|
|
I've joined Juventus, says Cevallos
The teenage sensation on Thursday claimed he has completed a dream move to the Old Lady and will jet out to Italy after the South America Under-20 championship
Ecuadorian starlet Jose Francisco Cevallos says he has already signed a contract with Juventus, and will fly to Turin immediately after the South America Under-20 tournament.The midfielder, who plays for Quito, also insisted he will fight for a first-team place with the Bianconeri, despite only turning 18 last week.
"I am very happy and very proud that after weeks and months of negotiations, the transfer has gone through," he told Ecuador TV.
"I have already signed the contract. As soon as the tournament ends, I will go straight to Turin. I’ll fight to earn my place and I am certain with God’s grace it will go well."
Cevallos' father, Jose Francisco Snr, was a legendary goalkeeper in Ecuador, who faced up against his son's soon-to-be captain Gianluigi Buffon in the 2002 World Cup.
He added: "In the 2002 World Cup, Gigi Buffon exchanged shirts with my father. If I get the chance, I’ll ask him if he remembers that."
| Sign up today with Ladbrokes and get a $20 welcome bonus! |
|
Related Stories
-
BVB's rise from the abyss to European contenders
BVB have recovered from teetering on the edge of bankruptcy to take their place on Europe's grandest stage, humbling their opponents on Saturday, Bayern Munich, along the way
-
Transfer Talk: Mourinho wants six new signings
Get your daily dose of all the speculation from around the globe as clubs cast their eye towards summer reinforcements
-
Who will start for Kenya against Nigeria in Oliech's absence?
Goal.com reviews Adel Amrouche’s striking options ahead of the June 5 contest, which Kenya must win if they hope to reach the finals to be staged in Brazil
-
Kenya coach accuses Logarusic of sabotage
Amrouche is at loggerheads with Gor Mahia coach Zdravko Logarusic, whom he accuses of refusing to release the clubs' players to train with the national team
-
Soulless EPL must face up to grim reality
After a season marred by controversy and a failure of its top teams to put up a credible Champions League challenge, the world's supposed best league is falling behind