Teenage Inter Milan attacking midfielder Valentin Carboni is set to undergo his medicals on a loan move to Marseille tomorrow.
This according to French football journalist Santi Aouna. He reports that the Argentine should undergo his medicals at 15:00 CET and then sign his new contract with the Ligue 1 club.
Carboni will soon become a Marseille player for next season.
The Nerazzurri have found a complete agreement with the Ligue 1 club on the terms of a deal.
The move will not be a permanent transfer right away. Rather, Carboni will be joining Marseille on an initial paid loan deal.
Then, the French side will have a purchase option to sign Carboni on a permanent basis.
Reports indicate that Marseille will pay Inter a €1 million loan fee this summer. Then, the purchase option will be a little under €40 million.
Meanwhile, Inter will have a buyback option. They can sign Carboni right back in the event that Marseille decide to exercise their purchase option.
Inter President Beppe Marotta has confirmed that the Nerazzurri will still have control over Carboni’s future per the terms of the deal with Marseille.
🚨🔵⚪️🇦🇷 #Ligue1 |
📍Valentin Carboni est attendu à Marseille demain vers 15h00 .
✈️ Ils prendront un vol privé depuis Milanhttps://t.co/iCIHesNi6u pic.twitter.com/ES3f73HKSD
— Santi Aouna (@Santi_J_FM) August 4, 2024
Inter Attacking Midfielder Valentin Carboni Set For Marseille Medical For Tomorrow
Carboni has signed a contract with Inter.
The 19-year-old has extended his deal from the end of June 2028 to the end of June 2029.
And now, it is time for Carboni to travel to France and undergo his medicals.
The Argentine teenager is already on his way,
Tomorrow at 15:00 CET, reports French journalist Aouna, Carboni will undergo his medicals.
Carboni has decided that Marseille’s project is the right one for him to take his next steps. He will work with former Sassuolo, Shakhtar Donetsk, and Brighton and Hove Albion coach Brighton and Hove Albion.
Nevertheless, Inter will retain control over Carboni’s future as Nerazzurri president Marotta made clear.