Alessandro Rosina Explained

Alessandro Rosina
Fullname:Alessandro Rosina
Birth Date:31 January 1984
Birth Place:Belvedere Marittimo, Italy
Height:1.68m
Position:Attacking midfielder
Winger
Youthclubs1:Parma
Years1:2002–2005
Years2:2005
Years3:2005–2009
Years4:2009–2012
Years5:2011
Years6:2012–2014
Years7:2014–2016
Years8:2015–2016
Years9:2016–2020
Clubs1:Parma
Clubs2:Hellas Verona (loan)
Clubs3:Torino
Clubs4:Zenit St. Petersburg
Clubs5:Cesena (loan)
Clubs6:Siena
Clubs7:Catania
Clubs8:Bari (loan)
Clubs9:Salernitana
Caps1:25
Goals1:0
Caps2:17
Goals2:2
Caps3:143
Goals3:32
Caps4:34
Goals4:4
Caps5:10
Goals5:1
Caps6:71
Goals6:18
Caps7:37
Goals7:8
Caps8:41
Goals8:12
Caps9:75
Goals9:11
Nationalyears1:2004–2007
Nationalyears2:2007
Nationalteam1:Italy U-21
Nationalteam2:Italy
Nationalcaps1:32
Nationalgoals1:4[1]
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0

Alessandro Rosina (pronounced as /it/; born 31 January 1984) is an Italian former footballer who played as an attacking midfielder or winger.

Club career

Early career

Born in Belvedere Marittimo, Rosina resided until the age of 9 in the nearby town of Bonifati (the town of origin of his maternal family), he starting his career at local Cittadella del Capo football youth team at the age of 5, where he caught the eye of Juventus, Roma and Milan scouts.[2] His father, however, decided to let him join Parma. He was subsequently brought up in the club's youth system.

Rosina spent the 2001–02 season playing for the Parma Primavera team. He was promoted to the first team the next season, making his professional debut on 16 February 2003 against Juventus as a substitute for Hidetoshi Nakata. In two and a half years at the club, he made 25 league appearances. Rosina was a member of the B squad in the 2003–04 UEFA Cup.

Following a tactical change to the team's formation, Rosina found first-team opportunities hard to come by. In January 2005 he was loaned to Hellas Verona, where he had a hugely successful spell.[2] After the end of the loan he was bought by Torino, then in Serie B.

Torino

Rosina was regarded as a revelation since his arrival at the Turin club. He became the driving force behind Torino's 2005–06 promotion campaign, making 42 appearances, scoring twelve times, as the club clinched a spot in the Italian top flight the following season. In two subsequent Serie A seasons, he dragged the team to survival from relegation, averaging a goal every three games as well as providing several assists. As a result, he earned the captain's armband in January 2008 and became a popular figure amongst Torino fans.[2] He was nicknamed Rosinaldo, a portmanteau of his last name and Ronaldo's name, due to his Brazilian-style flair.[3] He stayed loyal to Torino despite awakening the interest of Italian powerhouses, signing a contract extension until 2011 in 2007.

The 2008–2009 season was a major setback for Torino, as Rosina was unable to prevent the club from suffering relegation.

Zenit

On 31 July 2009, Rosina was sold to Russian Premier League club Zenit St. Petersburg for a fee in the region of €7 million, signing a 4-year contract with Sine-Belo-Golubyye.[4] Dick Advocaat, then-manager of Zenit who planned to quit the club at the end of the year to become Belgium coach, declared himself unhappy with the acquisition of Rosina and Sergei Kornilenko, labelling them newly appointed sporting director Igor Korneev's creatures, as the Dutch gaffer wished to sign two top-class forwards, namely Goran Pandev and Paolo Guerrero, instead.[5] [6] Nevertheless, Rosina made his debut on 5 August 2009 against FC Nizhny Novgorod in Russian Cup, also scoring his first Zenit goal, and played full 90 minutes in subsequent league game against Tom.

As Zenit lost to Tom at home, Advocaat was replaced at the helm by former Zenit player Anatoli Davydov, who soon afterwards brought in another offensive midfielder, controversial Vladimir Bystrov. Despite finding little playing time through tough competition, Rosina had impressed on occasions, achieving a total of two goals and two assists in nine RFPL games out of remaining fourteen.

2010 preseason saw another head coach change, as fellow Italian Luciano Spalletti took reign. However, with Danny having recovered from cruciate ligaments injury, Rosina again found himself on the bench at the start of the season. Being used mainly as a substitute, he managed to contribute with a vital assist against archrivals Spartak Moscow, finding Nicolas Lombaerts' head with a perfect cross in a game that finished 1–1.

As Spalletti settled to a counterattacking 4–3–3 or 4–2–3–1 formation with two wingers, and established internationals Danny, Konstantin Zyryanov and Danko Lazović all being options on the left, left-footed Rosina was mainly used in the rotation on the right as a backup for Bystrov.[7] [8] He scored after coming on as a substitute in 6–1 trashing of Saturn in September, rounding the keeper and scoring in the empty net.

