Franco‑Moroccan central midfielder Yanis Khafi of Paris SG U23 is being linked with a move to Italian Serie B side Carrarese, with the 20-year-old’s future at the French club increasingly uncertain.
The speculation, logged on 24 June 2026, suggests Carrarese are exploring the possibility of bringing Khafi to Tuscany as they look to add young technical quality in midfield ahead of the new Serie B campaign. The reported probability of the deal is listed only as “?”, underlining that talks are at an early and unconfirmed stage rather than an advanced negotiation.
Khafi, born in Ermont on 23 April 2006 and standing at 1.80m, is a right-footed central midfielder who has been developing within Paris Saint-Germain’s system, currently representing Paris SG U23 and the club’s Espoirs set-up. With no contract start or expiry dates recorded and no market valuation listed (his market value is currently shown as “None”), observers have speculated that he could become available as a free agent were PSG not to formalise his situation.
The lack of a defined market value makes any potential fee difficult to project and adds to the sense of opportunity for Carrarese, who are operating in a far more constrained financial environment than Europe’s elite clubs. For now, however, there is no indication of an agreed transfer fee, pre-contract, or option to buy.
Khafi is eligible for both Morocco and France and is listed with dual nationality, reflecting PSG’s increasingly global recruitment at youth level. He wears the No 8 shirt for Paris SG U23 and is viewed as a central midfielder by trade, capable of operating in the middle of the pitch rather than in wide or advanced attacking roles.
No recent competitive first-team appearance data or detailed match performance statistics have been published for Khafi, and there is no verified record of a specific recent fixture – such as opponent, date, scoreline or individual display – in senior football. His experience to date is rooted in youth and development squads rather than top-flight action.
With Carrarese aiming to consolidate in Serie B, the potential arrival of a technically schooled midfielder from PSG’s academy would represent a calculated gamble on upside rather than an immediate finished product. If the move does materialise, it could offer Khafi a clearer senior pathway, shape his reputation beyond youth football and provide a launchpad for an early breakthrough in the European professional game.
