Fabrizio Romano's catchphrase for confirming a transfer is done. When he posts on social media "Here we go!" it's a sure fire way of knowing a deal is agreed. It's become the unofficial official announcement in football - fans refresh his account constantly during transfer windows waiting for those three words.
"Erling Haaland to Manchester City, here we go!"
A transfer involving players going both ways rather than just cash. Sometimes straight swaps, sometimes player plus cash. Gets discussed more than it actually happens because valuations rarely match up and both players need to want to move. Sounds simple in theory but the negotiations are complicated because you need four parties to agree (two clubs, two players).
Arthur and Pjanić's swap between Barcelona and Juventus in 2020 confused everyone - neither side seemed to actually want the player they received, and it looked like an accounting trick to boost both clubs' financial reports.
Contacting a player under contract without their club's permission, trying to convince them to push for a move. Against FIFA rules and can result in bans, but everyone assumes it happens constantly because it's hard to prove. Usually goes through agents rather than directly. Clubs accuse each other of tapping up whenever a player starts agitating to leave.
Liverpool were found guilty of tapping up Southampton's Virgil van Dijk in 2017 and were forced to publicly apologize and end their interest - though they eventually signed him six months later through proper channels.
An unofficial understanding between a club and a player that they'll let him leave if a certain type of offer comes in, even if his contract doesn't include a
release clause. Used to keep players happy and committed without giving up all leverage. The problem is they're unwritten and unenforceable, so clubs sometimes deny they exist when big offers arrive.
Harry Kane's reported gentleman's agreement with Tottenham to let him leave for a top club became a saga in 2021 - the club insisted no such deal existed, Kane pushed for a Manchester City move, and the whole thing dragged on for months before he eventually stayed.
An agreement to sign for a new club that can be made when a player has six months or less on their current contract. The player sees out their deal, then joins the new club on a free. Big clubs hate it because they lose valuable players for nothing. Players and agents love it because all the money that would've gone to the selling club can go into wages and signing bonuses instead.
Kylian Mbappé's pre-contract saga with Real Madrid dragged on for years - every January, Madrid could legally negotiate a free transfer, creating pressure on PSG to either sell or lose him for nothing.
A young player with exceptional talent who's expected to become world class. The label creates pressure and expectations. Some wonderkids fulfill the hype (Messi, Mbappé), others don't (Freddy Adu, remember him?). Football Manager made the term mainstream - everyone's hunting the next wonderkid before their price explodes. The hype machine starts younger every year.
Lamine Yamal became Barcelona's latest wonderkid, playing first-team football at 16 - the hype around him mirrors earlier prodigies like Messi and Ansu Fati, with everyone waiting to see if he can handle the weight of expectation.
The last day of a transfer window. The last chance for clubs to sign players before the window slams shut and doesn't open again for a few months. In England, the transfer window usually closes at 11pm on deadline day in late August/early September for the summer window and in late January/early February for the winter transfer window. Sky Sports News has turned Transfer Deadline Day into a main sporting event twice a year, with the yellow ticker announcing transfers as they happen. Expect a flurry of late transfers and loans!
On deadline day in January 2011, Fernando Torres left Liverpool for Chelsea in a £50 million move, and Liverpool immediately spent most of that on Andy Carroll from Newcastle. Sky Sports had reporters at all three clubs as the chaos unfolded live on air.
Paying a transfer fee in chunks over time rather than all at once. Most big transfers are structured this way - £100m might be £25m a year for four years. It helps the buying club's cash flow and often makes the difference between a deal happening or not. The selling club prefers upfront payment but usually has to compromise.
Chelsea's summer 2022 spending spree relied heavily on installments - while the total fees were enormous, structuring payments over 5+ years meant the immediate cash outflow was manageable.
Similar to
gazumping but sounds more aggressive - actively intercepting a transfer that's in progress. The hijacking club doesn't just outbid, they convince the player to change his mind when he'd already agreed terms elsewhere. Creates drama, headlines, and enemies. Barcelona hijacking Cesc Fàbregas from Arsenal's rivals became legendary.
Manchester United's attempted hijacking of Alexis Sánchez from Manchester City in January 2018 succeeded - Sánchez had seemingly agreed to join City, but United's wage offer was reportedly so much higher that he switched allegiances at the last moment.
A loan where the receiving club can buy the player permanently at the end for a pre-agreed fee. It lets clubs try before they commit and spreads the financial risk. Sometimes the option is an obligation that automatically triggers under certain conditions (like staying in the league or appearances). Clever clubs use these to get around spending restrictions.
Chelsea's loan with option to buy for Mateo Kovačić from Real Madrid eventually converted to a permanent deal - the loan year let both parties assess fit before committing to a €45 million transfer.