List of foreign Serie A players
This is a list of foreign players (i.e. non-Italian players) in Serie A . The following players:
Have played at least one Serie A game for the respective club (seasons in which and teams that a player did not collect any caps in Serie A for have NOT been listed).
Have not been capped for the Italy national team on any level, independently from the birthplace, except for players born in San Marino and active in the Italy national team before the first official match of the San Marino national football team played on 14 November 1990 and players of Italian formation born abroad from Italian parents (so called 'Oriundi').
Have been born in Italy and were capped by a foreign national team. This includes players who have dual citizenship with Italy.
Players are sorted by the State , according to the FIFA eligibility rules :
They played for in a national team on any level. For footballers that played for two or more national teams it prevails:
The one he played for on A level .
The national team of birth.
If they never played for any national team on any level, it prevails the state of birth. For footballers born in dissolved states prevails the actual state of birth (e.g.: Yugoslavia -> Serbia , Montenegro , Croatia , etc.).
These are all the teams that have had at least one foreign player while playing in a Serie A season. Teams in bold are the ones currently playing in the 2023–24 Serie A season:
Alessandria , Ancona , Ascoli , Atalanta , Avellino , Bari , Benevento , Bologna , Brescia , Cagliari , Carpi , Catania , Catanzaro , Cesena , Chievo , Como , Cremonese , Crotone , Empoli , Fiorentina , Foggia , Frosinone , Genoa , Hellas Verona , Internazionale , Juventus , Lazio , Lecce , Lecco , Legnano , Livorno , Lucchese , Mantova , Messina , Milan , Modena , Monza , Napoli , Novara , Padova , Palermo , Parma , Perugia , Pescara , Piacenza , Pisa , Pistoiese , Pro Patria , Reggiana , Reggina , Roma , Salernitana , Sampdoria , Sassuolo , Siena , SPAL , Spezia , Torino , Treviso , Triestina , Udinese , Varese , Venezia , Vicenza .
These are the only teams that have participated in Serie A but have not had at least one foreign player:
Casale , Pro Vercelli , Ternana .
In bold: Players still active in Serie A and their respective teams in the current season.
Oriundi and Naturalised players
José Altafini playing for Milan
– Ermanno Aebi – Inter – 1910–22
– Valerio Alesi – Ascoli – 1984–85
– José Altafini – Milan, Napoli, Juventus – 1958–76
– Amauri – Napoli, Piacenza, Chievo, Palermo, Juventus, Parma, Fiorentina, Torino – 2000–02, 2003–16
– André Anderson – Lazio – 2019–20, 2021–22
– Miguel Andreolo – Bologna, Lazio, Napoli – 1935–48
– Antonio Angelillo – Inter, Roma, Milan, Lecco – 1957–68
– Emil Audero – Juventus, Sampdoria, Inter, Como – 2016–17, 2018–
– Emilio Badini – Bologna, Spal – 1913–22
– Cristian Battocchio – Udinese – 2010–12
– Daniel Bessa – Verona, Genoa – 2017–19, 2020–22
– Kingsley Boateng – Catania – 2013–14
– Mauro Camoranesi – Verona, Juventus – 2000–06, 2007–10
– Renato Cesarini – Juventus – 1929–35
– Arturo Chini Ludueña – Roma – 1927–34
– Nikita Contini – Napoli – 2023–
– Dino da Costa – Roma, Fiorentina, Atalanta, Juventus – 1955–66
– Alejandro Demaría – Lazio – 1931–34
– Paolo Dellafiore – Treviso, Palermo, Torino, Parma, Cesena, Novara, Siena – 2005–13
– Attilio Demaria – Inter, Novara, Legnano – 1932–36, 1938–46
– Alfredo Devincenzi – Inter – 1934–36
– Nicolao Dumitru – Napoli – 2010–11
– Éder – Empoli, Brescia, Cesena, Sampdoria, Inter – 2006–07, 2010–18
– Emerson (Emerson Palmieri dos Santos) – Palermo, Roma – 2014–18
– Ricardo Faccio – Inter – 1933–36
– Otávio Fantoni – Lazio – 1930–35
– Francisco Fedullo – Bologna – 1930–39
– Luiz Felipe – Lazio – 2017–22
– Emanuele Figliola – Genoa – 1935–38
– Eddie Firmani – Sampdoria, Inter, Genoa – 1955–61, 1962–63
– Enrique Flamini – Lazio – 1939–52, 1953–54
– Fernando Forestieri – Siena, Udinese – 2007–09, 2020–22
– Francesco Frione – Inter – 1932–35
– Elisio Gabardo – Milan, Liguria, Genoa – 1935–41
– Alcides Ghiggia – Roma, Milan – 1953–62
– Carlos Gringa – Fiorentina, Lucchese – 1932–39
– Enrique Guaita – Roma – 1933–35
– Anfilogino Guarisi – Lazio – 1931–37
– Paolo Innocenti – Bologna, Napoli – 1924–37
– João Pedro – Palermo, Cagliari – 2010–11, 2014–15, 2016–22
– Jorginho – Verona, Napoli – 2013–18
– Cristian Ledesma – Lecce, Lazio – 2001–02, 2003–15
– Julio Libonatti – Torino, Genoa – 1926–36
– Francisco Lojacono – Vicenza, Fiorentina, Roma, Sampdoria – 1956–65
– Leandro Martínez – Parma – 2007–08
– Rinaldo Martino – Juventus – 1949–50
– Ernesto Mascheroni – Inter – 1934–36
– Humberto Maschio – Bologna, Atalanta, Inter, Fiorentina – 1957–66
– Luis Monti – Juventus – 1930–39
– Miguel Montuori – Fiorentina – 1956–61
– Giovanni Moscardini – Lucchese, Pisa, Genoa – 1919–??
– Thiago Motta – Genoa, Inter – 2008–12
– Alfonso Negro – Fiorentina, Napoli – 1934–39
– Brian Oddei – Sassuolo – 2020–22
– Raimundo Orsi – Juventus – 1928–35
– Dani Osvaldo – Fiorentina, Bologna, Roma, Juventus, Inter – 2007–10, 2011–15
– Gabriel Paletta – Parma, Milan, Atalanta – 2010–17
– Bruno Pesaola – Roma, Novara, Napoli, Genoa – 1947–61
– Cecilio Pisano – Sampdoria – 1937–38, 1939–40, 1941–43
– Roberto Porta – Inter – 1934–36
– Ettore Puricelli – Bologna, Milan – 1938–49
– Vincenzo Rennella – Cesena – 2011–12
– Mateo Retegui – Genoa, Atalanta – 2023–
– Eduardo Ricagni – Juventus, Milan, Torino – 1953–58
– Rômulo – Fiorentina, Verona, Juventus, Genoa, Lazio, Brescia – 2011–16, 2017–20
– Humberto Rosa – Sampdoria, Padova, Juventus, Napoli – 1954–64
– Said Ahmed Said – Genoa – 2012–13
– Attila Sallustro – Napoli – 1925–37
– Oreste Sallustro – Napoli, Bari – 1929–33, 1934–37
– Raffaele Sansone – Bologna, Napoli – 1931–45
– Fabiano Santacroce – Napoli, Parma – 2007–13, 2014–15
– Ezequiel Schelotto – Cesena, Catania, Atalanta, Inter, Sassuolo, Parma, Chievo – 2010–15, 2018–19
– Juan Alberto Schiaffino – Milan, Roma – 1954–62
– Alessandro Scopelli – Roma – 1933–35
– Pedro Sernagiotto – Juventus – 1932–34
– Omar Sívori – Juventus, Napoli – 1957–69
– Angelo Sormani – Mantova, Roma, Sampdoria, Milan, Napoli, Fiorentina, Vicenza – 1961–76
– Rafael Toloi – Roma, Atalanta – 2013–14, 2015–
– Victor Tortora – Venezia – 1939–43, 1946–47
– Ulisse Uslenghi – Livorno, Napoli – 1933–38
– Giuseppe Wilson – Lazio – 1969–79
– Kelvin Yeboah – Genoa – 2021–22
– Maximo Zenildo Zappino – Frosinone – 2015–16
Africa (CAF)
Algeria
Houssem Aouar – Roma – 2023–24[b FRA] [c FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U18]
Ishak Belfodil – Bologna, Parma, Inter, Livorno – 2011–15[c FRA U20] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17]
Samir Beloufa – Milan – 1997–98[b FRA]
Ismaël Bennacer – Empoli, Milan – 2018–[b FRA] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18]
Mohamed Fares – Verona, SPAL, Lazio, Genoa – 2014–16, 2017–22[b FRA]
Abdelkader Ghezzal – Siena, Bari, Cesena, Parma – 2008–12, 2014–15[b FRA]
Rachid Ghezzal – Fiorentina – 2019–20[b FRA] [c FRA U20]
Faouzi Ghoulam – Napoli – 2013–22[b FRA] [c FRA U21]
Mehdi Léris – Chievo, Sampdoria – 2017–21, 2022–23[b FRA]
Mourad Meghni – Bologna, Lazio – 2002–05, 2007–10[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U17]
Djamel Mesbah – Lecce, Milan, Parma, Livorno, Sampdoria, Crotone – 2010–17
Adam Ounas – Napoli, Cagliari, Crotone – 2017–19, 2020–23[b FRA] [c FRA U20]
Saphir Taïder – Bologna, Inter, Sassuolo – 2011–18[b FRA] [c FRA U20] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18]
Ahmed Touba – Lecce – 2023-24[b FRA] [c BEL U21] [c BEL U19] [c BEL U18] [c BEL U17]
Hassan Yebda – Napoli, Udinese – 2010–11, 2013–14[b FRA] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Karim Zedadka – Napoli – 2022–23[b FRA]
Angola
Burkina Faso
Cameroon
Samuel Eto'o , a protagonist of the 2010 treble by Inter , training. He also played 6 months for Sampdoria .
André-Frank Zambo Anguissa – Napoli – 2021–
Nicky Beloko – Fiorentina – 2018–19[c SUI U21] [c SUI U20] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U15]
Jean-Claude Billong – Benevento – 2017–18[b FRA]
Yann Aurel Bisseck – Inter – 2023–[b DEU] [c DEU U21] [c DEU U19] [c DEU U18] [c DEU U17]
Enzo Ebosse – Udinese – 2022–[b FRA] [c FRA U16]
Samuel Eto'o – Inter, Sampdoria – 2009–11, 2014–15
Antonio Ghomsi – Messina – 2006–07
Martin Hongla – Verona – 2021–24
Thomas Job – Sampdoria, Ascoli – 2003–04, 2006–07
Daniel Maa Boumsong – Inter – 2005–06
Patrick Mboma – Cagliari, Parma – 1998–2002
Joseph Minala – Lazio – 2013–14
Nicolas N'Koulou – Torino – 2017–21
Jean-Pierre Nsame – Venezia – 2021–22
Olivier Ntcham – Genoa – 2015–17[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U20] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
François Omam-Biyik – Sampdoria – 1997–98
André Onana – Inter – 2022–23
Frank Ongfiang – Venezia – 2001–02
Jérôme Onguéné – Genoa – 2020–21[c FRA U20] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Augustine Simo – Torino – 1995–96
Rigobert Song – Salernitana – 1998–99
Adrien Tameze – Atalanta, Verona, Torino – 2019–[b FRA] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Jackson Tchatchoua – Verona – 2023–[b BEL]
Pierre Womé – Vicenza, Roma, Bologna, Brescia, Inter – 1996–97, 1998–2002, 2004–06
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Congo
DR Congo
Egypt
Mohamed Salah playing for Fiorentina in 2015
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Maxwell Acosty – Fiorentina, Chievo, Crotone – 2011–12, 2013–14, 2016–17
Afriyie Acquah – Palermo, Parma, Sampdoria, Torino, Empoli – 2010–19
Felix Afena-Gyan – Roma, Cremonese – 2021–23
Daniel Kofi Agyei – Fiorentina – 2009–10
Emmanuel Agyemang-Badu – Udinese, Verona – 2009–17, 2018–20
Augustine Ahinful – Venezia – 1998–99
Masahudu Alhassan – Genoa – 2011–12
Ebenezer Annan – Bologna – 2021–22
Stephen Appiah – Udinese, Parma, Brescia, Juventus, Bologna, Cesena – 1997–2005, 2009–11
Kwadwo Asamoah – Udinese, Juventus, Inter, Cagliari – 2008–21
Kwame Ayew – Lecce – 1993–94
Ahmed Barusso – Roma, Siena – 2007–09
Richmond Boakye – Genoa, Atalanta – 2009–11, 2014–15
Kevin-Prince Boateng – Milan, Sassuolo, Fiorentina – 2010–13, 2015–16, 2018–20[b FRG] [c DEU U21] [c DEU U20] [c DEU U19]
Raman Chibsah – Sassuolo, Frosinone, Benevento – 2013–16, 2017–19
Isaac Cofie – Genoa, Chievo, Carpi – 2009–10, 2012–18
Amadou Diambo – Benevento – 2020–21
Isaac Donkor – Inter – 2014–15
Godfred Donsah – Verona, Cagliari, Bologna – 2013–19
Alfred Duncan – Inter, Livorno, Sampdoria, Sassuolo, Fiorentina, Cagliari, Venezia – 2012–
Mark Edusei – Sampdoria, Catania – 2004–08
Caleb Ekuban – Genoa – 2021–22, 2023–[b ITA]
Michael Essien – Milan – 2013–15
Abdullah Fusseini – Torino – 1999–2000
Mohammed Gargo – Udinese – 1996–2002, 2003–04
Bright Gyamfi – Benevento – 2017–18
Asamoah Gyan – Udinese – 2003–04, 2006–08
Emmanuel Gyasi – Spezia, Empoli – 2020–[b ITA]
Samuel Kuffour – Roma, Livorno – 2005–07
John Mensah – Chievo, Modena – 2002–05
Sulley Muntari – Udinese, Inter, Milan, Pescara – 2002–07, 2008–15, 2016–17
Nicholas Opoku – Udinese – 2018–20
Emmanuel Osei – Livorno – 2004–05
Abédi Pelé – Torino – 1994–96
Amidu Salifu – Fiorentina, Catania – 2010–13
Ibrahim Sulemana – Verona, Cagliari, Atalanta – 2022–
Nana Welbeck – Brescia – 2010–11
Philip Yeboah Ankrah – Verona – 2020–21
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Ivory Coast
Gervinho with Roma in 2014
Jean-Daniel Akpa Akpro – Lazio, Empoli, Monza – 2020–[b FRA]
Ibrahima Bakayoko – Livorno, Messina – 2005–07
Sol Bamba – Palermo – 2014–15[b FRA]
Jérémie Boga – Sassuolo, Atalanta – 2018–23[b FRA] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U16]
Drissa Camara – Parma – 2020–21, 2024–
Amad Diallo – Atalanta – 2019–21
Serge Dié – Reggina – 1999–2000
Koffi Djidji – Torino, Crotone – 2018–24[b FRA]
Cyril Domoraud – Inter – 1999–2000
Thierry Doubai – Udinese – 2011–12
Seydou Doumbia – Roma – 2014–15
Seko Fofana – Udinese – 2016–20[b FRA] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Gervinho – Roma, Parma – 2013–16, 2018–21
Assane Demoya Gnoukouri – Inter – 2014–17
Cedric Gondo – Salernitana – 2021–22
