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Ligue 1 targets

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Buddha

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Seeing as we're being linked with a bunch of them...
Henry V lead England to a famous victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415 - and now it seems that Liverpool are looking to renew Anglo-French tensions by raiding their counterparts on the other side of the Channel for no fewer than seven players this January.

But who are these wine-swilling, frog eating connoisseurs of all things continental? Can they cut the (dijon) mustard? Or are they all onion and garlic? Would they be best served staying where they are, or with a side order of Foie Gras?

MirrorFootball's Chris Bloor has the answers.

1) Eden Hazard (Lille)
The Belgian international may only be 19 years of age, but he's already been part of their first team set-up for three years. With over 80 league appearances under his belt, and 11 goals to boot, Hazard's a proven talent. His success at club level was rewarded with an international call-up in November 2008 - when Eden was still only 17 years old. He was also named in last season's Ligue 1 team of the year, alongside the likes of Marouane Chamakh and Yoann Gourcuff.

Primarily used as a winger, Hazard's playing style has drawn comparisons with Barcelona's Lionel Messi. And while he could provide that creative spark that Liverpool's performances have largely been devoid of so far, his tender age might be of concern.
Sacre Rouge rating: 7/10

2) Gervinho (Lille)
Born in the Cote D'Ivoire, Gervinho spent two years in Belgium with Beveren before moving to Le Mans in 2007. An approach from Arsenal was reportedly knocked back in 2008 but the striker joined Lille a year later, for whom he's netted 17 times in only 40 appearances.

The long-haired African caught many people's attention in this summer's World Cup where he was named man of the match against Portugal. And Gervinho's indubitable quality in front of goal could see him become the perfect partner for an often isolated Fernando Torres, and at 23-years-old he could be the investment that Liverpool's new owners are looking for.
Sacre Rouge rating: 8/10

3) Adil Rami (Lille)
Since being snatched from France's fourth division in 2007, this 6'3" French defender of Moroccan descent has gone on to make over a hundred appearances for Lille and has even broken into the national squad, starting in Les Bleus' previous five games - including their 2-1 victory over England.

Despite his humble beginnings, Rami is evolving into a world class performer. And following the recent long-term injury to Jamie Carragher, he might provide the defensive solidity that Anfield is craving. That said, it's unlikely Lille will allow three of their star players to depart next January, so something somewhere has to give.
Sacre Rouge rating: 5/10

4) Sylvain Marveaux (Rennes)
Question marks remain over whether this slender-framed, 24-year-old attacking midfielder will cope with the physicality of the Premier League. However, Marveaux's form last season has seen many of Europe's biggest clubs stand up and pay attention. In 38 games he netted 12 times and provided five assists.

The Rennes ace still hasn't broken into the French national squad, though, and what with the recent form of Ryan Babel and Joe Cole currently returning to fitness, it's hard to see what he'd realistically bring to Liverpool's table.
Sacre Rouge rating: 2/10

5) Yann M'Vila (Rennes)
Another of France's rising stars, this 20 year-old defensive midfielder captained the France U-19 side and has made five appearances for the seniors. M'Vila has also made waves domestically, notching up over 40 appearances since making his first-team debut for Rennes in 2009.

Liverpool have struggled to fill the vacuum left by Javier Mascherano, and M'Vila's physical and technical ability would give their more attack minded players licence to play the expansive football that fans crave. Providing Liverpool are of the opinion that if you're good enough, you're old enough, then M'Vilia could be a goer.
Sacre Rouge rating: 9/10

6) Rod Fanni (Rennes)
A move for Fanni is entirely dependent on the relationship between Roy Hodgson and Glen Johnson. Having only recently spent a whopping £17.5 million on a right-back, it seems unthinkable that Liverpool swould pend more on the same position when there are so many holes elsewhere. However, if the England defender's position is untenable, as some have suggested, then Liverpool will certainly be in the market for a replacement.

Experience is key, as whoever arrives will need to slot right in. The 29 year-old Fanni, has already played at the highest level both in Europe and internationally, and would therefore tick all the boxes. And he'd almost be worth signing for the comedy chant potential alone.
Sacre Rouge rating: 7/10

7) Dimitri Payet (Nantes)
Another attack-minded midfielder, the 23-year old Payet has recently replaced Florent Malouda in the friendly victory against England at Wembley. He's already played over 130 games in Ligue 1, and scored close to 20 goals in the process. A midfielder producing this sort of return could free Gerrard from his scoring burden and allow him to dominate the middle of the park instead. Payet has European experience and started this campaign with a superb hat-trick against Lens. If Liveprool can strike a deal then Payet could be the one to mak

Read more: http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/opinion/blogs/football-spy/Liverpool-transfer-special-Eden-Hazard-Gervinho-Adil-Rami-Sylvain-Marveaux-Yann-M-Vila-Rod-Fanni-Dimitri-Payet-Which-of-the-seven-linked-Ligue-1-stars-will-Roy-Hodgson-sign-in-January-article645565.html#ixzz17VWm6FmU
 
Interesting read. I'd happily take half of them, but can't see it happening. Rami, m'vila, hazard would do me. Although I couldn't overly knock back any of them as we're shit for depth
 
[quote author=Buddha link=topic=43091.msg1230422#msg1230422 date=1291797582]
7) Dimitri Payet (Nantes)
He's already played over 130 games in Ligue 1, and scored close to 20 goals in the process.

130 games in Ligue 1, and scored close to 20 goals in the process.

130 games 20 goals

20 goals
[/quote]

...
 
[quote author=IGotALuvlyBunchOfCoconuts link=topic=43091.msg1230450#msg1230450 date=1291802919]
[quote author=Buddha link=topic=43091.msg1230422#msg1230422 date=1291797582]
7) Dimitri Payet (Nantes)
He's already played over 130 games in Ligue 1, and scored close to 20 goals in the process.

130 games in Ligue 1, and scored close to 20 goals in the process.

130 games 20 goals

20 goals
[/quote]

...
[/quote]

Dimitri Payet is with St Etienne, not Nantes. The reporter needs to work harder. 😛

Given that Nantes were a bottom half side when he was with them and how St Etienne flirted with relegation in previous season, perhaps its understandable as a attacking midfielder he didn't chip in as many goals. Been on form this season though, with 8 in 16. 🙂
 
Good read.

I'm still not convinced that we're struggling to 'fill the vacuum' after Masher though.

When fielding a 4-2-2 it's even more pivotal that your midfielders can pass the ball around, move it with pace and hold up possession and that's not quite the abilities Masher's well-known for.

I know I'll probably get a lot of stick for this but we'd probably been struggling more with the current personal against say Villa with either Lucas or Raul making way for Masher in the weekend. Well, definitely so had it been Raul and perhaps even had it been the often criticized Hungarian-looking Brazilian.

I believe we've been somewhat blinded by Mashers extreme work-ethics, splendid tackles and never-ending harrassing of opponents that we've actually forgot that there's another way to address the game in central midfield.

I had hopes that Poulsen could perhaps give us something different in terms of possession and passing, something that hasn't exactly come true however. That said with Raul introduced and Lucas' rapid improvements we've actually seen exactly this change of style in the middle of the park (in a few positive games) and for what it's worth I'm not hoping for us to by someone Masher-like really.

This is not a dig at M'Vila as I've never seen him play. I just hope he's a different type of player than Masher really should we indeed buy him. More Busquets/Khadira-like if you may.
 
That sounds like you're suggesting a move away from a destroyer type to one thats more attacking?

With maybe Lucas as box-to-box and Ming and Gerrard in front?

I think it's something to try but I don't know if we have enough protection on the flanks for that.

What kind of formation would we try?
 
[quote author=LeTallecWiz link=topic=43091.msg1230445#msg1230445 date=1291802417]
M'Vila and Hazard please.
[/quote]

x2
 
[quote author=Avmenon link=topic=43091.msg1230515#msg1230515 date=1291809679]
That sounds like you're suggesting a move away from a destroyer type to one thats more attacking?

With maybe Lucas as box-to-box and Ming and Gerrard in front?

I think it's something to try but I don't know if we have enough protection on the flanks for that.

What kind of formation would we try?
[/quote]
4-2-2 suits midfielders like Lucas and Raul better than say 4-3-3 where a holding defensive midfielder like Masher would be more handy even though I know it's difficult to generalize on the concepts of numbers and formations.

With a 4-3-3 formation however you're pushing your wings further upfield hence asking your defensive midfielder to be less involved in attack. Masher's build for the engineroom in a 4-3-3 formation. Gerrard is pretty much build for the AM in that formation too. And Kuyt for the wing. etc.

In a more standard 4-2-2 formation you'll keep your wingers operating a little less forward and expect more from your two central midfielders when it comes to your attacking game. You'd then be rather limited if you only had players like Masher to chose from. In my opinion.
 
[quote author=KHL link=topic=43091.msg1230537#msg1230537 date=1291813534]
[quote author=Avmenon link=topic=43091.msg1230515#msg1230515 date=1291809679]
That sounds like you're suggesting a move away from a destroyer type to one thats more attacking?

With maybe Lucas as box-to-box and Ming and Gerrard in front?

I think it's something to try but I don't know if we have enough protection on the flanks for that.

What kind of formation would we try?
[/quote]
4-2-2 suits midfielders like Lucas and Raul better than say 4-3-3 where a holding defensive midfielder like Masher would be more handy even though I know it's difficult to generalize on the concepts of numbers and formations.

With a 4-3-3 formation however you're pushing your wings further upfield hence asking your defensive midfielder to be less involved in attack. Masher's build for the engineroom in a 4-3-3 formation. Gerrard is pretty much build for the AM in that formation too. And Kuyt for the wing. etc.

In a more standard 4-2-2 formation you'll keep your wingers operating a little less forward and expect more from your two central midfielders when it comes to your attacking game. You'd then be rather limited if you only had players like Masher to chose from. In my opinion.
[/quote]

Such is the quality of our wingers these days it does sometimes feel we are playing 4-2-2.
 
[quote author=Akakabooto link=topic=43091.msg1230540#msg1230540 date=1291813742]
[quote author=KHL link=topic=43091.msg1230537#msg1230537 date=1291813534]
[quote author=Avmenon link=topic=43091.msg1230515#msg1230515 date=1291809679]
That sounds like you're suggesting a move away from a destroyer type to one thats more attacking?

With maybe Lucas as box-to-box and Ming and Gerrard in front?

I think it's something to try but I don't know if we have enough protection on the flanks for that.

What kind of formation would we try?
[/quote]
4-2-2 suits midfielders like Lucas and Raul better than say 4-3-3 where a holding defensive midfielder like Masher would be more handy even though I know it's difficult to generalize on the concepts of numbers and formations.

With a 4-3-3 formation however you're pushing your wings further upfield hence asking your defensive midfielder to be less involved in attack. Masher's build for the engineroom in a 4-3-3 formation. Gerrard is pretty much build for the AM in that formation too. And Kuyt for the wing. etc.

In a more standard 4-2-2 formation you'll keep your wingers operating a little less forward and expect more from your two central midfielders when it comes to your attacking game. You'd then be rather limited if you only had players like Masher to chose from. In my opinion.
[/quote]

Such is the quality of our wingers these days it does sometimes feel we are playing 4-2-2.
[/quote]
Haha.. sad but good point.

Maxi has been better of late though and HOPEFULLY we're buying a wing-ace like Hazard come January.
 
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