Serie A MVP Federico Dimarco is reaching legendary status at Inter Milan. Could he become the greatest left-sided player in club history?
There is a moment that tells you everything you need to know about Federico Dimarco.
Inter versus Pisa. Chivu’s side are two goals down. The atmosphere inside the stadium is tense. Then, at the 34th minute, Dimarco comes off the bench.
What follows is one of the great individual performances of the 2025-26 season. Two assists, one goal, a 6-2 final scoreline, and a Man of the Match award that barely did the performance justice. In other words, a player coming off the bench — not starting — decided a match with that level of influence.
It was a masterclass. And, ultimately, it will not be forgotten by anyone who watched it.
The MVP Season in Full
The Pisa performance was not an outlier. Rather, it was a summation.
Overall, Dimarco’s 2025-26 campaign was the best of his career, which is saying something for a player who has been consistently excellent for three consecutive seasons. He finished as the league’s leading assist provider from a defensive position. Meanwhile, his delivery from wide areas — crossing from open play, set-piece delivery in tight situations, diagonal switches that opened defenses — was the most dangerous in Serie A.
On top of that, he contributed over 20 goal involvements across the season. From a wing-back. In a defensive system. As a result, that output places him in conversation with the best wide players in Europe regardless of position — not just the best defensive ones.
Given all of this, the MVP award is deserved. It is not close.
Best Left Wing-Back in the World?
At the specific position of left wing-back, in a back-five system, nobody is doing it better than Dimarco right now. The output, the consistency, the quality of delivery — it is all elite.
That said, let us be honest: the conversation at the very top of the world rankings for left-sided defenders also includes Nuno Mendes and Alphonso Davies. Together, these two, alongside Dimarco, form a tier that is clearly above the rest. All three perform day in and day out for their clubs at the highest level. Depending on your criteria — defensive solidity, attacking contribution, big-game performance — you can argue the order between them.
Even so, what you cannot argue is that Dimarco does not belong in that conversation. He absolutely does.
The Local Boy Who Cannot Be Replicated
There is a kind of love in football that money cannot manufacture. Instead, it develops over time, through shared identity, through the knowledge that the player pulling on the shirt grew up caring about it the same way you did.
Federico Dimarco is a Milan boy. An Inter fan since childhood. Indeed, he came through the academy, went out on loan — Parma, Verona, others — developed away from the spotlight, and eventually came back to become the best player in the division.
That story is rare in modern football, and Inter fans know it. After all, the connection between Dimarco and the Nerazzurri fan base is not the professional admiration you feel for a great signing who delivers. It is something deeper. Specifically, it is the love you have for a player who was always one of your own.
By comparison, consider Alexander Arnold and Liverpool — a player who left too soon in the eyes of the fan base, and whose departure fundamentally changed how supporters felt about him, regardless of his quality. Clearly, the trust between a homegrown player and a fan base is the most fragile thing in football. Break it at the wrong moment, and it never fully repairs.
Dimarco, however, has never come close to breaking it. If anything, it grows stronger every season. After all, Inter fans have watched him since he was a kid. Ultimately, that kind of love cannot be replicated by any signing, no matter how expensive or how good.
The Set Piece Weapon Nobody Talks About Enough
One dimension of Dimarco’s value that deserves far more attention, meanwhile, is his delivery from dead-ball situations.
Inter’s set piece record in 2025-26 was among the best in Europe. Naturally, that does not happen without a delivery specialist operating at the highest level. Dimarco’s left foot generates curl, pace, and precision from corners and free kicks that very few players in world football can replicate.
In a modern game increasingly decided by set pieces — and with analytics departments now routinely identifying dead-ball efficiency as one of the highest-value metrics in football — Dimarco’s specific skill set has quantifiable, measurable importance. In short, he is not just a wing-back who happens to take set pieces. Rather, he is one of the best set-piece deliverers in the world who also happens to be an elite wing-back.
His Place in Inter History
This is where the conversation becomes genuinely exciting.
On the trajectory Dimarco is on, the argument is already being made: by the time he eventually leaves Inter, he will be remembered as the best left-back or left wing-back the club has ever had. After all, no one will have contributed as many goals, assists, or appearances from that side of the pitch.
For a club with Inter‘s history, that is an extraordinary claim. Facchetti — Giacinto Facchetti, the legendary captain whose statue stands outside San Siro — is the standard. In other words, the greatest left-sided player this club has known.
Even so, Dimarco is on a path that, if sustained, puts him in that conversation. Not yet. But the direction is clear. And, if he spends the rest of his career at Inter, as every indication suggests he intends to, the comparison will not feel premature for much longer.
The Contract Situation
One thing, above all, is clear: Dimarco is not a complex negotiation. He knows what Inter means to him, the club knows what he means to them, and as a result the renewal, when it happens, should be straightforward — no agent warfare, no manufactured standoffs.
So, get the contract done quietly. Then let him get back to proving why he belongs among the world’s elite.
What Happens Next
Of course, the MVP award brings its own complications. Recognition at this level invites interest, inflates valuations, and tests clubs’ resolve. Consequently, there will be clubs in England and Spain who look at this season’s numbers and ask the question.
Inter‘s answer, however, should be immediate and unambiguous: not for sale, not for any fee, not in this window.
Lock him in. Let the contract speak for itself. And then, sit back and watch him build towards a legacy that could place him among the true legends of this football club.
After all, Facchetti’s statue stands outside San Siro for a reason. Dimarco is writing the next chapter.
Dimarco has won trophies. He’s won over the fanbase. And now he’s won Serie A MVP.
If he spends the rest of his career at Inter, where do you think he’ll rank among the club’s all-time greats?
Let us know in the comments — and don’t be afraid to put a ranking on it.

The MVP Season in Full
The Local Boy Who Cannot Be Replicated
His Place in Inter History












