AS Roma is considering two contrasting strategies for their future: a complete rebuild or a gradual improvement. The decision involves key figures like ownership, the board, and head coach Gian Piero Gasperini, creating a tense situation within the club.
Roma's head coach Gian Piero Gasperini looks on before the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and AS Roma at San Siro stadium in Milan, on April 5, 2026. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images
Roma's head coach Gian Piero Gasperini looks on before the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and AS Roma at San Siro stadium in Milan, on April 5, 2026. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images
While your typical football club canât match the sheer depth of an NFL roster, where nearly 50 players suit up every Sunday, among the two dozen or so men lucky enough to don the giallo e rosso each season, there is tremendous variety: in roles, attitudes, skills, and potential. From virtuosos to role players and those we simply forgot about, Roma has employed every type of player under the sun.
And as foolhardy as it may have been, weâve intermittently attempted to weigh and measure Romaâs roster, separating the core components from the redundancies. We wanted to make it a part of our annual tentpole features, but never managed to get the timing quite rightâwe either had to do it before the summer transfer season, which would make the rankings potentially irrelevant as players were bought and sold, or at the start of the season before they had a chance to prove themselves. (Just for kicks, here is the most recent version from 2023. In retrospect, I was a bit too high on Ola Solbakken.)
Since the club is currently divided on whether to completely rebuild or simply add a few new pieces and chug along, it would be nearly impossible to rank and file Romaâs roster. So, instead of banging our heads against that wall, weâll look at the two rumored plans: The Full Friedkin Tear-Down and Gasperiniâs Gradual Rebuild, to assess which is more realistic. These strategies arenât entirely opposite, but since they reportedly pit ownership, the board, and the managerâleaving Ricky Massara caught in the middleâRoma is a potential powder keg.
Option 1: The Full Friedkin Teardown
While the Friedkins prefer to move in silence (like real Gs), Romaâs embarrassing loss to Inter Milan on Easter Sunday seemed to stir something within the taciturn Texans. Losing to Inter Milan on the road is nothing new for Roma, but failing as they didâso completely and so feeblyâdidnât reveal any new issues for the club. It did, however, expose a possible divide among the clubâs power brokers over how to pull Roma out of this morass.
In the immediate aftermath of that defeat, rumors of a revolution began to spread. Knee-jerk reactions suggested the Friedkins aimed to sign up to 12 new players this summer, casting aside unwanted veterans and unproven young talents. While such extensive changesâespecially in signingsâare unlikely, the club might still sell several key players, let multiple loans end, and carry out other mid-tier sales and transfers, leading to notable shifts at Trigoria.
But what could that actually look like when the rubber meets the road?
You Say GoodbyeâŠ
Right away, we can assume that Roma will not retain players like Evan Ferguson, Kostas Tsimikas, and Bryan Zaragoza, who failed to make an impact this season. Similarly, the club is likely to allow veterans such as Paulo Dybala, Stephan El Shaarawy, Zeki Ăelik, and Lorenzo Pellegrini to depart once their contracts end in June. There are rumors that Pellegrini might return at a lower salary, but if the team is undergoing a full rebuild, re-signing him seems unlikely, especially since he will turn 30 in June.
Artem Dobvyk is a different story. The high-priced striker is under contract with the club for three more seasons, and given his recent injury woes, heâd be a tough sell to any club. In that light, Roma may have to make the best of a bad situation and create a suitable role for the hulking striker. Heâs not a typical Gasperini striker, sure, but he can score goals, so he has some value.
In this teardown scenario, we assume that Tommaso Baldanzi, Anass Salah-Eddine, Eldor Shomurodov, Saul Abdulhamid, and Marash Kumbuall will have their options exercised by their new clubs, so they wonât return to Roma next fall. Meanwhile, the club keeps loanees like Donyell Malen, Daniele Ghilardi, and Lorenzo Venturino, while fringe players such as Buba Sangare, Luigi Cherubini, and Riccardo Pagano return to fill vacant roster spots.
Weâre already up to seven potential first-team vacancies, but we still have to deal with the 800-pound gorillas in the room: Gianluca Mancini and Bryan Cristante. With their current contracts set to expire in June 2027, the club has reportedly been working on extensions for both players, much to the dismay of many Roma fans. However, the flames of contract renewal have been doused by the clubâs recent struggles, suggesting that the Friedkins have come to grips with Cristante and Manciniâs limitations and that their days at the club are numbered.
However, that still puts the club at loggerheads with two of its most tenured players: Can they arrange transfers for Cristante and Mancini this summer, or will this potentially awkward marriage continue for another season before they reach free agency?
Since weâre discussing a revolution, change is inevitable. Cristante and Mancini will need to move on; the only question is where. Are they at a stage in their careers where theyâd accept a larger role at smaller clubs like Genoa, Torino, or Udinese, or is there another plan? It might sound crazy, but we canât rule out the possibility that they could join a bigger club looking for experienced role playersâperhaps Juventus or one of the Milan teams.
Either way, weâve just shed nine first-team and/or top rotation players from the roster in this fictional teardown, which raises an important question: How will Roma replace them?
The next question we have to answer is simply, who can Roma survive without? With young defenders like Ghilardi and Jan Ziolkowski waiting in the wings, Ndicka seems like the safest choice. After that, youâre forced to pick your poison. Pisilli and Wesley are both U-23 players and havenât reached their peak form (or price, for that matter), so it wouldnât be in Romaâs best interest to sell them this summer.
Okay, now that the hard part is over, letâs search for their replacements.
And I Say Hello
Economics, accounting, and FFP arenât my strong suit, so these proposed transfers are based on basic transfer math and Romaâs historical spending thresholds. Weâll assume Gasperiniâs tactics wonât change and that Ghilardi, Ziolkowski, and Mario Hermoso will be his top three defenders, so weâll focus our efforts on the attack and depth at the wingback spots.
With that in mind, letâs get to the fun partâthe new faces that will lead this revolution.
Midfielders
Letâs start with a big ticket purchase, one relatively low on experience but loaded with potential: Eintracht Frankfurtâs Can Uzun. Limited to 811 minutes this season thanks to a series of muscular injuries (See? Heâs perfect for Roma!), the 20-year-old Turkish midfielder has scored six goals and provided three assists, drawing rave reviews from across the Bundesliga, leading to a âŹ40 to âŹ45M Transfermarkt valuation.
(Depending on what you read, he may have a significantly higher release clause, but weâll roll with this figure.)
In this scenario, Roma gets in on the ground floor, offering Uzun a full-time role and the keys to Gasperiniâs attack, before flipping him to the Premiership two years later. Win-win. To ease Uzunâs transition, weâll sign Julian Brandt on a free transfer to provide depth when the fixture list gets packed in the late fall/early winter.
With Uzun acting as the central creator or second striker, Brandt as a roaming playmaker, and Frattesi and Pisilli providing energy and vertical threats, our Cristante replacement must be defensively reliable, disciplined, and mobile. He should win duels, facilitate and defend against transitions, and be capable of operating in a high press, among many other duties.
Given our expenditure on Uzun, we canât overspend on this player. Ideally, weâd prefer someone with experience, so Iâll throw two names at you: RB Leipzigâs Xaver Schlager and Tottenhamâs JoĂŁo Palhinha. Schlager, a 28-year-old Austrian midfielder, isnât as physically imposing as Cristante, but heâs a typical âhunterâ who thrives under Gasperini, jumping into the opponentâs space to disrupt play, win the ball, and then quickly progress it vertically up the pitch.
Palihnha can fill that role as well, but heâs under contract with Bayern Munich for two more years, while Schlager is an impending free agent and the path of least resistance.
If Roma can resist the temptation to sell Wesley, they will have a stable core of three wing-backs, with Angeliño starting on the left and Devyne Rensch backing up both positions. However, the club might seek a better complementary player (and possible upgrade) for Angeliño on the left. At minimum, they need a capable defender to cover the back three and contribute to set piecesâideally at a low cost.
Enter Club Bruggeâs BjĂžrn Meijer. The 23-year-old Dutch defender is an ideal foil for Gasperini to deploy opposite Wesley. At 6â3â, Meijer has the requisite height to be a back-post weapon in attack and an imposing figure in defense, where he commands the air, winning nearly 70% of his aerial duels. Heâs also a proficient crosser, hitting 36% of his crosses this season, an incredible figure that ranks in the 97th percentile among left-backs in Europe.
In central defense, weâre looking for a young player to join the rotation and eventually replace Mario Hermoso. If heâs left-footed, all the better. Real Betisâs ValentĂn GĂłmez fits the bill as a left-footed, ball-playing defender well-suited to Gasperiniâs aggressive style. This season, GĂłmez has successfully completed 92% of his dribbling attempts and has made over 160 defensive actions. Since he only joined Betis last summer, Roma may have to up the ante to acquire him, but he could be a worthwhile âŹ20 million investment.
Coming off the bench, the primary options include Lorenzo Venturino, Robinio Vaz, Dario Osario, and Artem Dobvyk in attack; Neil El Aynaoui and Niccolo Pisilli in midfield (though he can replace Frattesi if you prefer); and Devyne Rensch, Angeliño, and ValentĂn GĂłmez in defense. Adding players like Buba Sangare, Antonio Arena, and a few other new bench members creates a balanced mix of fresh faces, younger players taking on bigger roles, and a couple of veterans from last yearâs XI.
This might not be a Scudetto-winning team, but it is a Gasperini team, better aligned with the physical and tactical requirements of his style. (And, if we really want to get crazy, maybe we lure Mohammed Salah back to the capital, capping off his European career with the Giallorossi.)
The economic aspects of these deals are not as simple as they seem, but the core ideaâan energetic, vertically oriented team that overwhelms opponents with intense ball pressure and quick transitionsâis what Roma and Gasperini need to succeed.
But itâs not the only optionâŠ
Option 2: Gasperiniâs Gradual Rebuild
For the sake of brevity, we wonât delve quite as deeply into this option. Still, by focusing on only a few key signings and retaining the core of the squad, Gasperiniâs selective approach could achieve the same ends in fewer steps. It may not offer the same long-term upside, but itâs less volatile and could be the more feasible path forward.
After all, as Gasperini recently lamented:
âThe goal is to improve the team from time to time. To me, it seems that if you look at Roma on Transfermarkt, weâve brought in 30 players and only four or five play. I donât blame anyone, but maybe thereâs a need for different targets.
âIâve seen great players and teams at Roma, the fans recognise quality players. Iâm more inclined to that sort of idea (quality over quantity) rather than bringing in 30 players. Not everyone might share the same opinion.â
While the names we suggested above (attackers Can Uzun and Dario Osorio, and left-back BjĂžrn Meijer) would fit this bill, weâll mix things up a bit and suggest different options. Besides, if Roma narrows their transfer scope, they can theoretically spend more on these three targets.
Kerim Alajbegovic (LW)
For our Dybala replacement, weâll turn to another member of the Red Bull Football family and target Salzburgâs Serbian winger. Like La Joya, Alajbegovic, 18, is a left-footed winger who can play centrally and create and finish chances with aplomb. In his first season in a senior league, Alajbegovic has scored nine goals and three assists across all competitions and ranks in the 86th percentile for chances created among midfielders and wingers in Europeâs top five leagues, according to FotMob. Heâs also taken 70 shots in just 1,500 minutes, so heâs no wallflower.
Plus, at 6â1â, Alajbegovic brings great size and hustle to the position, which heâs already using to contribute to Salzburgâs defensive game, ranking in the 90th percentile among midfielders and wingers for possession won in the final third.
At a rumored âŹ25 to âŹ30 million, Alajbegovic wouldnât necessarily be a cheap purchase by Roma standards, but he feels like a player who would thrive under Gasperini.
Davide Bartesaghi (LB/LWB)
As one of the jewels of AC Milanâs system, he wouldnât be an easy transfer. Still, with his talent, potential, and positional versatility, he is a worthwhile target, even if it means Roma would have to sacrifice one of their own talented U-23s to grease the wheels. With exceptional size for any position (6â4â), Bartesaghi has the potential to be a brute in defense and a threat on set pieces. And whatâs more, heâs already remarkably skilled on the ball, ranking among the best LM/LBs in the league in chances created, long balls, successful crosses, and expected assists per 90 minutes.
Again, this wouldnât be an easy negotiation, but his âŹ25 million rating could seem like a bargain in no time.
Oihan Sancet (AM)
Weâll deepen Romaâs Spanish influence with our third and final purchase, nabbing the 25-year-old midfielder from Athletic Club as our complement/upgrade to Lorenzo Pellegrini. Dealing with minor muscle strains this year, Sancet hasnât matched his attacking highs from previous seasons, when he cracked double digits in two of the previous three, but he is Gasperini-coded in other areas. Namely, his pace, physicality and aggression.
Sancet isnât a pure number 10 in the creative sense, but his ball-carrying prowess, nose for goal, and ability to play in a high-tempo pressing system make him an ideal cog in Gasperiniâs attacking machine.
Thanks to their lack of direction, indecision, and infighting, every summer feels like an inflection point for Roma, with unbridled optimism locked in a death roll with well-worn pessimism. After another tumultuous season in 2024-2025, Roma seemed to turn the page by selecting Gian Piero Gasperini as Claudio Ranieriâs successor, bringing in a manager with a well-defined identity and a plan to reshape the club.
However, as weâre slowly learning, the clubâs well-designed transfer campaign last summer was anything but cohesive, as Gasperini, Ranieri, and the Friedkins failed to agree on a policy. With those disagreements now seeing the light of day, not to mention disappointing results on the pitch, the clubâs future is once again on a knifeâs edge.
While the discord between Gasperini and Ranieri will likely subside, the importance of this transfer window cannot be overstated. Identify your weak spots, determine your priorities, compile a list of agreed-upon targets (and alternatives), and get to work. Itâs a simple idea that has always bedeviled the club, but itâs rendered Roma irrelevant over the past decade.
To the Roma brass, I say: Channel your inner Lennon and McCartney and work this out.
Q&A
What are the two plans Roma is considering for their roster?
Roma is weighing a complete rebuild known as the Full Friedkin Tear-Down against a more measured approach called Gasperiniâs Gradual Rebuild.
Who is involved in the decision-making process for Roma's future?
The decision involves ownership, the board, head coach Gian Piero Gasperini, and sporting director Ricky Massara.
What challenges does Roma face in assessing their roster?
Roma struggles to evaluate their roster due to the uncertainty of player transfers and the timing of assessments before and during the season.
How might the decision impact Roma's performance in the league?
The choice between a full rebuild or a gradual improvement could significantly affect Roma's competitiveness and overall performance in the Serie A.
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