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The 2023 Italian football summer transfer window runs from 1 July to 31 August 2023. This list includes transfers featuring at least one club from either Serie A or Serie B that were completed after the end of the 2022–23 season and before the end of the summer 2023 window on 31 August.
The following list shows the chronological progression of the most expensive transfer in the history of the Serie A. All the buying teams are Italian. All the buying teams are Italian. The cost does not include the salary of the player, an aspect that in the last few decades the sports press usually merged.
The 2022 Italian football summer transfer window runs from 1 July to 1 September 2022. This list includes transfers featuring at least one club from either Serie A or Serie B . Transfers
The 2022–23 Italian football winter transfer window ran from 2 to 31 January 2023. This list includes transfers featuring at least one club from either Serie A or Serie B that were completed after the end of the summer 2022 transfer window on 30 September 2022 and before the end of the winter 2022–23 window on 31 January.
The window formally opened on 2 July 2013 [citation needed] and closed on 2 September (2 months), but Lega Serie A and Lega Serie B accepted to document any transfer before that day, however those players would only able to play for his new club at the start of 2012–13 season. Free agent could join any club at any time.
This is a list of Italian football transfers featuring at least one Serie A or Serie B club which were completed from 4 January 2016 to 1 February 2016, [1] date in which the winter transfer window would close.
Serie A, as it is structured today, began during the 1929–30 season.From 1898 to 1922, the competition was organised into regional groups. Because of ever growing teams attending regional championships, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) split the CCI (Italian Football Confederation) in 1921, which founded in Milan the Lega Nord (Northern Football League), ancestor of present-day Lega ...
The 2020–21 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 119th season of top-tier Italian football, the 89th in a round-robin tournament, and the 11th since its organization under an own league committee, the Lega Serie A.