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Browsing: Ligue
“Itâ€s been a bit of a crazy week,†said Rennes manager Habib Beye after his teamâ€s 2-2 draw with Toulouse on Wednesday night. After a run of five games without a win, the former Newcastle and Aston Villa player did not know if he would be in charge for the game – his sacking was even hastily announced in some places – but he was in the dugout in Toulouse and is still holding on.
“The momentum at the club isnâ€t good and finances are relatively fragile, which puts pressure on us,†said the clubâ€s president, Arnaud Pouille, after the game before announcing that the manager would stay. “We met with the staff on Monday to ask them whether they still had the energy to keep going, and they proved it tonight.â€
Frustratingly for Beye, his team let a 2-0 lead slip and missed the chance to climb back into the top half of Ligue 1. The manager revealed before the match that the prospect of his dismissal had been “on the table†at the start of the week. “We arrived on Monday morning and led the training session. At one point, things were meant to come to an end but itâ€s going on because some people think we still have the energy to turn things around.†The former Senegal international went on to thank the clubâ€s owner, François-Henri Pinault, for his support.
Rennes have been owned by the Pinault family since 1998. Their $25bn wealth and a strong record of player sales have afforded the club some leeway in the transfer market. But, despite regularly reaching the nine-figure mark in recent campaigns, they have failed to rise above mid-table. Successive coaches (five in two seasons, to be precise) have struggled to string together consistent runs, with Beyeâ€s predecessor Jorge Sampaoli only lasting two months before he was sacked.
Habib Beye is under pressure at Rennes after a string of bad results. Photograph: Sebastien Salom-Gomis/AFP/Getty Images
The perpetual instability is present at all levels of the club; Rennes have gone through four presidents and three sporting directors since 2020. It looked as if they might join the pack chasing Paris Saint-Germain in 2019, when they won the Coupe de France and played in the latter stages of the Europa League. But the constant reshuffles and scattergun transfer policy over the last five years have seen the club fail to capitalise on the momentum created during Julien Stéphanâ€s first spell in charge.
The squad is hardly short of experience. In January, Pouille signed Brice Samba and Séko Fofana, both of whom previously played for his former club Lens. Quentin Merlin and Valentin Rongier arrived from Marseille in July, with the promising Angers forward Estéban Lepaul joining them late in the window. The club also added Swiss international striker Breel Embolo, and Mahdi Camara and Lilian Brassier – two standouts in Brestâ€s unlikely title charge two years ago.
Itâ€s an impressive cast of established names but they have not coalesced into a cohesive unit. Fofana and Ludovic Blas were notably left out of the squad entirely on Wednesday, an audacious call from Beye given his job was on the line. Dropping two senior members of the squad suggests his backing in the dressing room is far from unanimous. This is perhaps the most surprising aspect of Beyeâ€s struggles in his first top-flight job, given the charismatic man-management that was a hallmark of his success with Red Star a few years ago.
A close look at Rennes†results hardly makes a favourable case for the manager, even if the chronic instability at Roazhon Park hardly makes for ideal conditions. A 4-0 derby defeat to Lorient on the opening weekend of the season set a negative tone and their sole win since then came against a Lyon team who were down to 10 men. Beye has switched between different tactical setups in an attempt to inspire a revival, to no avail.
With in-form Strasbourg coming to town on Saturday, an immediate turnaround in results seems unlikely. Whether or not Beye remains in charge for the rest of the campaign, itâ€s clear that Rennes†issues also lie at a deeper, structural level. To finally make the most of their resources (which, by Ligue 1 standards, are impressive), they need a coherent long-term plan under a clearly defined hierarchy.
Quick GuideLigue 1 resultsShow
Le Havre 1-0 Brest
Lorient 1-1 PSG
Metz 2-0 Lens
Nice 2-0 Lille
Marseille 2-2 Angers
Nantes 3-5 Monaco
Paris FC 3-3 Lyon
Strasbourg 3-0 Auxerre
Toulouse 2-2 Rennes
Thank you for your feedback.
Talking points
PSG dropped points for the third time this month, although results elsewhere meant their 1-1 draw in Lorient was enough to cling on to top spot. The champions†stuttering form is partly due to an injury crisis, which is beginning to subside even if Désiré Doué came off with a thigh injury in Brittany. In any case, Luis Enriqueâ€s men are not short of immediate challengers this season, with only two points separating the top six clubs after 10 matches.
Strasbourg striker JoaquÃn Panichelli extended his lead in the race for the Golden Boot on Wednesday, scoring his ninth goal of the season in a 3-0 win over Auxerre. The Argentinian, who was signed in the summer after a 20-goal haul in Spainâ€s second tier for CD Mirandés, has taken Ligue 1 by storm with his imposing frame, astute movement and clinical finishing. The 23-year-old has emerged as the focal point of Liam Roseniorâ€s team just as they prepare to say goodbye to Emanuel Emegha, who will join Chelsea at the end of the season. With a place in the Champions League seeming more and more likely, Strasbourg fans will be hoping Panichelli stays in France a little longer before the seemingly inevitable move across the Channel.
This is an article by Get French Football News
What if correlation didimply causation? The “best season†of Ineosâ€s ownership of Nice correlated with Sir Jim Ratcliffe and co being forcibly distanced from the club due to Uefa regulations. “They have been so much better without our interference,†admitted Ratcliffe last season, as Niceachieved their highest league finish since 2017. With Nice and Manchester United no longer competing in the same European competition, Ineos regained operational control of the French club at the start of the summer and have only corroborated Ratcliffeâ€s previous assertion.
Already out of the Champions League at the first hurdle having been outplayed by Benfica in the qualifiers at the start of August, Nice have lost three of their first six games in Ligue 1 as well as losing their Europa League opener against Roma last Wednesday. “We canâ€t say that weâ€re swimming in joy and confidence,†said the clubâ€s manager, Franck Haise, before their 1-1 draw against newly promoted Paris FC on Sunday.
Nice are swimming in troubled waters. Injuries have contributed to their sub-standard start. Although, when you are reliant on 41-year-old Dante and the eternally injured Tanguy Ndombélé to make up the numbers, the problem is also in squad building. This is where Niceâ€s main issue currently lies. Sporting director Florian Maurice described the summer transfer window as “unpleasantâ€. From an accountancy perspective, the picture is rosy; they made €108m from player sales, the third-highest figure in Ligue 1. But there was not been significant reinvestment and the signings they did make are not paying off.
A third of Niceâ€s budget was spent on Isak Jansson, who looks ill-suited to the demands of Ligue 1, and was not exactly prolific at Rapid Vienna either; Yehvann Diouf looks a shadow of the goalkeeper he was at Reims last season; Kevin Carlos is yet to score his first goal; and Salis Abdul Samed, who is trying to get his career back on track following an injury-hit spell at Sunderland last time around, is short of confidence.
“We expect more,†said Haise last week. “That goes for other players too; it isnâ€t just the signings.†But the new arrivals are failing to fill the voids, the largest of which was created by the departures of Evann Guessand and Gaëtan Laborde, Niceâ€s top two goalscorers last season. Between the ineffective Jansson, the struggling Carlos and Terem Moffi, whose prolific form for Lorient back in 2022 now looks to have been a flash in the pan, it is difficult to see where the goals are coming from.
Isak Jansson has not exactly lit up Nice this season. Photograph: Manon Cruz/Reuters
In search of solutions in the transfer window, Maurice turned to Manchester United but did not receive any help. “We envisaged things like asking them to sign a player and then loaning us back, but their priority was selling,†said Niceâ€s sporting director. Nice have been treated with a level of ambivalence that would make BlueCo-owned Strasbourg green with envy. “I donâ€t think that [the link between Chelsea and Strasbourg] is Manchester Unitedâ€s model,†said Maurice. Between Nice and Strasbourg, the realities of multi-club ownership are starkly different.
It wasnâ€t just movement of players that Nice sought over the summer – it was clarity. There has been a lack of communication from the owners about their continued commitment to the club, amid reports that the investment bank Lazard has been tasked with finding a buyer. The silence has been a source of frustration, as Haise admitted earlier this season. “Lots of us are waiting for the owners to speak,†said the manager, who conceded that he was “annoyed†by Ratcliffeâ€s disparaging comments about the club last season. Ratcliffe made a rare appearance at the Allianz Riviera on Wednesday to watch Nice lose 2-1 to Roma in the Europa League, although he was not sitting alongside Maurice and CEO Fabrice Bocquet in the stands.
Ratcliffeâ€s controversial assertion that Niceâ€s standard of football is “not high enough for me to get excited†perhaps now has relevance, unlike last season, when the comment was originally made. The untouchable Haise is cobbling together the elements as best as he can, although he says he is “no magician†and “can understand the concerns†of the fans.
Their concerns are certainly warranted. Nice are 12th in the 18-team league after games against Toulouse, Auxerre, Le Havre, Nantes, Brest and Paris FC. “It is insufficient,†said Haise on Sunday. “Two wins, one draw and three losses against teams that donâ€t often play at the top of the table. We expect better, but it is our reality. We have to up our level. We know that the level of opponents will also increase.â€
In their next four games they play Monaco, Lyon, Lille and PSG, all of whom are in the top six. For a club that is questioning its long-term fate, there are plenty of issues to address in the short term, but it may be decisions made in the recent past, by Ineos and the wider management at Nice, that leave their ambitions for European qualification for next season already in peril.
Quick GuideLigue 1 resultsShow
Nice 1-1 Paris FC
Angers 0-2 Brest
Lille 0-1 Lyon
Metz 0-0 Le Havre
Rennes 0-0 Lens
Lorient 3-1 Monaco
Toulouse 2-2 Nantes
PSG 2-0 Auxerre
Strasbourg 1-2 Marseille
Thank you for your feedback.
Talking points
After defeat in Le Classique,PSG returned to winning ways and regained top spot in Ligue 1 thanks to a comfortable 2-0 win over Auxerre. However, it was yet another victory that came at a cost, with Vitinha and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia withdrawn before half-time. Both are now doubts to face Barcelona on Wednesday. Injuries are seemingly contagious at Le Campusthis season – no doubt symptomatic of an extended season and curtailed pre-season. Ousmane Dembélé, Désiré Doué, João Neves, Fabián Ruiz and Marquinhos are also on the sidelines. A second-string PSG side can suffice in Ligue 1; it may be a different story in Barcelona.
Adi Hütter has expressed “dissatisfaction†after every Monaco performance this season. The Austrian concedes that his annoyance is “paradoxical†given that, going into this weekendâ€s action, his team were top of Ligue 1. “It is not good enough,†he said after a 5-2 win over Metz last week. There was neither the performance nor the result on Saturday, when they lost 3-1 to Lorient. Thilo Kehrer was harshly sent off in the first half, hobbling a team that was already struggling with injuries. Every first-team midfielder (Lamine Camara, Denis Zakaria, Aleksandr Golovin, Aladji Bamba and Paul Pogba) is currently unavailable due to injury or lack of fitness. But the poor performances preceded those absences, and the concern before they face Manchester City on Wednesday is justified.
This is an article by Get French Football News
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