A Closer Look At Alberto Aquilani
'La rabona'. Talk to anyone who is into Italian football about Alberto Aquilani and that word is bound to come up. It is how Italians describe an audacious bit of skill where a player backheals a pass while running, a move that done well is likely to put any defence off balance.
Just as Aquilani did at the San Siro on the 11th of November of 2006. It was a fantastic move, one that set Roma on their way to scoring and at the same time silenced the whole stadium as everyone took in what they'd just seen.
For Aquilani, it was a defining moment as he finally started to emerge from the shadows of Roma's two other home grown stars in the form of Francesco Totti and Daniele de Rossi. Or it seemed like it at the time. Looking back, he never really managed to do that and the quite acceptance of his sale by the Roma fans - where the over-riding sentiment was of relief as the move was to generate some much needed money for them - is not one you would expect for the departure of a local player.
The reason for that is one: injuries. Throughout his career, Aquilani's talent has never been in doubt. Growing up, he was the star player in Italy's national youth teams including the Under 19 side that won the European championship back in 2003 where, incidentally, he was voted as the tournament's best talent. By that time, Aquilani had already made his debut for Roma and was on his way to Triestina to spend a season in the Serie B in order to add experience to his talent.
And gain he did as the eighteen year old quickly lit up the division as he played in all of the club's forty one games and scored four goals in the process. Impressive stuff for someone so young.
It also ensured his return to Roma and the culmination of a dream. Aquilani was always going to be a Romanista: his father was not only a huge fan but also worked at the ground on matchdays. Indeed, he was working at the Stadio Olimpico in May of 1984 when Roma took on Liverpool in the final of the Champions Cup and even got to touch the famous trophy. An omen, perhaps.
For Aquilani, therefore, playing in the red and yellow of his home city's club was what he had always wanted. Yet fitting into the side wasn't that easy. Roma already had De Rossi playing in the centre of midfield, Aquilani's nominal position whilst the role just behind the team's strikers was normally reserved for Totti. With the Brazilian Rodrigo Taddei, another local favourite, also guaranteed a starting spot in midfield, space for him was limited.
Yet he was too good to leave out and eventually managed to find his way into the team. Which is when misfortune struck: a training ground injury meant that he missed half of the 2006-07 season and another injury, this time at Old Trafford, cost him three months of the following campaign. Then came last season where Aquilani was injured most of the time this time for no clear reason.
It is those injuries that made the Roma fans forget how good he is. That Roma had refused Juventus' reported €30 million bid for the midfielder last summer - ironically, the then Juventus manager Claudio Ranieri saw him as a better option than Xabi Alonso - had come to be considered, in hindsight, to be a bad move by them. Better get rid of Aquilani while someone was still willing to pay good money for him, was the over-riding feeling.
Lost amid all of this was the reason why Aquilani had often been missing or, rather, why he was missing for so long after each injury. In recent times, Roma have had quite a troubled relationship with their medical staff and the frequency with which their players got injured or failed to recover raised doubts over their efficacy. There were rumours that appointments with the medical staff were made because of who they knew rather than because of their skills, that Luciano Spalletti had asked for advice from outside the club whilst some players refused to be looked after by the club's doctors. All this led to the dismissal of Mario Brozzi, the head of Roma's medical staff.
Therein lies the big hope: that rather than being a fragile player as has been hinted in some quarters, Aquilani had simply been treated badly.
His transfer remains, in all honesty, quite a big gamble by Benitez. Yet it isn't anything that he hasn't done before: remember the incredulity when Javier Mascherano was signed? This was a player that couldn't get a game for West Ham and suddenly he was given a starting role for Liverpool. Benitez, however, had seen Mascherano play before he had come to England, he knew how good the midfielder could be and how he was going to fit into his tactical schemes.
The same logic has been applied to Aquilani. Whilst he might not have the same passing range as Alonso, the Italian is much more dynamic which fits in nicely with Benitez's desire to have a team that plays at a high tempo which has the opposition constantly on the back foot.
More writings by Paul Grech can be found on his own blog A Liverpool Thing. He can also be followed on Twitter.
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Good stuff, lets hope you're right.
Aquilani will be good for Liverpool. He will fit in perfectly with Mascherano and Gerrard will be back as a second striker.
Many very good players have come to Liverpool and have become flops. It's all because we don't use them properly and our tactics are wrong. For example, Kyut and Babel are pure forwards and yet we use them as wingers. Torres is good at running through the defence and yet we send high balls from the backline! Liverpool tactics are poor. And there's no element of surprise in attack!
Satha,
Babel was on the left before he came to England and for his country - so your wrong. Kuyt, yes but then when you jave to operate with a proven net spend of £13m per season you have to do th ebest you can with your hands tied behind your back as Rafa is with the yanks in charge. We very seldom play high balls - we keep the ball down and only Carra really puts his laces through it? Given we have no element of surprise in attack as you claim how do you explain we scored more than any other team in the country last season? Only beaten in Cl by the amazing Barca? Are you one of these fair weathered glory fans who believe everything lazy Sky (notable Andy blue nose Grey) lead the sheep press to believe - ala "zonal doesnt work - yet last season we conceded few goals from set plays than any other team AND from open play....
Good Blogg - aqua looks a capable more direct threat and should offer an improvement for the middle all being well.
Fair play To ye, you know your stuff dude and its refreshing to read. Its a gamble but he's definitely a player. He will get on the ball and play and will (possibly) offer more than Xabi Alonso but time will tell i suppose.