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Who is presenting Sky Sport’s Calcio Mercato L’Originale tonight and how to watch in the UK
For British viewers who follow Italian Serie A and the drama of the transfer window, Sky Sport’s Calcio Mercato L’Originale is one of the most recognisable late‑night studio programmes from Italy. On this particular evening, the show is scheduled at 21:45 UK time and is airing on two Italian feeds: Sky Sport 24 / HD and Sky Sport Calcio HD. While these are not the same as UK channels such as Sky Sports, BBC, ITV or TNT Sports, they are part of the wider Sky broadcasting family that British fans will know from domestic Premier League and European coverage. In the UK, access to the Italian feeds generally requires an international or IPTV provider that carries the Italian Sky Sport package, or a compatible satellite set‑up; the programme is not part of the standard UK Sky Sports bundle.
Calcio Mercato L’Originale is aligned with the Italian transfer market and Serie A calendar rather than with a specific match. On the same date, the Serie A fixture list includes matches such as AC Milan v Genoa as part of the 2025–26 campaign, reflecting how closely the programme follows developments at the top of Italian football.[4][3] British fans who want to follow the transfer narrative around these fixtures often use this show as a companion to live match coverage and highlights offered by UK rights holders to Serie A.
Where to watch Calcio Mercato L’Originale from the UK
The show is being broadcast on:
- Sky Sport 24 / HD – Sky Italia’s 24‑hour rolling sports news channel, offering updates, interviews and live studio discussion.
- Sky Sport Calcio HD – the main Sky Italia channel devoted specifically to Italian football, including Serie A, Coppa Italia and club‑focused magazine programming.
British viewers will not find these channels listed in the normal UK Sky EPG alongside Sky Sports Premier League or Sky Sports Football. Instead, they form part of the Italian Sky package, which is geographically targeted at the Italian market. For UK‑based supporters, typical routes to watch include:
- A legitimate subscription to Sky Italia received via satellite, which usually requires residency or an address within Italy.
- International IPTV or cable providers that carry the Italian Sky Sport channels as part of an imported European line‑up, subject to rights restrictions.
- Official streaming platforms made available by Sky Italia in certain territories, if and when they obtain the appropriate digital rights.
Because UK rights to Serie A have historically been held by different broadcasters – for example, BT Sport (now TNT Sports) in one cycle and other partners in further deals – Calcio Mercato L’Originale itself is not normally simulcast on Sky Sports, BBC or ITV in Britain. Those channels concentrate on their own magazine programmes and highlight shows. Nevertheless, British viewers often encounter clips, interviews and transfer lines from the show through news reports and social media, particularly when the discussion involves Premier League clubs or major stars.
Tonight’s line‑up: presenter and pundits
For this edition of Calcio Mercato L’Originale, the studios of Sky Sport 24 and Sky Sport Calcio HD are anchored by a strong panel of familiar Italian football figures. The confirmed line‑up is:
- Presenter: Alessandro Bonan
- Pundit: Luca Marchegiani
- Pundit: Gianluca Di Marzio
- Pundit: Marco Bucciantini
- Pundit: Alessandro Costacurta
- Pundit: Paolo Condò
For UK followers of Serie A, this is an exceptionally authoritative group: it blends former players, a renowned transfer‑market insider, a respected tactical analyst and one of Italy’s best‑known football journalists. That mix makes Calcio Mercato L’Originale particularly valuable for anyone who wants more than just scores and headlines, and it goes some way to explaining why clips from this programme are often quoted in English‑language coverage of Italian football.
Alessandro Bonan – the face of Sky Italia’s transfer coverage
Alessandro Bonan is the lead presenter tonight and is one of Sky Italia’s most recognisable anchors. A long‑time host of football studio shows, he is best known for fronting programmes built around the Italian transfer market and late‑night discussion of Serie A. On Calcio Mercato L’Originale he typically sets the tone of the broadcast: a mix of detailed reporting, informed debate and a relaxed studio atmosphere.
