The Sun (Malaysia)

‘Genius’ and ‘big mouth’

> Raiola – best friend to the stars <

-

DRESSED in a T-shirt and jeans or tracksuit and trainers, it is easy to mistake Mino Raiola for just another chubby beer-loving football fan rather than the razor-sharp mind who dominates the world transfer market.

Raiola, whose Italian roots and love of pasta is highlighte­d by his family’s pizza restaurant, is said to have been instrument­al in orchestrat­ing Belgian striker Romelu Lukaku’s latest signing at Manchester United for a reported £75m last weekend.

The 24-year-old’s transfer from Everton – for a record fee between British clubs – was reportedly supported by another of Raiola’s proteges and Lukaku’s close friend, Paul Pogba.

It was Raiola who mastermind­ed Pogba’s own record-smashing € 105m return to the ‘Red Devils’ a year ago. He has looked after Swedish great Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c for the last 15 years and also manages Mario Balotelli, Blaise Matuidi and Henrikh Mkhitaryan.

Raiola did extremely well out of United last year making an estimated £40m from Pogba’s transfer from Juventus alone while stablemate­s Mkhitaryan and Ibrahimovi­c also joined at Old Trafford.

Raiola’s “a man that always thinks ahead and he’s a perfection­ist who’s always working unbelievab­ly hard to get the best deals for his players,” Willem Vissers, a Dutch football writer for the respected daily De Volkskrant has told AFP.

Raiola was born into humble roots. His family owns a cosy, traditiona­l pizza restaurant in the Dutch medieval city of Haarlem.

He first honed his skills on football and the art of negotiatin­g while waiting tables at the Ristorante Napoli.

“The board of the (now defunct) local football club Haarlem FC used to come and dine there at least once a week,” said Edwin Struis, a freelance football writer who worked at a Haarlem paper in the early 1990s.

“Warranted or unwarrante­d, Mino would chirp in, giving his opinions on the state of the club and football in general,” Struis has told AFP.

“It got to a point where they simply said, ‘Since you know so much, why don’t you just join the board?’” said Struis.

Raiola briefly worked as technical director at Haarlem FC, but he had much grander ideas: setting up a partnershi­p to transfer players from Italian club Napoli.

Naples is close to the southern Italian city of Nocera Inferiore, from where Raiola moved with his parents when he was one in 1968.

Many in football mistakenly brushed aside Raiola because of his jeans-and-Tshirt uniform.

Even Ibrahimovi­c in his autobiogra­phy “I am Zlatan” said he thought Raiola was a character from “The Sopranos” TV series when they first met.

“In the beginning they all underestim­ated him because of the way he dressed,” said Vissers, who has interviewe­d the elusive agent and been a keen follower of his career.

These days, nobody dismisses Raiola, one of the most powerful people in football.

His first big break came with the signing of Czech midfield star Pavel Nedved, a former Ballon d’Or winner, in 1992. After that, other greats like Ibrahimovi­c and Pogba – and now Lukaku – followed. It is not all plainsaili­ng for Raiola however. The Football Leaks media consortium alleged late last year that the agent had transferre­d Pogba’s multi-million image rights to the offshore haven of Jersey. The agent has dismissed the reports as imaginary. Raiola’s own income and tendency to shoot from the hip has earned him the admiration – and ire – of many in football.

“Unfortunat­ely, he’s made it a bit of a habit to insult people,” said Struis.

Five years ago Barcelona threatened to break ties with Raiola after he criticised then coach Pep Guardiola over his deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip with Ibrahimovi­c.

He crossed the line for many in the Netherland­s when he called late national football icon Johan Cruyff a “demented dickhead” for allegedly suggesting that ex-footballer­s should be given top football industry jobs.

Raiola later apologised to Cruyff, but said he stood by his viewpoints on jobs for pals.

“He has a sharp tongue – some would even say he’s a bit of a loudmouth that uses lots of words but doesn’t say much,” said Struis.

Gael Mahe, a former Pogba representa-tive, calls Raiola a “genius” for his deal making.

“He is the Donald Trump of football, a big mouth who knows how to sell and who has built his own skyscraper­s. Each of his players has virtually the value of a Manhattan building,” Mahe told AFP.

And Ibrahimovi­c has only good things to say in his autobiogra­phy.

“Shall I spell it out here? Mino is a genius,” said the world’s third-highest earning footballer in 2016 after Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi. – AFP

 ??  ?? Mbaye Mkhitaryan Donnarumma Matuidi Ibrahimovi­c Bonaventur­a Lukaku Pogba Romero Balotelli
Mbaye Mkhitaryan Donnarumma Matuidi Ibrahimovi­c Bonaventur­a Lukaku Pogba Romero Balotelli
 ??  ?? Raiola
Raiola
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia