Roma had a busy summer transfer window, bringing in 10 new players to bolster the squad for incoming coach Paulo Fonseca.
As a result, it was a naturally busy summer for journalists, who sought to find out what Roma’s next moves would be.
All the reports had to start somewhere, so here is an attempt to trace who broke the initial news of each of the signings Gianluca Petrachi made.
Leonardo Spinazzola
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The first player to arrive this summer was Spinazzola, as part of a swap deal that sent academy graduate Luca Pellegrini to Juventus. Although it was near the start of the mercato, this proposal seemed to materialise very quickly.
The two clubs were linked with several player exchanges over the summer, with Roma reportedly interested in Gonzalo Higuain and Mattia Perin, and Juventus pursuing Nicolo Zaniolo as well. When Juventus made their first attempts for the Italian midfielder, Pagine Romaniste‘s Davide Moresco appeared to be the first to suggest that Roma had asked for Spinazzola as well as Higuain as part of the swap (report dated 21st June). Although Zaniolo and Higuain stayed put at their respective clubs, the seeds were planted for Spinazzola.
La Stampa claimed that the entire swap between the five players was on, in a report dated 26th June, but obviously only two players ended up making the moves.
Various sources reacted two days later, when it emerged that a meeting had taken place to conclude the Spinazzola-Pellegrini swap. Sky Sport‘s Fabrizio Romano revealed in the early afternoon that the two clubs were at work over the swap of the duo, with Il Tempo‘s Filippo Biafora confirming shortly after that the deal would be weighted such that Juventus earned €8m.
Gazzetta Dello Sport were the next to react, revealing Spinazzola’s price as €29m – €0.5m away from the value that was confirmed when the deal was made official two days later.
Amadou Diawara
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Also arriving towards the start of the window was Diawara, in another swap, seeing Kostas Manolas move to Napoli. It was known for some time that Manolas was likely to leave, but Napoli emerged as a surprise destination at first.
When it became clear that they weren’t willing to pay the defender’s €36m release clause, talk of players being included in the deal began. Sky Sport were the first to suggest that Diawara had been offered to Roma on 14th June, even though they admitted the Giallorossi would have preferred Dries Mertens. Consequently, Corriere Dello Sport said the following day that the channel was now open for Roma to take Diawara – while also reporting on Roma’s request for the Belgian striker.
Il Messaggero revealed the structure of the operation on 19th June. With Roma approaching a financial deadline, the paper confirmed that Manolas’ move would be posted on the present year’s balance, but the club would wait until 1st July to confirm Diawara’s signing.
The green light came when, on 25th June, Di Marzio said that the deal would be completed that week, with Romano giving his famous “Here we go!” tweet the next day to declare the operation as finalised.
There appeared to be a last-minute glitch over personal terms, with RomaPress denying Di Marzio’s suggestion that the contract had been agreed on 27th June – although they admitted there were not likely to be many problems in reaching a conclusion.
Biafora revealed on the 28th that the negotiations were finally done, with the player agreeing a five-year contract and the clubs agreeing a €19m fee. Two days later, Di Marzio corrected him, announcing the price as €21m, which was confirmed in Roma’s official announcement the next day.
Pau Lopez
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It was clear for quite some time that Roma needed a new goalkeeper, with Robin Olsen being dropped before the end of the season. As mentioned above, Perin was one of the options listed, but Roma eventually chose Pau Lopez from Real Betis.
La Repubblica revealed that Petrachi was considering the Spaniard on 13th June, shortly before Di Marzio claimed he was the first name on Fonseca’s list, even if the €25m valuation was too high. 48 hours later, Di Marzio dealt fans a blow the same day by revealing that the initial €20m offer had been rejected.
Ultimately, Roma reached an agreement with Betis by removing their right to 50% of the sell-on fee of Antonio Sanabria – with Di Marzio again being the one to reveal their plans to do this, on 18th June.
In Spain, El Confidencial were confident that an agreement had been reached on 2nd July, worth €18m plus the Sanabria clause. Three days later, Romano proclaimed that the documents would be exchanged within 24 hours and Di Marzio revealed the medical was scheduled for the 8th. He was confirmed the next day – although no-one got the actual fee, €23.5m, correct.
Gianluca Mancini
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Possibly the longest-running link of the 10 players to join was defender Mancini. The Italian had been a target for Petrachi’s predecessor Monchi in January, after Tuttomercatoweb claimed on 5th November that Roma (and Inter) had gone to scout him in Atalanta’s clash with Bologna the previous day.
The idea of Manolas leaving was already likely in January, and Gazzetta said on the 3rd of the new year that Mancini was the plan as his replacement, with the price likely to be €25m. Mancini’s agent did not deny Roma’s interest in an interview with the paper the next day, but detailed the defender’s plan to stay in Bergamo until the end of the season.
Mancini eventually signed on loan with an obligation to buy, and the first to understand this structure was Il Giorno, who revealed that Roma would deploy a Cristante-style operation to sign the player on a €5m loan and €20m obligation as far back as 6th January.
However, the picture soon changed, with Monchi walking away from Roma at a turbulent time in March. He was replaced on an interim basis by Ricky Massara, before Petrachi officially took over at the start of July – although the former Torino man appears to have been having a say in Roma’s business a while before that.
Il Giorno revived the reports on 23rd March, becoming the first to reveal that Mancini was still in Roma’s thoughts despite Monchi’s exit, with Atalanta ready to sell and the capital club the most likely buyer.
With Manolas’ departure confirmed on 30th June, Biafora said that Mancini was one of two names being considered as a replacement, with Betis’ Marc Bartra the other. On 5th July, Tuttomercatoweb revealed the player had agreed a contract until 2024 on a €2m salary – while delivering the all-important development that a fee of €25m had been agreed with the club.
TMW then said Fonseca had given his approval to the move on the 9th as the final hurdles approached, as La Stampa‘s Matteo De Santis and Il Tempo‘s Alessandro Austini agreeing that he would be the next arrival. De Santis confirmed it would be a loan with an obligation to buy, totaling €26m – although ReteSport suggested the agreement was for a two-year free loan, with a payment of €21m plus €4m in bonuses.
Many sources expected the deal to be closed within a matter of hours, but it actually took a little longer – enough time for De Santis to reveal that the figures would be a €2m loan, plus an obligational payment of €19m, and a further €5m in add-ons. When the deal was made official the next day, on the 17th, Roma confirmed they had got a better deal – with the price comprising a €2m loan, a payment of €13m, and an additional €8m.
Jordan Veretout
Welcome to #ASRoma, Jordan Veretout! 🐺
— AS Roma English (@ASRomaEN) July 20, 2019
More details ➡️ https://t.co/X0Kg6lbwVF pic.twitter.com/0Yze5kbFRT
Arriving shortly after Mancini was the subject of another protracted transfer saga, that of Jordan Veretout. The French midfielder is another player whose links with Roma can be traced back to the Monchi days, with Corriere Della Sera claiming him as a target for last summer all the way back in April 2018, although his move obviously did not occur that year.
Monchi’s interim replacement Massara was also said to want him, via a ForzaRoma.info report in April this year. By the summer, it became clear that the Fiorentina man was going to be a target, with Di Marzio revealing on 9th June that Fonseca was keen on him and contacts had already been made. The next day, Calciomercato claimed he was the most likely candidate to replace departing legend Daniele De Rossi.
Veretout was in high demand though, with Napoli and AC Milan also heavily linked. However, by the 17th June, Corriere Dello Sport were confident that Roma were ahead of the latter at least, while Tuttomercatoweb went one step further four days later by revealing that Roma were in pole position.
A number of meetings took place with his agent, with the first coming on Monday 24th June – revealed three days earlier by Gazzetta Dello Sport‘s Nicolo Schira. On 2nd July, Sky confirmed that the next meeting was to be on the next day. It must have had some impact on the player, as Fiorentina director Daniele Prade revealed on the 4th that Veretout wanted to leave.
