly for the Torino fixture, a decision that would contextualise the defensive lapses. Similarly, the full extent of any injuries sustained in Turin remains unclear from the available reporting. Both questions carry weight: Inter face Barcelona on Wednesday, with a return leg in Milan the following week, before turning back to Serie A for a title celebration that will have a mathematical formality long since overtaken by sporting reality.
Dortmund, for their part, have a clearer run at preparation — but face a Barcelona side that dismantled Borussia Mönchengladbach and碾 pushed Real Madrid in the quarter-finals. The gap between domestic qualification and European contending is one both clubs understand intimately. Sunday confirmed the former; the next fortnight will define what the latter ultimately means.
Desk note
Monexus led with Dortmund's qualification rather than Inter's draw, reflecting the more decisive nature of the two results. The wire services led with Inter as the day's primary fixture; the framing here treats Dortmund's clinched spot as the more analytically significant event given the calendar context heading into the semi-finals.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/footballmarcus/18966