Founded: 2024
Headquarters: Madrid, Spain
Players: 10 (1 first-tier) for Rol Sports; 33 on the joint TransferRoom profile | Total market value: €15m
FIFA/FA registration: Sebastián López Fernández appears publicly as the licensed owner/agent and is listed on The FA registered football agents list as FARA2195.
Regions covered: Argentina, Spain, South America, Europe, North America, Middle East
Email: sl@rolsportsmanagement.com
Phone: +34 635 144 180
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rolsportsmanagement/
ROL Sports Management is a Madrid-based football agency whose Spanish corporate vehicle, ROL SPORTS MANAGEMENT SL, was incorporated in March 2024. Public materials show a football-only operation focused on player representation, with a strong Argentina-to-Europe and Argentina based players. The business appears selective rather than volume-heavy, but its public footprint is meaningful because it combines a verified Transfermarkt profile, a Trusted agency badge on TransferRoom, a 768-club network there, and a headline case study around Carlos Alcaraz’s move from Racing Club to Southampton. The public-facing differentiator is cross-border deal execution with visible use of international agent infrastructure rather than a massive standalone roster.
Sebastián López Fernández – Owner / CEO
Sole administrator of ROL SPORTS MANAGEMENT SL, and listed as the licensed owner of ROL Sports Management. His public LinkedIn profile describes him as an agent, sports lawyer and ROL Sports Management CEO. He has also been publicly associated with the Alcaraz-Southampton and Alcaraz-Juventus deal cycle.
Contact: sl@rolsportsmanagement.com | +34 635 144 180 | LinkedIn: public profile identified
Licensed agents
Sebastián López Fernández – licensed owner/agent; FA-registered in England as FARA2195
Carlos Alcaraz (Everton FC) – 30.11.2002
Leonel Jaime (CA River Plate II) – 14.07.2006
Joaquin Barolin (CA Patronatp)
2025 – Carlos Alcaraz – CR Flamengo to Everton FC – permanent – €15.00m – contract to 30.06.2027
2024 – Carlos Alcaraz – Southampton FC to Juventus FC – loan – €3.90m loan fee – option to buy publicly reported at €46.00m
2023 – Carlos Alcaraz – Racing Club to Southampton FC – permanent – €14.00m
Player career management
Transfers and loan negotiations
Contract negotiation and renewals
Club mediation on behalf of represented players
Image-rights related work
Player development and pathway building
Sports-law support
Market exposure through agent platforms such as TransferRoom
A visible TransferRoom network of 768 clubs, with Argentina as primary market and Spain as secondary market
Publicly evidenced club counterparties across recent deals include Racing Club, CA Banfield, Southampton FC, Everton FC.
Youth sourcing and development links are visible through current clients at CA River Plate II, CA Banfield II and Estudiantes U20
No public list of named external lawyers, physios or marketing agencies surfaced in the reviewed sources
Total transfers completed: at least 5 publicly traceable first-team transfers or loans involving current roster players from 2023 to March 2026
Deals ≥ €10m: 2 public deals – Carlos Alcaraz to Southampton at €14.00m and Carlos Alcaraz to Everton at €15.00m
Clients in top-5 leagues: 1 current client in a top-5 European league on the reviewed roster snapshot – Carlos Alcaraz at Everton in the Premier League
National team clients: N/A
Renewal/extension deals: N/A
The public-facing philosophy is unusually clear for a mid-sized agency: its goal is to find the best results for clients in every negotiation, with respect first. That aligns with the way Sebastián López publicly speaks about the Alcaraz pathway and with Carlos Alcaraz’s own testimonial about transparency and safety through the agency’s TransferRoom activity.
In practical terms, the roster suggests an Argentina-first talent base.
No public commission card, dual-representation policy or expense policy was disclosed on the sources reviewed for this agency. What can be said with confidence is that FIFA’s current regulatory framework still centres on licensed agents, formal representation agreements, professional conduct obligations and fee-cap principles. FIFA’s published framework points to caps of 3% of player remuneration for player agents and agents of engaging clubs, and 10% of the transfer fee for agents of releasing clubs, while also restricting multiple representation. Because implementation and litigation have varied across jurisdictions, public compliance should be read through both FIFA rules and local association practice.
Disciplinary actions / sanctions: No disciplinary action was referenced on the reviewed public agency profiles, company registration materials, FA registry results or accessible deal coverage checked. That is not a formal clean-bill certification, but no public sanction surfaced in the reviewed sources.
Litigation / disputes: No significant public litigation trail was found tied directly to ROL Sports Management in the reviewed sources.
Media sentiment: Positive / neutral. Coverage is relatively limited, but what is visible is mostly positive or transactional, centred on the Alcaraz case, the Everton move and other cross-border deals. No broad negative media pattern surfaced in the reviewed sources.
TransferRoom Trusted agency status
Featured by TransferRoom in a published success story on the Carlos Alcaraz to Southampton transfer
Several transfers on the joint profile are marked verified by player
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