Alan Do Marcolino has left Portuguese side Lusitânia FC Lourosa and is now a free agent after his contract with the Liga Portugal 2 club came to an end, with the move formally registered as a transfer to “Without Club.” The switch was completed on 2026-02-02, with no transfer fee involved and his contract with Lourosa expiring on 2026-06-30.
The 23-year-old centre-forward, who holds both Gabonese and French nationality, now enters the market with a listed value of €175k, according to the most recent assessment during his spell at Lusitânia FC Lourosa. His status as unattached means any future employer will not have to pay a fee to secure his services, a significant factor for clubs operating with limited budgets.
Do Marcolino’s departure from Lourosa concludes a brief stint in Portuguese football that followed a career largely developed in France. Before moving to Portugal, he was on the books of Stade Rennais FC, progressing through the Rennes youth structure from the U17s to the U19s and then the B team. He later stepped up to the first team and experienced senior football through loan spells at Quevilly-Rouen Métropole and US Orléans.
His most recent club-to-club move before becoming a free agent came when he joined Lusitânia FC Lourosa from Stade Rennais FC in the 2025–26 season, also on a free transfer. The subsequent rise in his market value to €175k at Lourosa reflects a modest rebound after earlier valuations of €200k during his time at Quevilly-Rouen and a later dip to €100k at US Orléans.
Born in Libreville and standing at 1.94 m, Do Marcolino offers a classic physical profile for a centre-forward. His main position is listed as attack – centre-forward, with a preference for his right foot. Throughout his club career, he has featured in French football at various levels and most recently in Portugal’s second tier, giving him experience in at least two European football systems.
Do Marcolino’s pathway is tightly linked to Stade Rennais, where he joined from Stade Laval’s youth setup and advanced step by step: from U17 to U19, then to the B team, and on to the senior squad, before his loans to Quevilly-Rouen and US Orléans helped him gain regular minutes in professional environments. Each loan was followed by a return to Rennes at the end of the spell, underlining his status as a developing asset within the French club’s structure until his eventual free transfer abroad.
Now unattached, the dual-national centre-forward becomes an option for clubs looking for a relatively low-cost, physically imposing striker with cross-border experience in France and Portugal. His free-agent status, combined with a defined market value and a background in reputable academies, positions him as a potentially attractive signing for teams in need of depth or a different profile in attack.






