Mino Raiola’s heir has broken the bank in women’s football

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is the heir of Mino Raiola. And she is ready to break the bank in women’s football. the brazilian lawyer Rafaela Pimenta This happened to one of the most powerful representatives of soccer players in the world, who died a year ago, who was ready to change the contracts and sponsorship of women in soccer.

This was assured by himself pepper in a recent interview, in which he wanted to launch a serious warning: “It is expected that, next season, the transfer of more than a million euros will take place for a player for the first time and I hope that I am the one you do” , drop he in a chat on the ‘Accademia dello Sport’ portal. A complete warning for a woman accustomed to closing multimillion-dollar contracts – she is the agent of Erling Haaland, Paul Pogba and Zlatan Ibrahimovicamong others- and aims to provide a change of direction in women’s football.

Right now, the Brazilian lawyer and former professor of International Law at the University of São Paulo, has made names for himself in the Spanish League, such as the Real Madrid goalkeeper, Misa Rodríguez, the goalscorer Esther González and the young pearl of the white team, Carla Camacho, one of the world’s best record-readers.

Rafaela Pimenta is in charge of continuing the legacy of the Italian Raiola, where she started working in 2004. Living in Monaco, she manages a portfolio of different soccer players adding up to a value of more than 1,000 million dollars through the agency A Sarl.

Women’s football is part of his priorities, as he said last week in an interview with Financial Times, in which she argued that “it’s important that female soccer players are treated as soccer players. They’re not cute dolls or bodies for Gillette ads.

He also denounced the machismo that still pervades this area: “If Margaret Thatcher If he is an agent, he will be questioned. He can run a country but not be a football agent. Because of football many men believe that only they know”.

However, when the clubs got to know him, the perception of him changed: “At first the prejudice was stronger, but then they understood me. It’s still a very male-dominated industry, where others think ‘He doesn’t know transfer, she’s a girl.’” At one point, a club executive admitted to her that “I thought you were just a prostitute from Brazil” when he saw her relatable in the football environment.

Today, he works with three full-time employees, three women, along with consultants in different cities. A powerful woman to lead change.

Source: La Verdad

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