In the away game against Genoa, except for the goalkeeper Stekelenburg, Gonzalez arranged players who will not start in the next Champions League group match, and the formation was changed to 352.

Kjaer, Romagnoli and Perrotta play three central defenders, Angel and Dodo play wing backs, Taddei and Pjanic Gade Braun in the middle of the midfield, and the double forwards are Tarlo and Jia pull.

This lineup is old and small, and the defense is okay. Romagnoli has played very well in training recently. Kjaer has also played in Serie A for a season, and it is still stable.

The offense can only rely on Pjanic and De Bruyne to create opportunities. Apart from the header, Talow is not as good as making a wish. As for Jara, he is better at adding icing on the cake.

Gonzalez also left behind. Wishing, Totti and De Rossi are all sitting on the bench. If the team has hope of winning in the second half, they can be sent to the field for a rush.

As a result, Gonzalez was disappointed. Immobile, the future Serie A striker king, showed his power... No, he showed his power. He scored twice in only 10 minutes of the first half, helping Genoa lead Roma at home. .

In fact, Immobile is not as good as he will be in the future. He scored 28 goals in Serie B last season, and then Genoa bought 50% ownership of Immobile from Juventus. He was able to land in Serie A this season, but he played very well. In general, facing the Serie A defenders, Immobile seems to have lost himself, and did not score a single goal in the first seven rounds.

Then it exploded when playing Roma, it was hard to understand...

Briefly explain the issue of player ownership in Serie A.

This is different from the common player agents or agency companies in Latin America and Portugal that own a part of the ownership of the players. It is done by unscrupulous agents for profit.

However, Serie A's player ownership system is to some extent used by wealthy teams to train the little monsters. Currently, only Serie A plays this way.

Take Roma as an example. For example, the Roma defender line is crowded now, but Romagnoli has shown great talent, but he can't play. What should we do?

Sell ​​it outright?That definitely won't work, it can't be sold for much now, and seeing that this kind of talent has a high probability of being kicked out, it's a blood loss.

To play in the youth league?It is also wasteful, and has no training value at all.

If this situation is put in other leagues, it is basically a loan.But there are also problems on loan. What if the opposing team does not train well?Or what if you don’t cultivate according to your own requirements?Originally, Romagnoli played as a central defender. If the opposing coach asked him to change his midfielder on loan, it would delay the players. This kind of thing has not happened before.

At this time, the player co-ownership system appeared. Roma can sell 50% of Romagnoli's ownership to weak teams, such as Genoa, so that Genoa has half of Romagnoli's ownership and use rights.

Some friends may have to ask, so Genoa will go all out to train Romagnoli?

The answer is yes, because Genoa will also benefit from player appreciation.Assuming that Romagnoli's worth is now 300 million euros, Genoa spent 150 million to buy half of the player's ownership. After two years of training, the player's worth rose to 1000 million. The 150 million that Genoa spent back then became 500 million.

And this kind of little demon generally has great potential, the better he plays, the higher his worth, so the team with the right to use it will carefully cultivate it.

For Rome, it is also a profit. After Romagnoli is trained, they can directly buy it back at a price of 500 million. Counting the 150 million sold that year, that is to say, they spent 350 million to get a 1000 Wan's players are still the kind who have trained similarly.

This is what player ownership co-ownership means.Let the giants and demons get more opportunities to play, and let the middle and lower reaches of the team who are generally short of money can get immediate combat power at a relatively low price. After training, the income from selling ownership is also quite considerable.

Bundled with interests, everyone benefits.

But this is Italy, how can there be no tricks?

According to regulations, the party without the right to use the player only needs to indicate in the envelope the price they want to buy half of the player's ownership, while the party with the right to use the player needs to indicate the full value of the player.

I also use Romagnoli as an example. For example, after two years, his worth is 1000 million euros. Rome only needs to list a price of 500 million in the envelope, while Genoa needs to list a price of 1000 million.

If Genoa made a mistake and wrote 500 million, then Roma only needs to spend 250 million euros to buy Romagnoli back.

At that time, the Italian national goalkeeper Viviano returned to Inter Milan at a price almost free because the director of Bologna made a mistake.

Of course, it is also possible that the director of Bologna took kickbacks. This kind of thing is very common in Serie A. Roma director Sabatini has been a master of kickbacks since then, especially after Suning took control of Inter Milan. He became the director of Inter Milan and got a lot of kickbacks rise……

There is also a rule that the team with player ownership can buy out first, which has loopholes to exploit.

The giants can take advantage of the fire, the middle and lower reaches of Serie A are generally not financially sound, and the transfer fee for a season may only be a few million euros. At this time, the giants don’t need to bid according to the player’s worth, they only need to pay for a weaker team. The price will do.

In June 2005, Juventus bought Maresca, Chiellini and Miccoli from Fiorentina for only 6 million euros, which cost 650 million euros a year ago.

Of course, there are also financial issues. As long as the Serie A teams check their accounts, there are more or less problems, so I won’t expand on this.

Two years later, the player ownership system will be officially abolished, because at that time almost all teams are taking advantage of loopholes or using them to balance accounts...

Now half of Immobile's ownership is still in the hands of Juventus, but the right to use it has been bought by Genoa, so although Immobile's performance is average, Genoa is still willing to cultivate, and this game will explode.

In the second half, Gonzalez replaced Taddei with Gaitan, let Perrotta play in the midfield, and replaced Talo with Yarmolenko, and played 4231 and Jara with a single arrow. The effect was still not good, but instead Genoa seized the opportunity to score another goal in No.605 minutes.

Three goals behind, Gonzalez completely gave up. He refused the wishing challenge and conceded the loss.

As a result, Roma's offense improved a bit. In the 805th minute, Jara received a through pass from Yarmolenko and successfully scored a goal against offside, 3 to 1!

Five minutes later, Jara scored twice to tie the score at 5-3!

Jara, like Immobile, did not score in seven games, and scored twice as soon as he scored!

But it didn't help. In stoppage time, Immobile scored another goal, staged a hat-trick, and completely killed the game.

In the end, with Immobile's outstanding performance, Genoa defeated the defending champion Roma 4-2 at home, broke the biggest upset of this round, and gave Roma their first defeat of the season.

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