Eventually, Milan and Napoli dropped away, with the key being revealed by Di Marzio on 10th July – the fact that Roma had surpassed them with a cash only offer. The decisive final meeting came on 16th July, revealed the day before by Di Marzio, with Biafora confirming that after three hours of face-to-face, an agreement had been reached for a five-year contract. But it was Di Marzio who had beaten him to the announcement by six minutes, revealing he would cost €17m plus €2m in bonuses – missing that the deal would actually be a €1m loan and €16m obligation to buy, plus the bonus €2m.
Distance still remained with Fiorentina, warned Calciomercato the next day, but Biafora and Di Marzio were separated by a matter of seconds again on the 18th when they confirmed that the total agreement had been reached, and that he could undergo his medical the next day. In the end, he did arrive on the 19th, but took his medical the day after.
Mert Cetin
Welcome to #ASRoma, Mert Cetin! 🐺
— AS Roma English (@ASRomaEN) August 16, 2019
More details ➡️ https://t.co/o8iEgCwe94 pic.twitter.com/KN8PcWLBw3
The least famous name to be brought in this summer, and therefore surely one of the more difficult to get information on. Biafora got there first on 15th August, also being able to confirm – correctly – that one more centre-back could arrive after Cetin. The understanding of his €3m price tag came from his native Turkey, where Fanatik editor Yakup Cinar was able to confirm the details shortly after Biafora’s announcement.
Davide Zappacosta
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It was clear for some time that Roma needed a new right-back, with many outlets reporting interest in Elseid Hysaj. The rumours of Zappacosta being an alternative actually originated from Calciomercato on 4th June, although they didn’t think Chelsea would let him go. Il Messaggero were the first to understand that he was not an alternative to Hysaj, but the more likely arrival, on 7th August.
With Chelsea boss Frank Lampard confirming he would have to find a solution eight days after, a meeting materialised, according to Tuttomercatoweb, on 18th August, with the hypothesis becoming ever stronger. By the 20th, Di Marzio could confirm that an agreement had been met, and he would take his medical the day after, when his move was made official.
Chris Smalling
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The speed at which Smalling‘s move to Roma was arranged is well-documented, with the defender joining the club on 30th August. One day earlier, Austini had revealed that the Englishman could be the ‘Mister X’ he said Roma were considering as an alternative to Dejan Lovren or Daniele Rugani. Things escalated quickly from there, with Romano confirming within the next 10 minutes that an agreement for a dry loan worth €3m had been met.
Nikola Kalinic
🇭🇷✅ Done Deal! Nikola Kalinic has joined #ASRoma on loan 💪
— AS Roma English (@ASRomaEN) September 2, 2019
And just as we’ve done all summer, we’re using our transfer announcements on Twitter to help search for missing children.@MissingKids ❤️ @ICMEC_official ❤️ @missingpeople pic.twitter.com/r9W0eSCLOj
Roma completed two senior signings on deadline day, both of which happened fairly quickly. The first to be announced was striker Kalinic, with there being whispers for a few weeks that he would be the replacement if Patrik Schick left. RB Leipzig ultimately cut it very fine to sign Schick, but once they did, Roma could unveil Kalinic.
The first to suggest Roma’s consideration of a loan for Kalinic was Sky Sport, on 22nd August, reporting that contacts with his entourage were advanced and Fonseca had given the green light to his potential signing, on loan with an option to buy.
The next update came on 30th August, when Biafora revealed that Kalinic also had an offer from Qatar, but was waiting for Roma. Calciomercato.com said the details had been agreed with Atletico for a loan and €10m option to buy – €1m shy of the actual value that was to be confirmed two days later. The same site were the ones to reveal that he would fly in on 1st August to take his medical the next day.
Henrikh Mkhitaryan
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In one of the most exciting and surprising moves of the window, Roma completed their summer business with the last-minute acqusition of Mkhitaryan on loan from Arsenal. The primary announcement came very late on 1st September, via Romano at 10:14pm BST, with Austini claiming he would arrive on loan with an option to buy seven minutes later. Although such an option was not officially announced, there is hope that Roma could make his signing permanent if he has a good season.
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