Bonan’s on‑screen role is similar to what British viewers might associate with lead hosts on Sky Sports’ own coverage, guiding conversations between ex‑professionals and journalists, introducing live reports from stadiums or training grounds, and ensuring that breaking news is immediately integrated into the discussion. His experience with Italian football stretches back over many seasons, meaning he can connect new stories with the recent history of Serie A clubs and previous transfer windows.
Luca Marchegiani – goalkeeping great turned studio analyst
Luca Marchegiani is a former Italy international goalkeeper, most closely associated with his successful spell at Lazio, where he won Serie A, the Coppa Italia and European honours during the late 1990s and early 2000s. After retiring from playing, he moved into broadcasting and has become one of Sky Italia’s most trusted voices on defensive organisation, goalkeeping and tactical balance.
On a show like Calcio Mercato L’Originale, Marchegiani’s strength lies in explaining how a potential signing might change the structure of a team: whether a new defender suits a back three or back four, how a goalkeeper’s style impacts the high defensive line, and how coaches might adapt their systems to integrate new arrivals. British viewers who remember watching Serie A on Channel 4 or later via UK pay‑TV will recognise Marchegiani as part of that generation of Italian players who helped make the league one of the world’s most tactically sophisticated competitions.[4]
Gianluca Di Marzio – Italy’s transfer market specialist
Gianluca Di Marzio is widely regarded as one of the leading transfer insiders in European football. A journalist and broadcaster long associated with Sky Italia, he has built a reputation for accurate reporting on negotiations, medicals and contract details, to the point where his updates are followed closely by fans of Premier League, Serie A and other top leagues alike.
Di Marzio’s work extends beyond television, with a dedicated website and a strong social‑media presence that track deals across Italy and the wider football world. His appearance on Calcio Mercato L’Originale provides the programme with direct, up‑to‑the‑minute information about which clubs are in talks, where there is genuine interest and which rumours are unlikely. For British viewers, many of his stories are later picked up by English‑language outlets whenever Serie A and Premier League clubs are involved.
To learn more about his reporting and background, UK fans often refer to his own site, https://gianlucadimarzio.com, which publishes news in both Italian and English.
Marco Bucciantini – tactical and narrative analysis
Marco Bucciantini is a journalist and commentator known for his thoughtful, sometimes literary take on football. With a background in print and television, he often focuses on the tactical evolution of teams and the broader narrative around clubs, managers and players rather than just the bare statistics.
On Calcio Mercato L’Originale he typically adds depth to discussions of how a new signing fits a manager’s long‑term vision, whether a transfer reflects a change of direction at board level, and how fan expectations shape the perception of deals. For viewers who enjoy the analytical side of the sport, Bucciantini provides a bridge between the data‑driven analysis common in modern coverage and the traditional Italian emphasis on style, identity and club culture.
Alessandro Costacurta – experience from Milan’s golden era
Alessandro Costacurta is a legendary former defender for AC Milan and the Italian national team. During a career that spanned more than two decades in Milan’s first team, he won multiple Serie A titles and UEFA Champions League trophies, working under iconic coaches such as Arrigo Sacchi and Fabio Capello alongside team‑mates like Franco Baresi and Paolo Maldini.[3]
Since retiring, Costacurta has established himself as a high‑profile pundit with Sky Italia and has even held roles within the Italian Football Federation. His insight is especially valuable when the show examines how top Italian clubs are trying to rebuild squads capable of competing in Europe, given that he experienced first‑hand the era when Serie A sides regularly dominated the latter stages of European competitions. British fans will often recognise his name from discussions surrounding AC Milan’s modern‑day attempts to recapture former glories, including their campaigns in Serie A and in UEFA competition.[3]
Paolo Condò – a leading Italian football journalist
Paolo Condò is one of Italy’s most respected football writers and television pundits. Known for his long career in journalism, including work with major Italian newspapers and magazines, he has interviewed some of the game’s biggest names and written extensively on World Cups, European Championships and the Champions League.
Condò brings a broad, international perspective to Calcio Mercato L’Originale. While some panellists focus on specific positional or tactical details, he often situates Italian transfer stories within the wider European market, comparing Serie A clubs with their peers in the Premier League, La Liga and the Bundesliga. For British viewers, this can be particularly useful: Condò’s commentary often highlights how financial realities, television rights deals and UEFA regulations push Italian clubs toward certain strategies, such as targeting younger players or focusing on loan‑plus‑option arrangements.
The role of Calcio Mercato L’Originale in the Serie A season
Unlike the match‑specific studio programmes that accompany live broadcasts of fixtures such as AC Milan v Genoa, Calcio Mercato L’Originale is structured around the rhythm of the transfer windows. It typically airs in the evenings when rumours and negotiations are at their most active, with reporters stationed at club headquarters, training grounds and sometimes hotels where agents and sporting directors meet.
During the January window, the show functions almost as a nightly barometer of the league’s balance of power. When a club high in the table – for example, a side challenging for the Scudetto or Champions League qualification – moves decisively in the market, the panel dissects how that might alter the title race. Conversely, when a team near the bottom secures reinforcements, the discussion turns to survival, fixture difficulty and whether the club has given its coach enough tools to avoid relegation.[4]
This is particularly relevant in seasons like 2025–26, when the table is tightly packed in both the European and relegation zones, and clubs know that one or two well‑judged winter signings can change the trajectory of the campaign.[2][3] For British fans who follow Serie A primarily through match broadcasts and highlights, the show offers context on why certain moves happened – for instance, a key player leaving Italy for the Premier League, or vice versa – and how Italian clubs plan to stay competitive despite financial constraints.
How UK coverage complements Italian programming
While Sky Sport 24 and Sky Sport Calcio HD focus on the Italian market, British broadcasters with rights to Serie A provide their own wrap‑around coverage, often using different studio teams and editorial priorities. A UK rights holder may show the live match, pre‑game build‑up and post‑match reaction, but leave the in‑depth transfer talk to dedicated news bulletins or digital content rather than a nightly studio show.
As a result, many British supporters develop a hybrid viewing habit: watching live Serie A matches via the UK rights holder, then seeking out clips, translations and reports from Italian programmes such as Calcio Mercato L’Originale to gain a deeper understanding of the market and internal club politics. The growing availability of official club content in English – especially from teams like AC Milan, Inter, Juventus and others – reinforces this trend, giving fans multiple angles on the same story.[3]
For more detail on the structure of Serie A and its clubs, British readers often consult resources such as the official https://www.legaseriea.it website, which provides league tables, fixtures and competition information in several languages.
Why this panel matters to British viewers
The combination of Alessandro Bonan, Luca Marchegiani, Gianluca Di Marzio, Marco Bucciantini, Alessandro Costacurta and Paolo Condò gives tonight’s Calcio Mercato L’Originale a rare balance of perspectives. For fans in the UK who follow Serie A as closely as the Premier League, it offers:
- Direct reporting on transfer negotiations from Di Marzio and Condò.
- Elite‑level player and tactical insight from Marchegiani and Costacurta.
- Narrative and analytical framing from Bucciantini.
- Experienced, flexible hosting from Bonan, able to switch between breaking news and detailed debate.
Even if the Italian feeds are not easily available through normal British television packages, the discussions and revelations from this studio often shape the wider European conversation about Italian football. Many of the stories that later appear in English‑language media have their roots in the reporting and analysis shared on programmes exactly like this one.
For viewers wanting to follow the clubs involved, official channels such as https://www.acmilan.com provide English‑language articles, interviews and match previews that complement what is discussed on Italian television and help bridge the gap between domestic and international coverage.[3]
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