
Como’s €60m Nico Paz Coup Redraws Serie A’s Financial Map
Como’s record purchase of the Argentine playmaker, alongside Milan’s pursuit of Gonçalo Ramos and Juventus’s striker search, marks a summer of ambitious spending in Italy, while Granit Xhaka nears a Chelsea reunion with Xabi Alonso.
Como have completed the most eye-catching deal of the Italian summer, paying Real Madrid €60 million for the 21-year-old playmaker Nico Paz. The operation, sealed in a matter of days, is the first purchase of such magnitude by a club outside Serie A’s traditional elite since Juventus signed Matthijs de Ligt in 2019. Madrid-based observers note that the Spanish club have not relinquished control: a buy-back clause set at €80 million and a 50 per cent share of any future resale ensure the European champions retain a tight grip on a talent they first developed. Paz, currently at the World Cup with Argentina, had made clear his wish to stay at Como, where he flourished last season, and the club’s president, Mirwan Suwarso, proactively aligned the deal with UEFA’s financial monitors despite not yet being bound by the full regulations — a gesture that, viewed from Nyon, signals a club intent on building organically rather than through artificial injections.
Across the city, Milan are moving with equal speed under their new coach, Ruben Amorim. The Portuguese was sacked by Manchester United in January after a tenure in which, according to CEO Omar Berrada, he “held too tightly to his ideas” at a moment when adaptation was essential. Now at the helm of the Rossoneri, Amorim has sanctioned a club-record €70 million move for Paris Saint-Germain’s Gonçalo Ramos, a compatriot who scored only six league goals last season. The deal, driven by the super-agent Jorge Mendes, deepens the Portuguese network at Milanello: Mendes also represents Pedro Gonçalves, the Sporting forward identified as Rafael Leão’s replacement should the winger depart after the World Cup. Juventus, meanwhile, are targeting another PSG striker, Randal Kolo Muani, who managed a solitary Premier League goal on loan at Tottenham, while also pursuing Bologna’s Jhon Lucumí and Aston Villa’s Emiliano Martínez.
In London, the transfer chatter centres on Granit Xhaka. The Switzerland captain is in advanced talks to join Chelsea, where he would reunite with Xabi Alonso, the coach who led him to a domestic double at Bayer Leverkusen. Xhaka, 34, only joined Sunderland last summer and captained the side in 32 league starts, but the pull of a second London chapter and Alonso’s admiration — Xhaka once spoke of being struck by the Spaniard’s “composure in communication” — has accelerated negotiations during the World Cup group stage. Switzerland face Iran or Algeria in the last 16 on Friday, and a deal could be formalised before kick-off.
From Marseille, the stance is one of defiance. Despite a pressing need to raise funds, the club have removed Amine Gouiri from the list of players available for sale. The Algerian forward’s dynamic displays at the World Cup have reinforced his value to a side that, alongside Facundo Medina and Timothy Weah, is being built as a young core capable of returning to European competition. Club sources, however, concede that an irrefutable offer could yet force a rethink. The next concrete sporting consequence will be felt on the pitch: as the World Cup knockout phase begins, the performances of players such as Gouiri, Xhaka and Paz will directly shape the final moves of a window already defined by Italian ambition and Iberian influence.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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Italy's summer window is a mix of bold moves and lingering doubts: Como secures Nico Paz, keeping a top talent in Serie A, while Milan shatters its transfer record for Gonçalo Ramos in a deal heavily influenced by agent Jorge Mendes. The 30-million move of 33-year-old Granit Xhaka to Chelsea raises eyebrows, blending excitement with skepticism.
Manchester United's CEO finally speaks out on Ruben Amorim's sacking, revealing it was not about tactics but his stubborn adherence to a playing philosophy. The disclosure exposes the brutal reality of modern football, where rigidity can cost a talented coach his job.
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