Exodus of Italian Players (1 Viewer)

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
#1
On the pitch it seems Italy have never had it so good. The Azzurri are world champions and at club level AC Milan are still celebrating their side's seventh European Champion Clubs' Cup triumph. You would think players would be clamouring to get a piece of the action. Quite the opposite. Since the final whistle blew on the Rossoneri's victory in Athens, Italian players at the peak of their careers have been packing their bags and leaving the Belpaese in unprecedented numbers.

Already this summer FIFA World Cup heroes Luca Toni and Fabio Grosso have signed for FC Bayern München and Olympique Lyonnais respectively; Cristian Abbiati and Morgan de Sanctis, two of the country’s best goalkeepers, have moved to Spain, while striker Cristiano Lucarelli, the symbol of AS Livorno Calcio, will look to keep up his phenomenal scoring record at FC Shakhtar Donetsk. Rolando Bianchi will score his next goals for Manchester City FC after the promising 24-year-old striker hit 18 for Reggina Calcio last season while midfielder Massimo Donati will play in Scotland for Celtic FC.

It seems the once golden world of Serie A is losing its lustre. Of course this is not the first wave of Italians to try their luck abroad. Ten years ago more Italians were playing outside Italy, but most of them were considered to be at the end of their careers. Gianfranco Zola and Amedeo Carboni were obvious exceptions to the rule but many of the foreign legion were happy to wind down their careers in the comfort of the likes of Major League Soccer. When FIFA World Cup winners Fabio Cannavaro and Gianluca Zambrotta moved to Spain last year it was as a consequence of Juventus's involvement in the sporting fraud scandal rather than any desire to leave Italy.

To a large extent Italy is still feeling the effects of that scandal. Juve's demotion last year and the points deduction for other teams turned the league into a predictable one-horse race with FC Internazionale Milano cantering to victory. With crowd violence still a problem, Serie A games averaged just 19,511 spectators, the ninth consecutive campaign that crowds have fallen. "Money is important but you play football because it’s fascinating - in England, Germany or Spain stadiums are always full of fans and players love it,” said Zola who spent seven seasons at Chelsea FC.

There is no disputing that, but money remains a crucial factor. Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani was first to raise the problem after failing to sign Thierry Henry. “The problem is the difference in the financial regime in Spain,” he said. “We were very close to signing Henry and we would not have had any problems matching Arsenal’s requested fee, but the €10m per season net wages are not sustainable for us. To be clear, Barcelona’s contract with Henry costs them less than €15m gross, but for us the same wages would cost €20m.”

Galliani's claim was supported by recent research from Ernst & Young published in the Italian financial newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore. According to their research a team with 24.7 players - 11.1 of them foreigners - everyone earning €500,000 per year would cost €24.8m in Italy, €23.09m in England, €22.5m in Germany and only €19.8m in Spain. The big difference with Spain is down to tax breaks for foreigners, making Spain a lucrative haven for today’s footballers.

Tax, though, is not the only issue. Some clubs are still dealing with the consequences of the financial crisis which left them on the verge of bankruptcy a few years ago. S.S. Lazio, for example, reached an agreement with the Italian Government to pay back the €170m they owe in outstanding taxes in instalments over 23 years. The Rome club have introduced a salary cap to meet their new financial reality and now adhere to a strict maximum wage limit of €500,000 per player per season plus bonuses which cannot exceed 50 per cent of the player's salary. Not surprisingly, players who can earn more on the other side of the Alps are happy to make the move. For that reason Lazio transfer target Marco Amelia – another member of the Italy squad which won the World Cup – is more likely to be playing his football abroad next season than at the Stadio Olimpico, forcing the Biancocelesti to turn their attentions elsewhere to find a successor for Angelo Peruzzi.

