Tag: Mudryk

  • Mykhailo Mudryk cameo livens up Chelsea’s goalless draw at Liverpool

    Mykhailo Mudryk cameo livens up Chelsea’s goalless draw at Liverpool

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    The 1,000th game of Jürgen Klopp’s managerial career will not be remembered with fondness, if it is remembered at all. “I heard Arsène Wenger lost his 1,000th game 6-0 so I’m really happy that didn’t happen,” the Liverpool manager said. Klopp was determined to accentuate the positives despite his team, and Chelsea, illustrating why Champions League qualification may be beyond them.

    A flat goalless draw at a freezing Anfield did nothing to validate talk of a revival from either Klopp or Graham Potter, although both seized on any crumbs of encouragement they could find. For Chelsea, whose run of six Premier League away games without a win is their worst in over seven years, they came in an impressive second half display from new £88m signing Mykhailo Mudryk and another imperious defensive performance from 38-year-old Thiago Silva. For Liverpool, who remain without a league win in 2023, it was a second successive clean sheet and the return to fitness of Darwin Núñez. Slim pickings indeed.

    “He was really good,” the Chelsea manager said of Mudryk. “He will get better the more he is with us but there were promising signs. He has only had two sessions with us but from watching him with Shakhtar he is dangerous in one v ones, he makes things happen in the final third, he gets supporters off their seats and he knows where the goal is.”

    Kai Havertz had an early goal ruled out by VAR but that was a rare incident in a game of precious little quality. The fixture’s usual stakes were already lowered before kick off with Liverpool and Chelsea ten points off the top four in ninth and tenth place respectively.

    Klopp reflected: “For me it is clear, you have to make small steps and that is how it is. I expect progress and from the last league game it was definitely progress. We defended with passion, which we didn’t do two weeks ago, so that is important. Usually a point against Chelsea is not a bad result but I feel everyone is thinking; ‘How can you not win against them?’ They will win a lot of games, believe me. I saw good signs. Now we have to do the good things better and for longer. I am sure they will go in that direction.”

    Havertz had the ball in the Liverpool net after only three minutes and perhaps the complexion of the game would have altered had VAR not disallowed the strike for offside. But probably not. The hosts struggled with crosses into their area from the outset. New Chelsea signing Benoît Badiashile was left unmarked at the first corner of the game, from Conor Gallagher, and his touch dropped for Silva to strike the base of a post from close range. Havertz converted the rebound and Liverpool had conceded first yet again. They were reprieved when, with the Chelsea celebrations over and the teams ready to restart, VAR found the goalscorer in an offside position.

    Chelsea’s Kai Havertz thought he had given his side the lead, only to see his goal chalked off by VAR.
    Chelsea’s Kai Havertz thought he had given his side the lead, only to see his goal chalked off by VAR. Photograph: Chelsea FC/Getty Images

    Klopp rightly rewarded Stefan Bajcetic and Harvey Elliott with starting roles following their contributions to the midweek FA Cup win at Wolves. The Liverpool manager also kept faith with the same midfield trio that brought more intensity and energy to the team following the abject defeat at Brighton, at the expense of Fabinho and Jordan Henderson, while James Milner was preferred at right back to Trent Alexander-Arnold. The end product was perfectly encapsulated by Klopp’s face when the half-time whistled sounded, a picture of undisguised fury at possession being lost and his team failing to trouble Kepa Arrizabalaga in the Chelsea goal.

    There was more intensity and purpose from Liverpool after the break, and presumably after a few home truths from Klopp. Mudryk made an immediate impression, showing good feet to weave away from two Liverpool defenders in a tight space before finding the side-netting. Milner, booked for hauling down the Ukraine international, was replaced by Alexander-Arnold after Mudryk had escaped him once too often.

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    Hakim Ziyech fired over at the end of a superb run across the Liverpool defence and Alexander-Arnold skied a good chance from Núñez’s cross from the by-line. But a non-event of a game got the scoreline it deserved.

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    #Mykhailo #Mudryk #cameo #livens #Chelseas #goalless #draw #Liverpool
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘He dribbles like Ronaldinho’: rise of Mudryk no surprise to old teammates

    ‘He dribbles like Ronaldinho’: rise of Mudryk no surprise to old teammates

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    The conundrum facing Shakhtar Donetsk’s hierarchy was that Mykhailo Mudryk had, for a player of his age, barely been given any oxygen at the top level. It was the summer of 2021 and his previous two managers, Paulo Fonseca and Luís Castro, had not been convinced enough to give him a run. In the club’s boardroom Mudryk was seen as a player who could win the Ballon d’Or; on the training pitch he was routinely viewed as fast, immensely skilful but raw and unpredictable. His 20th birthday had long since passed but he had only made seven appearances for Shakhtar and a further 21 on loan. He was yet to score a senior goal.

