Italy's Top 10 Wonderkids
2008 | Goal.com

It's not easy being a young footballer in Europe in the 21st Century. 
Almost every promising kid is caught somewhere between a frustrating 
rock or very demanding hard place.

One moment they are perched expectantly on the edge of an over-stuffed 
substitute bench. The next they are being blinded by a ferocious media 
spotlight and christened the next Maradona.

Promise, as history has taught us so many times, does not always lead to 
greatness.

But if the sizeable crop of Italian youngsters currently setting Serie A 
and B alight do manage to live up to their potential, the future is 
going to be coloured Azzurri blue.

It's difficult to remember a time when so many potentially exceptional 
talents have threatened to emerge at the same time. Truly, Italy have an 
abundance of future stars.

Heading this fresh-faced assault on a not-too-distant tomorrow are the 
likes of Alberto Aquilani, Fiorentina's Pazzini and Montolivo, Juventus 
pair Giorgio Chiellini and Raffaele Palladino and Udinese's Fabio 
Quagliarella. We already know all about these players so we won't 
profile them again here.

Because behind these stellar talents there is already another generation 
of virtuoso kids trying to push through.

So, for the purposes of this particular list, we will only deal with 
players born in 1985 or after. Here, then, in no particular order, are 
our top 10 next generation Italian superstars in waiting. Don't say you 
haven't been warned.

1. Andrea Russotto

Club: Treviso
Age: 19
Position: Midfield

There is a good deal of mystery surrounding the extraordinarily talented 
Andrea Russotto. He grew up in the Lazio youth system and was 
establishing himself as one of the best young players in Italy. Then, 
just when things seemed as if they couldn't get any better, they 
suddenly got rapidly worse. He was mysteriously off-loaded to Swiss 
second-division club Bellinzona. Apparently, after refusing to sign a 
deal with powerful player representation agency, GEA, one of many pies 
Alessandro Moggi had his fingers in. His sale was an ultimatum; sign 
with us or forget about your career. The kid they are calling the 'new 
Baggio' is now, happily, playing a different kind of ball game for 
Treviso. Juventus are known to be interested.

2. Sebastian Giovinco

Club: Empoli
Age: 21
Position: Midfield

He may only be 5ft nothing tall but Juventus-owned youngster Sebastian 
Giovinco has been making a big splash all his footballing life. He has 
been Italy's first choice as 'fantasista' from the Under-16's upwards 
and is now showing his brilliance at Under-21 level. It was a slice of 
impossible skill from Giovinco that set-up Robert Acquafresca to beat 
Albania in the recent European Championship qualifier. Even an old 
stager like Dino Zoff is excited at this hottest of prospects. "Giovinco 
is the miniature Del Piero," commented the goalkeeping legend. "Indeed I 
believe he has superior fantasy and technical ability to Il 
Pinturicchio." Juventus have announced that the kid is not for sale at 
any price.

3. Lorenzo De Silvestri

Club: Lazio
Age: 19
Position: Right-back

Here is a remarkable 19-year-old right-back with a single-minded vision 
to break down barriers, wherever they may be. Last season Silvestri was 
still playing in the Lazio youth team but his stellar talent has now 
seen him force his way into the club's starting X1. He possesses 
something else too; fierce, analytical, intelligence. "To become a top 
footballer you need to have motivation, humility and education," argues 
this potential future Azzurri captain. De Silvestri has just enrolled at 
university to study law.

4. Luca Cigarini

Club: Parma
Age: 21
Position: Midfield

Midfield Parma's very own metronome, Cigarini's relentlessly accurate 
passing from just in front of the defence for both club and country have 
already seen him compared to the greatest ball distributor in the modern 
game, Andrea Pirlo. It is a comparison that he finds very flattering. 
"Being compared to Pirlo is a point of arrival for any player," admits 
this product of the Gialloblu youth system. He possesses the same 
subtlety of movement, the same ability to disguise a pass, the same lazy 
swing when he chips inch-perfect lobs into the feet of the strikers. "I 
am convinced myself, in the sense that I know my potential, that I am 
ready for a great team," he said a couple of weeks ago. Few would argue 
with him.

5. Robert Acquafresca

Club: Cagliari
Age: 20
Position: Striker

Tall, lighting quick, good in the air and with a marksman's eye for 
goal, the Turin-born striker is not having a great season on-loan with 
Cagliari but remains on fire for the Azzurrini scoring five goals since 
he made his debut against Albania in June 2007. The poetically-named 
former Treviso star was part of the deal that eventually took David 
Suazo to Inter in the summer and there has already been some talk of the 
Nerazzurri buying him back for an estimated £4 million. His agent, Paolo 
Fabbri, has advised him to stay where he is. "It is so easy to burnout 
and I've advised him to stay calm," revealed Fabbri, sensibly, back in 
December last year. Torino have also been interested. He just might be 
the long-term replacement for Luca Toni in the Italian team.

6. Giuseppe Rossi

Club: Villarreal CF
Age: 21
Position: Striker

Because Italian football forbids any player under the age of 18 from 
signing a contract, Manchester United were able to steal this New 
Jersey-born Italian-American from right under Parma's nose. Despite a 
series of prolific displays in the reserves, Rossi somehow never made 
the breakthrough at Old Trafford and was first loaned back to Parma, 
then, reluctantly, put up for sale by Alex Ferguson. For reason's best 
known to themselves, not one Serie A club was sufficiently interested in 
signing a player who has been compared to the impossibly-talented 
Giuseppe Signori. Rossi shrugged his shoulders and headed for Spain 
where he has scored 11 goals so far this season, even though he often 
starts out of position as a lone striker. Now even Roberto Donadoni is 
sitting up and taking notice.

7. Ricardo Montolivo

Club: Fiorentina
Age: 23
Position: Midfield

Roman Abramovich's super-scout, 71-year-old Piet de Visser was so 
impressed with the Fiorentina midfielder at last years European Under-21 
Championships, he nearly fell off his chair. "Ricardo Montolivo is the 
superstar of all young midfielders in Europe," commented the seasoned 
spotter. "He has very good skills, but the best thing about him is that 
he combines his skills with fantastic running power. I could not spot a 
weakness in his game." Montolivo is yet another prodigious talent from 
the world class Atalanta youth system and yet another relentlessly 
accurate passer in the Pirlo mode. As influential as any other player in 
the Viola's impressive season, it is only a matter of time before he 
adds to his one senior international cap.

8. Antonio Nocerino

Club: Juventus
Age: 22
Position: Midfield

What a season it has been for Antonio Nocerino. Back in September, the 
young Neapolitan must have thought he find himself spending most of his 
time on the bench. But the failure of new signings Tiago and Almiron 
catapulted him into the very heart of Juve's push for a Champions League 
finish. And the 22-year-old has responded magnificently, becoming one of 
the finest box-to-box midfielders in Serie A. He has often been compared 
to Rino Gattuso but in truth this is a little wide of the mark. Nocerino 
has excelled in the role of midfield enforcer but possesses the easy 
technical ability of a creative type. A versatile future international 
certainty, in other words

9. Pablo Daniel Osvaldo

Club: Fiorentina
Age: 22
Position: Striker

Any Italian who witnessed his two stunning goals on his debut for 
Fiorentina against Livorno was delighted when this Argentine-born 
Italian citizen decided that he wanted to play for the country of his 
home and not the nation of his birth. The comparisons with Gabriel 
Batistuta are, perhaps, inevitable. Osvaldo even chose the legendary 
striker's number 9 when the shirts were handed out at the start of the 
season. "I knew it had belonged to Bati...it is an honour for me to wear 
it," said the young pretender. He certainly has the skill and 
explosiveness in the box to do justice to it.

10. Alberto Paloschi

Club: Milan
Age: 18
Position: Striker

Talk about making an entrance. Just 15 seconds after coming off the 
bench to make his debut for the current World and European champions. 
Alberto Paloschi won the game against Siena with his very first touch in 
Serie A. Within seconds, someone, somewhere was already calling him 'the 
new Pato'. It's a ridiculous tag and one that he is keen to play down. 
"I had a bit of luck, too. I really didn't expect to score on my debut 
and I still feel goose-bumps now," said the young striker after the 
game. He does not, however, make this list because of his instant impact 
in Serie A. He makes it because Carlo Ancelotti considered his 
performances in the Viareggio youth tournament to be so impressive that 
he merited a call-up to the first team.

Gil Gillespie

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