Ligue 1 | French Football 2017/18

kouroux

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You overreact.

I simply think there is a physical contact so the defender commits a fault.

Only Kylian himself can say he has been badly hurt or not. Who are we to say he hasn't suffered?

That said, every day, you can see players (Griezmann, Cristiano...) dramatising their pain.

If you do consider Kylian as a cheater, then you should also consider 50% of the football players as cheaters.
He cheated there, no doubt about it, just like many footballers cheat on every single match in every continent. There is no overreaction, it's a fact of football.
Gotta laugh at the "only Kylian himself can say he has been badly hurt or no" line tbh, I never said he didn't suffer.
 

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He cheated there, no doubt about it, just like many footballers cheat on every single match in every continent. There is no overreaction, it's a fact of football.
Gotta laugh at the "only Kylian himself can say he has been badly hurt or no" line tbh, I never said he didn't suffer.
Why do you think he cheats?
 

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The whole "i'm in soul shattering pain but i'll get up quickly once my opponent has gotten a card". Miraculous recovery.
You have never experimented a sharp sudden pain?

You accuse him of being ill-intentioned.

Let's agree to disagree on this subject.

He cheated there, no doubt about it, just like many footballers cheat on every single match in every continent. There is no overreaction, it's a fact of football.
Gotta laugh at the "only Kylian himself can say he has been badly hurt or no" line tbh, I never said he didn't suffer.
Indeed, you suggested he didn't suffer
 

kouroux

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You have never experimented a sharp sudden pain?

You accuse him of being ill-intentioned.

Let's agree to disagree on this subject.



Indeed, you suggested he didn't suffer
Wow :lol:, I suggested feck all, I didn't say he felt nothing. It's as simple as that, he amplified it to get the other player booked. Behavior of a cheat. Nothing special really. I don't do innuendos, I say what I think, I could be right or I could be wrong.
 

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Wow :lol:, I suggested feck all, I didn't say he felt nothing. It's as simple as that, he amplified it to get the other player booked. Behavior of a cheat. Nothing special really. I don't do innuendos, I say what I think, I could be right or I could be wrong.
I'm here to say who is right and who is wrong ;)
 

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Nice- AS Monaco 3-0, M.Balotelli

Look at the Monaco right-back Sidibé: typical contemporary full back who likes to attack but doesn't like to defend and mark a player.

The Monaco central defenders were focused on the opposing Centre-Forward.
 

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Kylian Mbappé: “I will do everything I can to help Neymar win the Ballon D’Or.”
Following his official presentation, Kylian Mbappé gave an interview to Le Parisien where he spoke about his new life, his ambitions and his desire to do the impossible with the new Brazilian star.

After a busy night which followed a welcome meal on behalf of PSG, Kylian Mbappé was presented yesterday morning in the Parc des Princes, with plenty of his family by his sides. His parents and younger brother Ethan were there for his official presentation, as were his uncle Pierre, grandfather and his lawyers.

The latter were very much present during these last few weeks and most notably, during the final night of the negotiations last Wednesday and Thursday. In one corner of the room, Antero Henrique, the new PSG sporting director, and Maxwell look in awe at their new protégé. Very much impressed, the former stated, “he really is very mature”.

Last December in our newspaper, you spoke about your dream to one day play for PSG. Did you ever imagine if would happen this quickly?

No. At the time, I was only concentrated on earning my spot at Monaco. I only saw myself with ASM, and I wanted to finish my season as best as possible. I also did not know that my summer would be this hectic.

Did you hesitate to join PSG over Real Madrid?

PSG was the project with suited me best. I want to learn, but I also want to win. I have the smallest trophy cabinet in the dressing room, but I am hungry for titles. There are great players here. We have everything here to grow and make people happy.

Is the €180m transfer fee a lot difficult to cope with?

I do not deal with any of that. This will not change my lifestyle or mentality. This does not worry me. The money does not go into or come out of my pocket. It does not affect me.

Did you think about the pressure put on PSG players before signing?

Football is not a form of pressure, but a form of enjoyment. It is a form of pressure when you think of it as a job. If you are worried about being fired from your job, then yes, you can be pressured. But I see it as a game, and when you see things like that, you are happy regardless of what happens.

Do you not worry about feeling scattered like other Parisians who return to the hometown?

My objectives with PSG are so ambitious that I do not have time to feel scattered. And I have friends who can help me concentrate if I get distracted.

What did your new coach Unai Emery say to you to convince you to sign?

He convinced me with more than one phrase. It is his football philosophy especially, as he is clear in what he wants to do. The coach eats, sleeps and lives for football like I do. We can do great things together.

Which philosophy is that?

To keep possession and maintain a high press to penetrate into the opposition’s half. I really like this philosophy.

How do you cope with the hype around you?

Simply put, because I feed off this passion for football, which allows me to overcome it. And when I am not allowed to play, I am not happy. Football is the only activity which allows me to feel fulfilled and get rid of all forms of pressure. When I am on the pitch, I forget everything and play as if I were a kid.

What position do you prefer to play in?

It is a bit difficult to answer. My youth coaches never put me in the same position for more than two years. I finished centrally while playing in Monaco, but I have played multiple positions. I would say centrally, but I might have a different answer a year from now.

What are your personal objectives?

PSG is an ambitious club that wants to be the best in the world. So we have to win everything and be sure to leave no doubt whatsoever. We have to immediately impose ourselves as a strong team that can dominate as a group with its style of play. That is the key to success.

Individually, in the long term, are you aiming for the Ballon d’Or?

No. I already have a teammate who wants to win it. So individually, my objective is to score a lot of goals and help Neymar. He can help us lift many titles, so we need to take care of him. I will do everything I can to help him win the Ballon d’Or. It would make me happy if I could help him like that.

You chose number 29 in reference to the date of birth of your younger brother Ethan. Is he better than you were at the same age?

No. We do play in the same position. I am more of a goal-scorer, and he is more of a provider. I hope he will manage to do more than me. I only wish the best for him. He is already at PSG and scored a goal earlier this week. It would be good for him to have his own life and not be in his older brother’s shadow, or in mine. He should follow his own path, and he should be left alone.

What goes you on in your life off the pitch? Last year, you received your high school baccalaureate…

Yes, I did get it. Now, I have to take classes to get my driver’s license. Apart from that, there is not time for much else. When you want to succeed in this line of work, there are sacrifices you need to make, and these sacrifices take up most of your day. So you really do not have much time for anything else.

What made you decide to quote Albert Camus in your letter to the Monaco fans?

It is something I worked on in school. My father brought me up with those quotes, and I even had some in my room. This was part of my upbringing. It is a moment of amusement that we share together as a family. We tell tales, cite quotations. There were a lot of false rumours about my transfer situation, so it was important that I show my feelings towards them.

What is your favorite quote?

“Aim for the moon to land among the stars” – Oscar Wilde

*full quote – “Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars”

As it happens, are you far from the moon?

Oh, yes! Considering my objectives, I am very far. I have not even gone for liftoff yet.

What is your first memory from the Parc des Princes?

It was a PSG – Rennes game, from when my brother Jirès Kembo played for them (note: in 2009, when he was 10 years old). I was so happy that I came back to watch more games. I really like the stadium and atmosphere. Plus, the return of the PSG Ultras will be magnificent!

What Parisian player did you particularly like?

When I was younger, it was Ronaldinho.

How do you imagine your life in Paris?

Simple. I spend my days at the training ground and then I go home to eat, sleep and mess around a bit with friends and family. My days are not that extraordinary.

Will you return to Bondy to live there?

No, not in Bondy. (laughing) Do you want me to get stuck in traffic before coming to the Camp des Loges everyday? Currently, I am still in the hotel. Afterwards, we will see.

Y.H.
 

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VERDICT | Lille’s loco transfer window leaves us all wandering what this project really is

Before the season began, everyone expected a rejuvenated LOSC Lille side. With new money and an exciting manager, the northerners were expected to be a viable European contender amongst a myriad of in-transition sides.

That all looks a little farfetched right now.

The Gérard Lopez era started back in January when, in preparation for Marcelo Bielsa’s arrival for the start of the following season, they would bring in a glut of players. Six in total, mostly on the final day of the winter window, but not many have hit the ground running.

Anwar El Ghazi has blown hot and cold, Junior Alonso is in and out of the team, Fares Bahlouli is yet to play under Bielsa, Ricardo Kishna didn’t make his loan permanent and Gabriel has been lent to Troyes.

The only player of any real significance during that mad trolley dash was Xeka of Braga. His reward for a solid half of the season? Sign him permanently only to sanction a loan move to Dijon on transfer deadline day.

A good start then, which only seemingly gets better.

They brought in nine players throughout the window, with many of them seen as players that they can develop and sell on. That’s something we’ve seen very successfully from Monaco in the past but the major difference is the amount of players coming through the door at once.

Most have been plonked straight into Bielsa’s set-up and so far, they are playing like a bunch of strangers. A strong opening day win masked it briefly before poor defeats to Strasbourg and Caen almost exacerbated it.

To build something sustainable, where you can allow young players to grow, you need to build a solid foundation. Some experienced heads, those that know the club well enough to pass it on and help the new lad settle into their new surroundings.

To that effect, Bielsa binned both Rio Mavuba and Marko Basa without any kind of fee in return. Whether either were particularly viable for a starting place any more can be questioned, but surely their Ligue 1 experience at a high level should have been worth more than a pat on the back for their services.

Adding to the loss of Xeka is the move of Naim Sliti, also to Dijon in a loan move. The former Red Star man did not impressed in a truly dire LOSC side last season, but he had shown enough promise in Ligue 2 to receive a fair crack this campaign, yet was also deemed surplus to requirements given the side’s newest acquisitions.

Allowing Sebastian Corchia to leave was written on the wall, the Frenchman had wanted to move this summer, but around €5m from a Champions League side seems like they were caught with their pants down, even if he had one year left on his contract. When his replacement Kévin Malcuit costs almost double that figure, alarm bells should be ringing.

However, to some they had won the window by beating a number of Premier League and Ligue 1 sides to Angers forward Nicolas Pepe. Possibly one of the most overhyped talents of the window, the Ivorian is yet to score or really do anything of note under the lights at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy.

But since they bought a forward, they needed to bin one. So out went last season’s top scorer Nicolas De Preville, to a league rival in Bordeaux, for a figure believed to be between €8m to €10m.

A joke, really.

A player that would run through walls for your club, who would even go in net despite looking like a small child in the goalmouth and yet that wasn’t enough. The only viable goal threat the team have had this season was touted around clubs on the final days of the transfer window like it meant nothing.

Even worse, De Preville revealed Lille had to sell in order to recoup some transfer fees. A club that earned €47m from transfer fees last season and with a reported big-money investment apparently needs to sell one of its best performers to keep it above some sort of established money threshold.

Seemingly shambolic.

Les Dogues fans will agree that this stinks of a lack of planning, a lack of thought and another scramble to assemble something for El Loco.

Unsurprisingly when it comes to the Argentine, temperatures appear to be at boiling point. His appointment was to be the start of a new dawn and if the performances of the start the season continues, don’t be surprised to see him to leave another club in the lurch sooner rather than later.

N.S.
 

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FEATURE | Marseille’s Champions Project did not make a dent in the summer transfer market, but it’s a start
Frank McCourt’s OM Champions Project: Perhaps not the fireworks everyone expected… but it’s a start.

There are two sets of thoughts on the transfer strategy adopted by Olympique de Marseille. The optimists, and the realists. It was perhaps easy (too easy?) to get caught up in the wild rhetoric about how much Marseille were ‘back’, how a sleeping giant would immediately stake a claim for the Ligue 1 title, and finally had the financial clout to match its gloried history, storied fanbase and wonderful stadium.

It didn’t help either that the club’s hierarchy were peddling an optimistic dream in France’s media over the course of the year that has elapsed since Frank McCourt agreed a deal to buy OM from Margarita Louis-Dreyfus – whose own ‘hands-off’ strategy left OM at the knees.

Statements such as McCourt’s willingness to spend €50m on a striker (if the opportunity presented itself) were met by virtual acclaim on the Twittosphere. It whetted the appetite of a notoriously hard-to-please fanbase whom, after suffering for the best part of 5 years were keen to live a plausible situation in which their club were able to spend serious money in search of a place back in Europe’s elite.

And so, after the early blow made by the signings of Morgan Sanson and Dimitri Payet in particular, the latter earning OM continental notoriety in a typically morose January window seemed to buy into the idea that McCourt and co. were ready to spend, and spend big.

The groundwork for the summer window was laid out with a rather impressive 5th place in Ligue 1. With former Barcelona Sporting Director Andoni Zubizarreta and his network of scouts ready, it would only be a matter of time before the ‘Champions Project’ would be in full swing.

Fast forward 91 days to the end of the summer 2017 window, there remains a distinct sense of unease by the OM support as to how the first test of McCourt’s plans have panned out. It’s not that the investment hasn’t materialised – Marseille have spent more on this window than in any other – but questions remain about the supposed strength of the players acquired.

There was to be no Giroud, no Koscielny, not even valuable young performers in the form of Moussa Dembélé, Joris Gnagnon or Issa Diop. What OM settled for was for a motley crew of players ranging from the surprising addition of Luiz Gustavo, a former treble winner with Bayern Munich, to the welcome additions of Jordan Amavi and Valere Germain, and the welcome (Steve Mandanda) and not-so-welcome (Lucas Ocampos) returns of familiar faces.

The main sticking point of the mercato had been two key positions up front and at the back, a search that initially had started upon McCourt’s acquisition of the club last year.

Indeed, the search lasted much longer than anyone hoped – right the way until the final hours of August 31. It mirrored OM’s farcical chase to find a partner for Michy Batshuayi in 2015 where, having failed to find a suitable player in the summer, put all of their eggs in the basket of Steven Fletcher on January 31.

This time around, it was the Greek striker Kostas Mitroglou who debarked on the south coast. And even then, it was only after Stevan Jovetic left OM on the altar to sign for Monaco on the final weekend of the window.

Mitroglou at 29 isn’t exactly the youngest sharpshooter around. Though, with a seemingly impressive goal record with Benfica and Olympiakos, it remains to be seen just how much of an upgrade he is on Gomis.

The centre-back question proved also to be a major issue for OM. Interesting names such as Koscielny were fantastical to say the least, while young valuable defenders from Ligue 1 such as Issa Diop and Joris Gnagnon were also spurned.

In the end, France international Adil Rami and former Monaco defender Aymen Abdennour joined the project. Each with considerable Ligue 1 experience, but by no means the show-stoppers the fans craved.

So yes, in all there can legitimately be some disappointment at how the summer has turned out in terms of how many first-choice players OM managed to convince. The optimists may not have had their ‘Icardi’ or ‘Koscielny’, but consider the following.

One, this has been a quite unique transfer window for all concerned. Fees have been inflated no end, and the fact that OM made a big splash in the January window to nab Dimitri Payet from West Ham would have surely alerted clubs across Europe should Zubizarreta and co. come knocking for their players.

Two, McCourt’s investment – while welcome, is not infinite. The American made it clear that his initial plan was to spend €200m of his own money over 4 years – i.e. the first 8 transfer windows of his reign. In just 2, OM have dispensed just over €100m. This, from one individual who is not backed by a sovereign wealth fund unlike in the capital. McCourt has invested, but only time will tell if the sporting cell of the club has used that wisely.

Three. The project is long-term, not short. OM have built a squad that is widely thought to be capable of finishing in a Champions League position. If that goal is not met this season, there remains some investment in the budget to ultimately reach that goal.

Conversely, if OM do reach the Champions’ League group stage next season, McCourt’s personal investment would take a back seat to the financial riches that group stage participation promises. In the latter scenario, OM could conceivably spend north of €100m next summer, thereby beginning a cycle in which the team can qualify for the UCL year-on-year, as was the case between 2007-12.

Spending big from the off is unwise. Had McCourt spent the vast majority of his €200m investment this summer, and the club missed out on the top 3 – it might’ve marked to a return to the Margarita Louis Dreyfus days of selling assets to raise funds as the owner was unwilling to commit any more funds.

Take AC Milan, another sleeping giant in a similar position for example. The Rossoneri have no doubt spent big to return to the Champions League with the acquisitions of Leonardo Bonucci, André Silva, Franck Kessié, Hakan Calhanoglu among others via the influx of dubious Chinese money and rumours of significant financial risk if they were to miss out on their goal. Marseille on the other hand, have been more risk-averse in this scenario.

Yes, it’s largely, not the players that OM would have wanted, but it is – or it should be enough for the first stage of the ‘Champions Project’ – i.e. to get back into the Champions League. On paper, it should be the 3rd strongest squad in Ligue 1.

The task of steering OM towards their goal now lies at the hands of Rudi Garcia, whose recent coaching has left a lot to be desired. A 6-1 drubbing at the hands of the champions last weekend has only heightened concerns that OM fans were sold a dream.

However, as one fan put to me on Twitter recently, OM must crawl before they can walk. Many would do well to remember that.

M.A.
 

Hojoon

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I missed the match but watching the highlights, Sidibe :lol: Great offensively but he can singlehandedly lose you games.
 

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Malcom started brightly against Toulouse. However, the first half ended up being a frustrating performance from him overall, and due to Malcom not being at the races, Bordeaux are really suffering, and should really be losing. Hopefully, Malcom can turn it around in the second half
 

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Malcom started brightly against Toulouse. However, the first half ended up being a frustrating performance from him overall, and due to Malcom not being at the races, Bordeaux are really suffering, and should really be losing. Hopefully, Malcom can turn it around in the second half
The best moment for Bordeaux so far orchestrated by Malcom who found himself in a 1v1 after some nice one touch passes from his teammates, he skips past his man as if he's a training cone, and then makes a nicely weighted pass to his teammate arriving in the box, who should've made a cut back.
 

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The best moment for Bordeaux so far orchestrated by Malcom who found himself in a 1v1 after some nice one touch passes from his teammates, he skips past his man as if he's a training cone, and then makes a nicely weighted pass to his teammate arriving in the box, who should've made a cut back.
Malcom is an incredible talent
 

liamp

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Somebody's going to buy Malcom for 70-100m next summer.
 

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Tonight: Lo Celso or Draxler to replace Verratti

 

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Dmitry Rybolovlev accused of influencing police officers and members of the Monaco justice department

Yesterday, Le Monde revealed details about a very troublesome affair for AS Monaco’s owner, Dmitry Rybolovlev, suspected of having influenced certain police officers and magistrates of the Principality.

Often questioned in the press for his proximity to Dmitry Rybolovlev, the director of Judicial services, Philippe Narmino, very suddenly, announced his retirement yesterday. It is in regards to a sudden development in the fraud case concerning the majority shareholder and ASM president versus Swiss art merchant, Yves Bouvier, which was reported by many outlets during these last few weeks.

It is still too early to say what the consequences of this news item will be for the current French champions or on the relationship between the Principality and the Russian businessman (50 years old), who has already had issues with the law*. This situation appears to involve two of the main AS Monaco executives: the club’s owner but also Tetiana Bersheda, the billionaire’s lawyer, who has an advisory role at the club.

*In Russia in 1996, he was accused of the murder of the general director of a company of which he owned 40% of its shares. He was imprisoned for many months, before having his name cleared in 1998, with the accuser dropping accusations.

Le Monde’s article which was published today, preceded Philippe Narmino’s departure, and described the relationship between the former Director of Judicial Services and his wife with Rybolovlev as being on “the best of terms.” The latter is said to have invited the couple to his chalet in Gstaad in January 2015. Many of their telephone exchanges published in Le Monde also suggest that there were dealings between Tetiana Bersheda and the head of the Judicial Monegasque police, as well as his assistant, in particular at the time of Yves Bouvier’s arrest in 2015, accused of art fraud my Mr Rybolovlev. The AS Monaco president was accused of having links with multiple members of the police and Monegasque judicial institution.

The story dates from two years back, when Rybolovlev accused Bouvier of having overcharged him for the purchase of multiple art pieces for a fee of €1bn. The latter was charged by the Monegasque justice for fraud and complicity in money laundering. He was then stopped by police while on the way to Rybolovlev’s apartment in Monaco, after the latter had contacted him. Bouvier is certain that the Russia businessman has agents amongst the police and the judicial authorities, who tricked him. According to Le Monde, the content of multiple text message exchanges from Bersheda’s phone suggests that the lawyer was the instigator for the trap set up for Bouvier, with the aid of the Monaco police.

The Minister of Justice in the Principality, Narmino (64 years old) appears as a strong supporter of the Rybolovlev camp, when one reads the text messages published by the French newspaper. “On our behalf, we would like to thank Dmitri for his great hospitality, and once again extend our friendship and congratulate him on such a beautiful residence in Gstaad,” said Narmine’s wife in a text message to Bersheda transcribed in Le Monde. Soon after this stay, Bouvier was stopped following an order from the Monegasque justice.

When interviewed by Le Monde, Bouvier’s advisor, Mr. Francis Szpiner made big accusations saying, “I have always said that Mr. Rybolovlev befriended the Monegasque justice for his personal gain. Hereafter, we have proof that the police, the prosecutor and the minister of justice did everything to place together a group of supposed criminals in order to pass this off as a fraud case in the eye of the judge. I ask that the Keeper of the Seals lead an investigation into the Magistrate’s conduct, and that the minister of the interior investigates the situation regarding French police assigned in Monaco.”

This was right before Normina’s retirement announcement, who was praised by Prince Albert as a “great servant to the state”.

Y.H.
 

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Kingsley Coman ordered to pay €5000 over domestic violence case

French winger Kingsley Coman was today ordered by a French judge to pay €5000 in damages of assaulting his former girlfriend.

Coman, who accepted his guilt almost immediately, will also cover her legal co
 

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FEATURE | For how much longer will Djibril Sidibé get away with abject & fatal defensive errors?
Monaco were expecting to lose a full back this summer. Crucial to their success, both Benjamin Mendy and Djibril Sidibé marauded along their respective touchlines throughout last season. Sidibé had arrived from Lille last summer for €13m, a deal that reportedly included agreement allowing the player to leave the following off-season should Monaco perform well. However, despite some interest, most notably from Arsenal, it was Mendy who eventually joined Manchester City for £51m. Sidibé’s errant defensive display in Monaco’s 4-0 drubbing at Nice this weekend highlights why.

In a number ways, Sidibé is the quintessential modern full-back. He boasts pace, a good touch, decent crossing ability and the extensive stamina needed to forage up and down his flank for 90 minutes. Add to this a bullish physique and even the ability to add his name to the scoresheet once in a while equals a sizeable talent with a variety of ways to affect the game. These weapons were used repeatedly by Leonardo Jardim last season as Sidibé often stood out with Monaco often in the ascendancy, adding 5 assists in Ligue 1, the same as Marco Verratti.

However, in instances of sustained pressure Sidibé was regularly rumbled when glaring defensive blind spots in his positional play and lack of concentration were exposed, traits exploited by Mario Balotelli for Nice’s third goal on Saturday afternoon. Nice, as they did repeatedly, hit Monaco with an incisive counter. Arnaud Souquet burst down the Monaco left and easily outpaced left back Jorge to fire a low cross across the face goal, in front of centre backs Jemerson and Kamil Glik, who were holding a decent enough line, for Balotelli to stroll in at the far post to tap home. Sidibé, at right back (often used at left back too, especially at Lille) had left the Italian to jog into a position of danger completely unchecked, despite the run being a frustratingly obvious one.

Lapses in concentration are not unforgivable but Sidibé is a repeated offender of this easily eradicated mistake. He failed to track Adrien Rabiot’s run in the Trophée des Champions, whose resulting header won the game while Mario Mandzukic was left to ghost in at Subasic’s far post during Monaco’s Champions League semifinal second leg with Juventus to effectively end the tie unchallenged. Although in that particular instance Sidibé was deployed at wing back the principle remains the same and Sidibé’s slow reactions remain baffling as does the sheer volume of examples of his lack of defensive rigour, most often from crosses. Leroy Sané and John Stones were both beneficiaries during the previous round.

Rash and often reckless decision-making can prove equally as destructive. Another swift Nice counter on Saturday afternoon, utilising the pace of Allan Saint-Maximin and Alassane Pléa, dragged Sidibé out of position and he in turn inexplicably dragged down Balotelli from a resulting cross to concede a needless penalty as early as the 5 minute, the Nice forward posing relatively little danger at the time.

Manhandling Julian Draxler in Paris last season to give away a late penalty, a game which Monaco only just escaped with a point having deserved more, being another prime example of careless play born out of his inability to effective track his man. Worryingly for Leonardo Jardim these examples are often drawn from pivotal games where one such error can prove costly.

This is not to say Sidibé is completely devoid of defensive ability. His strength and pace make him far more of challenge in one on one situations in full-back areas than most of his peers as his build and height, standing at 6 foot, is traditionally more suited to a center back or even a central midfielder. Perhaps a midfield berth could be an option for Jardim in the future, Sidibé showed with his cute finish and uncharacteristic composure in the Trophée des Champions this season that he can be dangerous from wide on the right, playing ahead of Almamy Touré when fit.

Monaco find themselves in an even Champions’ League group alongside Besiktas, Porto and RB Leipzig with Les Monegasques opening their campaign with a trip to Germany on Wednesday night, a game that could resemble the encounter with Nice in a number of ways. Meaning Sidibé, should he line up at full back, could be under pressure once more. Nice’s switch to 4-4-2 and the speed on the counter that caused Monaco’s back four so many issues could be mirrored by RBL with Timo Werner and Yussuf Poulsen flanked by Marcel Sabitzer and Emil Forsberg.

A fluid front four supported by the dynamic Naby Keita that will be difficult to track in a game that could well be as open as the first half in Nice with the Monaco defence likely to be put repeatedly under pressure on more, a combination that has exposed Sidibé’s defensive frailties before.

It can’t be overlooked that Sidibé is often a key player for Monaco and has recently broken into the French national side but after the display against Nice, it may be time for Leonardo Jardim to sure up his back four and move Sidibé into midfield.

Although Monaco have, before Saturday, proved they could live without Silva, Bakayoko and Mbappé, their departures mean that, for now, Monaco can’t counterpunch as effectively or as often as they did last season and a slightly more pragmatic approach could be employed for now, allowing a new team time to settle.

Nevertheless, Jardim, renowned for improving his players, has some way to go if he is to mould his marauding right back into the calm, composed and consistent defender that Monaco need and that bigger clubs are looking for.

A.W.