    In Roberto De Zerbi, who asks the bold to be even bolder, Shakhtar found the coach who could harness a talent that needed some love. It took only a few viewings for the Italian to be convinced, and to tell the player he had his trust. De Zerbi had already given Mudryk two starts in the league when, with Shakhtar on the point of losing their Champions League playoff against Monaco, he called him from the bench. Mudryk had eight minutes plus extra time to make a difference: he terrorised the Ligue 1 club from the left flank and it was his direct influence, another sparkling run bringing a cross that clipped Ruben Aguilar before looping in, that propelled his side back to the group stage.

    Seventeen months on, Mudryk is an £89m player who will almost certainly make his Chelsea debut at Anfield on Saturday. It is one of the most stunning rises to prominence in memory. He took his chance from De Zerbi, whose reign was short-lived due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and never let up. After one of Shakhtar’s Champions League ties last autumn an opponent said in private that Mudryk was the best player he had ever faced.

    It is a far cry from the 2020-21 season, when Mudryk was undergoing the second of those loan spells. He spent the first half of that campaign at Desna Chernihiv, another Ukrainian top-flight side; they only lost twice and it was clear to teammates that his talent was matched by an extraordinary drive.

    “He was always so concentrated on football,” says Ihor Litovka, who was Desna’s goalkeeper. “When we had a day off, he’d be training; when we had one training session, he’d be doing two. He’d go out on to the pitch alone, taking balls with him, shooting and dribbling. Then he’d go and ask the coach to show him how he played in the last game, reviewing the statistics. That was very important to him.”

    Mykhaylo Mudryk on the ball during Shakhtar Donetsk’s Champions League group game against Real Madrid
    Mykhaylo Mudryk on the ball during Shakhtar Donetsk’s Champions League group game against Real Madrid. Photograph: Janek Skarżyński/AFP/Getty Images

    A year after Mudryk returned to Shakhtar, Desna were a casualty of Russia’s aggression. Their stadium was all but destroyed; Litovka, who is trying to rebuild his career in Croatia, is among the former teammates for whom multimillion-pound transfers were never on the table. Mudryk had the attributes for a different path. “His pace was unreal,” Litovka says. “Really, really high speed and very, very good dribbling that reminded me of Ronaldinho.”

    Chelsea will hope for more of that, along with the end product that saw Mudryk score twice against Celtic and once against RB Leipzig in this season’s group stage. He also shone in both encounters with Real Madrid, repeating the verve that saw him applauded from the Bernabéu pitch the previous season. That was 10 weeks after the Monaco game and Mudryk had left little doubt that the Champions League was his theatre.

    While Shakhtar coaches had been slow to appreciate him, those around Mudryk felt for some time that the same applied externally. Premier League clubs had long been made aware of him but Brentford were the only side from England to bite firmly before his eruption. They were happy to make him their record signing by some distance last summer but Shakhtar, who sought a fee north of £30m even six months ago, would not yield.

    Their calculated gamble that Mudryk’s value would soar was borne out by his form, rising far above the mean in Ukraine’s resurrected top flight while announcing himself more widely in Europe. Arsenal had toyed with bidding in pre-season and found their task increasingly complicated when they eventually got involved. Shakhtar felt the prices for players such as Jack Grealish and Antony set precedent, even if a valid counterpoint was Mudryk’s lack of games. In the end Arsenal were on the verge of agreeing a deal but it was Chelsea, whose co-owner Behdad Eghbali and recruitment chief Paul Winstanley arrived at Shakhtar’s hotel reception in Antalya ready to complete an extraordinary heist last Saturday, who took him to London.

    Mudryk had publicly courted Arsenal but knew this was business. There was an anxiousness, from his perspective, to complete a move upwards this month and a sense that, with Shakhtar out of the Champions League and no international stage to shine on this summer, there was little scope for his price to increase further. This was the sweet spot for all parties to come away with what they wanted; Mudryk now has the prize of a top Premier League club and the chance to work under Graham Potter, whose meticulousness and man-management skills look a promising fit for further improvement. One figure who has worked closely with Mudryk believes he has hit only 50% of his potential.

    There will be pressure to deliver quickly, in an out of form side, but Mudryk has the chance to blaze a trail. Millions of futures have been compromised in Ukraine over the past 11 months. “The guy just worked, thought constantly about football and now signs a contract with Chelsea,” Litovka says. “It can be a motivation for all the youngsters who train in Ukraine now. It shows them anything is possible.”

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    #dribbles #Ronaldinho #rise #Mudryk #surprise #teammates
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )