Ligue 1 - 2022-23

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According to L’Équipe Tunisian businessman Hicham Bouajila contacted Olympique de Marseille’s lawyers earlier this spring to discuss a project with a partner from the United Arab Emirates, Dr Abdulla Alraisi. However, these attempts were quickly swept aside by current owner Frank Mccourt’s side – with the Tunisian businessman struggling to exchange with the American Marseille ownership.

Bouajila is a well known in the Val-de-Marne region, as he accompanied current Qatari PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaïfi when he first arrived in France. His partner, Alraisi, would be a major gateway to investors in the Emirates with an Al-Khelaïfi-style profile who combines top-level sports such as athletic and handball, with state diplomacy. He is rumoured to have an extensive network that could open up potential investment into OM.

However, Marsielle’s lawyers have advised Bouajila and to approach two ‘backbone’ members of the McCourt family business: Barry Cohen and Jeff Ingram.

However, despite these attempts to get into exchanges with the OM owner, the McCourt entourage have dismissed any desire to sell with one member telling L’Équipe that “Frank is here for a long time.” and an OM executive saying “Those who are spreading these rumours are only trying to destabilise the club”.
 
I would fucking love for Marseilles to find an oligarch who would give PSG a run for their money.

Unfortunately Marseille’s reputation is possibly not the best choice for sport washing one’s own reputation.

Bit like asking Boris Johnson to write the forward for a book on integrity.
 
I like Marseille. Always my favorite French club growing up, think I liked the kit or something. As much as people hate oil money clubs or w/e, another club who have the muscle to challenge PSG would be very good for Ligue 1.

Unlike the PL, there's no way for the other clubs to organically compete with PSG longer term, because the revenue just isn't there.
 
I like Marseille. Always my favorite French club growing up, think I liked the kit or something. As much as people hate oil money clubs or w/e, another club who have the muscle to challenge PSG would be very good for Ligue 1.

Unlike the PL, there's no way for the other clubs to organically compete with PSG longer term, because the revenue just isn't there.

Not my favourite French club, but I have a soft spot for them just because they are such a bonkers club. Fabulous stadium, huge fanatical following and one of the craziest histories in major European football. Tappie, Corsican mafia, Marseille mafia, murders, ultras running things like ticketing and merchandise etc.
 
It's the only thing billionaire's are good for.

Debatable.

We're not talking about mere billionaires anyway..... We need less dodgy oligarchs inflating the football economy in the name of sports-washing; not more.

Ethical debate aside; I'd rather Spurs have a better footing in the trf market than simp for the idea of a slightly more competitive Ligue Une..... This is also why a team in every port doesn't work.... Sooner or later there's a conflict of interests.
 

La Provence report this afternoon that a delegation of disgruntled Marseille players which includes captain Dimitri Payet have asked for a meeting with club president Pablo Longoria over their dissatisfaction with new manager Igor Tudor’s methods.

The former Hellas Verona coach came in at the start of the summer in the wake of Jorge Sampaoli’s shock departure, with the Argentine unhappy with the progress that the club had then made in the opening weeks of the transfer window.

Having won none of their four pre-season games – losses to Middlesbrough, Norwich, Milan and a draw to Real Betis – the tension is said to be rising behind the scenes at Marseille.

The entourage of one player told La Provence that the Croatian coach “does not hesitate to lay into them and shout at them”, as part of a harsh set of methods which also led to the departure of Mauro Camoranesi from the coaching staff just one week after his arrival.

The players have yet to fully understand exactly what Tudor wants to put in place in terms of a game plan, and want to clear the air and want to clear the air so as to lighten the mood at the training ground ahead of what already promises to be a trying campaign.
 
I like Marseille. Always my favorite French club growing up, think I liked the kit or something. As much as people hate oil money clubs or w/e, another club who have the muscle to challenge PSG would be very good for Ligue 1.

Unlike the PL, there's no way for the other clubs to organically compete with PSG longer term, because the revenue just isn't there.
Nah, fuck OM. Bunch of pricks not better than PSG, also adding to the fact that they're hypocritical racist shits like OL fans, with the only difference being that OL fans acknowledge it (which still makes them cunts too).
 

Last night’s 5-2 win over Montpellier saw Neymar continue his stellar run of form for Paris Saint-Germain, scoring a double and continuing to combine well with Lionel Messi. Less inspiring, though, was Kylian Mbappé’s return to action, despite scoring one and assisting another, as the Frenchman appeared off the pace, missing a penalty and appearing frustrated at times.

