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Deano

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Discussion starter · #1 ·
Come on guys put your heads together and have a think

From the top of my head so far it seems

Lupoli (now at Ascoli, Livorno may sign him and he could be their main striker which would be a positive)

Russotto (Got shafted by GEA, but since then he has struggled even in Serie B)

Di Gennaro (not quite wasted yet, but hes going that way)
 
Discussion starter · #2 ·
Most Italian soccer fans should be familiar with the name of Andrea Russotto. As a youngster he was dubbed as “the next Roberto Baggio” and “Antonio Cassano with a level head” but up until now he has not even been close to living up to those names. His story is a bit particular, and for those of you that don’t know it here it is. In 2004, Russotto, already a regular in the national youth teams and a rising star in Lazio’s youth system, was approached by GEA World (probably the biggest Italian football agency, Marcello Lippi’s son Davide was the head of the organization and was brought into the Calciopoli scandal on accusations of illegally handling player transfers) who wanted to represent the rising star. The agency basically told Russotto that if he wanted to have an important career, it was in his best interests that he sign with one of their agents. Russotto refused the pressure from GEA and to get away from their continuing pressure escaped to Switzerland, where he signed for AC Bellinzona, a team from the Italian part of Switzerland that were playing in Swiss Second Division at the time (they are now in the Swiss Super League).


Starting the 2004-2005 season at Bellinzona, the 16 year old Russotto made 9 appearances and 1 goal until January, when he was sent on loan to Roman club Cisco Roma (then called Lodigiani) where he made 1 appearance the rest of the season. That summer Russotto then showed all of his talent at the U-17 World Cup with Italy, and many Italian clubs were interested in bringing him back to the peninsula. Treviso FBC, who had just been promoted to Serie A, acquired his services on loan but made him play with the Primavera side all season (with Robert Acquafresca). However Russotto did make his debut in Serie A that season as a 17 year old and finished the season with 4 appearances. Famed magazine World Soccer even inserted Russotto on the list of the top 50 young players in the world.

The following season Treviso extended the loan (although they had been relegated to Serie B) and Russotto finally started to show signs of a potential explosion. He made his Italy U-21 debut at the age of 18 (he has 9 appearances and 2 goals with the U-21’s to date) and racked up 32 appearances and 4 goals that season. Treviso extended his loan for one more year in 2007-2008 but even though he played 31 times and scoring 1 goal, Russotto failed to perform at a high level like the previous season and was used mainly as a sub. In the summer of 2008, he finally returned to Bellinzona, but it wasn’t a long stay as Napoli decided to take a chance on him. Napoli saw a potential superstar and decided to take him on loan for the season with the right to buy him in June 2009 for 3.8 million euro. However the young fantasista was used sparingly by both Edy Reja and Roberto Donadoni and even though he always did well and showed good things when coming on, he never gained the full trust of either manager.

This past summer, Napoli decided not to exercise the buy-out clause and therefore Russotto was sent back to Switzerland again. Despite remote interest from clubs like Udinese, Lecce, Piacenza, and Gallipoli, nobody took the risk on the 21 year old Russotto. Today on the last day of the transfer market I expected a club to take a chance on him at the last minute, but nobody did. For the 2009/2010 season, Andrea Russotto is playing for Bellinzona of the Swiss Super League (where he has the shirt number 20 and has already made 2 appearances in the league). It is a little strange that no club in Italy wanted to take a chance on him. It’s mind-boggling that one of Italy’s more talented youngsters is plying his trade in the Swiss Super League. But then again, maybe there’s something we don’t know. Maybe he has an attitude problem. Maybe he doesn’t put effort in training. We don’t know, and quite frankly I don’t think we ever will. Will Russotto ever explode? It’s hard to tell. His move to Switzerland definitely puts him off the radar. He certainly has the talent to do so, but as of now, it’s still a mystery.
http://italy.theoffside.com/serie-a/andrea-russotto-what-happened-to-you.html
 
Discussion starter · #3 ·
Azzurrini - Italy's future stars - Andrea Russotto
By Andrea Tallarita
We always talk about players primarily in terms of how they determine victory and defeat on the field. Success is the fuel that the media thrive on, the nourishment by which they grow. Today we are going to talk about a player who has embraced values which transcend the polished sheen of trophies, and who has consequently been denied the saurian attention of the media. Most of the public will be less familiar with this player than with other prominent Azzurrini such as Sebastian Giovinco or Mario Balotelli. Today we are going to talk about Andrea Russotto.



Russotto was born in Rome, on 25 May 1988. His evolution in the youth camps of Lazio quickly earned him distinction as a peculiar offensive player, one of a kind which does not emerge very often – Russotto is a trequartista, a typology of footballer which is not a midfielder, not a forward, and something more than a mere compromise between the two. The role implies starting in the trequarti, a term which refers to the space three-quarters of the way from one end of the pitch to the adversary goal. It requires great technical versatility, a strong shot from distance and, above all, tremendous passing skills and vision. The most famous trequartista in modern Italian football is of course Francesco Totti, despite his recent metamorphosis into a forward, and Russotto is the young player amid the Azzurrini who most resembles the Roman icon. This is ironic, because the junior footballer supports Lazio with a passion which seldom belongs to the contemporary age. “If I were to receive an offer from Roma,” he once declared in an interview, “I wouldn’t even consider it.” The statement was made at a time when Russotto was playing for Bellinzona, a team in the lowly Swiss league, and Roma were second-best in Serie A and climbing the Champions League steps, so it denotes an integrity of notable proportions.



Said integrity is precisely the reason why Russotto has encountered difficulties in affirming himself so far. The young man did not move to Bellinzona because he could not cut it in the Lazio ranks – he moved there as an act of defiance. “When I was at Lazio, I was approached by a representative of the Gea,” he declared in 2005. The Gea was an organisation of football agents in Italy, found less than a year after Russotto’s public declarations to be heavily involved in the Calciopoli scandal. “He told me,” the young player continued, “that if I didn’t tie myself to them I could not have a career. So I took my stuff and left.” Time proved the boy to be right and Gea to be an organisation bordering on football mafia, though Russotto gained no benefit from his act of honesty other than his own moral satisfaction. His jumbled career led Napoli to pick him up as a young promise last year, but none of the Coaches gave him trust and he saw very little playing time. Recently he has been returned from the loan to Bellinzona, and his future is now something of a mystery. Udinese apparently expressed some interest, but nothing is certain as of now.






The story of the move to Switzerland paints the image of a footballer who possesses perhaps the rarest quality in his trade – the courage to face obscurity. It takes a real man to act on that, and it takes more than a champion to prove oneself a man when one is the age of a boy. Maturation implies sacrifice, and Russotto is paying for his resistance to the seduction of glory with an extensive waiting time for his international pronouncement. Though he has already played his part with the Azzurrini (it was there that his skills first came to public attention), the limited playing time and stiff competition he encountered at Napoli mean that he will have to wait until after the World Cup to have his say with the senior team. Unlike Sebastian Giovinco or Davide Santon, Russotto has no chance of making it to South Africa. Unlike Mario Balotelli or Luca Cigarini, he is unlikely to be there for Euro 2012 either. Russotto will be a late bloomer. But when he blooms, expect pyrotechnics.



Russotto is a talent, there can be no doubt about that. His performances with the U-21 national team showed flashes of skill that do not belong to common players, as well as an advanced sense of positioning and vision. As importantly, Russotto is as selfless on the pitch as he is off it. His solutions are always oriented towards team-play and collective success, never towards personal glory. Even among senior players this is an uncommon and precious quality, and it is this defining characteristic that truly makes Russotto a valuable asset amid the wealth of promising juvenile forwards in the Italian ranks. There are more young strikers and supporting strikers in the peninsula than the Coaches know what to do with, but an authentic, traditional trequartista with all the technical attributes and the altruism to put them to their best use – now that is a rarity. The closest thing to an alternative is of course represented by Giovinco, but the Juventus phenomenon is more conventionally a half-winger or seconda punta, given his individual one-on-one skills and his ephemeral physicality.



The difficulty about trequartisti is that they are very tactically unwieldy. If you field a trequartista, then you must build the team around him. This means that if Russotto is to affirm himself in that position – in whichever club team he turns out to play next, and subsequently with the Azzurri – then he will have to be truly exceptional. Otherwise he may be employed in other positions, where in all likelihood he will have to act as no more than a versatile substitute for a range of other role-players.



