
Roma have completed the signing of 18-year-old Robinio Vaz from Marseille in a deal worth €25m. The French striker, born in the banlieues of Mantes-la-Jolie, becomes Gian Piero Gasperini’s first January reinforcement.
There’s a video circulating on social media right now. It shows a teenage boy surrounded by masked friends, smoke bombs crackling behind them, fireworks exploding into the grey sky above Mantes-la-Jolie. That boy was celebrating a contract extension at Marseille. Less than a year later, he’s walked out on the French club and landed at Ciampino airport to begin a new life in Rome.
His name is Robinio Vaz. And if you haven’t heard it yet, you will.
A name with a story
The name itself tells you something. His father—a worker, a dreamer, a man who loved football—named him after the Brazilian winger Robinho. The French spelling, with the ‘i’ instead of the ‘h’. An artistic touch. But there’s nothing Brazilian about the boy who grew up in Val-Fourré, one of the roughest neighbourhoods in the Parisian suburbs. Robinio Vaz learned his football in street tournaments where, as his former coach Saidou Dia once put it, “the slightest dribbling mistake, the smallest trick they do to you, they’ll remind you of it for months.”
That pressure—raw, unrelenting, personal—shaped him. And Roma have just paid €25 million to harness it.
The numbers that caught Massara’s eye
Let’s get to the facts. Robinio Vaz is 18 years old. He won’t turn 19 until February 17. He has 22 senior appearances for Olympique de Marseille, four goals, and three assists. These are respectable numbers, but they don’t tell the whole story.
Among players born in 2007 across Europe’s top five leagues, only Lamine Yamal has scored more goals than Vaz this season. But here’s the kicker: Vaz has played the fewest minutes of anyone in that bracket. His conversion rate is absurd. His efficiency is terrifying.
Roberto De Zerbi saw it early. “He’s really strong,” the Marseille coach said back in January 2025, after throwing the then-17-year-old into a Ligue 1 match against Strasbourg. Vaz came on at half-time, won a penalty within 45 minutes, and was named man of the match. “He needs to keep his head on his shoulders,” De Zerbi added. “He has that desire, that hunger. It’s a source of pride to give him playing time.”
Why De Zerbi couldn’t keep him
The relationship soured. Not dramatically, not publicly—but unmistakably. By October, De Zerbi was still praising the youngster in press conferences: “I have a soft spot for Robinio. He has two qualities I really like: hunger and desire to improve.” Yet by December, Vaz had been frozen out. Contract negotiations stalled. The club wanted an extension; the player’s camp wanted better terms.
In late October, De Zerbi made a telling remark to reporters: “He’s not here for us to sell him to England in the summer.” Three months later, he’s in Italy.
According to journalist Fabrice Hawkins, the final deal was a permanent transfer worth €25 million including bonuses. Marseille secured a 10% sell-on clause. Sochaux—the third-division club where Vaz spent two formative years without ever playing a professional game—will receive 15% of the fee. For a club with a €12 million annual budget, that’s roughly €4 million. Nearly a third of their operating costs, delivered by a teenager they couldn’t convince to sign a professional contract.
What Gasperini gains—and what he must manage
Gian Piero Gasperini didn’t build Atalanta’s dynasty by signing polished products. He built it by taking rough diamonds—Diego Milito, Gianluca Scamacca, Rasmus Højlund—and grinding them into European-level strikers. Vaz fits that mould, though the edges are sharper than most.
His former youth coach at Sochaux once described him bluntly: “He was never the most disciplined. Sometimes he was lazy. But athletically, he was a cut above everyone else. Strength, explosiveness, the ability to terrorise defences.”
There’s the talent. And there’s the warning. Gasperini will need both in his approach.
Roma sporting director Frederic Massara flew to Paris to meet with Vaz and his family personally. The player arrived at Ciampino on Tuesday evening, completed his medical on Wednesday morning, and signed a four-year contract running until 2030. He has chosen the number 78 shirt—a nod, perhaps, to the FC Mantois 78, one of the amateur clubs where he first dreamed of becoming a professional.
The tactical fit
Gasperini’s Serie A teams have always been built around relentless pressing, fluid positional rotations, and an almost maniacal emphasis on one-on-one duels. Vaz—explosive, direct, fearless in individual battles—fits like a glove.
He can play as a centre-forward, but there’s talk of moulding him into a wide attacker. The Rafael Leão pathway, essentially. Pace, power, and a technique still being refined. At 1.85m, he has the frame to bully Serie A defenders. At 18, he has the time to grow into a club centrepiece.
This is a long-term play by the Friedkin ownership. Roma have spent €25 million on a player who, twelve months ago, had never appeared in a professional league. That’s conviction—or madness. Possibly both.
The bottom line
When Vaz stepped onto the tarmac in Rome, only twenty fans were waiting. The Coppa Italia match against Genoa was about to kick off; the city had other priorities. But make no mistake: this signing is Roma’s most significant statement of the January window.
They’ve beaten Premier League interest. They’ve outmaneuvered German scouts. They’ve landed one of the most explosive young forwards in European football.
Now the question is whether Gasperini can do what De Zerbi couldn’t—channel the hunger without losing control of the fire.
— OfficialASRoma View on X