L’Équipe and RMC would report after the game that the forward had experienced “personal issues” beforehand but still wanted to play a part in the first home match of the season. His manager Christophe Galtier would go on to explain that Mbappé was not at full capacity yet physically, but did not make any mention of other problems. For Marco Verratti, his teammate’s irritation at missing the penalty was a sign of how much he cares for the team.

After the game though, a series of tweets liked by Neymar indicated a deeper problem within the dressing room, as yet another “penaltygate” appears to have reared its head at PSG.

Among the tweets – in Portuguese – liked by the Brazilian, one claimed that: “Now it’s official, Mbappé is the one who takes penalties at PSG. Clearly it’s a contract thing, because in no club in the world would Neymar be the second taker. It seems that because of his contract, Mbappé is the owner of PSG!”

Another claimed that Christophe Galtier had indicated after the game that Mbappé would be the main penalty taker this season – this was not the case, given that the manager simply explained that the Mbappé-Neymar order was simply decided for this game alone – “moving foward, we’ll see.”
 

Marseille coach Igor Tudor compares Ligue 1 and Serie A: “There is much more pace in France.”​

Marseille’s Croatian manager Igor Tudor gave a wide-ranging interview to L’Équipe this Wednesday, where he notably spoke of the differences between French and Italian football. The 44-year-old head coach is enjoying a remarkable first season on the southern coast. His free-flowing Marseille side are second in the Ligue 1 standings, with only a 7-point deficit on league leaders and arch-rivals Paris Saint-Germain. The former Juventus player was Andrea Pirlo’s assistant coach during the latter’s short tenure as head of the Bianconeri. Then, Tudor took over Hellas Verona and led them to an impressive ninth-place finish in Serie A before embarking on his journey to France. Tudor has spoken about the differences between Ligue 1 and Serie A, and according to him the French top-flight is underrated on the European stage:

France is less valued, and that’s a mistake. Because when you start to really look at it, you completely change your mind. It’s an exciting league, with beautiful stadiums and talented players“, Tudor says. He goes on to describe Ligue 1 as a “super difficult” league.

The Croatian further explains why he believes Ligue 1, as a whole, may be more competitive league than Serie A. According to Tudor, there are only three to four Italian teams who, in terms of the quality of their squads, have more than their French counterparts, bar PSG. “But from 6th to bottom place, it’s stronger here [in France]. If Empoli play Strasbourg, Strasbourg wins. If La Spezia play Reims, Reims win. When you face Reims, you see three to four players you’d like to take with you. If I’m the Inter coach, I’m taking nobody from Empoli or La Spezia. There is a gap here you do not find in France.

Tudor sees another striking difference between Ligue 1 and Serie A. “There is much more pace in France. Because the players’ profiles are different, here they are younger and more physical.” The Marseille manager takes the transfer business of the English clubs as an example, with Bournemouth splashing €17m for Dango Ouattara during the winter transfer window. “They buy players from Lorient, not from Italy, that means that there are players here who have the qualities to fit into the highest level of football.
 

In French class, the Serbian Ognjen Lukic, the Australian Mohamed Touré, the Ecuadorian Maiky de la Cruz and the American Kobi Henry cannot even pronounce “Reims.”

These four young professional players regularly laugh out loudly with their teacher, Anca Mandi-Bredy.

“She is almost full-time with us and puts on four to five classes a day. Little by little, we made the club English, even the physiotherapists,” says Mathieu Lacour, Ligue 1 side Reims’ CEO since the start of 2018.

This season, Reims boss Will Still has named a starting XI with as many as 10 different nationalities represented within it. When Lacour began his job with SDR, there were only 12 different nationalities represented across the whole 1st team squad. Now that figure stands at close to double.

Lacour continues, in an interview with L’Équipe:

“With Pol-Édouard Caillot (Sporting Director), we are executing on a five-year project, based around international talent. The first phase of the plan saw Stade de Reims focus on Belgium, the Netherlands, Portugal and French-speaking areas (as evidenced by the signings of Engels, Foket, Konan, Doumbia, Romao in 2018). The second phase saw the arrival of English speakers (Rajkovic, Maresic, Donis, Zeneli, Munetsi in 2019). But not just for the sake of it. We recruited Miguel Comminges as sporting coordinator in the summer of 2019. He knows the DNA of the club (he played at Reims from 2003 to 2007) but also played six years in England and in the United States (Swindon, Cardiff, Carlisle, Southend, Stevenage, Colorado Rapids). In 2020, Yann Kombouaré followed, notably to become the director of international development.”

Kombouaré, who is indeed the son of FC Nantes coach Antoine Kombouaré, continues:

“We want to extend our network as much as possible by finding bridges to build with as many clubs as possible. Woolwich pushed for Folarin Balogun (21, on loan without an option to buy last summer and revelation in Ligue 1 with 17 goals scored) to come here because they know how we work. We want to put our project front and centre, put the club on the world map. It’s time-consuming, but our sporting success is making it easier.”

Reims operate entirely without a recruitment department or scouts. Instead, it is the triumvirate of Lacour, Kombouaré and Caillot (the latter is the son of the president, Jean-Pierre) who believe that they are performing well in the transfer market because of their network and leveraging of technology (data analytics and video analysis tools).

“We use TransferRoom a lot, a platform that connects clubs and organises three annual conferences where we meet other individuals at clubs in a sort of speed dating, which allows for the efficiency of a reduced decision-making chain. As a three, we are agile. We save time, and therefore money, by not overpaying players because we are often the first onto them. There are no intermediaries. We are moving at a cruising speed,” Kombouaré adds.

In addition to this core team, the club also employs a Head of Loans (14 players are currently out on loan) and a Deputy Sporting Director who is in charge of the club’s reserve set-up, which employs eight full-time people. Created in the summer of 2018, this structure, whose team is currently playing in National 2 (the French 4th division), represents an a stepping stone for player development, especially for foreigners. It is a holistic structure, which has initiatives like classes in nutrition and assistance with administrative issues included within it. “It’s an incubator, where we were able to take bets like Boulaye Dia, El-Bilal Touré, Axel Disasi, Nathanaël Mbuku, Hugo Ekitike, Dion Lopy,” adds Lacour.

The Director of the Youth Academy, Yannick Menu, dives deeper into the reserve set-up:

“In this reserve group, there are Africans, Australians, North Americans. This level of diversity first strengthens the person, but also the player. When you take a boy out of his environment, you destabilise him. The shock is immense in terms of the change of culture, their way of life, their food, their education, their relationship with adults and, of course, their game. Thus, they are frequently injured because of the shock to the change in atmosphere (the Australians Mohamed Touré and Yaya Dukuly saw snow for the first time in their lives this winter during a training session) or the change of playing surface. It takes a lot of time to integrate them from a sporting perspective.”

Lacour is keen for it not be described merely as a “reserve team.”

“It’s not a reserve team, it’s specialised post-youth academy training. It welcomes 18-year-old foreigners, who need time to adapt to Ligue 1, to France, but who are faced with tough internal competition, when in fact they are actually supposed to come up against this level of competition on a daily basis much later in their development.”

Ecuadorian left-back Maiky de la Cruz, the first Spanish-speaker recruited by a club that will now switch to the Spanish and Portuguese phase of their 5-year recruitment expansion policy, admits to have suffered despite these accommodations made by the club.

“Everything was new, I started from scratch. It was complicated,“- he admits that he suffered from very poor mental health during his first six months when placed into an education system where nobody spoke his language.

Menu adds:

“Even the rice is different here. Mealtimes weren’t even fun. It was a total upheaval compared to everything he had known. Leaving your family to go to the other side of the world at 18 is very complicated. We know how to manage players coming from African better, for example.”

In recent years, Reims has, for example, forged strong links with Mali (Moussa Doumbia, El-Bilal Touré) and a three-bedroom house has been made available to players from this country. A Franco-Malian assistant has been put in charge of it. She cooks local dishes, teaches them how to shop, how to manage an apartment.

Menu explains: “They call her tata or mum, she is in touch with the families. It leads them to take on more responsibilities, earn independence. When the player is ready, he becomes autonomous and gets an apartment of his own. Thus in January, Kamory Doumbia gave way to Abdoulaye Gory (in the house),who arrived from the AFE Academy (Bamako).”

Reims have another asset that has become important in their international development: the partnership signed in 2020 and running until 2024 with Portuguese 1st division club Paços de Ferreira.

Lacour explains: “This opens a third phase in the Latin markets. Signing a Brazilian and putting him there before, after or even instead of the reserve set-up would make sense. We are going to spend a week in Argentina. We feel ready for that.”

This strategy is part of an ambitious overarching plan for the club between 2023 and 2028, where the goal is for the club to “settle in Ligue 1 and make it into Europe every three or four years.”
 
Guess which side Sissoko joined after us:


NANTES MANAGER ANTOINE KOMBOUARÉ: “WE’RE A SHIT TEAM.”​


Here's a clue:

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