The Brighton loanee could be thrown in at the deep end on Monday night, the Argentinian teenager ready to make his Leicester City debut against Tottenham Hotspur.
When he potentially steps out for his debut on Monday night, Facundo Buonanotte will be the third Argentinian player to represent Leicester City, and the second to have made their way to the King Power Stadium via Brighton.
Ten years ago this week, Leonardo Ulloa, then the club’s record signing after joining for £8m from the Seagulls, made his maiden outing for City in their first game back in the top flight. He made it a scoring debut as Nigel Pearson’s side kicked off the campaign with a 2-2 draw against Everton.
It was the first of 11 goals Ulloa netted that season, the striker integral to the club’s survival. If Buonanotte can get anywhere close to the impact his countryman made in his first campaign at the King Power Stadium, the decision to bring him in will go down as a masterstroke.
Buonanotte's Arrival Highlights City's Decline
Right now, among supporters, there’s not much optimism of that happening. Buonanotte has not exactly torn up trees in his time at Brighton so far, albeit he is very young.
But perhaps part of the explanation of the lack of excitement around his arrival is because of the reality it exposes. It was not long ago that City would have been loaning their players to the likes of Brighton to get them game-time and develop them.
In just a few years, with City suffering a disastrous relegation and Brighton going from strength to strength in part because of their exceptional transfer business, the roles are reversed. Buonanotte’s arrival is a reminder of how far, and how quickly, City have fallen.
Manager Steve Cooper has suggested the 19-year-old has been identified by the recruitment team, rather than by him, and for the staff behind the scenes, it needs to be a successful signing. Otherwise, there will be criticism.
A Waste of Opportunity?
Usually, if a signing flops, the focus is on the expenditure and the potential waste of money. It’s different for Buonanotte. If he doesn’t hit the mark, the focus will be on the wasted opportunity to develop City’s own players.
Because City already have a 19-year-old attacking midfielder in their squad in Will Alves. He’s the club’s big hope. But instead of giving him a chance to show what he can do and to adapt to senior football, City are turning to a Brighton player and helping to develop him for the Seagulls.
Buonanotte has played 40 games in the Premier League and had more senior football in Argentina before that. Alves is yet to make his league debut. So the loanee is more likely to make an impact than City’s homegrown talent. The logic is there. Right now, Buonanotte is very likely the more effective player.
At the end of the season, he will return to Brighton with more experience, and potentially as an improved player. Alves, meanwhile, may still be craving minutes to aid his development. Buonanotte will have been the barrier to that, but if City stay up and the loanee plays a big part in their success, no questions will be asked. If City go down, then it’s a problem.
Buonanotte Ready to Make His Mark
The good news is that Buonanotte is ready to come into the team straight away. He may not have featured for the club in pre-season, but Cooper says he will play a part against Tottenham on Monday.
“He’s definitely going to be involved, for sure,” the manager said. “He’s been with us and it’s been good that we’ve had quite a long week, given it’s a Monday night game. Hopefully it will be beneficial to him.
“We’ve been trying not to bombard him with too much as he’s a young player, a foreign player, and he’s coming into a new dressing room and a new area. We want to give him time to settle.
“We know we’ve signed a good player and want him to contribute the best he can. We’re trying to get that balance right, giving him as much as he needs but not so much that he stops thinking about what he’s good at and what he can give.
“We want players to be free on the pitch and make their own decisions. Sometimes that’s by what you don’t tell them rather than what you do tell them.”
Leicester City's Buonanotte Signing: A Potential Game-Changer
Leicester have signed attacking midfielder Facundo Buonanotte on a season-long loan deal from Brighton.
The 19-year-old Argentina international is the fifth new addition to Foxes boss Steve Cooper's squad this summer.
Buonanotte originally joined Brighton from Rosario Central in January 2023 and has made 50 appearances for the Seagulls, scoring five goals, but has moved to the East Midlands club in search of more game time.
“It's a big opportunity for me and for this reason I had no doubts about coming. I hope I can help the team to achieve great things,” he said.
“I spoke a lot with the manager and he filled me with confidence about the club - it was an easy decision for me to come here. I believe it [more minutes on the pitch] was also an important factor in my decision.”
Buonanotte has also signed an contract extension with Brighton until June 2028.
He could make his Premier League debut for Leicester in their opening game of the season at home to Tottenham on 19 August.
Buonanotte has been capped twice for Argentina having made his debut in a 2-0 win over Indonesia in June 2023.
Buonanotte's Arrival at Leicester: A Look at His Career and Potential
The young Argentinean has made a loan move from the Seagulls to the Foxes ahead of 2024/25 and the Blue Army can be excited about the prospect of watching the winger in action this season.
A cultured left-footed player, often seen drifting in off the right flank, Buonanotte boasts significant Premier League experience for the South Coast outfit, with 40 English top-flight appearances to his name, as well as featuring in the UEFA Europa League last term.
Not afraid to take players on, he also possesses a fierce strike, unleashing several across the campaign, mostly notably at Sheffield United and Chelsea. Buonanotte’s goal involvements included four goals and an assist, an improvement on his 2022/23 showing.
Born in Pérez, a city within the province of Santa Fe, Buonanotte began his youth career at nearby Club Atlético Rosario Central from the age of 10, rising through the ranks to eventually make his first team debut for Canalla in the Argentine Primera Division eight years later.
Having made his international debut last year, he’s now capped twice by Argentina at senior level, after previously representing the Under-20s side.
Still just 19 years old, Buonanotte is hoping to further enhance his development at King Power Stadium, as Steve Cooper’s squad continues to shape up in preparation for the Premier League season.