Spalletti escapes Roman ruin

The transfer window closed with no great shakes around the Serie A clubs â the big moves had been done and dusted earlier in the summer.

There was no surprise that Fabio Grosso joined his Italy international team-mates at Juventus, and Marcello Lippi will be glad to have three of his back-four, as well as goalkeeper Gigi Buffon, in one team.

It was a bit of a shock to see Zdravko Kuzmanovic move to Stuttgart, but then Fiorentina need the money and â¬8 million is not bad business for a player the Tuscans picked up for a song a few yearâÂÂs back.

Apart from that, the usual journeymen were packing their bags once again, although Sampdoria have landed an excellent back-up to Giampaolo Pazzini in Nicola Pozzi, who may have already been fitting snugly into the formerâÂÂs boots, so to speak, if it had not been for two serious knee injuries.

While the players can rest easily for another few months, the same cannot be said for the coaches who must wish they had a transfer window of their very own.

The season is hardly up and running and already we have the first managerial casualty, even though it was a car wreck waiting to happen.

Of course, itâÂÂs in the city of fading glory where Luciano Spalletti has overseen another disastrous start to the campaign by AS Roma.

We have been down this road to Rome before, and the Giallorossi are currently propping up the rest of the league following defeats to Genoa and Juventus.

The opening fixtures may have been unkind to Spalletti, but it is Roma after all, and they are expected to beat any team on their day.

However, the writing was on the wall for the Tuscan who admitted as much that he had lost the dressing room after SundayâÂÂs 3-1 loss to Juve, claiming that the team had âÂÂfailed to follow ordersâ and âÂÂlacked fighting spirit.âÂÂ

Spalletti had long seemed to have given up the ghost as well, once again staring at the ground for most of SundayâÂÂs threadbare performance.

He was like a down-in-the-mouth tourist who has been pick-pocketed at the Trevi Fountain and canâÂÂt wait to get out of town.

He could have gone to Chelsea last season, was heavily linked with Juventus and a move to Zenit St. Petersburg in the summer, but his bald plate was still shining in the Roman sun come the start of the campaign â and what an easy target it was for the clubâÂÂs detractors.

Of course, the coach has to take the rap, when all is said and done, for the on-field results but there are quite a few other candidates who should be wary of the fansâ ever-growing hostility.

The Sensi family â with the demure but totally ineffectual Rosella in charge â have clung on to control, racking up a massive debt while refusing to step aside when a potential buyer presents itself.

No longer a buying club, unless you count Nicolas Burdiss and Bogdan Lobont - the latter only there on a loan deal - they cashed in on Alberto Aquilani.

But the real business would have come with the sale of even bigger money-spinners in Daniele de Rossi and Philippe Mexes.  
 
It looks as if everyone connected with Roma are deluding themselves that the club can actually be a force again under the current ownership.

Just look at the man to arrest the slide into oblivion: Claudio Ranieri. At least, Jose Mourinho will have someone to bully again.

Roberto Mancini would have been a better option, but there is no point even going there with the persona non grata of Italian football.

Ranieri may be a Roman through-and-through and adored much in the way an eccentric, old uncle would be, but when it comes to taking Roma back to anywhere near the heights they enjoyed in recent years then heâÂÂs not your man.

He is cheap â earning less than a â¬1 million-a-year compared to SpallettiâÂÂs â¬1.9m-a-year salary â but when it comes to managing star names, as witnessed at Juventus, he has little sway.

Francesco Totti will not be too pleased with a new 4-4-2 formation, because in his eyes there can only be one striker and goalscorer in the team.

Sorry to say, but the great manâÂÂs powers in that role are waning match by match as ever-physical Serie A defenders muscle him off the ball.

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