On 29 January 2011, before the start of Russian Premier League 2011–12 season, Rosina was loaned to Serie A side Cesena until July 2011.[9]

Cesena

Rosina made his debut for Cesena on 2 February 2011 against Catania, coming on as a substitute in the 81st minute for Emanuele Giaccherini.[10] He scored his first goal for Cesena on 20 February 2011 against Parma, firing home the opener in the 31st minute.[11] Rosina struggled with his fitness during his time on loan and amassed only 9 league appearances for Serie A newcomers.[12]

Return to Zenit

After his loan deal with Cesena came to an end, Rosina returned to Zenit and was subsequently registered for Russian Premier League football. On 14 August he was included in the starting line-up against Amkar and put off a dynamic performance, but due to below-par passing and general lack of end product he was substituted even before the break. Despite this, Zenit head coach Luciano Spalletti praised Rosina for his footballing attitude and determination to fight for a place in the team, promising him a squad role for the remainder of the season.[13] Rosina had to fight off competition from Lazović, Aleksei Ionov, Szabolcs Huszti as well as recovering Bystrov.[12] In April, he won his second Russian Premier League title.

Return to Italy

On 31 August 2012, Rosina was sold to Siena. He spent two seasons with the club, until its bankruptcy in July 2014.[14]

On 23 July 2014, he signed with Serie B club Catania.[15]

International career

Rosina was a member of the Italy U-21 team from 2004 to 2007.

On 17 October 2007, Rosina made his Italy national team debut against South Africa in an international friendly match.[16]

Honours

Club

Zenit St. Petersburg

2010, 2012

2010

International

Italy U-21

2004

Individual

2007[17]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ROSINA ALESSANDRO . FIGC . Italian . 19 October 2007 .
  2. News: ru:Алессандро Розина . http://www.fc-zenit.ru/info/personInfo.phtml?id=363 . FC Zenit St. Petersburg site . Russian . https://web.archive.org/web/20091016194044/http://www.fc-zenit.ru/info/personInfo.phtml?id=363 . 16 October 2009 . dead .
  3. News: Calcio Debate: Is Rosina Destroying His Career At Torino? . Goal.com . 14 July 2008 . 12 November 2009.
  4. News: Official: Alessandro Rosina Joins Zenit St. Petersburg From Torino . Goal.com . 31 July 2009 . 12 November 2009.
  5. News: ru:Тренер ФК "Зенит" Дик Адвокат недоволен покупкой двух игроков . http://sport.rian.ru/sport/20090731/179322898.html . . Russian . 31 July 2009 . 13 November 2009.
  6. News: Zenit boss Advocaat unhappy with new signing . . 1 August 2009 . 13 November 2009 . 4 June 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110604121731/http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=664530&cc=5739 . dead .
  7. Web site: Сергей Веденеев: "Тактического разнообразия в действиях "Зенита" при Лучано Спаллетти абсолютно нет".
  8. Web site: Нулевой выезд "Зенита".
  9. News: Alessandro Rosina è del Cesena. A.C. Cesena. 29 January 2011. Italian. 29 January 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110203165812/http://www.cesenacalcio.it/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4416%3Aalessandro-rosina-e-del-cesena&catid=4%3Acomunicato-stampa&Itemid=121&lang=en. 3 February 2011. dead. dmy-all.
  10. News: Cesena 1 – 1 Catania . . 2 February 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110205090328/http://www.legaseriea.it/it/serie-a-tim/match-report/-/match-report/Cesena-Catania/25323 . 5 February 2011 .
  11. News: Parma 2 – 2 Cesena . . 20 February 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110224032400/http://www.legaseriea.it/it/serie-a-tim/match-report/-/match-report/Parma-Cesena/25389 . 24 February 2011 .
  12. Web site: Советский спорт - новости футбол, хоккей, биатлон и другие виды спорта. https://web.archive.org/web/20120325084352/http://www.sovsport.ru/gazeta/article-item/479860. dead. 25 March 2012.
  13. Web site: Новости.
  14. http://www.football-italia.net/52136/siena-and-padova-bankrupt Siena and Padova bankrupt
  15. https://twitter.com/Catania/statuses/491870761519685633 Official Twitter
  16. Web site: Rosina's Azzurri ambition. Football Italia. 18 October 2007. 19 October 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061203044343/http://www.channel4.com/sport/football_italia/oct18a.html . 3 December 2006.
  17. Web site: Il dream team Under 21. Andrew Haslam. 29 June 2007. UEFA. Italian. https://web.archive.org/web/20160115105549/http://it.archive.uefa.com/magazine/news/kind%3D16384/newsid%3D556168.html. 15 January 2016. dead. 19 June 2015. dmy.