The Out-Of-Contract Players Who Should Interest Premier League Clubs

 Expect to see a few of these players in England next season. Composite: AP; Reuters; AFP/Getty; Bongarts/Getty
Expect to see a few of these players in England next season. Composite: AP; Reuters; AFP/Getty; Bongarts/Getty
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The Out-Of-Contract Players Who Should Interest Premier League Clubs

 Expect to see a few of these players in England next season. Composite: AP; Reuters; AFP/Getty; Bongarts/Getty
Expect to see a few of these players in England next season. Composite: AP; Reuters; AFP/Getty; Bongarts/Getty

Given the money in the game these days, allowing a valuable player’s contract to run down to expiry never sits well with any fans. But one club’s loss is always another’s gain. Aaron Ramsey has already agreed a deal with Juventus on a free transfer and Ander Herrera is expected to join PSG for nothing after his departure from Manchester United. With Vincent Kompany the latest player to leave England on a free, here are a few players who could move in the opposite direction when their current deals expire.

Adrien Rabiot, Paris Saint-Germain

Adrien Rabiot was expected to join Barcelona this summer but his dream move looks increasingly unlikely after the club agreed a £65m deal for Frenkie de Jong. Having cut ties with PSG, the 24-year-old midfielder is very much up for grabs.

Whoever signs Rabiot will do so knowing there are question marks about his attitude. He has been fined and suspended by PSG for various misdemeanours, including turning up late for training, being pictured in a nightclub a few hours after a game and liking a social media post from Patrice Evra that celebrated Manchester United’s win over PSG in the Champions League.

That said, there are no doubts about the technical quality of a player whose best years are still ahead of him. He was in fine form at the start of the season but, following a dispute over his current deal – with Rabiot and his agent suggesting his wages should fall in line with the club’s top earners – the Frenchman has not played a single minute in 2019.

At his best, he is one of the most elegant passers in the game, as shown by his pass accuracy of 93.1% in his 14 Ligue 1 appearances this season. It will take a club with deep pockets to match the midfielder’s wage demands, but a young player of Rabiot’s quality rarely becomes available on a free transfer.

Yacine Brahimi, Porto

Yacine Brahimi has long been touted with an exit from Porto and, having run down his contract, he will surely make that move this summer. The Algeria winger will have no shortage of suitors. He did turn 29 earlier this year, but he shows no signs of slowing down; Brahimi hit double figures for league goals for the first time in his career this season.

Brahimi is renowned for his dazzling skills – he completed more dribbles than any other player in Portugal this season (84) – and his ability to isolate and beat defenders makes him a true entertainer. Having proven himself on the biggest stage in the Champions League over the last five years, he would be an astute signing for most clubs preparing for next season’s tournament.

Mario Balotelli, Marseille

Rabiot has a reputation for behavioural problems, but he has some way to go before he reaches Balotelli levels of “bad boy” status. There is a reason Balotelli doesn’t stick around at clubs for too long and it has little to do with his ability on the pitch.

Balotelli joined Nice on a free transfer in August 2016 and was excellent in his first two seasons on the Cote d’Azur but, once again, he found himself leaving a club in unceremonious fashion. At the start of this season, he turned up late and out of shape, prompting Nice manager Patrick Vieira to say: “When it comes to Mario, I want to answer back, or just slam him up against the wall or leave him hanging by his collar on the coat rack, but I can’t, as I’m no longer a player.”

With his relationship at Nice broken, Balotelli terminated his contract and signed for Marseille in January. The move has done him well. Over the last few months, Balotelli has once again shown that he can still be an extremely useful goalscorer. He has scored eight goals in 14 league appearances for Marseille, taking his tally to 39 in Ligue 1 since he moved to France in 2016.

The hot-headed striker will always be a risk, but he has delivered (in the short term at least) at almost every club – with the exception of Liverpool – he has represented.

Max Kruse, Wolfsburg

Not too long ago Max Kruse looked like Germany’s best option to lead their attack, but things fell apart for the striker in the build-up to Euro 2016. He was admonished for eating too much Nutella and fined £20,000 for leaving £60,000 of poker winnings in the back of a taxi, which led Joachim Löw to drop him from the national team for “acting unprofessionally”. In truth, if the Germany squad was picked on merit, Kruse should be given an international recall, but his more pressing issue is deciding where his future lies at club level.

The versatile forward had a direct hand in 20 Bundesliga goals for Werder Bremen this season, scoring 11 and assisting nine. He flourished when deployed behind a lone striker in particular and his creativity and vision would be a real asset to a number of Premier League teams.

Bayern Munich are believed to be weighing up an offer to Kruse and Liverpool have also been linked with the player. He can be inconsistent but, at his best, he is a real handful. He turned 31 in March but still has plenty to offer.

Enock Kwateng, Nantes

Speaking in December, Enock Kwateng said his “priority is to stay at Nantes” but the fact he has not played as often as he would like in recent months suggests he will be on the move this summer. The 22-year-old defender has started 21 of 29 league appearances in total this season, primarily at right-back but also in a more advanced role on that flank.

He is a solid defender – the youngster has made the most interceptions per 90 minutes in Ligue 1 this season – and he would represent a low-risk transfer for most Premier League clubs outside the top six.

The Guardian Sport



Liverpool vs. Man United is a Rivalry for the Ages but Looks Like a Mismatch Now

Liverpool's coach Arne Slot celebrates his team 3-1 victory over Leicester City at the end of a English Premier League soccer match at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/lan Hodgson)
Liverpool's coach Arne Slot celebrates his team 3-1 victory over Leicester City at the end of a English Premier League soccer match at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/lan Hodgson)
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Liverpool vs. Man United is a Rivalry for the Ages but Looks Like a Mismatch Now

Liverpool's coach Arne Slot celebrates his team 3-1 victory over Leicester City at the end of a English Premier League soccer match at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/lan Hodgson)
Liverpool's coach Arne Slot celebrates his team 3-1 victory over Leicester City at the end of a English Premier League soccer match at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/lan Hodgson)

Liverpool vs. Manchester United used to be English soccer's fiercest rivalry. Sunday's showdown at Anfield pits two teams going in opposite directions.

Liverpool, top of the Premier League and the Champions League, has its sights on equalling United 's record 20 Premier League titles and more. Liverpool has lost to United just once in seven years in the Premier League, and most recently won 3-0 at Old Trafford in September.

United is closer to the relegation zone than the top in another calamitous campaign which has seen the departure of a manager, a sporting director and the exile of one of its leading players, according to The AP.

The gap between Liverpool and United is widening to the point where one is in contention for a quadruple of trophies and the other is talking about top flight survival.

How have English soccer’s two most successful teams ended up on such differing paths?

Managerial mistakes United has been in alarming decline since winning a record 20th title in Alex Ferguson's final season as manager in 2013. It hasn't come close to winning another since his retirement. Ruben Amorim is the sixth permanent manager hired in the last 11-plus years.

David Moyes, Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Erik ten Hag all failed to deliver consistent success and the upheaval from so much managerial change has repeatedly set back United as the club has lurched from one direction to another.

Amorim has quickly realized the size of the job after six defeats in his last eight games. This week he admitted he could be in a relegation fight.

“It is a possibility," he said. "We have to be clear with our fans.”

Succession planning While United has made a mess of trying to replace a managerial great, Liverpool has made it look easy.

Arne Slot took on the unenviable task of filling the void left by Jürgen Klopp at the end of last season and has driven the team to new levels.

Klopp won a full set of trophies at Anfield and was denied much more success in the Premier League than just the 2020 title only by Pep Guardiola's Manchester City.

Slot has Liverpool leading the Premier League by six points with a game in hand, the Champions League by three points, and through to the semifinals of the English League Cup.

Perhaps he has been fortunate to take over when City has gone into freefall but Liverpool's 14 wins from 18 games in the league would be title-challenging form in any season.

Transfers Billions have been spent at United yet there have been more costly errors than transfer successes.

Superstar signings such as Angel di Maria, Alexis Sanchez, Paul Pogba, Casemiro and Jadon Sancho have proved to be big disappointments. From the last transfer window, signees such as Joshua Zirkzee, Matthijs de Ligt have struggled.

Amorim is likely to have to sell in January if he wants to bring more players in and Marcus Rashford, recently dropped from the team, could be his best chance of raising funds.

Conversely, Liverpool has been one of the savviest operators in the transfer market over the past decade. When it has spent big, it has generally spent well, with the likes of Virgil van Dijk and Alisson proving pillars of its trophy haul. Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson were relative bargains.

Savvy ownership Under Fenway Sports Group (FSG), the American conglomerate that also owns the Boston Red Sox, Liverpool became a major force in England and Europe again and ended a 30-year title drought in the Premier League.

The hiring of Klopp was pivotal to that but so was Michael Edwards, the sporting director who was integral to so many transfer successes. He left in 2022 but is back as FSG chief executive of football and helped to guide the transition to Slot.

United's American owner, the Glazer family, has faced regular fan protests since its leveraged buyout of the club in 2005.

The minority investment by British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe last year sparked optimism. He assumed control of the club's soccer operations but that hasn't gone to plan so far.

Ten Hag was fired months after signing a contract extension and sporting director Dan Ashworth departed after less than six months. The signings in Ratcliffe's first summer transfer window also look questionable with United 14th in the standings and just seven points above the relegation zone.

The future Liverpool is enjoying an outstanding campaign with big issues to be resolved.

Salah, Van Dijk and Trent Alexander Arnold are out of contract after this season. Salah and Van Dijk are in their 30s and in dispute is the length of contract Liverpool is prepared to offer them. Alexander Arnold, meanwhile, is reportedly a target for Real Madrid.

Amorim's immediate concern is how to turn around United's form. Long term, his squad looks ill-suited to his preferred system.