Hassane Kamara – Udinese – 2023–[b FRA]
Franck Kessié – Atalanta, Milan – 2016–22
Axel Cédric Konan – Lecce, Torino – 2000–02, 2003–07, 2008–09
Ben Lhassine Kone – Torino, Como – 2021–22, 2024–
Moussa Koné – Atalanta – 2013–14
Odilon Kossounou – Atalanta – 2024–
Christian Kouamé – Genoa, Fiorentina – 2018–21, 2022–
Arnaud Kouyo – Lecce – 2003–04
Saliou Lassissi – Parma, Sampdoria, Fiorentina – 1998–2001
Christian Manfredini – Chievo, Lazio, Perugia – 2001–09
Evan Ndicka – Roma – 2023–[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U20] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Siriki Sanogo – Benevento – 2017–18, 2020–21
Ibrahiman Scandroglio – Empoli – 1998–99
Alassane Sidibe – Atalanta – 2021–22
Wilfried Singo – Torino – 2019–23
Tallo – Roma – 2011–12
Chaka Traorè – Parma, Milan – 2020–21, 2023–24
Hamed Junior Traorè – Empoli, Sassuolo, Napoli – 2018–24
François Zahoui – Ascoli – 1981–83
Marco Zoro – Messina – 2004–07
Kenya
Liberia
Libya
Mali
Mauritania
Morocco
Mehdi Benatia training for Udinese
Jamal Alioui – Perugia – 2003–04[b FRA]
Sofyan Amrabat – Verona, Fiorentina – 2019–23, 2024–25[b NED] [c NED U15]
Reda Belahyane – Verona – 2023–[b FRA] [c FRA U18]
Mehdi Benatia – Udinese, Roma, Juventus – 2010–14, 2016–19[b FRA] [c FRA U18]
Zakarya Bergdich – Genoa – 2014–15[b FRA]
Soufiane Bidaoui – Parma – 2014–15[b BEL]
Mehdi Bourabia – Sassuolo, Spezia, Frosinone – 2018–24[b FRA]
Ouasim Bouy – Palermo – 2016–17[b NED] [c NED U19] [c NED U17] [c NED U15]
Walid Cheddira – Frosinone, Napoli – 2023–25[b ITA]
Manuel da Costa – Fiorentina, Sampdoria – 2008–09[b FRA] [c POR U23] [c POR U21] [c POR U20]
Brahim Díaz – Milan – 2020–23[b SPA] [c SPA] [c SPA U21] [c SPA U19] [c SPA U17]
Oussama El Azzouzi – Bologna – 2023–[b NED]
Saad El Haddad – Venezia – 2024–
Mounir El Hamdaoui – Fiorentina – 2012–13, 2014–15[b NED] [c NED U21]
Moestafa El Kabir – Cagliari – 2011–12
Omar El Kaddouri – Napoli, Torino, Empoli – 2012–17[b BEL] [c BEL U21] [c BEL U19]
Abdelhamid El Kaoutari – Palermo – 2015–16[b FRA] [c FRA U19]
Jawad El Yamiq – Genoa – 2017–18, 2019–20
Zouhair Feddal – Palermo, Parma – 2014–15
Abdou Harroui – Sassuolo, Frosinone, Verona – 2021–[b NED] [c NED U21] [c NED U20]
Achraf Hakimi – Inter – 2020–21[b ESP]
Abderrazak Jadid – Brescia, Parma – 2002–03, 2004–05, 2011–12
Omar Khailoti – Bologna – 2020–21[b ITA]
Houssine Kharja – Roma, Siena, Genoa, Inter, Fiorentina – 2005–06, 2007–12[b FRA]
Sofian Kiyine – Chievo, Venezia – 2016–17, 2018–19, 2021–22[b BEL]
Achraf Lazaar – Palermo, Benevento – 2014–16, 2017–18
Kévin Malcuit – Napoli, Fiorentina – 2018–22[b FRA]
Youssef Maleh – Fiorentina, Lecce, Empoli – 2021–[b ITA] [c ITA U21]
Ibrahim Maroufi – Inter – 2006–07[b BEL] [c BEL U21]
Adam Masina – Bologna, Udinese, Torino – 2015–18, 2022–[c ITA U21]
Rachid Neqrouz – Bari – 1997–2001
Mounir Obbadi – Verona – 2014–15[b FRA] [c FRA U19] [c FRA U18] [b FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Amir Richardson – Fiorentina – 2024–[b FRA] [c FRA U20]
Abdelilah Saber – Napoli – 2000–01
Abdelhamid Sabiri – Sampdoria – 2021–23[c DEU U21]
Adel Taarabt – Milan, Genoa – 2013–14, 2016–18[c FRA U19] [c FRA U17]
Nigeria
Obafemi Martins
Victor Osimhen was the first African player to win the Capocannoniere , scoring 26 goals in Napoli 's title-winning 2022–23 campaign.
Daniel Adejo – Reggina – 2008–09
Ola Aina – Torino – 2018–20, 2021–23[b ENG] [c ENG U20] [c ENG U19] [c ENG U18] [c ENG U17] [c ENG U16]
Akande Ajide – Roma – 2003–04
Ebenezer Akinsanmiro – Inter – 2023–24
Mohammed Aliyu – Milan – 1998–2000
Ibrahim Babatunde – Piacenza – 2002–03
David Ankeye – Genoa – 2023–
Samuel Chukwueze – Milan – 2023–
Fisayo Dele-Bashiru – Lazio – 2024–[b DEU]
Cyriel Dessers – Cremonese – 2022–23[b BEL]
Osarimen Ebagua – Catania – 2011–12
Tyronne Ebuehi – Venezia, Empoli – 2021–[b NED]
Kingsley Ehizibue – Udinese – 2022–[b DEU] [c NED U21]
Hugo Enyinnaya – Bari – 1999–2001
Odion Ighalo – Udinese, Cesena – 2008–09, 2010–11
Chukwubuikem Ikwuemesi – Salernitana – 2023–24
Ikechukwu Kalu – Sampdoria – 2007–08
Nwankwo Kanu – Inter – 1997–99
Ademola Lookman – Atalanta – 2022–[b ENG] [c ENG U21] [c ENG U20] [c ENG U19]
Stephen Makinwa – Modena, Atalanta, Palermo, Lazio, Reggina, Chievo – 2003–10
Obafemi Martins – Inter – 2002–06
Jerry Mbakogu – Carpi – 2015–16
Kingsley Michael – Bologna – 2019–20, 2021–22
Victor Moses – Inter – 2019–20[c ENG U21] [c ENG U19] [c ENG U17] [c ENG U16]
Joel Obi – Inter, Parma, Torino, Chievo, Salernitana – 2010–19, 2021–22
Victor Obinna – Chievo, Inter – 2005–07, 2008–09, 2013–14
Nwankwo Obiora – Inter, Parma – 2010–12
Christian Obodo – Perugia, Fiorentina, Udinese, Lecce – 2001–10, 2011–12
Michael Odibe – Siena – 2009–10
Nnamdi Oduamadi – Milan – 2010–11
Edward Ofere – Lecce – 2010–12
David Okereke – Venezia, Cremonese, Torino – 2021–24
Maduka Okoye – Udinese – 2023–[b DEU]
Orji Okwonkwo – Bologna – 2016–19
Sunday Oliseh – Reggiana, Juventus – 1994–95, 1999–2000
Mathew Olorunleke – Messina – 2005–06
Akeem Omolade – Torino – 2002–03
Ogenyi Onazi – Lazio – 2011–16
Victor Osimhen – Napoli – 2020–24
Umar Sadiq – Roma, Bologna, Torino – 2015–18
Nwankwo Simy – Crotone, Salernitana – 2016–18, 2020–22, 2023–24
Isaac Success – Udinese – 2021–24
Taye Taiwo – Milan – 2011–12
William Troost-Ekong – Udinese, Salernitana – 2018–20, 2022–23[b NED] [c NED U20] [c NED U19]
Adewale Wahab – Roma – 2003–04
Taribo West – Inter, Milan – 1997–2000
Kenneth Zeigbo – Venezia – 1998–99
Réunion
Senegal
Alfred Gomis , the second African goalkeeper in Serie A after his brother Lys , and the first to be starter in the category.[ 1]
Kalidou Koulibaly made over 200 Serie A appearances for Napoli
Khouma Babacar – Fiorentina, Sassuolo, Lecce – 2009–12, 2014–20
Fodé Ballo-Touré – Milan – 2021–23[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U16]
Issa Cissokho – Genoa – 2015–16[b FRA]
Ferdinand Coly – Perugia, Parma – 2003–04, 2005–08
Mamadou Coulibaly – Pescara, Udinese, Salernitana – 2016–17, 2020–22, 2023–24
Boulaye Dia – Salernitana, Lazio – 2022–[b FRA]
Abdou Diakhaté – Parma – 2018–19
Djibril Diawara – Torino – 1999–2000
Abou Diop – Torino – 2012–13
Assane Dioussé – Empoli, Chievo – 2015–17, 2018–19
Diaw Doudou – Torino – 2006–07
Boukary Dramé – Chievo, Atalanta, SPAL – 2011–18[b FRA]
Ricardo Faty – Roma – 2006–07, 2009–10[b FRA] [c FRA U21]
Alfred Gomis – SPAL – 2017–19[c ITA B]
Lys Gomis – Torino – 2013–14[b ITA]
Diomansy Kamara – Modena – 2002–04[b FRA]
Mamadou Kanoute – Benevento – 2017–18
Baldé Keita – Lazio, Inter, Sampdoria, Cagliari – 2013–17, 2018–19, 2020–22[b ESP] [c CAT]
Moussa Konaté – Genoa – 2013–14
Kalidou Koulibaly – Napoli – 2014–22[b FRA] [c FRA U20]
Ibrahima Mbaye – Livorno, Inter, Bologna – 2013–22
Maodo Malick Mbaye – Chievo – 2013–14
David Mbodj – Pescara – 2012–13
Roger Mendy – Pescara – 1992–93
M'Baye Niang – Milan, Genoa, Torino, Empoli – 2012–18, 2023–24[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U17] [c FRA U16]
Welle Ossou – Livorno – 2009–10
Mohamed Sarr – Milan – 2001–02
Mouhamadou Fallou Sarr – Cremonese – 2022–23
Demba Seck – Torino, Frosinone – 2021–24
Demba Thiam – SPAL – 2019–20
Mame Baba Thiam – Empoli – 2016–17
Mamadou Tounkara – Lazio – 2013–14, 2016–17[b ESP]
Armand Traoré – Juventus – 2010–11[b FRA] [c FRA U21] [c FRA U19]
Papa Waigo – Genoa, Fiorentina, Lecce – 2007–09, 2010–11
Sierra Leone
Kewullay Conteh – Atalanta, Venezia, Palermo – 1995–96, 2001–02, 2004–07
Mohamed Kallon – Bologna, Cagliari, Reggina, Vicenza, Inter – 1997–2004
Yayah Kallon – Genoa, Verona – 2020–24
Augustus Kargbo – Crotone – 2020–21
Rodney Strasser – Milan, Lecce, Parma – 2008–13
Somalia
South Africa
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Asia (AFC)
Australia
Mark Bresciano , Australian player of Italian descent who played in European competitions with Parma and Palermo
John Aloisi – Cremonese – 1995–96
Mark Bresciano – Parma, Palermo, Lazio – 2002–11
Joshua Brillante – Fiorentina, Empoli – 2014–15
Alessandro Circati – Parma – 2024–[b ITA] [c ITA U20]
Frank Farina – Bari – 1991–92
Bruno Fornaroli – Sampdoria – 2008–09, 2010–11[b URY] [c URY U17]
Vincenzo Grella – Empoli, Parma, Torino – 1998–99, 2002–08
Ajdin Hrustic – Verona – 2022–23
Zeljko Kalac – Perugia, Milan – 2002–04, 2005–09
Paul Okon – Lazio, Fiorentina – 1996–97, 1998–2000
Trent Sainsbury – Inter – 2016–17
James Troisi – Atalanta – 2012–13
Matthew Ryan – Roma – 2024 -
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Japan
Hidetoshi Nakata has been an important player for Roma's Scudetto in 2001
North Korea
Saudi Arabia
South Korea
Kim Min-jae won a Serie A title with Napoli in 2023
Uzbekistan
Europe (UEFA)
Albania
Elseid Hysaj made over 300 Serie A appearances for Empoli , Napoli and Lazio
Arlind Ajeti – Frosinone, Torino, Crotone – 2015–18[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U20] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U17]
Kristjan Asllani – Empoli, Inter – 2021–
Nedim Bajrami – Empoli, Sassuolo – 2021–24[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U17] [c SUI U16] [c SUI U15]
Migjen Basha – Torino – 2012–15[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U17]
Etrit Berisha – Lazio, Atalanta, SPAL, Torino, Empoli – 2013–20, 2021–22, 2023–24[b KOS–SFR]
Medon Berisha – Lecce – 2023–[b SUI] [c KOS U21]
Erjon Bogdani – Reggina, Verona, Siena, Chievo, Livorno, Cesena – 1999–2001, 2002–03, 2005–13
Loro Boriçi – Lazio – 1941–43
Lorik Cana – Lazio – 2011–15[b KOS–SFR]
Edgar Çani – Palermo, Catania – 2007–08, 2012–13
Marvin Çuni – Frosinone – 2023–24[b DEU]
Kastriot Dermaku – Parma, Lecce – 2019–21, 2022–23[b ITA]
Berat Djimsiti – Atalanta , Benevento – 2015–16, 2017–[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18]
Elseid Hysaj – Empoli, Napoli, Lazio – 2014–
Ardian Ismajli – Spezia, Empoli – 2020–[b KOS–FR] [c KOS] [c KOS U21]
Naim Krieziu – Roma, Napoli – 1939–43, 1945–48, 1950–52 [b KOS–SRB]
Marash Kumbulla – Verona, Roma, Sassuolo – 2019–24[b ITA]
Andi Lila – Parma – 2014–15
Rey Manaj – Inter, Pescara, Spezia – 2015–17, 2021–22
Agon Mehmeti – Palermo – 2011–12[b KOS–SFR] [c SWE U21] [c SWE U19]
Ledian Memushaj – Pescara, Benevento – 2016–18
Emanuele Ndoj – Brescia – 2019–20[b ITA]
Angelo Ndrecka – Chievo – 2018–19[b ITA]
Ylber Ramadani – Lecce – 2023–[b DEU] [c KOS U21] [c KOS U19]
Xhulian Rrudho – Chievo – 2006–07
Alen Sherri – Cagliari – 2024–
Stiven Shpendi – Empoli – 2023–24[b ITA]
Ervin Skela – Ascoli – 2006–07
Thomas Strakosha – Lazio – 2016–22[b GRE]
Igli Tare – Brescia, Bologna, Lazio – 2000–08
Frédéric Veseli – Empoli, Salernitana – 2016–17, 2018–19, 2021–22[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U20] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U17] [c SUI U16] [c SUI U15]
Giacomo Vrioni – Juventus – 2019–21[b ITA] [c ITA U19] [c ITA U18]
Armenia
Henrikh Mkhitaryan was the first Armenian to play in Serie A
Austria
Herbert Prohaska won a scudetto with Roma in 1983
Emanuel Aiwu – Cremonese – 2022–23
Marko Arnautović – Inter , Bologna – 2009–10, 2021–
Matthias Braunöder – Como – 2024–
Flavius Daniliuc – Salernitana, Verona – 2022–
György Garics – Napoli, Atalanta, Bologna – 2007–14[b HUN]
Robert Gucher – Frosinone – 2015–16
Michael Hatz – Reggiana, Lecce – 1996–98
Erwin Hoffer – Napoli – 2009–10
Robert Ibertsberger – Venezia – 1999–2000
Arnel Jakupović – Empoli – 2016–17
Engelbert König – Fiorentina, Lazio, Sampdoria, Genoa – 1940–41, 1942–43, 1945–50
Michael Konsel – Roma, Venezia – 1997–2000
Valentino Lazaro – Inter, Torino – 2019–20, 2022–
Alex Manninger – Fiorentina, Torino, Siena, Juventus – 2001–03, 2004–05, 2006–10
Dieter Mirnegg – Como – 1981–82
Ernst Ocwirk – Sampdoria – 1956–61
Anton Polster – Torino – 1987–88
Stefan Posch – Bologna – 2022–
Herbert Prohaska – Inter, Roma – 1980–83
Jürgen Prutsch – Livorno – 2009–10
Jürgen Säumel – Torino – 2008–09
Walter Schachner – Cesena, Torino, Avellino – 1981–88
David Schnegg – Venezia – 2021–22
Markus Schopp – Brescia – 2001–05
Lukas Spendlhofer – Inter – 2012–13
Michael Svoboda – Venezia – 2021–22, 2024–
Maximilian Ullmann – Venezia – 2021–22
Belarus
Belgium
Dries Mertens is Napoli's all-time top goalscorer.
