Serie A
Napoli “Smells Blood,” Eyes EPL Fringe Players
Sun, sea and a city basking in the triumphant glow of its recent Scudetto. Naples is an easy sell for wealthy footballers looking for a new experience this summer.
“If you are rich, Naples is amazing,” lauds journalist Vincenzo Credendino. “One day you pick up the boat you go to Capri, another day you go to Amalfi, to Pompeii. You eat good, there are a lot of things to do. Naples, if you are rich, is very attractive. It has always been like this.”
While estate agents have long pointed new arrivals to the luxury hillside villas of Posillipo, it is a recent phenomenon that those enticed to Napoli by president Aurelio de Laurentiis are coming from the Premier League.
After Scott McTominay, who joined from Manchester United, earned cult status in Campania for spearheading Napoli’s Serie A success, the film producer-turned-football club owner returned to add six-time Premier League winner Kevin de Bruyne to head coach Antonio Conte’s ranks.
He joins Romelu Lukaku and Billy Gilmour as others prised from the Premier League payroll since the Conte era began last summer.
And there could be more.
De Bruyne’s former City team-mate Jack Grealish – a £100m signing from Aston Villa four years ago – has also been linked, as has United winger Alejandro Garnacho, while Credendino believes there is interest in United and England forward Jadon Sancho, who spent last season on loan at Chelsea.
“People in Napoli are thinking Aurelio de Laurentiis is going crazy,” laughs Credendino. “In our mind, he is the president who tries to win, clearly, but always by putting the finances first, always being very careful about the economic side and doing a lot of player trading.
“That was the core business of Napoli. Now things have changed. Aurelio de Laurentiis is smelling the blood of the opponent, of the enemies.”
Napoli won Serie A last season for the fourth time in their history and the second time in three seasons. The first two titles, in 1987 and 1990, came during the Diego Maradona era. In 2023, Luciano Spalletti won their first Scudetto in 33 years before Conte steered I Partenopei to last season’s triumph.
Conte’s side finished one point above Inter Milan, who lost successful boss Simone Inzaghi to Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal earlier this month. Atalanta, who finished third, also saw long-term head coach Gian Piero Gasperini, the man who led them to Europa League glory two years ago, leave for Roma.
Traditional powerhouses Juventus are undergoing something of a restructure, while AC Milan will not compete in Europe next season. As their rivals stall, Napoli are looking to capitalise.
“Napoli is very stable. They plan before others so they have the money to convince a player like De Bruyne to embrace this new adventure,” explains Federico Mari, a Milan-based international football executive who specialises in transfer strategies, club acquisitions, MCO and cross-border strategy.
According to Transfermarkt, Napoli rank 30th on a list of the world’s most valuable clubs – below 15 Premier League sides and fifth among Italian clubs.
They went bankrupt in 2004, dropping into the third tier, and were acquired by De Laurentiis, who guided them back into Serie A by 2007. They have been European regulars since, winning the Coppa Italia three times and, finally, those long-awaited league titles.
“Napoli is a very well-run club,” says Mari. “For the De Laurentiis family, Napoli is their main family business and the past 10-15 years they have managed to do well both on the pitch, but also off the pitch.”
Mari highlights the sales of Gonzalo Higuain to Juventus for £75.3m, and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (£59m) and Edinson Cavani (£55m) to Paris St-Germain. Napoli spent more than £70m on Victor Osimhen in 2020 but, after a year on loan at Galatasaray, he is expected to leave this summer.
“They were very good at finding this talent and putting them in a place to do well, to play in Europe,” adds Mari. “If you have this stability to grow your business, have a club where everybody is aligning, they have a clear goal, then it happens that in some time you are better off or richer than some clubs who are usually more powerful than you – AC Milan, Inter Milan and Juventus.”
The Conte factor
If De Laurentiis “smells blood”, it may also be because he has a serial winner in the dugout tickling his nostrils.
Last season’s Serie A title was the fifth of Conte’s managerial career, becoming the first manager to do so with three different clubs. He also won the Premier League with Chelsea between those other successes at Juventus and Inter Milan.
“If you want to make young players grow, you pick other coaches,” explains Naples-based journalist Credendino. “If you pick Antonio Conte, you already know he will ask you to buy Romelu Lukaku. No problem.”
Indeed, after loan spells at Inter and Roma, Belgium forward Lukaku joined Napoli permanently from Chelsea at the beginning of Conte’s reign last summer.
“Conte wants to live in the moment, winning in the moment,” adds Credendino. “He cannot win with only young players with not so great experience. He likes young players, but when they are already stars.”
De Bruyne, whose contract expired at City, is another vastly experienced and decorated addition. He reportedly took a pay cut to join Napoli and, according to Credendino, is on 5.5m euros (£4.7m) per year following an initial 10m euros (£8.5m) signing on fee – making him the club’s second-highest earner behind compatriot Lukaku.
Grealish, Sancho or Garnacho would also not come cheap, however, which begs the question why Conte and De Laurentiis are shopping for expensive but out-of-favour Premier League names.
“Some players in the Premier League are not in a top moment, but if they come to Italy, with the mismatch we now have comparing the leagues, someone who in the Premier League plays at six out of 10, in Serie A they are an eight out of 10 level,” says Credendino.
Serie A is certainly older. Napoli had, on average, the second-oldest side in the Italian top flight last season at 28.2 years – only behind Champions League finalists Inter, who finished Serie A runners-up, with 29.1 years. In contrast, Fulham were the oldest in the Premier League at 27.9, according to Transfermarkt.
Statistics from Opta suggest a higher intensity in the Premier League too, teams pressed more and possession was won in the opposition’s final third over 600 times more than it was in Serie A last season, with 40 more goals scored following high turnovers. Players also dribbled or carried the ball significantly more than in Italy.
“The tactical side of it is slower than English football,” striker Keinan Davis, who joined Udinese from Aston Villa, told BBC Sport last season.
“I am physical and there are not really too many of those players. You see Lukaku and people with physical attributes do well. In England everybody is physical and everybody is fast.”
That said, Conte is renowned for being a manager who works his players incredibly hard. For all Naples’ charm, those joining should not expect a holiday retreat.
“De Bruyne probably has the feeling he will join a competitive team with one of the best coaches in the world, who is well known to be a killer in training because he makes players run like crazy, but he is a winner,” adds Mari.
“The Italian league is still very well known for tactics, so maybe if he is thinking in the future if I want to become a sporting director or a coach, I am going to learn new stuff in Italian football with Antonio Conte. The lifestyle is appealing, with a top coach in the best team in the league.”
Bbc.com
Serie A
Dele Alli Sent Trial Warning After Scary Fall From Grace As Ex-Tottenham Midfielder Faces Slim Opportunities
Dele Alli’s football journey has taken another worrying turn. Once one of England’s brightest midfield prospects, he now finds himself without a club and fighting to save what’s left of his career. Former Tottenham defender Stephen Carr believes the 29-year-old may have reached a point where trial spells are his only remaining path back into professional football.
It’s a harsh reality, but one that reflects how drastically—almost unbelievably—Dele’s career has declined.
How Dele Became a Free Agent
Dele’s contract with Serie A side Como was terminated in September 2025 after a tough spell that saw him make just one appearance—an outing that lasted less than ten minutes and ended in a red card against AC Milan.
Before that, he struggled at Everton, where injuries and patchy form made it impossible to secure a regular place. His loan to Besiktas in early 2023 was supposed to revive his career, but instead marked the beginning of his long battle with inconsistency, fitness issues, and confidence.
For a player who once dominated Premier League midfields and shone on the international stage, the contrast is sobering.
Stephen Carr: “It’s Scary How He’s Fallen”
Speaking to GOAL, Carr didn’t mince words. His assessment was blunt but honest: Dele Alli’s chances are running out.
“It’s scary how he’s fallen. He’s only 29, just past his peak, but he hasn’t played anywhere near enough football,” Carr said.
Carr compared Dele’s situation to a player coming back from severe injury—training alone can’t replicate match rhythm, intensity, and sharpness. His body simply isn’t used to competing at the highest level anymore, and that gap is becoming harder to close.
Even worse, Carr fears Dele may now be more prone to injuries because he hasn’t played consistently for so long.
Trial Time: Dele May Not Get to Choose His Next Club
Carr believes Dele’s next opportunity—if he gets one—won’t come with fanfare or big-club anticipation. It will likely come in the form of a trial, where he must prove he still belongs in the professional ranks.
“Wherever he ends up, he isn’t going to get to pick. It could be a trial where you have to prove it. It’s whether he has the stomach for that,” Carr said.
Trials are humbling experiences, even for players who’ve never reached Dele’s highs. For someone who has played Champions League football, carried England’s hopes, and been one of Europe’s most exciting young players, the mental shift required will be enormous.
Does Dele Still Have the Hunger?
Clubs in the EFL—including Wrexham and Birmingham—have been loosely linked, but the bigger question isn’t about who wants him. It’s about whether Dele wants it badly enough.
According to Carr, this stage of his career will be less about talent and more about mental strength.
“You aren’t a top player on paper anymore. You have to prove yourself again,” he said. “Whether he is up to the task, who knows, but his chances are slim—very slim.”
At just 29, Dele still has time. But time without football can be as damaging as any injury. If he can swallow his pride, rebuild his fitness, and embrace the grind, his story might yet have one final chapter.
But if not, this could be the closing pages of one of English football’s most unexpected declines.
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LaLiga
Carlo Ancelotti Warns Neymar And Vinicius Junior To Be At 100% For Brazil’s 2026 World Cup Squad
Carlo Ancelotti has made one thing very clear: the 2026 World Cup will not be a tournament of reputations. Brazil’s head coach has warned Neymar and Vinicius Junior that they must be at “100 per cent” if they hope to make the final squad travelling to the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
It’s a firm message delivered at a sensitive time, especially for Neymar, who is still battling persistent injuries and an inconsistent spell since returning to Santos. For Vinicius, the warning comes as he struggles to find his full form at Real Madrid this season.
Neymar’s injury struggles continue
After returning to Santos in early 2025 with hopes of reviving both his career and the club’s fortunes, Neymar has found himself in a frustrating cycle of recovery and setbacks. His long ACL layoff after leaving PSG, followed by fitness troubles at Al-Hilal, has meant very little sustained playing time.
His second spell at Santos was expected to be his emotional comeback story, but instead, it has been filled with knee discomfort, match-to-match uncertainty, and only flashes of his old brilliance. Seven goals in 25 games tell the story of a player trying, but physically unable, to build the rhythm he once had so effortlessly.
Santos manager Juan Pablo Vojvoda confirmed that Neymar was again sidelined due to knee discomfort during their recent draw with Internacional. Even so, the forward fought through pain in their 3–0 win against Sport, helping the club climb out of the relegation zone on goal difference.
Ancelotti: “No player gets special treatment”
When asked directly about Neymar’s situation, Ancelotti didn’t offer any emotional cushioning. His message was simple: Brazil has too much talent to carry anyone operating below full fitness.
“He has to be 100%,” Ancelotti told Esporte Record. “It’s not just Neymar — it could be Vinícius. If Vinícius is at 90%, I’ll call another player who is at 100%. This team has a very high level of competition, especially up front.”
He praised Neymar’s brilliance but pointed to the reality of his career: injuries have repeatedly halted his progress at the worst possible moments.
Neymar responds with determination
Despite the setbacks, Neymar remains defiant. After Santos’ victory over Sport, he admitted that the injuries have been emotionally exhausting, but insisted he won’t give up.
“I’m feeling better and better,” he said. “This injury is sad and annoying, but it won’t stop me. My focus now is helping Santos stay where it belongs — in the top flight. After that, we’ll see what’s next.”
Brazil’s road to 2026 just got more competitive
For Ancelotti, the message is clear: only the best, fully fit players will represent Brazil on the biggest stage. For Neymar and Vinicius, the challenge is equally clear — recover fully, perform consistently, and prove they belong in a squad full of hungry, in-form challengers.
The race to 2026 has officially begun.
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Premier League
Newcastle Ready To Launch Davide Frattesi Bid As Eddie Howe Revives Midfield Hunt
Newcastle United are reportedly gearing up to make another move for Inter Milan midfielder Davide Frattesi as speculation around the Italian star’s future intensifies. The Magpies wanted him last summer, but internal changes at Inter — including the exit of Simone Inzaghi — kept Frattesi in Milan. Months later, his playing time has dropped dramatically, and the door to a Premier League switch may now be wide open.
Inter Exit Looking Increasingly Likely
According to multiple Italian outlets, Frattesi has barely cracked 200 Serie A minutes this season — a worrying sign for a player who was once considered untouchable. Under new boss Cristian Chivu, he has slipped behind Petar Sucic and Piotr Zielinski in the midfield hierarchy.
Reports now claim a January exit is “very likely.” Inter rejected Newcastle’s initial approach in the summer, but with the player’s situation deteriorating, the Magpies could revisit the deal heading into 2026.
Howe Not Giving Much Away… But The Need Is Clear
Back in August, Eddie Howe openly admitted the club needed another midfielder due to injuries to Joe Willock and Lewis Miley.
“We want six midfielders and now we are down to four,” Howe said at the time. “It is a position we are looking at.”
Newcastle eventually signed Jacob Ramsey from Aston Villa, but with a long season ahead — and their PSR constraints limiting flashy deals — Howe may look toward strategic signings like Frattesi rather than blockbuster transfers.
The Newcastle manager also shut down talk of re-signing Elliot Anderson, noting that PSR remains a major factor:
“We can’t let one transfer unbalance the financial situation.”
Frattesi Still Shining For Italy
Despite limited club action, Frattesi remains in Roberto Mancini’s Italy setup and recently featured in their 4-1 loss to Norway during World Cup qualifying.
Speaking after the match, he acknowledged the team’s mental struggles:
“It was two games in one. In the first half, there was only one team on the pitch. In the second, we were fragile… Explaining 4-1 is difficult, but I wouldn’t call it humiliation.”
Italy now face a tense playoff route to the 2026 World Cup — and Frattesi’s future could play a major role in his national team form.
Will Newcastle Make Their Move?
If Inter make him available, Newcastle will be among the first in line. Howe wants depth, Frattesi wants minutes, and Inter want financial balance — the ingredients for a winter transfer that could benefit all sides.
A bid may be coming sooner than expected.
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