It is too early to say whether Russotto really will be a future star or whether he shall remain an unfulfilled promise. The kid has not been given enough opportunities to prove himself, and we have not been given enough chances to examine him (though what we have seen so far is certainly very suggestive). What is certain is that his career, like his personality, will say no to compromise – a player so idiosyncratic in his attributes (and character) as Russotto can only end up as either the heart of the team he plays in and the focal point of all their game, or as an evanescent figure subsisting in the grey twilight of the reserve team. This year and the next will tell us which destiny awaits this mysterious young talent.

http://www.footballitaliano.co.uk/article.aspx?id=480
 
Discussion starter · #4 ·
RBSdcm29SJI

Really sad to see this guy waste a way into nowhere.
 
Interesting, but..if he is that good, he would attract interests from other leagues. EPL, Liga?

GEA cant be that influential outside Italy right.
 
Discussion starter · #6 ·
He would not be suited to EPL for sure, but indeed La Liga, maybe someone could have, but as the article says a team needs to be built for him, and not many teams could invest this much on a player like he who has not really proven anything at the top level, just for U21 and a good time with Treviso. He went to Crotone and hardly even played there, something must be wrong... he certainly has the talent.
 
Yes, talent alone brings you nowhere. A friend of mine could do everything with a ball, but his weight was around 100 kg (for 165 cm) so he was dead after 1 minute of a real game. He is an extreme case, but less extreme cases are good enough to explain the reason why an extremely talented player can die in serie D. I wouldn't even talk about wasted talent, I'd talk about half a player.
 
Will Forestieri return to Serie A next season?

Looks like Lecce want him, but Udinese is determined to have him back with them this season, so either way, the loan in Spain is over it seems. Good news I guess...


L’avvocato Dario Canovi, agente del centrocampista italo-argentino Fernando Forestieri, ha fatto sapere che le squadre interessate al talento ex Genoa dovranno sbrigarsi a decidere se fare un’offerta o meno. Il gocatore quest’anno ha giocato in Spagna col Malaga, ma infortuni prima e scelte tecniche dopo ne hanno frenato la continuità. Forestieri, in comproprietà tra Genoa e Udinese, nelle ultime ore pare destinato al Lecce (qualora la comproprietà si risolvesse a favore del Genoa) ma il club friulano ha intenzione di riportarlo a casa. (itasportpress)
 
These are not Lippi's fault. They haven't even shown their talent at club level, most of them. Forestieri, Russotto, Giovinco, you've only known they're good because of what they did at youth levels, in primavera tounraments, etc. When was the last time one of them had a match-winning performance in Serie A?
 
These are not Lippi's fault. They haven't even shown their talent at club level, most of them. Forestieri, Russotto, Giovinco, you've only known they're good because of what they did at youth levels, in primavera tounraments, etc. When was the last time one of them had a match-winning performance in Serie A?
That's why they are wasted talents. They've never got much chance to play let alone shine.
 
Discussion starter · #18 ·
This thread has nothing to do with Lippi :D
 
Giovinco...Juventus have yet again shun, stunted and neglected a prodigious talent in favour of Del Piero and Diego...

It's amazing how many careers Del Piero has ruined...
i think its more the coaches rather than del piero. players like giovinco can play together with del piero, in fact it would benefit him as he'll have a player to link up with. But why Gio has been neglected in teams that he could have easily broken into a head of the likes of a salihamdzic when camo was injured and veen nedved being out of form in his last season really was a concern.

Miccoli at Juve on the other hand was treated poorly, but then again, you had del piero still in his prime kicking plenty of goals and creating them also.

but definitely juventus have failed the most when it comes to young italian talent, they stuffed up Maresca and so many more.

In saying that, 4 years ago italy lifted the world cup and a lot of juve players in the team so that says something as well.

Anyway, Gio will move on, possibly Bari...lets hope he starts, shines and becomes a super star for Italy in the near future.
 
Yes, talent alone brings you nowhere. A friend of mine could do everything with a ball, but his weight was around 100 kg (for 165 cm) so he was dead after 1 minute of a real game. He is an extreme case, but less extreme cases are good enough to explain the reason why an extremely talented player can die in serie D. I wouldn't even talk about wasted talent, I'd talk about half a player.
yeah perfect. this definition of talent is not even worthy to speak of when these players are half players. I don't care at all about it.
 
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