
Bournemouth defender Senesi targeted by Juventus and Roma
Juventus, Roma and Real Sociedad are all keeping a close eye on Bournemouth defender Marcos Senesi, according to reports in Italy.
The central defender from Argentina is only under contract until June 2026 and is therefore expected to be sold this summer.
He made the move from Feyenoord to Bournemouth in 2022 for €15m, but only made 19 competitive appearances this season.
It was because of a serious thigh injury that kept him out of action for four months from December 2024 to April 2025.
Senesi looking for new challeng
According to DAZN and Sport Mediaset transfer pundit Orazio Accomando, there is interest from Roma, Juventus and Villarreal, but the Giallorossi are further behind in the running because of their need to make sales and meet Financial Fair Play parameters.
The Bianconeri are also looking at other targets, so Spain would seem a more likely option for the 28-year-old, with Real Sociedad and Villsarreal also linkREAD MORE;
When Wolves trio set Molineux alight before Crystal Palace and AFC Bournemouth came calling
It is easy to forget just how integral the years under Kenny Jackett were for Wolves, with the club now a stable Premier League outfit.
However, following two successive relegations that saw the club in turmoil ahead of the 2013/14 League One campaign, Jackett’s incredible work saw the club bounce back at the first time of asking. And there was one trio nurtured by Jackett that gave the Old Gold a chance of doing the impossible – two successive promotions following two successive relegations.
Before the Premier League and European names would set foot on the pitch at Molineux, there was Nouha Dicko, Benik Afobe and Bakary Sako who set the Championship alight together in the 2014/15 term, before Premier League moves came calling for two of the three.
A play-off charge inspired by an electric trio
Following Wolves’ promotion back to the Championship in 2014, the Old Gold had begun life well back in the second tier. At the midway point of the campaign, Jackett’s men were sitting in ninth place, with the play-offs far from out of the picture.
The key to their attacking threat was a dynamic front three that tore teams apart on the counter.