That is not to say the short-term future of Italian football is bleak. The return to Serie A of traditional, wealthy and well-supported teams such as Juventus, SSC Napoli and Genoa CFC 1893 will generate new income and interest. Serie A will also be represented by the ten biggest cities in the country – with the exception of Bologna. Some of the nation’s biggest derbies are back on the fixture list and according to Deloitte, income from television rights, attendance and merchandising will increase by €360m next season. It may take some for Serie A to reestablish itself as THE destination for the world’s best footballers, but it is not a bad start.

uefa.com
 

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.zero

★ ★ ★
Aug 8, 2006
80,658
#4
obviously if we didn't get demoted and setup then +70% of these players would remain in italy. so i too blame moratti and co.
 

Ahmed

Principino
Sep 3, 2006
47,928
#5
but the Italian system is also seriously flawed...every year they have squabbles over the TV money referees crowd dustrubance etc...they should have an investigation and see what steps need to be taken to improve Italian football
 

Cronios

Juventolog
Jun 7, 2004
27,412
#6
I dont think, this necessary a bad thing, i ve always wanted to see how Italian players would cope abroad. They are professionals, Italian boards shouldnt halt their carrier (as long as the Italian league will not suffer the "Internationale" disease)
 
Jul 5, 2005
2,653
#7
I think the last 2 years start to happen this Exodus. Maybe the scandals of the Italian football are responsible, and also the victory of Italy in Mudial last summer made the Italian players more prized abroad.
 

tonykart

Senior Member
Feb 16, 2007
1,595
#9
i blame morrati and the figc!! i mean talk about shooting yourself in the foot with a gun called calciopoli
I agree 100%. 1 person dies in Catania and it is everywhere "tragedy", "disgrace"... but look at what happened in Athens with Liverpool fans and in Rome and Lyon with Man U fans. All of that just got swept under the rug. The FIGC needs to grow some balls and tell the foreign media to F-Off!
 

X Æ A-12

Senior Member
Contributor
Sep 4, 2006
86,718
#11
I agree 100%. 1 person dies in Catania and it is everywhere "tragedy", "disgrace"... but look at what happened in Athens with Liverpool fans and in Rome and Lyon with Man U fans. All of that just got swept under the rug. The FIGC needs to grow some balls and tell the foreign media to F-Off!
i didnt mean the police officers death i meant the match fixing scandal but i agree that we shouldnt care what the foreign media think
 

metalhead

Junior Member
Sep 23, 2005
154
#19
The thing with Calcio is making every incident into a scandal. Actually I dont think its a problem as it wouldnt be Calcio without it. When you remember past season, its never complete without the controversy.

Next season is gonna be an epic season ... sit back and enjoy Juve back in Serie A. The Italian league has something different that other leagues want but dont have. Its like comparing rugby to football (Calcio). Rugby is fun to watch but when you experience a great football match, its worth all the Rugby matches put together.

Funny how these articles come after Italy wins the world cup with Serie A player, pricks Milan win CL again, and Juventus, Napoli and Genoa are back.
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
65,830
#20
bojinov was saying in one of his statements his warning to calcio about how all the strikers are leaving italy. yes i might say the blame is down to calciopoli, which face it was partially to blame, but now its more about money.
italy dont have half as many oil barons and financially dodgey millionnaires like the prem do im pleased to say, but all the money is in countries like england where they earn ridiculous ammounts of money from tv rights alone, something along the lines of 50 mill so unfortunatly to say italy doesnt have that appeal of money. but at the same time, im pleased to say that italy is becomming one of those leagues that is rapidly producing talent by the season with the likes of marchisio starting to blossom, palladino etc... and even unknowns like almiron look set to make an impression on the big stage. Im also pleased to admit that italy is the only nation who only has italian managers in its top division which to me is the most important thing, it keeps its identity and not become like the epl where its a league of foreigners and foreign influence, so in my conclusion if they want to bugger off to another league because of the appeal of money, then go! doesnt bother me, or it shouldnt bother the league, because it will continue to produce talent, and its shown on the european stage with milan lifting the cl this year, better more so by defeating liverpool and man utd on the way, which shows money can buy you quality, but not titles.
 

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