Last summer’s transfer window was coming to an end, and Barcelona urgently needed to take care of Vitor Roque’s situation.
The 19-year-old striker had landed in Spain in January earlier in 2024. Barcelona had made him one of their biggest signings over the past few years with a €30million fixed fee, plus €31m more in add-ons.
The Brazilian was tipped for greatness. He was the club’s bet to replace the veteran Robert Lewandowski in the long-term. But since then, nothing has worked out for him at Barcelona.
Roque played 353 minutes last campaign under Xavi, scoring two goals, and failed to earn the trust of the manager. This season meant a fresh start, with the arrival of Hansi Flick at the club, but even then he failed to find a breakthrough. After being unable to impress in pre-season, all parties decided to move on with a loan deal.
Real Betis made a push in the final days of summer’s transfer window to convince Roque to join them. Club executives, including their legend Joaquin Sanchez, travelled to Barcelona to personally meet the player and tell him what he could expect from Betis.
They succeeded, and Roque quickly decided to join them. It was always meant to be a loan deal, as Barcelona wanted to monitor his progress and a sale was hardly going to be a profitable piece of business for the Catalan club at this point.
However, Roque had one specific request to include in the deal: the absence of, as it’s known in Spain, “la clausula del miedo”.
Directly translated as the clause of fear, it refers to a quite common condition among loan deals from one La Liga side to another. This clause is the only way a parent club can avoid a loanee facing them in La Liga.
In other leagues, such as the Premier League, footballers can’t face their parent club while on loan as it’s a rule from the Football Association itself. In Spain, however, that is not the case. There have been many examples of loanees taking revenge — one of them was as recently as last season, with Joao Felix scoring against Atletico Madrid, both home and away, while wearing a Barcelona shirt.
Barcelona always try to include the fear clause in their loan deals (Pablo Torre at Girona and Abde Ezzalzouli at Osasuna are some examples of that), but Vitor Roque did not want it in the deal. He wanted his chance for vindication. Barcelona, as they were facing a race against the transfer deadline, accepted.
“I needed a change in my life,” the striker said last summer on his presentation day at Betis — as reported by Marca — one that brought him to tears. “I have gone through tough moments, but thanks to my family and God, who was with me in every moment, I have this chance at Betis now and I am so happy about it”.
Barcelona will visit Real Betis this Saturday in La Liga, with Roque being fully fit and ready for the game. His time for revenge should be now — as long as Manuel Pellegrini selects him to start.
After over three months at the club, Vitor Roque has played 18 games for Real Betis, totalling 984 minutes. That trebles the figure he registered in the second half of last season with Barcelona.
He has scored five goals, becoming the team’s second-best goalscorer — tied with winger Abde Ezzalzouli and just behind former Tottenham midfielder, Giovani Lo Celso (six). Those performances allowed Roque to return to his national team, captaining Brazil’s Under-20 side last September. Those close to the player, speaking under the condition of anonymity to protect relationships, say he’s found in Sevilla a better environment to enjoy football again.
Betis went after Roque due to their alarming lack of firepower up front, and the teenager earned a spot as the most-used striker under Pellegrini, taking over the likes of Ezequiel ‘Chimy’ Avila and Cedric Bakambu. With all that, we should expect Roque to start against his parent club.
But Roque is still a work in progress — as we can expect from a teenager who left his home country for the first time less than a year ago.
He has scored valuable goals such as one scored at Osasuna that helped the team get a well-fought victory, or the one he scored during his first game at home to seal a 2-0 win against Leganes. There have also been frustrating moments.
Roque was wasteful earlier this week in their favourable Copa del Rey tie against fourth-tier side Sant Andreu when he missed an almost-open goal and a penalty. But if there’s a game that will stick in the minds of Betis fans it will be the latest local derby against Sevilla, in which Roque missed two big chances and they ended up losing the game.
“If you have two open one-against-one (opportunities) in front of the keeper in a Seville derby, you have to score them to get the win,” Pellegrini said just after the game, as reported by AS.
The manager summed up Vitor Roque’s season honestly two months ago when the attacker was struggling to score.
He said, as reported by Cadena Ser: “We brought Vitor Roque in knowing that he is a player who is still learning and improving. He has a huge potential. He has missed many goals and if he had scored we would probably be in a different position in the table, but at the same time he would not be playing right now. We really hope he has a bright future at Betis, and I’m sure that at some point the tables will turn and his shots will go in”.
Real Betis are taking care of Vitor Roque’s wages, reportedly around €3million per year, during the loan, which is expected to last for two seasons.
The southern club have options to buy Roque at the end of both seasons. The one for the end of this season is €25million for 80 per cent of his rights. In summer 2026, that figure rises up to €27.5m.
Barcelona have the right to cut the loan short next summer, but given the experience Roque had in Catalonia since the start of this year, this is seen as unlikely.
Barcelona’s dressing room sources, speaking anonymously to protect relationships, said Roque had a hard time settling into a new life at the club, on and off the pitch, as well as in the dressing room. The fact that Xavi barely used him in matches, and even preferred now Chelsea striker Marc Guiu over him in several games, also took a toll on Roque’s confidence.
The same happened after the arrival of Flick, who trusted former Barcelona Atletic striker Pau Victor ahead of Roque, a moment in which Roque realised his short-term future would not be at Barcelona.
Roque, however, is still 19 and has a long career ahead of him. As unlikely as it seems at the minute that he will return to Barcelona, Roque is now ready for the match he had marked in his calendar as soon as he left on loan.
It is on him now to prove if he can really make an impression.
(Top photo: Fran Santiago/Getty Images)