Radja Nainggolan training with Roma
Walter Baseggio – Treviso – 2005–06
Maxime Busi – Parma – 2020–21
Timothy Castagne – Atalanta – 2017–20
Luis Pedro Cavanda – Lazio – 2010–15[b ANG]
Ludo Coeck – Inter – 1983–84
Bertrand Crasson – Napoli – 1996–98
Charles De Ketelaere – Milan, Atalanta – 2022–
Koni De Winter – Empoli, Genoa – 2022–
Stéphane Demol – Bologna – 1988–89
Leander Dendoncker – Napoli – 2023–24
Daan Dierckx – Parma – 2020–21
Noë Dussenne – Crotone – 2016–18
Daam Foulon – Benevento – 2020–21
Régis Genaux – Udinese – 1996–2001
Eric Gerets – Milan – 1983–84
Jean-François Gillet – Bari, Bologna, Torino – 2000–01, 2009–13, 2014–15
Georges Grün – Parma, Reggiana – 1990–94, 1996–97
Daan Heymans – Venezia – 2021–22
Christian Kabasele – Udinese – 2023–[b ZAI]
Mandela Keita – Parma – 2024–
Sven Kums – Udinese – 2016–17
Maxime Lestienne – Genoa – 2014–15
Jordan Lukaku – Lazio – 2016–20
Romelu Lukaku – Inter, Roma, Napoli – 2019–21, 2022–
Samuel Mbangula – Juventus – 2024–
Dries Mertens – Napoli – 2013–22
Kevin Mirallas – Fiorentina – 2018–19
Gaby Mudingayi – Lazio, Bologna, Inter, Cesena – 2005–15[b ZAI]
Radja Nainggolan – Cagliari, Roma, Inter – 2009–21
Cyril Ngonge – Verona, Napoli – 2022–
Joseph Nonge – Juventus – 2023–24
Luís Oliveira – Cagliari, Fiorentina, Bologna – 1992–2001[b BRA]
Stephane Omeonga – Genoa – 2017–19
Divock Origi – Milan – 2022–23
Daouda Peeters – Juventus – 2019–20[b GUI]
Dennis Praet – Sampdoria, Torino – 2016–19, 2021–22
Silvio Proto – Lazio – 2018–19
Alexis Saelemaekers – Milan , Bologna, Roma – 2019–
Richie Sagrado – Venezia – 2024–
Joël Schingtienne – Venezia – 2024–
Vincenzo Scifo – Inter, Torino – 1987–88, 1991–93
Francis Severeyns – Pisa – 1988–89
Ayanda Sishuba – Verona – 2024–
Arthur Theate – Bologna – 2021–22
Anthony Vanden Borre – Fiorentina, Genoa – 2007–09[b ZAI]
Ignace Van Der Brempt – Como – 2024–
René Vandereycken – Genoa – 1981–83
Zinho Vanheusden – Genoa – 2021–22
Thomas Vermaelen – Roma – 2016–17
Patrick Vervoort – Ascoli – 1991–92
Aster Vranckx – Milan – 2022–23
Johan Walem – Udinese, Parma – 1997–2001
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Mustafa Arslanović – Ascoli – 1988–90 ( while active)
Riad Bajić – Udinese – 2017–18
Asmir Begović – Milan – 2019–20[c CAN U20]
Milan Đurić – Cesena, Salernitana, Verona, Monza – 2014–15, 2021–
Edin Džeko – Roma, Inter – 2015–23
Amer Gojak – Torino – 2020–21
Vinko Golob – Venezia – 1949–50 ( while active)
Mato Jajalo – Siena, Palermo, Udinese – 2009–10, 2014–17, 2019–23[c CRO] [c CRO U21] [c CRO U20]
Davor Jozić – Cesena – 1987–91 ( while active)
Sead Kolašinac – Atalanta – 2023–[b DEU] [c DEU U20] [c DEU U19] [c DEU U18]
Rade Krunić – Empoli, Milan – 2015–17, 2018–24
Senad Lulić – Lazio – 2011–21
Hrvoje Miličević – Pescara – 2016–17[c CRO U21] [c CRO U20] [c CRO U19]
Vedin Musić – Como, Modena, Torino – 2002–04, 2006–07
Zlatan Muslimović – Udinese, Messina, Parma, Atalanta – 2000–01, 2005–08
Enis Nadarević – Genoa – 2012–13
Daniel Pavlović – Frosinone, Sampdoria, Crotone – 2015–18[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U20] [c SUI U19]
Miralem Pjanić – Roma, Juventus – 2011–20[c LUX U19] [c LUX U17]
Sanjin Prcić – Torino – 2015–16[b FRA]
Hasan Salihamidžić – Juventus – 2007–11
Haris Škoro – Torino – 1988–89, 1990–91 ( while active)
Blaž Slišković – Pescara – 1987–88, 1992–93 ( while active)
Ćazim Suljić – Crotone – 2016–17[b FRA]
Toni Šunjić – Palermo – 2016–17
Benjamin Tahirović – Roma – 2022–23[b SWE]
Petar Zovko – Spezia – 2021–22
Ervin Zukanović – Chievo, Sampdoria, Roma, Atalanta, Genoa, SPAL – 2014–20
Bulgaria
Valeri Bojinov , the youngest foreign player to make his debut in Serie A at the age of 15 and 11 months.[ 3]
Valentin Antov – Bologna, Monza – 2020–21, 2022–23
Valeri Bojinov – Lecce, Fiorentina, Parma – 2001–02, 2003–06, 2009–12
Ivaylo Chochev – Palermo – 2014–17
Kiril Despodov – Cagliari – 2018–19, 2020–21
Andrey Galabinov – Genoa, Spezia – 2017–18, 2020–21
Petko Hristov – Spezia – 2021–23
Nikolay Iliev – Bologna – 1989–91
Hristo Stoichkov – Parma – 1995–96
Aleksandar Tonev – Frosinone, Crotone – 2015–18
Croatia
Mario Mandžukić , Croatian player appreciated with Juventus for his grit and determination.[ 4] [ 5]
Marcelo Brozović made over 250 Serie A appearances for Inter Milan
Aljoša Asanović – Napoli – 1997–98
Milan Badelj – Fiorentina, Lazio, Genoa – 2014–22, 2023–
Ricardo Bagadur – Fiorentina – 2014–15
Andrija Balić – Udinese – 2016–19
Zoran Ban – Juventus – 1993–94
Toma Bašić – Lazio , Salernitana – 2021–
Filip Benković – Udinese – 2021–22
Kristijan Bistrović – Lecce – 2022–23
Saša Bjelanović – Como, Chievo, Lecce, Ascoli, Torino – 2002–03, 2004–08
Zvonimir Boban – Bari, Milan – 1991–2001 ( while active)
Luka Bogdan – Salernitana – 2021–22
Alen Bokšić – Lazio, Juventus – 1993–2000
Domagoj Bradarić – Salernitana, Verona – 2022–
Filip Bradarić – Cagliari – 2018–19
Elvis Brajković – Verona – 1996–97
Josip Brekalo – Torino, Fiorentina – 2021–24
Petar Brlek – Genoa – 2017–18
Dražen Brnčić – Milan, Vicenza – 2000–01
Marcelo Brozović – Inter – 2014–23
Igor Bubnjić – Udinese, Carpi – 2013–16
Ante Budimir – Sampdoria, Crotone – 2016–18[b BIH–YUG]
Igor Budan – Venezia, Atalanta, Ascoli, Parma, Palermo, Cesena – 1999–2000, 2001–02, 2004–13
Davor Čop – Empoli – 1987–88 ( while active)
Duje Čop – Cagliari – 2014–15, 2017–18
Ante Ćorić – Roma – 2018–19
Mario Cvitanović – Verona, Venezia – 2000–02
Damjan Đoković – Cesena – 2011–12
Tomislav Erceg – Perugia – 1998–99
Martin Erlić – Spezia, Sassuolo, Bologna – 2020–
Tomislav Gomelt – Crotone – 2020–21
Robert Jarni – Bari, Torino, Juventus – 1991–92, 1993–95 ( while active)
Ivan Javorčić – Brescia – 1997–98
Tin Jedvaj – Roma – 2013–14
Krunoslav Jurčić – Torino – 1999–2000[b BIH–YUG]
Ivan Jurić – Genoa – 2007–10
Nikola Kalinić – Fiorentina, Milan, Roma, Verona – 2015–18, 2019–22
Veldin Karić – Torino – 1995–96
Ivan Kelava – Udinese – 2013–14
Dario Knežević – Livorno, Juventus – 2006–10
Robert Kovač – Juventus – 2005–06[b FRG]
Mateo Kovačić – Inter – 2012–15[b AUT]
Miljenko Kovačić – Brescia – 1997–98
Karlo Letica – SPAL, Sampdoria – 2019–21
Marko Livaja – Cesena, Inter, Atalanta, Empoli – 2011–14, 2015–16
Karlo Lulić – Frosinone – 2023–24
Mario Mandžukić – Juventus, Milan – 2015–19, 2020–21
Mirko Marić – Monza – 2023–[b BIH] [c BIH U19] [c BIH U18] [c BIH U17]
Ivan Martić – Verona – 2014–15[b SUI]
Frane Matošić – Bologna – 1942–43 ( while active)
Hrvoje Milić – Fiorentina – 2016–17
Zvonko Monsider – Padova – 1949–50 ( while active)
Nikola Moro – Bologna – 2022–
Robert Murić – Pescara – 2016–17
Marko Pajač – Cagliari, Empoli, Genoa – 2016–17, 2018–20
Manuel Pamić – Chievo – 2013–14
Ivor Pandur – Verona – 2020–22
Mario Pašalić – Milan, Atalanta – 2016–17, 2018–[b DEU]
Stipe Perica – Udinese, Frosinone – 2014–19
Ivan Perišić – Inter – 2015–19, 2020–22
Bruno Petković – Catania, Bologna, Verona – 2012–14, 2016–18
Marko Pjaca – Juventus, Fiorentina, Genoa, Torino, Empoli – 2016–17, 2018–19, 2020–23
Marin Pongračić – Lecce, Fiorentina – 2022–[b DEU]
Josip Posavec – Palermo – 2015–17
Nenad Pralija – Reggina – 1999–2000
Franjo Prce – Lazio – 2016–17[b BIH]
Josip Radošević – Napoli – 2013–15
Milan Rapaić – Perugia, Ancona – 1996–97, 1998–2000, 2003–04
Ante Rebić – Fiorentina, Verona, Milan, Lecce – 2013–14, 2015–16, 2019–23, 2024–
Marko Rog – Napoli, Cagliari – 2016–22
Tomislav Rukavina – Venezia – 1999–2000, 2001–02
Adrian Šemper – Chievo, Genoa – 2018–19, 2021–22
Anthony Šerić – Verona, Brescia, Parma, Lazio – 1999–2005[b AUS]
Dario Šimić – Inter, Milan – 1998–2008
Lorenco Šimić – SPAL – 2017–19
Dario Smoje – Milan – 1997–98
Robert Špehar – Verona – 1999–2000
Borna Sosa – Torino – 2024–
Darijo Srna – Cagliari – 2018–19
Mario Stanić – Parma – 1996–2000[b BIH–YUG]
Ivan Strinić – Napoli, Sampdoria – 2014–18
Ivo Šuprina – Napoli – 1950–51 ( while active)
Ivica Šurjak – Udinese – 1982–83 ( while active)
Boško Šutalo – Atalanta, Verona – 2019–22
Marin Šverko – Venezia – 2024–[b DEU]
Antonio Tikvić – Udinese – 2023–24[b DEU]
Stjepan Tomas – Vicenza, Como – 2000–01, 2002–03[b BIH–YUG]
Goran Tomić – Vicenza – 2000–01
Igor Tudor – Juventus, Siena – 1998–2006
Ivan Vargić – Lazio – 2016–17
Goran Vlaović – Padova – 1994–96
Nikola Vlašić – Torino – 2022–
Šime Vrsaljko – Genoa, Sassuolo, Inter – 2013–16, 2018–19
Davor Vugrinec – Lecce, Atalanta – 2000–03
Bernard Vukas – Bologna – 1957–59 ( while active)
Dragan Vukoja – Salernitana – 1998–99
Ante Vukušić – Pescara – 2012–13
Tonči Žilić – Verona – 1999–2000
Dario Župarić – Pescara – 2016–17[c BIH U19]
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Pavel Nedvěd playing for Juventus in 2007, he is one of the best players in the history of the Turin team. He won the 2003 Ballon d'Or and he has been an important player also for the Sergio Cragnotti 's Lazio
Marek Jankulovski
Antonín Barák – Udinese, Lecce, Verona, Fiorentina – 2017–25
Ondřej Čelůstka – Palermo – 2009–10
Zdeněk Grygera – Juventus – 2007–11
Josef Hušbauer – Cagliari – 2014–15
Jakub Jankto – Udinese, Sampdoria, Cagliari – 2016–21, 2023–
Marek Jankulovski – Napoli, Udinese, Milan – 2000–01, 2002–11
Lukáš Jarolím – Siena – 2007–10
Martin Jiránek – Reggina – 2000–01, 2002–04
Josef Kaiml – Triestina – 1951–52 ( while active)
Václav Koloušek – Salernitana – 1998–99
Libor Kozák – Lazio – 2008–09, 2010–13
Ladislav Krejčí – Bologna – 2016–20
Luboš Kubík – Fiorentina – 1989–91 ( while active)
Martin Lejsal – Reggina – 2002–04
Mario Lička – Livorno – 2004–05
David Limberský – Modena – 2003–04
Aleš Matějů – Brescia, Venezia – 2019–20, 2021–22
Pavel Nedvěd – Lazio, Juventus – 1996–2006, 2007–09
Jaroslav Plašil – Catania – 2013–14
Karel Poborský – Lazio – 2000–02
Daniel Pudil – Cesena – 2011–12
Michael Rabušic – Verona – 2013–14
Tomáš Řepka – Fiorentina – 1998–2002
David Rozehnal – Lazio – 2007–09
Patrik Schick – Sampdoria, Roma – 2016–19
Stefan Simić – Crotone – 2017–18
Tomáš Sivok – Udinese – 2006–08
Tomáš Skuhravý – Genoa – 1990–95 ( while active)
Pavel Srníček – Brescia – 2000–03
Tomáš Ujfaluši – Fiorentina – 2004–08
Kamil Vacek – Chievo – 2011–13
Lukáš Vorlický – Atalanta – 2022–23
Čestmír Vycpálek – Juventus, Palermo – 1946–47, 1948–52 ( while active)
Matěj Vydra – Udinese – 2010–11
Tomáš Zápotočný – Udinese – 2006–08
David Zima – Torino – 2021–24
Jaromír Zmrhal – Brescia – 2019–20
Denmark
Preben Elkjær in 2011; he played a vital role in Verona's scudetto win in 1985 Michael Laudrup in 2006
Oliver Abildgaard – Verona, Como – 2022–23, 2024–25
Joachim Andersen – Sampdoria – 2017–19
Magnus Kofod Andersen – Venezia – 2024–
Peter Ankersen – Genoa – 2019–20
Julius Beck – Spezia – 2022–23
Nicklas Bendtner – Juventus – 2012–13
Nils Bennike – Spal, Genoa – 1951–54
Klaus Berggreen – Pisa, Roma, Torino – 1982–84, 1985–88
Martin Bergvold – Livorno – 2006–08, 2009–10
Morten Bisgaard – Udinese – 1998–2001
Helge Bronée – Palermo, Roma, Juventus, Novara – 1950–56
Kurt Christensen – Atalanta, Lazio, Catania – 1961–66
Oliver Christensen – Fiorentina – 2023–
Anders Christiansen – Chievo – 2014–15
Hans Colberg – Lucchese – 1950–52
Jeppe Corfitzen – Lecce – 2023–
Andreas Cornelius – Atalanta, Parma – 2017–18, 2019–21
Mikkel Damsgaard – Sampdoria – 2020–22
Patrick Dorgu – Lecce – 2023–
Riza Durmisi – Lazio – 2018–19
Preben Elkjær – Verona – 1984–88
Christian Eriksen – Inter – 2019–21
Kai Frandsen – Lucchese – 1951–52
Morten Frendrup – Genoa – 2021–22, 2023–
Martin Frese – Verona – 2024–
Allan Gaarde – Udinese – 2000–01
Christian Gytkjær – Monza, Venezia – 2022–23, 2024–
John Hansen – Juventus, Lazio – 1948–55
Karl Aage Hansen – Atalanta, Juventus, Sampdoria, Catania – 1949–55
Svend Jørgen Hansen – Atalanta, Pro Patria – 1950–53
Thomas Helveg – Udinese, Milan, Inter – 1993–94, 1995–2004
Morten Hjulmand – Lecce – 2022–23
Rasmus Højlund – Atalanta – 2022–23
Gustav Isaksen – Lazio – 2023–
Daniel Jensen – Novara – 2011–12
Ivan Jensen – Bologna – 1949–56
Per Jensen – Triestina – 1954–55
Martin Jørgensen – Udinese, Fiorentina – 1997–2010
Christian Keller – Lazio – 2005–06
Simon Kjær – Palermo, Roma, Atalanta, Milan – 2008–10, 2011–12, 2019–24
Peter Knudsen – Bari – 1998–99
Rasmus Kristensen – Roma – 2023–24
Thomas Thiesson Kristensen – Udinese – 2023–
Victor Kristiansen – Bologna – 2023–24
Per Krøldrup – Udinese, Fiorentina, Pescara – 2001–11, 2012–13
Henrik Larsen – Pisa – 1990–91
Brian Laudrup – Fiorentina, Milan – 1992–94[b AUT]
Michael Laudrup – Lazio, Juventus – 1983–89
Martin Laursen – Verona, Milan – 1999–2004
Lukas Lerager – Genoa – 2018–21
Jesper Lindström – Napoli – 2023–24
Christian Lønstrup – Cagliari – 1996–97
Michael Madsen – Bari – 1998–2001
Joakim Mæhle – Atalanta – 2020–23
Simon Makienok – Palermo – 2014–15
Leif Mortensen – Udinese – 1961–62
Flemming Nielsen – Atalanta – 1961–64
Harald Nielsen – Bologna, Inter, Napoli, Sampdoria – 1961–70
Matti Lund Nielsen – Pescara – 2012–13
Nicki Bille Nielsen – Reggina – 2006–07
Christian Nørgaard – Fiorentina – 2018–19
Marc Nygaard – Brescia – 2004–05
Jens Odgaard – Sassuolo, Bologna – 2018–19, 2023–
Dion Ørnvold – Spal – 1951–52
Axel Pilmark – Bologna – 1950–59
Johannes Pløger – Juventus, Novara, Torino, Udinese – 1948–54
Christian Poulsen – Juventus – 2008–10
Simon Poulsen – Sampdoria – 2012–13
Karl Aage Præst – Juventus, Lazio – 1949–57
Jacob Rasmussen – Empoli – 2018–19
Poul Aage Rasmussen – Atalanta – 1952–56
Lasse Schöne – Genoa – 2019–20
John Sivebæk – Pescara – 1992–93
Søren Skov – Avellino – 1982–83
Andreas Skov Olsen – Bologna – 2019–22
Erling Sørensen – Udinese, Triestina – 1950–55
Frederik Sørensen – Juventus, Bologna, Verona – 2010–15
Jørgen Leschly Sørensen – Atalanta, Milan – 1949–55
Kris Stadsgaard – Reggina – 2007–08
Jens Stryger Larsen – Udinese – 2017–22
Casper Tengstedt – Verona – 2024–
Thomas Thorninger – Udinese – 2001–02
Jon Dahl Tomasson – Milan – 2002–05
Mike Tullberg – Reggina – 2007–08
Magnus Warming – Torino – 2021–22
Niki Zimling – Udinese – 2008–10
England
David Beckham playing for AC Milan in 2009
Fikayo Tomori won the scudetto with AC Milan in 2021–22
Tammy Abraham – Roma , Milan – 2021–
Charles Adcock – Padova, Triestina – 1948–50
Tino Anjorin – Empoli – 2024–
Joe Baker – Torino – 1961–62
David Beckham – Milan – 2008–10
Luis Binks – Bologna – 2021–22[c SCO U18]
Luther Blissett – Milan – 1983–84[b JAM]
Jay Bothroyd – Perugia – 2003–04
Franz Carr – Reggiana – 1996–97
Nathaniel Chalobah – Napoli – 2015–16[b SLE]
Ashley Cole – Roma – 2014–15
Gordon Cowans – Bari – 1985–86
Keinan Davis – Udinese – 2023–
Danny Dichio – Lecce – 1997–98
Paul Elliott – Pisa – 1987–89
Omari Forson – Monza – 2024–
Trevor Francis – Sampdoria, Atalanta – 1982–87
Paul Gascoigne – Lazio – 1992–95
Ben Godfrey – Atalanta – 2024–
Jimmy Greaves – Milan – 1961–62
Joe Hart – Torino – 2016–17
Mark Hateley – Milan – 1984–87
Gerry Hitchens – Inter, Torino, Atalanta, Cagliari – 1961–69
Samuel Iling-Junior – Juventus, Bologna – 2022–
Paul Ince – Inter – 1995–97
William Jordan – Juventus – 1948–49
Ruben Loftus-Cheek – Milan – 2023–
Ainsley Maitland-Niles – Roma – 2021–22
Anthony Marchi – Vicenza, Torino – 1957–59
Stephy Mavididi – Juventus – 2018–19
Brooke Norton-Cuffy – Genoa – 2024–
David Platt – Bari, Juventus, Sampdoria – 1991–95
Micah Richards – Fiorentina – 2014–15
Paul Rideout – Bari – 1985–86
Lee Sharpe – Sampdoria – 1998–99
Chris Smalling – Roma – 2019–24
Djed Spence – Genoa – 2023–24
Fikayo Tomori – Milan – 2020–[b CAN] [c CAN U20]
Ronaldo Vieira – Sampdoria, Verona, Torino – 2018–23[b GNB]
Des Walker – Sampdoria – 1992–93
Ray Wilkins – Milan – 1984–87
Ben Wilmot – Udinese – 2018–19
Harry Winks – Sampdoria – 2022–23
Ashley Young – Inter – 2019–21
Estonia
Finland
France
Georgia
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia
Germany
Oliver Bierhoff scored 112 goals in Serie A
Miroslav Klose
Rudi Völler
Faride Alidou – Verona – 2024–
Nadiem Amiri – Genoa – 2021–22
Tolgay Arslan – Udinese – 2020–23[c TUR U21] [c TUR U19]
Dietmar Beiersdorfer – Reggiana – 1996–97
Thomas Berthold – Verona, Roma – 1987–91
Oliver Bierhoff – Ascoli, Udinese, Milan, Chievo – 1991–92, 1995–2001, 2002–03
Manfred Binz – Brescia – 1997–98
Jérôme Boateng – Salernitana – 2023–24
Andreas Brehme – Inter – 1988–92
Hans-Peter Briegel – Verona, Sampdoria – 1984–88
Albert Brülls – Modena, Brescia – 1962–64, 1965–68
Horst Buhtz – Torino – 1952–56
Emre Can – Juventus – 2018–20
Jeff Chabot – Sampdoria, Spezia – 2019–22
Lennart Czyborra – Atalanta, Genoa – 2019–21
Marvin Compper – Fiorentina – 2012–14
Diego Demme – Napoli – 2019–24
Thomas Doll – Lazio, Bari – 1991–94, 1997–98
Stefan Effenberg – Fiorentina – 1992–93
Yannik Engelhardt – Como – 2024–
Gianluca Gaudino – Chievo – 2017–18
Rolf Geiger – Mantova – 1962–63
Giuseppe Gemiti – Udinese, Chievo, Novara, Livorno – 2002–04, 2005–06, 2011–12, 2013–14
Mario Gómez – Fiorentina – 2013–15
Robin Gosens – Atalanta, Inter, Fiorentina – 2017–23, 2024–
André Gumprecht – Lecce – 1993–94
Sinan Gümüş – Genoa – 2019–20
Koray Günter – Genoa, Verona, Sampdoria – 2018–23[c TUR U16]
Helmut Haller – Bologna, Juventus – 1962–73
Thomas Häßler – Juventus, Roma – 1990–94
Jörg Heinrich – Fiorentina – 1998–2000
Thomas Hitzlsperger – Lazio – 2009–10
Benedikt Höwedes – Juventus – 2017–18
Mats Hummels – Roma – 2024–
Arijon Ibrahimović – Frosinone – 2023–24
Carsten Jancker – Udinese – 2002–04
Ludwig Janda – Fiorentina, Novara – 1949–54
Marc Oliver Kempf – Como – 2024–
Sami Khedira – Juventus – 2015–20
Jürgen Klinsmann – Inter, Sampdoria – 1989–92, 1997–98
Miroslav Klose – Lazio – 2011–16[b POL]
Jürgen Kohler – Juventus – 1991–95
Rudolf Kölbl – Padova, Genoa – 1961–62, 1964–65
Oliver Kragl – Frosinone, Crotone – 2015–16, 2017–18
Jens Lehmann – Milan – 1998–99
Moritz Leitner – Lazio – 2016–17[c AUT U17]
Lothar Matthäus – Inter – 1988–92
Andreas Möller – Juventus – 1992–94
Hansi Müller – Inter, Como – 1982–85
Shkodran Mustafi – Sampdoria – 2012–14
Herbert Neumann – Udinese, Bologna – 1980–82
Savio Nsereko – Bologna – 2009–10[b UGA]
Vincenzo Palumbo – Empoli – 1998–99
Lukas Podolski – Inter – 2014–15[b POL]
Gerhard Poschner – Venezia – 1998–99[b ROU]
Stefan Reuter – Juventus – 1991–92
Karl-Heinz Riedle – Lazio – 1990–93
Antonio Rüdiger – Roma – 2015–17
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge – Inter – 1984–87
Matthias Sammer – Inter – 1992–93
Karl-Heinz Schnellinger – Mantova, Roma, Milan – 1963–74
Jürgen Schütz – Roma, Messina, Torino, Brescia – 1963–68
Suat Serdar – Verona – 2023–
Karl-Heinz Spikofski – Catania – 1954–55
Horst Szymaniak – Catania, Inter, Varese – 1961–65
Malick Thiaw – Milan – 2022–
Jeremy Toljan – Sassuolo – 2019–24
Rudi Völler – Roma – 1987–92
Herbert Waas – Bologna – 1989–91
Erwin Waldner – Spal – 1961–63
Amin Younes – Napoli – 2018–20
Kurt Zaro – Triestina – 1955–56
Christian Ziege – Milan – 1997–99
Greece
Kostas Manolas playing for Roma
Nikos Anastopoulos – Avellino – 1987–88
Lampros Choutos – Roma, Atalanta, Reggina, Inter – 1995–96, 1999–2000, 2004–07
Lazaros Christodoulopoulos – Bologna, Verona, Sampdoria – 2012–16
Traianos Dellas – Perugia, Roma – 2001–05
Dimitrios Eleftheropoulos – Messina, Ascoli, Siena – 2004–05, 2006–09
Giannis Fetfatzidis – Genoa, Chievo – 2013–15
Savvas Gentsoglou – Sampdoria – 2013–14
Grigorios Georgatos – Inter – 1999–2000, 2001–02
Panagiotis Gonias – Messina – 2004–05
Pantelis Hatzidiakos – Cagliari – 2023–24[c NED U17] [c NED U16]
José Holebas – Roma – 2014–15[b FRG]
Giorgos Karagounis – Inter – 2003–05
Orestis Karnezis – Udinese, Napoli – 2014–17, 2018–19
Fanis Katergiannakis – Cagliari – 2004–05
Dimitrios Keramitsis – Roma – 2021–22
Panagiotis Kone – Brescia, Bologna, Udinese, Fiorentina – 2010–17[b ALB]
Christos Kourfalidis – Cagliari – 2021–22
Giorgos Kyriakopoulos – Sassuolo, Bologna, Monza – 2019–
Apostolos Liolidis – Atalanta – 2002–03
Konstantinos Loumpoutis – Perugia, Siena – 2002–04
Charalambos Lykogiannis – Cagliari, Bologna – 2017–
Christos Mandas – Lazio – 2023–
Kostas Manolas – Roma, Napoli, Salernitana – 2014–22, 2023–24
Vangelis Moras – Bologna, Cesena, Verona – 2008–12, 2013–16
Evangelois Nastos – Perugia – 2003–04
Dimitris Nikolaou – Empoli, Spezia – 2018–19, 2021–23
Sotiris Ninis – Parma – 2012–13[b ALB]
Marios Oikonomou – Cagliari, Bologna, SPAL, Sampdoria – 2013–14, 2015–18, 2022–23
Christos Papadopoulos – Genoa – 2023–
Dimitrios Papadopoulos – Lecce – 2008–09[b UZB–URS]
Sokratis Papastathopoulos – Genoa, Milan – 2008–11
Triantafyllos Pasalidis – Salernitana – 2023–24
Panagiotis Retsos – Verona – 2021–23[b RSA]
Nikos Spyropoulos – Chievo – 2012–13
Panagiotis Tachtsidis – Roma, Catania, Torino, Verona, Genoa, Cagliari, Lecce – 2012–17, 2019–20
Vasilis Torosidis – Roma, Bologna – 2012–18
Alexandros Tziolis – Siena – 2009–10
Alexandros Tzorvas – Palermo, Genoa – 2011–13
Georgios Vakouftsis – Fiorentina – 1999–2000, 2001–02
Zisis Vryzas – Perugia – 2000–04
Vasilis Zagaritis – Parma – 2020–21
Theodoros Zagorakis – Bologna – 2004–05
Hungary
István Nyers
Botond Balogh – Parma – 2020–21, 2024–
Norbert Balogh – Palermo – 2015–17
Lajos Détári – Bologna, Ancona, Genoa – 1990–91, 1992–94
Róbert Feczesin – Brescia – 2010–11
János Füzér – Genoa – 1947–48[b ROU–AUT]
Tibor Garay – Inter, Pro Patria – 1947–49
András Gosztonyi – Bari – 2009–10
Krisztofer Horváth – SPAL – 2019–20
János Hrotkó – Bari – 1946–49
László Kaszás – Venezia – 1961–62
Mihály Kincses – Atalanta, Juventus, Bari, Lucchese – 1946–52
Vladimir Koman – Sampdoria, Bari – 2006–07, 2009–11[b UKR–URS]
Márk Kosznovszky – Parma – 2020–21
Zsolt Laczkó – Sampdoria – 2010–11
István Mike – Bologna, Lucchese, Napoli, Genoa – 1947–55
Ádám Nagy – Bologna – 2016–19
Gyula Nagy – Fiorentina – 1949–51
János Nehadoma – Fiorentina – 1933–36
István Nyers – Inter, Roma – 1948–56[b FRA]
Sándor Olajkár – Atalanta – 1946–47
Ferenc Ottavi – Fiorentina, Bari – 1933–34, 1935–37, 1938–39
István Pakó – Livorno – 1948–49
Rudolf Plemich – Triestina – 1929–30
Gergely Rudolf – Genoa, Bari – 2010–11
Roland Sallai – Palermo – 2016–17
Béla Sárosi – Bologna, Bari – 1946–50
Vilmos Sipos – Bologna – 1946–47[b AUT–HUN] [c YUG]
László Szőke – Udinese, Triestina – 1952–57, 1958–59
Dániel Tőzsér – Genoa – 2012–13
Gyula Tóth – Lucchese – 1947–50
István Turbéky – Pro Patria – 1949–52
Mihail Uram – Lucchese – 1948–49
Ádám Vass – Brescia – 2010–11
István Vincze – Lecce – 1988–90
Jenő Vinyei – Pro Patria, Napoli, Spal – 1949–56[c CSK]
József Viola – Juventus – 1929–30
Mihály Vörös – Bari – 1947–50
Dionisiu Weisz – Padova – 1924–25[b ROU–AUT]
József Zilisy – Milan – 1929–30
Gyula Zsengellér – Roma – 1947–49
Iceland
Andri Fannar Baldursson – Bologna – 2019–21
Bjarki Steinn Bjarkason – Venezia – 2021–22, 2024–
Birkir Bjarnason – Pescara, Sampdoria, Brescia – 2012–14, 2019–20
Mikael Egill Ellertsson – Spezia, Venezia – 2022–23, 2024–
Albert Guðmundsson (1923) – Milan – 1948–49
Albert Guðmundsson (1997) – Genoa, Fiorentina – 2021–22, 2023–
Emil Hallfreðsson – Reggina, Verona, Udinese, Frosinone – 2007–09, 2013–19
Þórir Jóhann Helgason – Lecce – 2022–23, 2024–
Hordur Magnússon – Cesena – 2014–15
Hilmir Rafn Mikaelsson – Venezia – 2021–22
Arnór Sigurðsson – Venezia – 2021–22
Israel
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Valon Berisha – Lazio – 2018–20[b SWE] [c NOR] [c NOR U23] [c NOR U21] [c NOR U19] [c NOR U18] [c NOR U17] [c NOR U16] [c NOR U15]
Riza Lushta – Bari, Juventus, Napoli, Alessandria – 1939–43, 1945–48[b KOS–SRB]
Vedat Muriqi – Lazio – 2020–22[c ALB U21]
Amir Rrahmani – Verona, Napoli – 2019–[c ALB] [c ALB U21] [c ALB U19]
Samir Ujkani – Palermo, Novara, Torino, Empoli – 2008–09, 2011–13, 2014–15, 2019–21, 2022–23[c ALB] [c ALB U21]
Mërgim Vojvoda – Torino – 2020–[b DEU] [c ALB U21]
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
Dejan Savićević , one of the stars of the '90 AC Milan
Netherlands
Clarence Seedorf playing for Milan
Wesley Sneijder , a protagonist of the 2010 treble by Inter
Aron Winter
Bobby Adekanye – Lazio – 2019–20[b NGA]
Mitchel Bakker – Atalanta – 2023–25
Mario Been – Pisa – 1988–89, 1990–91
Dennis Bergkamp – Inter – 1993–95
Sam Beukema – Bologna – 2023–
Winston Bogarde – Milan – 1997–98
Jayden Braaf – Udinese, Verona – 2020–21, 2022–23
Edson Braafheid – Lazio – 2014–16[b SUR]
Luc Castaignos – Inter – 2011–12
Denilho Cleonise – Genoa – 2019–20
Thijs Dallinga – Bologna – 2024–
Edgar Davids – Milan, Juventus, Inter – 1996–2005[b SUR–NED]
Nigel de Jong – Milan – 2012–16
Matthijs de Ligt – Juventus – 2019–22
Jonathan de Guzmán – Napoli, Carpi, Chievo – 2014–17[b CAN]
Marten de Roon – Atalanta – 2015–16, 2017–
Stefan de Vrij – Lazio, Inter – 2014–
Mitchell Dijks – Bologna – 2018–22
Denzel Dumfries – Inter – 2021–[c ARU]
Jurgen Ekkelenkamp – Udinese – 2024–
Eljero Elia – Juventus – 2011–12
Urby Emanuelson – Milan, Roma, Atalanta, Verona – 2010–16
Ruud Gullit – Milan, Sampdoria – 1987–95
Hans Hateboer – Atalanta – 2016–24
Wesley Hoedt – Lazio – 2015–17, 2020–21
Klaas-Jan Huntelaar – Milan – 2009–10
Wim Jonk – Inter – 1993–95
Rick Karsdorp – Roma – 2017–19, 2020–24
Denso Kasius – Bologna – 2021–23
Wim Kieft – Pisa, Torino – 1983–84, 1985–87
Ricardo Kishna – Lazio – 2015–17
Davy Klaassen – Inter – 2023–24
Justin Kluivert – Roma – 2018–21
Patrick Kluivert – Milan – 1997–98
Teun Koopmeiners – Atalanta, Juventus – 2021–
Michel Kreek – Padova, Perugia – 1994–97
Ruud Krol – Napoli – 1980–84
Piet Kruiver – Vicenza – 1961–62
Wim Lakenberg – Pro Patria – 1950–51
Sam Lammers – Atalanta, Empoli, Sampdoria – 2020–23
Timo Letschert – Sassuolo – 2016–18
Tijjani Noslin – Verona, Lazio – 2023–
Bram Nuytinck – Udinese, Sampdoria – 2017–23
Thomas Ouwejan – Udinese – 2020–21
Johannes Peters – Genoa, Atalanta – 1982–84, 1985–86
Tijjani Reijnders – Milan – 2023–
Michael Reiziger – Milan – 1996–97
Frank Rijkaard – Milan – 1988–93
Andries Roosenburg – Fiorentina – 1950–53
Bryan Roy – Foggia – 1992–94
Jerdy Schouten – Bologna – 2019–23
Perr Schuurs – Torino – 2022–
Clarence Seedorf – Sampdoria, Inter, Milan – 1995–96, 1999–2012[b SUR]
Wesley Sneijder – Inter – 2009–13
Jaap Stam – Lazio, Milan – 2001–06
Kevin Strootman – Roma, Genoa , Cagliari – 2013–19, 2020–22, 2023–24
Maarten Stekelenburg – Roma – 2011–13
Elayis Tavşan – Verona – 2023–24
Hidde ter Avest – Udinese – 2018–21
Marco van Basten – Milan – 1987–93
Mark van Bommel – Milan – 2010–12
Michel van de Korput – Torino – 1980–83
Andy van der Meyde – Inter – 2003–05
Edwin van der Sar – Juventus – 1999–2001
Henry van der Vegt – Udinese – 1998–2000
Gregory van der Wiel – Cagliari – 2017–18
Marco van Ginkel – Milan – 2014–15
Sydney van Hooijdonk – Bologna – 2021–22, 2023–24
John van 't Schip – Genoa – 1992–95[b CAN]
Leonard van Utrecht – Padova – 1995–96
Tonny Vilhena – Salernitana – 2022–23
Marciano Vink – Genoa – 1993–94[b SUR–NED]
Rai Vloet – Frosinone – 2018–19
Harald Wapenaar – Udinese – 1998–99
Georginio Wijnaldum – Roma – 2022–23
Faas Wilkes – Inter, Torino – 1949–53
Aron Winter – Lazio, Inter – 1992–99[b SUR–NED]
Deyovaisio Zeefuik – Verona – 2022–23
Marvin Zeegelaar – Udinese – 2018–23
Joshua Zirkzee – Parma, Bologna – 2020–21, 2022–24
Jeroen Zoet – Spezia – 2020–23
North Macedonia
Goran Pandev was part of Inter 's treble success in 2010.
Norway
John Arne Riise
Haitam Aleesami – Palermo – 2016–17
Knut Andersen – Padova – 1951–52
Kristoffer Askildsen – Sampdoria, Lecce – 2019–23
Runar Berg – Venezia – 1999–2000[b NED]
Emil Bohinen – Salernitana, Genoa – 2021–[b ENG]
Erik Botheim – Salernitana – 2022–24
Per Bredesen – Lazio, Milan, Bari – 1952–55, 1956–57, 1958–59
John Carew – Roma – 2003–04
Emil Konradsen Ceide – Sassuolo – 2021–24
Tore André Flo – Siena – 2003–05
Finn Gundersen – Verona – 1957–58
Jens Petter Hauge – Milan – 2020–21
Erik Huseklepp – Bari – 2010–11
Dennis Johnsen – Venezia – 2021–22
Julian Kristoffersen – Salernitana – 2021–23
Ragnar Larsen – Lazio, Genoa – 1951–56
Steinar Nilsen – Milan – 1997–98
Leo Skiri Østigård – Genoa, Napoli – 2021–24
Martin Palumbo – Udinese, Juventus – 2019–22[c ITA U18]
Marcus Holmgren Pedersen – Sassuolo, Torino – 2023–
John Arne Riise – Roma – 2008–11
Petter Rudi – Perugia – 1996–97
Ola Solbakken – Roma, Empoli – 2022–
Stefan Strandberg – Salernitana – 2021–22
Morten Thorsby – Sampdoria, Genoa – 2019–22, 2023–
Kristian Thorstvedt – Sassuolo – 2022–24
Rafik Zekhnini – Fiorentina – 2017–18
Poland
Zbigniew Boniek in 2015
Wojciech Szczęsny with Juventus in 2019
Piotr Zieliński with Napoli in 2019
Dariusz Adamczuk – Udinese – 1993–94
Błażej Augustyn – Catania – 2009–11, 2012–13
Adrian Benedyczak – Parma – 2024–
Bartosz Bereszyński – Sampdoria, Napoli, Empoli – 2016–24
Jakub Błaszczykowski – Fiorentina – 2015–16
Zbigniew Boniek – Juventus, Roma – 1982–88
Artur Boruc – Fiorentina – 2010–12
Aleksander Buksa – Genoa – 2021–22
Thiago Cionek – Palermo, SPAL – 2015–20[b BRA]
Piotr Czachowski – Udinese – 1992–93
Paweł Dawidowicz – Verona – 2019–
Bartłomiej Drągowski – Fiorentina, Empoli, Spezia – 2016–23
Dominik Furman – Verona – 2015–16
Kamil Glik – Bari, Torino, Benevento – 2010–11, 2012–16, 2020–21
Jakub Iskra – SPAL – 2019–20
Filip Jagiełło – Genoa – 2019–20, 2023–24
Paweł Jaroszyński – Chievo, Salernitana – 2017–19, 2021–22
Jakub Kiwior – Spezia – 2021–23
Kamil Kosowski – Chievo – 2006–07
Mateusz Kowalski – Parma – 2024–
Dawid Kownacki – Sampdoria – 2017–19
Marek Koźmiński – Udinese, Brescia – 1992–94, 1995–98, 2000–02
Tomasz Kupisz – Chievo – 2013–14
Igor Łasicki – Napoli – 2013–14
Mateusz Łęgowski – Salernitana – 2023–24
Karol Linetty – Sampdoria, Torino – 2016–
Marcin Listkowski – Lecce – 2022–24
Jordan Majchrzak – Roma – 2022–23
Filip Marchwiński – Lecce – 2024–
Radosław Matusiak – Palermo – 2006–07
Arkadiusz Milik – Napoli, Juventus – 2016–20, 2022–
Krzysztof Piątek – Genoa, Milan, Fiorentina, Salernitana – 2018–20, 2021–23
Mateusz Praszelik – Verona – 2021–22
Arkadiusz Reca – Atalanta, SPAL, Crotone, Spezia – 2018–23
Bartosz Salamon – Sampdoria, Cagliari, SPAL, Frosinone – 2013–14, 2016–20
Łukasz Skorupski – Roma, Empoli, Bologna – 2013–
Mariusz Stępiński – Chievo, Verona – 2017–20
Karol Świderski – Verona – 2023–24
Wojciech Szczęsny – Roma, Juventus – 2015–24
Przemysław Szymiński – Frosinone – 2023–24
Łukasz Teodorczyk – Udinese – 2018–20
Kacper Urbański – Bologna – 2020–22, 2023–
Sebastian Walukiewicz – Cagliari, Empoli , Torino – 2019–
Mateusz Wieteska – Cagliari – 2023–
Kamil Wilczek – Carpi – 2015–16
Przemysław Wiśniewski – Spezia – 2022–23
Rafał Wolski – Fiorentina – 2012–14
Paweł Wszołek – Sampdoria, Verona – 2013–16
Nicola Zalewski – Roma – 2020–[b ITA]
Piotr Zieliński – Udinese, Empoli, Napoli, Inter – 2012–
Władysław Żmuda – Verona, Cremonese – 1982–85
Szymon Żurkowski – Fiorentina, Empoli , Spezia – 2019–20, 2021–
Portugal
Fernando Couto in 2011
Luís Figo
Cristiano Ronaldo playing for Juventus in 2020
Salvador Agra – Siena – 2012–13
Hugo Almeida – Cesena – 2014–15
Bruno Alves – Cagliari, Parma – 2016–17, 2018–21
Jorge Andrade – Juventus – 2007–08
Vitorino Antunes – Roma, Lecce – 2007–09
Gonçalo Brandão – Siena, Parma – 2008–10, 2011–12
Leonardo Buta – Udinese – 2022–23
Jorge Cadete – Brescia – 1994–95[b MOZ–POR]
Marco Caneira – Reggina – 2000–01
Cédric – Inter – 2018–19[b DEU]
Francisco Conceição – Juventus – 2024–
Sérgio Conceição – Lazio, Parma, Inter – 1998–2004
Paulo Costa – Reggina – 2000–01
Félix Correia – Juventus – 2020–21
Costinha – Atalanta – 2007–08
Fernando Couto – Parma, Lazio – 1994–96, 1998–2008
Diogo Dalot – Milan – 2020–21
Danilo Pereira – Parma – 2011–12[b GNB]
Gil Bastião Dias – Fiorentina – 2017–18
Dimas – Juventus – 1996–99[b RSA]
Tiago Djaló – Juventus – 2023–24
Diogo Figueiras – Genoa – 2015–16
Eduardo – Genoa – 2010–11
Eliseu – Lazio – 2009–10
Ricardo Esteves – Reggina – 2004–05, 2006–07
Vasco Faísca – Vicenza – 2000–01
Bruno Fernandes – Udinese, Sampdoria – 2013–17
Luís Figo – Inter – 2005–09
Paulo Futre – Reggiana, Milan – 1993–96
Hilário – Perugia – 1998–2001[b FRA]
Hugo – Sampdoria – 1997–99
João Cancelo – Inter, Juventus – 2017–19
João Costa – Roma – 2023–24[b BRA]
João Ferreira – Udinese – 2023–24
João Mário – Inter – 2016–19
João Moutinho – Spezia – 2022–23
João Silva – Palermo – 2014–15
Bruno Jordão – Lazio – 2018–19
Jorge Humberto – Inter, Vicenza – 1961–64[b CPV–POR]
Rafael Leão – Milan – 2019–
Mamede – Reggina, Messina – 2000–01, 2002–03, 2004–06
Maniche – Inter – 2007–08
Luís Maximiano – Lazio – 2022–23
Iuri Medeiros – Genoa – 2017–2019
Pedro Mendes – Parma, Sassuolo – 2013–15[b SUI]
Dany Mota – Monza – 2022–[b LUX]
Herculano Nabian – Empoli – 2022–23[b GNB]
Nani – Lazio, Venezia – 2017–18, 2021–22
Nélson – Palermo – 2012–13[b CPV]
Luís Neto – Siena – 2012–13
Pedro Neto – Lazio – 2018–19
Nuno Gomes – Fiorentina – 2000–02
Filipe Oliveira – Parma – 2010–11
Sérgio Oliveira – Roma – 2021–22
António Pacheco – Reggiana – 1996–97
Pelé – Inter – 2007–08
Pedro Pereira – Sampdoria, Genoa, Crotone, Monza – 2015–19, 2020–21, 2023–
Bruno Pereirinha – Lazio – 2012–15
Hélder Postiga – Lazio – 2013–14
Ricardo Quaresma – Inter – 2008–10
Domingos Quina – Udinese – 2023–24[b GNB]
Rolando – Napoli, Inter – 2012–14[b CPV]
Cristiano Ronaldo – Juventus – 2018–22
Mário Rui – Empoli, Roma, Napoli – 2014–
Rui Águas – Reggiana – 1994–95
Rui Barros – Juventus – 1988–90
Rui Costa – Fiorentina, Milan – 1994–2006
Rui Patrício – Roma – 2021–
Rui Sampaio – Cagliari – 2011–12
Renato Sanches – Roma – 2023–24
José Semedo – Cagliari – 2006–07
Vivaldo Semedo – Udinese – 2022–24[b ANG]
Adrien Silva – Sampdoria – 2020–22[b FRA]
André Silva – Milan – 2017–18, 2019–20
Dani Silva – Verona – 2023–
Paulo Sousa – Juventus, Inter, Parma – 1994–96, 1997–2000
Jorge Teixeira – Siena – 2012–13
Nuno Tavares – Lazio – 2024–
Tiago – Juventus– 2007–10
Silvestre Varela – Parma – 2014–15
Miguel Veloso – Genoa, Verona – 2010–12, 2016–23
Luís Vidigal – Napoli, Livorno, Udinese – 2000–01, 2004–08[b ANG–POR]
Rúben Vinagre – Verona – 2023–24
Vitinha – Genoa – 2023–
Abel Xavier – Bari, Roma – 1995–96, 2004–05[b MOZ–POR]
Republic of Ireland
Romania
Cristian Chivu
Gheorghe Hagi
Adrian Mutu
Ștefan Radu
Marius Alexe – Sassuolo – 2013–14
Denis Alibec – Inter, Bologna – 2010–11, 2013–14
Romario Benzar – Lecce – 2019–20
Ionică Bogdan – Bari – 1947–48
Deian Boldor – Verona – 2017–18
Daniel Boloca – Sassuolo – 2023–24[b ITA]
Rareș Burnete – Lecce – 2023–
Vlad Chiricheș – Napoli, Sassuolo, Cremonese – 2015–23
Cristian Chivu – Roma, Inter – 2003–13
Paul Codrea – Perugia, Palermo, Siena, Bari – 2003–04, 2005–12
Cosmin Contra – Milan – 2001–02
Nicolae Dică – Catania – 2008–09
Denis Drăguș – Crotone – 2020–21
Radu Drăgușin – Juventus, Sampdoria, Salernitana, Genoa – 2020–22, 2023–24
Iosif Fabian – Torino, Lucchese, Bari – 1947–50
Dorin Goian – Palermo – 2009–11
Gheorghe Hagi – Brescia – 1992–93
Ianis Hagi – Fiorentina – 2016–17[b TUR]
Norbert Höfling – Lazio, Pro Patria, Vicenza – 1948–53, 1954–56[b UKR–ROU]
Marius Lăcătuș – Fiorentina – 1990–91
Bogdan Lobonț – Fiorentina, Roma – 2005–06, 2009–13
Dănuț Lupu – Brescia – 1994–95
Dennis Man – Parma – 2020–21, 2024–
Răzvan Marin – Cagliari , Empoli – 2020–
Dorin Mateuț – Brescia, Reggiana – 1992–95
Cristian Melinte – Palermo – 2009–10
Emil Micossi – Genoa – 1932–33
Valentin Mihăilă – Parma , Atalanta – 2020–22, 2024–
Alexandru Mitriță – Pescara – 2016–17
Cosmin Moți – Siena – 2008–09
Adrian Mutu – Inter, Verona, Parma, Juventus, Fiorentina, Cesena – 1999–2003, 2004–12
Valentin Năstase – Bologna, Ascoli – 2004–05, 2006–07
Viorel Năstase – Catanzaro – 1981–83
Constantin Nica – Atalanta, Cesena – 2013–15
Paul Papp – Chievo – 2012–14
Bogdan Pătrașcu – Piacenza, Chievo – 2001–03, 2008–09
Victor Pepoli – Genoa, Palermo – 1933–35
Adrian Piț – Roma – 2007–08, 2009–10
Dan Petrescu – Foggia, Genoa – 1991–94
Gheorghe Popescu – Lecce – 2001–02
George Pușcaș – Inter, Benevento, Genoa – 2014–15, 2017–18, 2023–24
Florian Radu – Roma – 1948–49
Ionuț Radu – Inter, Genoa, Cremonese – 2015–16, 2018–23
Ștefan Radu – Lazio – 2007–23
Florin Răducioiu – Bari, Verona, Brescia, Milan – 1990–94
Ioan Sabău – Brescia, Reggiana – 1992–93, 1994–95, 1996–98
Răzvan Sava – Udinese – 2024–
Andres Emil Sfait – Salernitana – 2023–24
Nicolae Simatoc – Inter – 1947–49[b MOL–ROU]
Adrian Stoian – Roma, Chievo, Genoa, Crotone – 2008–09, 2012–14, 2016–18
Sergiu Suciu – Torino – 2008–09, 2012–13
Gabriel Torje – Udinese – 2011–12
Alin Toșca – Benevento – 2017–18
Ciprian Tătărușanu – Fiorentina, Milan – 2014–17, 2020–23
Ianis Zicu – Parma – 2003–05
Russia
Dmitri Alenichev – Roma, Perugia – 1998–2000
Viktor Budyanskiy – Juventus, Reggina, Ascoli, Udinese, Lecce – 2003–05, 2006–09[b UKR–URS]
Igor Dobrovolski – Genoa – 1992–93 ( while active)[b UKR–URS]
Andrei Kanchelskis – Fiorentina – 1996–98[b UKR–URS]
Aleksandr Kokorin – Fiorentina – 2020–22
Igor Kolyvanov – Foggia, Bologna – 1991–95, 1996–2001 ( while active)
Aleksei Miranchuk – Atalanta, Torino – 2020–24
Ruslan Nigmatullin – Verona – 2001–02
Igor Shalimov – Foggia, Inter, Udinese, Bologna – 1991–94, 1995–98 ( while active)
Igor Simutenkov – Reggiana, Bologna – 1994–95, 1996–97, 1998–99
Omari Tetradze – Roma – 1996–98[b GEO–URS]
San Marino
Scotland
Graeme Souness in 2001
Serbia
Aleksandar Kolarov played for both of the Capital teams
Siniša Mihajlović as Fiorentina head coach in 2010. As player he was a free kick specialist.[ 6] [ 7] He scored a record 28 goals from free kicks in Serie A.[ 8]
Dejan Stanković with Inter . He won five championships with Inter and one with Lazio , also lifting the treble with Inter in 2010.
Sergej Milinković-Savić made over 250 Serie A appearances for Lazio
Danijel Aleksić – Genoa – 2009–10[b CRO–YUG]
Aleksandar Aranđelović – Padova, Roma, Novara – 1948–51 ( while active)
Vlada Avramov – Fiorentina, Cagliari, Atalanta – 2007–08, 2009–15
Dušan Basta – Lecce, Udinese, Lazio – 2008–10, 2011–18
Milan Biševac – Lazio – 2015–16[b KOS–SFR]
Dražen Bolić – Salernitana, Ancona – 1998–99, 2003–04 ( while active)[b CRO–YUG]
Vujadin Boškov – Sampdoria – 1961–62 ( while active)
Željko Brkić – Siena, Udinese, Cagliari, Carpi – 2011–16
Uroš Ćosić – Pescara, Empoli – 2012–13, 2015–17
Borislav Cvetković – Ascoli – 1988–90 ( while active)[b CRO–YUG]
Miloš Dimitrijević – Chievo – 2010–11[c FRA U18]
Filip Đorđević – Lazio, Chievo – 2014–17, 2018–19
Filip Đuričić – Sampdoria, Benevento, Sassuolo – 2016–23
Vladislav Đukić – Cesena – 1989–90 ( while active)
Ljubiša Dunđerski – Atalanta – 1997–98, 2000–01 ( while active)[b BIH–YUG]
Vladimir Golemić – Crotone – 2020–21
Nikola Gulan – Fiorentina, Chievo – 2010–12
Dejan Govedarica – Lecce – 1997–98 ( while active)
Ivan Ilić – Verona, Torino – 2020–
Ivica Iliev – Messina – 2004–07 ( while active)
Mihailo Ivanović – Sampdoria – 2022–23
Ilija Ivić – Torino – 1999–2000 ( while active)
Boško Janković – Palermo, Genoa, Verona – 2007–16
Luka Jović – Fiorentina, Milan – 2022–[b BIH]
Vladimir Jugović – Sampdoria, Juventus, Lazio, Inter – 1992–98, 1999–2001 ( while active)
Tomislav Kaloperović – Padova – 1961–62 ( while active)
Dimitrije Kamenović – Lazio – 2021–22
Aleksandar Kocić – Perugia, Empoli – 1996–98 ( while active)
Aleksandar Kolarov – Lazio, Roma, Inter – 2007–10, 2017–22
Bora Kostić – Vicenza – 1961–62 ( while active)
Filip Kostić – Juventus – 2022–24
Darko Kovačević – Juventus, Lazio – 1999–2002 ( while active)
Miloš Krasić – Juventus – 2010–12[b KOS–SFR]
Aleksandar Kristić – Salernitana – 1998–99 ( while active)
Nenad Krstičić – Sampdoria – 2012–16
Zdravko Kuzmanović – Fiorentina, Inter, Udinese – 2006–09, 2012–16[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U20] [c SUI U19] [c SUI U18] [c SUI U17]
Marko Lazetić – Milan – 2022–23
Nikola Lazetić – Chievo, Lazio, Siena, Livorno, Torino – 2002–04, 2005–08 ( while active)[b KOS–SFR]
Darko Lazović – Genoa, Verona – 2015–
Adem Ljajić – Fiorentina, Roma, Inter, Torino – 2009–19
Saša Lukić – Torino – 2016–17, 2018–23
Aleksandar Luković – Ascoli, Udinese – 2006–10
Nikola Maksimović – Torino, Napoli, Genoa – 2013–22
Petar Manola – Lazio – 1942–43, 1945–47 ( while active)[b BIH–AUT]
Petar Mićin – Udinese – 2018–19, 2020–21
Nemanja Matić – Roma – 2022–23
Siniša Mihajlović – Roma, Sampdoria, Lazio, Inter – 1992–2006 ( while active)[b CRO–YUG]
Bratislav Mijalković – Perugia – 1996–97 ( while active)
Milan Milanović – Palermo – 2011–12[b KOS–SFR]
Nikola Milenković – Fiorentina – 2017–24
Sergej Milinković-Savić – Lazio – 2015–23[b ESP]
Vanja Milinković-Savić – Torino , SPAL – 2017–19, 2020–[b ESP]
Savo Milošević – Parma – 2000–02 ( while active)[b BIH–YUG]
Zoran Mirković – Atalanta, Juventus – 1996–2000 ( while active)
Stefan Mitrović – Verona – 2023–24
Matija Nastasić – Fiorentina – 2011–13, 2021–22
Nikola Ninković – Chievo, Genoa – 2015–17
Nenad Novaković – Reggina – 2007–08
Strahinja Pavlović – Milan – 2024–
Marko Perović – Cremonese, Ancona – 1995–96, 2003–04 ( while active)
Aleksandar Pešić – Atalanta – 2016–17
Dejan Petković – Venezia – 1999–2000 ( while active)
Aleksandar Prijović – Parma – 2007–08[b SUI] [c SUI U21] [c SUI U20]
Uroš Račić – Sassuolo – 2023–24
Nemanja Radonjić – Torino – 2022–24
Ivan Radovanović – Atalanta, Bologna, Novara, Chievo, Genoa, Salernitana – 2009–23
Boris Radunović – Atalanta, Verona, Cagliari – 2015–16, 2019–20, 2021–22, 2023–24
Slobodan Rajković – Palermo – 2016–17
Đorđe Rakić – Reggina – 2008–09
Nenad Sakić – Lecce, Sampdoria – 1997–99 ( while active)
Lazar Samardžić – Udinese, Atalanta – 2021–[b DEU] [c DEU U21] [c DEU U20] [c DEU U19] [c DEU U17] [c DEU U16]
Stefan Šćepović – Sampdoria – 2009–10
Jan-Carlo Simić – Milan – 2023–24[b DEU]
Vlado Šmit – Bologna – 2002–03 ( while active)
Dejan Stanković – Lazio, Inter – 1998–2013 ( while active)
Filip Stanković – Venezia – 2024–[b ITA]
Alen Stevanović – Inter, Torino, – 2009–10, 2012–13[b SUI]
Damir Stojak – Napoli – 1997–98, 2000–01 ( while active)
Dragan Stojković – Verona – 1991–92 ( while active)
Mile Svilar – Roma – 2022–[b BEL] [c BEL U21] [c BEL U19] [c BEL U18] [c BEL U17] [c BEL U16] [c BEL U15]
Strahinja Tanasijević – Chievo – 2018–19
Aleksa Terzić – Fiorentina – 2019–20, 2021–23
Ivan Tomić – Roma – 1998–2000, 2001–03 ( while active)
Nenad Tomović – Genoa, Lecce, Fiorentina, Chievo, SPAL – 2009–20
Aleksandar Trifunović – Ascoli – 1983–84, 1986–87 ( while active)
Todor Veselinović – Sampdoria – 1961–62 ( while active)
Nemanja Vidić – Inter – 2014–15
Dušan Vlahović – Fiorentina, Juventus – 2018–
Vanja Vlahović – Atalanta – 2024–
Jagoš Vuković – Verona – 2017–18
Miloš Vulić – Crotone – 2020–21
Bratislav Živković – Sampdoria – 1998–99, 2003–04 ( while active)
Slovakia
Marek Hamšík was formerly Napoli 's all-time top goalscorer
Milan Škriniar playing for Inter
Ján Arpáš – Juventus – 1947–48 ( while active)
Pavol Bajza – Parma – 2012–14
Marek Čech – Bologna – 2013–14
János Chawko – Palermo, Como – 1948–50 ( while active)
Ondrej Duda – Verona – 2022–
Pavol Farkaš – Chievo – 2012–13
Miloš Glonek – Ancona – 1992–93 ( while active)
Vratislav Greško – Inter, Parma – 2000–03
Norbert Gyömbér – Catania, Roma, Pescara, Salernitana – 2013–14, 2015–17, 2021–24
Marek Hamšík – Brescia, Napoli – 2004–05, 2007–19
Dávid Hancko – Fiorentina – 2018–19
Lukáš Haraslín – Parma, Sassuolo – 2014–15, 2019–21
David Ivan – Sampdoria – 2015–16
Kamil Kopúnek – Bari – 2010–11
Július Korostelev – Juventus, Atalanta – 1946–49 ( while active)
Tomáš Košický – Catania – 2008–12
Matej Krajčík – Reggina – 2008–09
Juraj Kucka – Genoa, Milan, Parma – 2010–17, 2018–21
Stanislav Lobotka – Napoli – 2019–
Samuel Mráz – Empoli, Spezia – 2018–19, 2021–22
Adam Obert – Cagliari – 2021–22, 2023–
Július Schubert – Torino – 1948–49 ( while active)[b HUN]
Milan Škriniar – Sampdoria, Inter – 2015–23
Nikolas Špalek – Brescia – 2019–20
Dávid Strelec – Spezia – 2021–23
Tomáš Suslov – Verona – 2023–
Ľubomír Tupta – Verona – 2017–18, 2020–21
Blažej Vašcák – Treviso – 2005–06
Denis Vavro – Lazio – 2019–22
Vladimír Weiss – Pescara – 2012–13
Slovenia
Samir Handanović training with Inter
Srečko Katanec in 2015, he had an important role in the Sampdoria team that won the 1990–91 Scudetto.
Siniša Anđelković – Palermo – 2010–11, 2014–17
Armin Bačinović – Palermo – 2010–12
Vid Belec – Carpi, Benevento, Sampdoria, Salernitana – 2015–16, 2017–18, 2021–22
Jaka Bijol – Udinese – 2022–
Valter Birsa – Genoa, Torino, Milan, Chievo, Cagliari – 2011–20
Žan Celar – Roma – 2018–19
Boštjan Cesar – Chievo – 2010–19
Sebastjan Cimirotič – Lecce – 2001–02
Tio Cipot – Spezia – 2022–23
Domen Črnigoj – Venezia , Salernitana – 2021–23, 2024–
Zlatko Dedić – Parma – 2005–07[b BIH–YUG]
Robert Englaro – Atalanta – 1997–98
Matjaž Florjančič – Cremonese, Empoli – 1991–92, 1993–96, 1997–98
Samir Handanović – Udinese, Treviso, Lazio, Inter – 2004–06, 2007–23
Josip Iličić – Palermo, Fiorentina, Atalanta – 2010–22[b BIH–YUG]
Enej Jelenič – Genoa – 2010–11
Bojan Jokić – Chievo – 2009–13
Srečko Katanec – Sampdoria – 1989–94 ( while active)
Jan Koprivec – Udinese – 2008–09
Andrej Kotnik – Crotone – 2016–17
Luka Krajnc – Genoa, Cesena, Frosinone – 2012–13, 2014–15, 2018–19
Rene Krhin – Inter, Bologna – 2009–15
Jasmin Kurtić – Palermo, Sassuolo, Torino, Fiorentina, Atalanta, SPAL, Parma – 2010–11, 2012–21
Dejan Lazarević – Genoa, Chievo, Sassuolo – 2009–10, 2013–15
Sandi Lovrić – Udinese – 2022–[b AUT] [c AUT U21] [c AUT U19] [c AUT U18] [c AUT U17] [c AUT U16]
Žan Majer – Lecce – 2019–20
Tim Matavž – Genoa – 2015–16
Jan Mlakar – Fiorentina – 2016–17
Petar Stojanović – Empoli – 2021–23, 2024–25
Aljaž Struna – Palermo – 2015–16
Leo Štulac – Parma, Empoli – 2018–19, 2021–22
Martin Turk – Sampdoria – 2022–23
Miha Zajc – Empoli, Genoa – 2016–17, 2018–19, 2020–21
Spain
José Callejón playing for Napoli in 2014
Luis Alberto playing for Lazio in 2018 Luis Suárez , a legend of Inter, club where he played and that he trained
Antonio Adán – Cagliari – 2013–14
Raúl Albiol – Napoli – 2013–19
Marcos Alonso – Fiorentina – 2013–17
Guillermo Amor – Fiorentina – 1998–2000[c CAT]
Angeliño – Roma – 2023–[c GAL]
Álex Berenguer – Torino – 2017–21
Adrián Bernabé – Parma – 2024–
Bojan – Roma, Milan – 2011–13[c CAT]
Borja Valero – Fiorentina, Inter – 2012–21
Borja Mayoral – Roma – 2020–22
Iker Bravo – Udinese – 2024–
José Callejón – Napoli, Fiorentina – 2013–22
Toni Calvo – Parma – 2010–11
Diego Capel – Genoa – 2015–16[c ANU]
Samu Castillejo – Milan, Sassuolo – 2018–22, 2023–24
Chico Flores – Genoa – 2010–11[c ANU]
José Ángel Crespo – Bologna – 2011–12, 2013–14
Iván de la Peña – Lazio – 1998–99, 2001–02[c CNT]
Luis del Sol – Juventus, Roma – 1962–72
Roberto Delgado – Lazio – 2003–05
David de Gea – Fiorentina – 2024–
Gerard Deulofeu – Milan, Udinese – 2016–17, 2020–23[c CAT]
Dídac Vilà – Milan – 2010–11[c CAT]
Toni Doblas – Napoli – 2013–14
Javier Farinós – Inter – 2000–04[c VAL]
Salva Ferrer – Spezia – 2020–23[c CAT]
Ricardo Gallego – Udinese – 1989–90
Javier Garrido – Lazio – 2010–12[c BSQ]
Alexandre Geijo – Udinese – 2009–10, 2014–15[b SUI]
Mario Gila – Lazio – 2022–
César Gómez – Roma – 1997–98
Joan González – Lecce – 2022–[c CAT]
Pep Guardiola – Brescia, Roma – 2001–03[c CAT]
Iago Falque – Genoa, Roma, Torino, Benevento – 2014–21[c GAL]
Iván Helguera – Roma – 1997–98[c CNT]
Luis Helguera – Udinese, Ancona – 2000–02, 2003–04
Mario Hermoso – Roma – 2024–
Dean Huijsen – Juventus, Roma – 2023–24[b NED] [c NED U19] [c NED U18] [c NED U17]
Álex Jiménez – Milan – 2023–
Joaquín – Fiorentina – 2013–15
Jony – Lazio – 2019–20
José Ángel Valdés – Roma – 2011–12
Keko – Catania – 2012–14
Pol Lirola – Sassuolo, Fiorentina, Frosinone – 2016–21, 2023–24[c CAT]
Diego Llorente – Roma – 2022–24
Fernando Llorente – Juventus, Napoli, Udinese – 2013–16, 2019–21[c BSQ]
David López – Napoli – 2014–16[c CAT]
Diego López – Milan – 2014–16[c GAL]
Óscar López – Lazio – 2004–05
Pau López – Roma – 2019–21[c CAT]
Luis Alberto – Lazio – 2016–24[c ANU]
Iván Marcano – Roma – 2018–19
José Mari – Milan – 1999–2002
Pablo Marí – Udinese, Monza – 2021–
Fernando Marqués – Parma – 2010–12
Aarón Martín – Genoa – 2023–[c CAT]
Rafael Martín Vázquez – Torino – 1990–92
Josep Martínez – Genoa – 2023–
Jordi Mboula – Verona – 2023–24
Gaizka Mendieta – Lazio – 2001–02[c BSQ]
Michu – Napoli – 2014–15
Juan Miranda – Bologna – 2024–
Tòfol Montiel – Fiorentina – 2018–19, 2020–21
Martín Montoya – Inter – 2015–16[c CAT]
Álvaro Morata – Juventus, Milan – 2014–16, 2020–22, 2024–
Alberto Moreno – Como – 2024–
Javi Moreno – Milan – 2001–02[c VAL]
Tete Morente – Lecce – 2024–
Raúl Moro – Lazio – 2019–22
Víctor Muñoz – Sampdoria – 1988–90
Álvaro Odriozola – Fiorentina – 2021–22
Patric – Lazio – 2015–
Pedro – Roma, Lazio – 2020–[c CNY]
Joaquín Peiró – Torino, Inter, Roma – 1962–70
Carles Pérez – Roma – 2019–22
Javier Portillo – Fiorentina – 2004–05
Pepe Reina – Napoli, Milan, Lazio, Como – 2013–14, 2015–22, 2024–[c CAT]
Martí Riverola – Bologna – 2012–13
Sergi Roberto – Como – 2024–[c CAT]
Alejandro Rodríguez – Cesena, Sampdoria, Empoli – 2010–11, 2014–16, 2018–19
Jesé Rodríguez – Sampdoria – 2022–23
Pablo Rodríguez – Lecce – 2022–23
Jaime Romero – Udinese, Bari – 2009–11
Rubén Pérez – Torino – 2014–15[c ANU]
Fabián Ruiz – Napoli – 2018–22
Víctor Ruiz – Napoli – 2010–11[c CAT]
Christian Rutjens – Benevento – 2017–18
Juan Santisteban – Venezia – 1961–63
Luis Suárez – Inter, Sampdoria – 1961–73
Mario Suárez – Fiorentina – 2015–16
Suso – Milan, Genoa – 2014–20[c ANU]
Cristian Tello – Fiorentina – 2015–17[c CAT]
Fernando Torres – Milan – 2014–15
Diego Tristán – Livorno – 2007–08[c ANU]
Joan Verdú – Fiorentina – 2015–16[c CAT]
Gonzalo Villar – Roma, Sampdoria – 2019–21, 2022–23
Gerard Yepes – Sampdoria – 2021–23
Alberto Zapater – Genoa – 2009–10[c ARA]
Oier Zarraga – Udinese – 2023–[c BSQ]
Sweden
Switzerland
Valon Behrami playing for Napoli
Stephan Lichtsteiner won 7 consecutives leagues with Juventus between 2011 and 2018
Almen Abdi – Udinese – 2010–12[b KOS–SFR]
Michel Aebischer – Bologna – 2021–
Toni Allemann – Mantova – 1961–63
Steve von Bergen – Cesena, Palermo – 2010–13
Valon Behrami – Lazio, Fiorentina, Napoli, Udinese, Genoa – 2005–08, 2010–14, 2017–22[b KOS–SFR]
Gaetano Berardi – Brescia, Sampdoria – 2010–11, 2012–14
Patrick Bettoni – Vicenza – 1998–99
Davide Chiumiento – Juventus, Siena – 2003–05[c ITA U21]
Fabio Daprelà – Brescia, Palermo, Carpi – 2010–11, 2014–16
Johan Djourou – SPAL – 2018–19[b CIV]
Blerim Džemaili – Torino, Parma, Napoli, Genoa, Bologna – 2008–14, 2015–20[b MKD–YUG]
Innocent Emeghara – Siena, Livorno – 2012–14[b NGA]
Matteo Fedele – Carpi – 2015–16
Edimilson Fernandes – Fiorentina – 2018–19
Gélson Fernandes – Chievo, Udinese – 2010–12[b CPV]
Remo Freuler – Atalanta, Bologna – 2015–22, 2023–
Philippe Fuchs – Padova – 1948–52
Simone Grippo – Chievo – 2008–09
Nicolas Haas – Atalanta, Empoli – 2017–18, 2021–
Silvan Hefti – Genoa – 2021–22, 2023–24
Gökhan Inler – Udinese, Napoli – 2007–15[c TUR U21]
Pajtim Kasami – Palermo – 2010–11
Stephan Lichtsteiner – Lazio, Juventus – 2008–18
Cephas Malele – Palermo – 2012–13[b ANG]
Giuseppe Mazzarelli – Bari – 2000–01
Michel Morganella – Palermo, Novara – 2008–09, 2011–13, 2014–17
Bruno Mota – Sampdoria – 2006–07
Dan Ndoye – Bologna – 2023–
Alain Nef – Udinese – 2008–09
Dimitri Oberlin – Empoli – 2018–19[b CMR]
Noah Okafor – Milan – 2023–
Marco Padalino – Sampdoria – 2008–11
Marco Pascolo – Cagliari – 1996–97
Ricardo Rodríguez – Milan, Torino – 2017–24
Jonathan Rossini – Sampdoria, Sassuolo – 2012–14
Kevin Rüegg – Verona – 2020–21
Anđelko Savić – Sampdoria – 2012–13
Haris Seferovic – Fiorentina, Lecce – 2010–13
Philippe Senderos – Milan – 2008–09
David Sesa – Lecce, Napoli – 1999–2001
Ciriaco Sforza – Inter – 1996–97
Xherdan Shaqiri – Inter – 2014–15[b KOS–SFR]
Simon Sohm – Parma – 2020–21, 2024–
Yann Sommer – Inter – 2023–
Kubilay Türkyılmaz – Bologna, Brescia – 1990–91, 2000–01
Ramon Vega – Cagliari – 1996–97
Johann Vogel – Milan – 2005–06
Johan Vonlanthen – Brescia – 2004–05[b COL]
Roger Vonlanthen – Inter, Alessandria – 1955–59
Silvan Widmer – Udinese – 2013–18
Denis Zakaria – Juventus – 2021–23
Fabrizio Zambrella – Brescia – 2004–05
Reto Ziegler – Sampdoria, Sassuolo – 2006–11, 2013–14
Turkey
Kaan Ayhan – Sassuolo – 2020–23[b DEU] [c DEU U18] [c DEU U17] [c DEU U16]
Hakan Çalhanoğlu – Milan, Inter – 2017–[b DEU]
Zeki Çelik – Roma – 2022–
Mert Çetin – Roma, Verona, Lecce – 2019–23
Ümit Davala – Milan – 2001–02[b FRG]
Merih Demiral – Sassuolo, Juventus, Atalanta – 2018–23
Bülent Esel – Spal – 1951–54
Bülent Eken – Palermo – 1951–52
Can Bartu – Fiorentina, Venezia, Lazio – 1961–67
Emre Belözoğlu – Inter – 2001–05
Hakan Şükür – Torino, Inter, Parma – 1995–96, 2000–02
Emirhan İlkhan – Torino, Sampdoria – 2022–23
Lefter Küçükandonyadis – Fiorentina – 1951–52
Berkan Kutlu – Genoa – 2023–24[b SUI]
Mert Müldür – Sassuolo – 2019–23[b AUT]
Metin Oktay – Palermo – 1961–62
Okan Buruk – Inter – 2001–04
Şükrü Gülesin – Palermo, Lazio – 1950–53
Salih Uçan – Roma, Empoli – 2014–16, 2018–19
Cengiz Ünder – Roma – 2017–20
Kenan Yıldız – Juventus – 2023–[b DEU]
Ukraine
Andriy Shevchenko won the Ballon d'Or while at Milan in 2004
Wales
John Charles
North, Central America and Caribbean (CONCACAF)
Canada
Costa Rica
Dominican Republic
El Salvador
Guadeloupe
Honduras
Edgar Álvarez – Cagliari, Roma, Messina, Livorno, Bari, Palermo – 2004–08, 2009–12
Samuel Caballero – Udinese – 2001–03
Julio César de León – Reggina, Genoa – 2002–04, 2006–08
Carlos Pavón – Udinese – 2001–02
David Suazo – Cagliari, Inter, Genoa, Catania – 1999–2000, 2004–08, 2009–10, 2011–12
Jamaica
Martinique
Mexico
Panama
Saint Martin
Suriname
United States
Weston McKennie playing for Juventus in 2021
Oceania (OFC)
New Zealand
South America (CONMEBOL)
Argentina
Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Alexis Sánchez Arturo Vidal , an important player for Juventus between 2011 and 2015 for the rise of the club
Matías Campos – Siena, Udinese – 2012–13
Carlos Carmona – Reggina, Atalanta – 2008–09, 2011–17
Nicolás Castillo – Frosinone – 2015–16
Nicolás Córdova – Perugia, Livorno, Ascoli, Messina, Brescia – 2001–02, 2004–07, 2010–11
Pascual de Gregorio – Bari – 1999–2001
Alejandro Escalona – Torino – 1999–2000
Matías Fernández – Fiorentina, Milan – 2012–17[b ARG]
Pablo Galdames – Genoa, Cremonese – 2021–24
Julio Gutiérrez – Udinese – 2000–01, 2003–04
Mauricio Isla – Udinese, Juventus, Cagliari – 2007–14, 2015–17
Manuel Iturra – Udinese – 2015–16
Luis Jiménez – Fiorentina, Lazio, Inter, Parma, Cesena – 2005–11
Cristóbal Jorquera – Genoa, Parma – 2011–13, 2014–15
Carlos Labrín – Novara, Palermo – 2011–13
Marcelo Larrondo – Siena, Fiorentina, Torino – 2009–10, 2011–15[b ARG]
Guillermo Maripán – Torino – 2024–
Gary Medel – Inter, Bologna – 2014–17, 2019–23
Mauricio Pinilla – Chievo, Palermo, Cagliari, Genoa, Atalanta – 2003–04, 2010–17
David Pizarro – Udinese, Inter, Roma, Fiorentina – 1999–2015
Erick Pulgar – Bologna, Fiorentina – 2015–22
Luis Rojas – Crotone – 2020–21
Hugo Eduardo Rubio – Bologna – 1988–89
Marcelo Salas – Lazio, Juventus – 1998–2003
Mario Salgado – Brescia – 2001–02
Alexis Sánchez – Udinese , Inter – 2008–11, 2019–22, 2023–
Felipe Seymour – Genoa, Catania, Chievo – 2011–13
Francisco Sierralta – Parma – 2018–19
Hector Tapia – Perugia – 1999–2000
Jorge Toro – Sampdoria, Modena, Verona – 1962–64, 1969–70
Jaime Valdés – Bari, Fiorentina, Lecce, Atalanta, Parma – 2000–01, 2004–06, 2008–10, 2011–14
Diego Valencia – Salernitana – 2022–23
Eduardo Vargas – Napoli – 2011–13
Jorge Vargas – Reggina, Empoli, Livorno – 1999–2001, 2002–06
Arturo Vidal – Juventus, Inter – 2011–15, 2020–22
Iván Zamorano – Inter – 1996–2001
Colombia
Juan Cuadrado
Luis Muriel
Duván Zapata
Kevin Agudelo – Genoa, Fiorentina, Spezia – 2019–23
Abel Aguilar – Udinese – 2005–06
Pablo Armero – Udinese, Napoli, Milan – 2010–17
Faustino Asprilla – Parma – 1992–96, 1997–99
Carlos Bacca – Milan – 2015–17
Jorge Bolaño – Parma, Sampdoria, Lecce – 1999–2007
Miguel Borja – Livorno – 2013–14
Juan David Cabal – Verona, Juventus – 2022–
Carlos Carbonero – Cesena, Sampdoria – 2014–16
Damir Ceter – Cagliari – 2017–18, 2021–22
Iván Córdoba – Inter – 2000–12
Oscar Córdoba – Perugia – 2002–03
Juan Cuadrado – Udinese, Lecce, Fiorentina, Juventus, Inter, Atalanta – 2009–
Fredy Guarín – Inter – 2011–16
Miguel Guerrero – Bari – 1994–96, 1997–99
Víctor Ibarbo – Cagliari, Roma – 2011–17
Jhon Lucumí – Bologna – 2022–
Gonzalo Martínez – Udinese, Reggina – 2001–04
Yerry Mina – Fiorentina, Cagliari – 2023–
Johan Mojica – Atalanta – 2020–21
Johnnier Montaño – Parma, Verona, Piacenza – 1999–2004
Daniel Mosquera – Verona – 2024–
Jonny Mosquera – Livorno – 2013–14
Luis Muriel – Lecce, Udinese, Sampdoria, Fiorentina, Atalanta – 2011–17, 2018–24
Jeison Murillo – Inter, Sampdoria – 2015–17, 2019–20, 2022–23
David Ospina – Napoli – 2018–22
Dorlan Pabón – Parma – 2012–13
Brayan Perea – Lazio – 2013–15
Juan Fernando Quintero – Pescara – 2012–13
Freddy Rincón – Napoli – 1994–95
Nelson Rivas – Inter, Livorno – 2007–10
Carlos Sánchez – Fiorentina – 2016–18
Jorge Horacio Serna – Como – 2002–03
Andrés Tello – Empoli, Benevento – 2016–17, 2020–21
Fernando Uribe – Chievo – 2010–12
Adolfo Valencia – Reggiana – 1997–98
Juan Manuel Valencia – Bologna – 2018–19
Iván Valenciano – Atalanta – 1992–93
Devis Vásquez – Empoli – 2024–
Brayan Vera – Lecce – 2019–20
Mario Yepes – Chievo, Milan, Atalanta – 2008–14
Alexis Zapata – Udinese – 2014–15
Cristián Zapata – Udinese, Milan, Genoa – 2005–11, 2012–21
Duván Zapata – Napoli, Udinese, Sampdoria, Atalanta, Torino – 2013–
Juan Camilo Zúñiga – Siena, Napoli, Bologna – 2008–16
Ecuador
Paraguay
Dionisio Arce – Lazio, Napoli, Sampdoria, Novara, Torino, Palermo – 1949–60
Óscar Ayala – Bari – 2000–01
Édgar Barreto – Reggina, Atalanta, Palermo, Sampdoria – 2007–10, 2011–13, 2014–20
Felix Benegas – Triestina – 1950–52
Andrés Cubas – Pescara – 2016–17[b ARG] [c ARG U20]
Marcelo Estigarribia – Juventus, Sampdoria, Chievo, Atalanta – 2011–16
Carlos Gamarra – Inter – 2002–05
Gustavo Gómez – Milan – 2016–17
Tomás Guzmán – Siena – 2005–06
Juan Iturbe – Verona, Roma, Torino – 2013–17[b ARG] [c ARG U20]
Rubén Maldonado – Venezia, Napoli – 1999–2001, 2007–08
Víctor Hugo Mareco – Brescia – 2002–05, 2010–11
César Meza – Cesena – 2011–12
José Montiel – Udinese, Reggina – 2006–08
Gustavo Neffa – Cremonese – 1989–90, 1991–92
Miguel Ortega – Genoa – 1946–48[b BRA]
Carlos Humberto Paredes – Reggina – 2002–06
José Parodi – Padova, Genoa – 1955–57
Silvio Parodi Ramos – Fiorentina – 1956–57
Iván Piris – Roma, Udinese – 2012–13, 2014–16
Antonio Sanabria – Sassuolo, Roma, Genoa, Torino – 2013–15, 2018–
Federico Santander – Bologna – 2018–22
Delio Toledo – Udinese – 1998–99
Leongino Unzaim – Lazio – 1950–51
Peru
Álvaro Ampuero – Parma – 2012–13
Gerónimo Barbadillo – Avellino, Udinese – 1982–86
Víctor Benítez – Milan, Messina, Roma, Venezia, Inter – 1962–70
Rinaldo Cruzado – Chievo – 2011–13
Alberto Gallardo – Milan, Cagliari – 1963–66
Gianluca Lapadula – Milan, Genoa, Lecce, Benevento, Cagliari – 2016–21, 2023–[b ITA] [c ITA B]
Hugo Natteri – Triestina, Alessandria – 1956–58
Juan Seminario – Fiorentina – 1962–64
Julio Uribe – Cagliari – 1982–83
Juan Manuel Vargas – Catania, Fiorentina, Genoa – 2006–15
Uruguay
Venezuela
See also
Notes
References
2024–25 clubs Former clubs Organisations Competition Statistics and awards Finances History Associated competitions