
Romelu
Lukaku says Inter Milan got him out of a "deep hole" at Manchester United
and admits he was only ever going to leave the Serie A champions for
Chelsea.
The Belgian striker made the move to Italy in 2019 after a tough final few
months at Old Trafford where he fell out of favour under Ole Gunnar
Solskjaer.
He rediscovered his goalscoring form at San Siro as his 64 goals in 95
appearances propelled Inter to a first Serie A title in 11 years and earned
him a £97.5m move back to Stamford Bridge - which he admits was a
head-turner.
"I was only going to leave Inter Milan for Chelsea," Lukaku told HLN. "Kids
love Real Madrid, Barcelona, Manchester United. And Chelsea for me, everyone
knows what Chelsea means to me.
"If they ask me, why would I say no? I only realised that Chelsea was
serious at the third offer. So it was €100m (£85m), then it was €105m
(£90m), and then it went to €110m (£94m). Then I knew, this is truly
serious.
"I was in a deep hole at Man United. I didn't want to go behind Inter's
back.
"So after training I went to [Inter boss Simone] Inzaghi's office. I didn't
want to ruin the atmosphere because I was no longer with my head in Milan.
So I asked him: please find an agreement."
Lukaku originally joined Chelsea in 2011 at just 18 years of age but after
one season was shipped out on loan to West Brom and then Everton, where he
secured a permanent move in 2014.
Having rejoined the club 10 years later, the 28-year-old has settled in
quickly and scored on his second debut against Arsenal in August, and is
adamant Thomas Tuchel's style of play suits his game.
"The first two training sessions, that intensity was so high that the first
two or three days I had a bit of a scare," Lukaku said. "But two days before
the match we had a training session where I scored two goals and I thought
yes.
"The team is looking good, the coach is looking good, I love the system that
we play because it's the same system as here [with Belgium], only the
emphasis is different. For me it's fantastic because I play in a team that
dominates."