Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Top football agent Mino Raiola dies

The Italian-Dutch "superagent" Mino Raiola has passed away following a serious illness. An influentia­l yet controvers­ial figure, Raiola counted Erling Haaland, Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c and Paul Pogba among his clients.

-

Influentia­l football agent Mino Raiola died in hospital in Italy on Saturday following a serious illness.

"Mino fought until the end with the same strength he put on the negotiatio­n tables to defend players," read a statement released by the Raiola family on Twitter, describing the 54-yearold as "the most caring and amazing football agent there ever was."

Raiola was in hospital in January, with German tabloid Bildreport­ing that he was undergoing treatment for a lung disease, but his spokesman played down any concerns at the time, saying: "Mino Raiola is undergoing usual medical examinatio­ns that require anesthesia. Everything was planned, and there was no emergency surgery."

Earlier this week, on Thursday, Raiola himself denied reports that he had passed away following a series of inaccurate claims.

"Current health status for the ones wondering: p***** off second time in 4 months they kill me. Seem also able to resuscitat­e," he said, although close friends told media outlets including the New York Times and Dutch broadcaste­r NOSthat Raiola was "very, very ill" and "in a bad position."

On Saturday, he finally did pass away, his family announced.

"Mino touched so many lives through his work and wrote a new chapter in the history of modern football," continued his family's statement. "His presence will forever be missed."

Superagent to Pogba, Haaland, Ibrahimovi­c, etc.

The Italian superagent counted star players such as Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c (AC Milan), Paul Pogba (Manchester United), Matthijs de Ligt (Juventus) and Gianluigi Donnarumma (Paris Saint- Germain) among his clients, as well as Borussia Dortmund strikers Erling Haaland and Donyell Malen.

Born in Italy but raised in the Netherland­s, Raiola spoke seven languages (Italian, English, German, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Dutch) and in 2016 was responsibl­e for securing Pogba's then-record transfer from Juventus back to Manchester United for €105 million — a deal for which he reportedly pocketed a €25 million commission.

Raiola had most recently been involved in negotiatin­g a potential transfer of Dortmund's Haaland to Manchester City, with reports in England suggesting that the 21-year-old could be set to agree a five-year deal with the Abu Dhabi-owned club.

A larger- than- life figure, Raiola was no stranger to scandal. In 2008, he was involved in disciplina­ry hearings instigated by the Italian Football Associatio­n (FIGC) regarding transfer irregulari­ties, before being banned from transfer activities for three months in 2019 by the FIGC and then FIFA — bans that were revoked upon appeal.

Ferguson: 'I distrusted him from the moment I met him.'

Never afraid to represent his players' — and his own — interests publicly, Raiola prompted loyalty and contempt in equal measure from people within the industry. "I'm ready to go to war for my players. I am ready to do anything, as I would for my sons," he told German outlet Sport1last year.

"The sporting directors hate me? How come? If they hate me, then it's the biggest compliment for me. Then I'm doing something well. If they said 'it's good that the Raiola advises the player, it'll be easy for us,' then I'd have a problem."

Among Raiola's biggest critics was former Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson, who famously called him a "s***bag" for his representa­tion of Pogba.

"There are one or two football agents I simply do not like, and Mino Raiola is one of them," Ferguson wrote in his 2015 autobiogra­phy. "I distrusted him from the moment I met him."

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Raiola's business efforts have had their detractors
Raiola's business efforts have had their detractors

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany