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- đ¤ The next Premier League?
đ¤ The next Premier League?
Plus: Will Xabi Alonso be a fit for Liverpool?
GM football fans. Route One here, the football newsletter thatâll love you even when you forget to buy us a card. Happy Valentineâs Day.
Todayâs briefing is a ~4 min read:
Brazil: the next Premier League đ§đˇ
Is Alonso the perfect fit for Liverpool? đ¤
Extra time: Thierry talks Arsenal đĄ
Morning Brief đď¸
Sir Jim Ratcliffe has received Premier League directorâs and ownersâ test approval for his 25 per cent purchase of Manchester United. The clubsâs Class A shares rose more than six per cent to $21 (ÂŁ16.57) in post-market trading after the tender offer deadline was extended.
Lewis Smith (30) will become the youngest referee of a Premier League match when he officiates Fulhamâs home clash against Aston Villa on Saturday.
Sven-Goran Eriksson will be on the touchline for a Liverpool legends game against Ajax next month. The Reds have graned the former England managerâs wish to manage the club following his terminal cancer diagnosis.
Sean Dyche says Dele is 'a long way' from returning to competitive action for Everton.
BRAZIL: THE NEXT PREMIER LEAGUE? đ§đˇ
Next time you see your mate, ask them why they fell in love with footballâŚ
Ronaldinho?
Zico?
R9?
Garrincha?
Romario?
Pele?
The point is: while the English invented the game, the Brazilians made it beautiful.
Yet, the Brazilian domestic league isnât known overseas⌠but the Financial Times thinks this will change.
Why? Because the investment potential in Brazil is big and thereâs âhuge interestâ from international investors.
But it wonât happen overnightâŚ
Club revenue in Brazil remains low. And we mean lowâŚ
Source: Financial Times
Long story short: the lack of professional management has meant that many clubs have failed to realise the sports commercial potential.
Unpaid bills and wages are common, and there have been cases of corruption, embezzlement and match-fixing.
Hmmm. Thatâs no quick fix if youâre asking me.
So will cause this change�
⌠money of course.
But, more specifically, an environment that attracts outside investment:
A 2021 law now encourages clubs across the Brazilian leagues to operate as businesses⌠not traditional non-profit associations.
The new company template will help to prevent overspending and poor management.
Favourable tax rates are set to open the door to investors.
The biggest change? Well, taking a leaf from the Premier League, the ultimate goal is to sell TV and other media rights collectively.
Traditionally, Brazilian sides have signed their contracts on an individual basis.
CrazyâŚ
IS XABI ALONSO A PERFECT FIT FOR LIVERPOOL? đ¤
Jamie Carragher is convinced Xabi Alonso will be Liverpoolâs next manager, so what can we expect from Kloppâs heir?
Good things apparently⌠his Bayer Leverkusen team ranks highly amongst Europeâs elite this season:
First for passes per game.
First for short passes per game.
Third for 10+ pass sequences.
Third for expected goals per game.
Fourth best for goals conceded per game.
The stats speak for themselves, theyâre super impressive.
But Carragher sees one issue⌠Liverpoolâs current style of play differs greatly from Bayer Leverkusenâs as shown by the graph below:
Source: Sky Sports
Leverkusen is similar to Manchester Cityâs (long periods of possession with lots of short passes)⌠which is very different from Liverpoolâs mixed approach (a combination of short and long passes).
So the question is: will Liverpool adapt to Alonso or will Alonso adapt to Liverpool?
Carragher predicts Alonso will merge the two styles and become âmore like Bayern Munichâ.
Why?
Carragher believes Alonso will avoid becoming a purely short-pass possession-based team because Alonso knows âAnfeld, the crowd, the energyâ and will want his team to be as exciting to watch as Kloppâs.
Sign us up for a team thatâs as good on the ball as Manchester City and as exciting to watch as Liverpool under KloppâŚ
EXTRA-TIME âąď¸
The best goal youâll see all week. Jaden Philogene-Bidace mustâve just won the Puskas Award, right?
The Australian league possess a lot of quality⌠and If they keep pulling off trivelas like this, we might need to launch R1 Down Under.
Thierry Henry breaks down Arsenalâs chances in the UCL. We think he nails it.
The January transfer window saw 5,073 international transfers completed across menâs and womenâs football. The latter saw the record spending in a January transfer window at $2.1 million.
AFTV toured Ghana and the results were interesting⌠one fan was disappointed with Arteta after their latest 6-0 win.
MEME đ
Source: @eurofootcom