Bonny draws attention as Inter take stock of their attacking depth

According to Sky Sport Italia, Ange-Yoan Bonny has become a player of interest for clubs looking to move in this summer, with Inter already defining their position. The key point from the report is that the Nerazzurri are working on the shape of next season’s squad and do not want to be caught off guard if external offers or enquiries start to build around the forward. In short, Bonny is not being treated as a marginal name in the market picture.
Because in a season that eats legs, the third and fourth forward aren’t names — they’re insurance.
Bonny isn’t a headline signing. He’s a 'squad-shape' decision.
If you’re building a 3-5-2, you need more than “two starters and vibes.” You need profiles.
Bonny offers a different kind of utility: running channels, stretching a line, pressing with intent, adding vertical threat when the game gets stale, and the possession starts to feel like self-hypnosis.
And when your references are still Lautaro Martínez and Marcus Thuram, the question isn’t “is Bonny better than them?” The question is: can he save them from playing 55 matches each?
Chivu’s attack: rotation or monetisation — pick one early
This is the part Inter are finally learning: you don’t wait for the market to set the price for you.
If enquiries grow, Inter’s decision will hinge on one brutal point:
Is Bonny a rotation weapon with upside or a sellable asset you cash in before the window turns ugly?
Keeping him means you protect depth and avoid shopping for “mobile modern striker” in a market where everyone wants one and nobody sells cheap.
Selling him only makes sense if Inter already have a clear replacement path, because otherwise you’ve just created a problem that costs more than the fee you collected.
The real message from this report
Interest exists. Inter are not opening the door for free.
That’s it. No drama. No desperation. Just the club trying to stay in control — which, in Italy, is already a minor miracle.
For a team that wants to stay at the top of Serie A while keeping the attack fresh, Bonny is exactly the kind of profile that can become more important over time, not less. Would you keep Bonny at Appiano as part of the rotation, or cash in if a strong offer arrives?

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