- 10 hours ago
'Mini Van Dijk' promises long-term answer for Tottenham headache
Radu Dragusin is set to become Tottenham's second signing of the January transfer window, despite a last-ditch effort from Bayern Munich to hijack a deal for the central defender.
The 21-year-old has been followed by the likes of Arsenal and Newcastle United this season, but it is Spurs, who FootballTransfers exclusively revealed in December had prioritised him for January, who are set to win the race for him in a deal worth in the region of €20 million. It could prove a bargain figure.
Dragusin has had an interesting career to date.
The 12-cap Romania international was signed by Juventus in 2018 from Regal Sport Bucuresti. At the time, he was linked with Chelsea, Paris Saint-Germain and Atletico Madrid but it was the Serie A giants who made their move for him, securing the defender in a deal believed to be worth €250,000.
Andrea Pirlo called the young defender up to his senior squad during the 2020/21 campaign and he went on to make four appearances across multiple competitions. Dragusin then spent the 2021/22 season on loan in Serie A with Sampdoria and Salernitana. He made a total of 22 appearances across both loan spells before returning to Turin.
“#Dragusin sale from Juve? I’m disappointed he was sold but it happens in life. I have no doubts about his ability. He was lucky to share a locker room with, Buffon, Ronaldo, and #Chiellini who still gives him advice to this day” #Manea (AG of Dragusin)
[@tvplayofficial ] pic.twitter.com/F95i5CBiM0— 🎥 The AJC 🏳️🏴 (@The_AJC_) October 25, 2023
Following their relegation, Genoa moved to bring the centre-back in. Initially, he arrived on loan but the deal included an option to buy. The versatile defender played a key role in their promotion and he’s been pivotal in their surprising start to the 2023/24 season.
By the autumn, it appeared that Dragusin would be difficult for Genoa to keep beyond next summer, but the timeframe of his move has accelerated and he will surely depart in January.
While a move to the Premier League looks risky at this stage in his career, Spurs look a good option as team that likes to play on the front foot.
He’s deceptively good on the ball and really aggressive as a defender. Putting him in a ball-dominant side could see him really flourish into a true behemoth in that position.
He’s a brick wall at times and he would be able to really showcase his passing talents from deeper positions when setting up counter-attacks. So those interested make a lot of sense from a playing profile point of view.
At 6ft3, he would be physically suited to the rigours of England too. The 21-year-old competes in four aerial battles per 90 and he’s coming out on top 67% of the time. If he was able to replicate these numbers in the Premier League, he’d be one of the more aerially dominant centre-backs in the league.
He has a long-term deal with Genoa until 2027 but for the right price, they would sell a player they paid just €5.5m for. It looks that around €20m will do the trick.
GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL 🔴🔵
44’ | DRAGUSIN#GenoaVerona 1️⃣-0️⃣ pic.twitter.com/98BgPg4Fea— Genoa CFC (@GenoaCFC) November 10, 2023
Room for improvement
Dragusin isn’t yet the real deal. There are areas he needs to improve but this comes with age and experience. He is perhaps a little immature at times - his positioning can be too aggressive and he can look to force passes that just clearly aren’t on. It will get him and his team into trouble on occasion but you have to take the rough with the smooth with a player like him. After all, once he’s ironed these out, there is the potential there for him to develop into a top-tier centre-back.
Right now, he’s a mini Virgil van Dijk. That isn’t necessarily a bad thing, though. A lot of centre-backs model their game on the Liverpool skipper. If Dragusin matures and starts to dominate space as well as he can dominate players, he will improve his all-round game and may even have his own aura in one-versus-one situations.
There are no guarantees in football but paying €20m for someone of Dragusin’s skillset seems like sensible business. Even if he fails to fulfil his potential, he’s young enough to be a handy squad player for the best part of a decade if required.