Which club will Rabiot join on a Bosman transfer? Liverpool, Barcelona, Juventus and possible destinations

The France international midfielder has made waves this summer with his refusal to sign a new deal with PSG – so where will he end up?

The summer transfer window of 2018 may only just have closed for the majority of clubs around Europe, yet already one of the major stories of 2019 is brewing in Paris. Adrien Rabiot is set to be one of the hot talking points for the next year, with the central midfielder’s contract up with Paris Saint-Germain next summer.

Many of Europe’s biggest clubs have been linked with the 23-year-old, who has grown from academy graduate to first-team regular at Parc des Princes – no mean feat given the lavish spending of France’s dominant club. 

It takes a certain personality type to grow in that manner, and while Rabiot’s self-confidence, backed by his notoriously pushy mother, Veronique, has helped him make his name in the French capital, it could also be the factor that leads him away.

His stubborn attitude has led to an impasse in contract negotiations with PSG and, as such, a great degree of uncertainty as to where exactly his future lies. 

Rabiot’s personality meant that he missed the World Cup as Didier Deschamps did not believe he was a good figure to have around a squad that thrived on their togetherness, but that has been a factor in allowing him to enjoy a strong start to the season.

While players such as Neymar and Kylian Mbappe, who went deep into Russia 2018, have had their playing time reduced in the opening weeks of the season, Rabiot has come into the campaign fresh and has been present on the park for every competitive minute that PSG have played.

And he has shown the stature that made him so difficult to be overlooked by Deschamps, particularly in the wake of Thiago Motta’s retirement. Typically a more attacking player than the former Italy international, he has operated as No.6 in the midfield, although he yearns to be given more freedom once again.



There is, however, no guarantee that he will leave Paris. Goal understands that neither the player nor Veronique has their heart set on a transfer, although if the team flops in the Champions League, that could change his outlook.

Meanwhile, head coach Thomas Tuchel has gone public on how much he appreciates the midfielder.

“I really like Adrien, really. I appreciate him,” the former Dortmund boss told RMC .

“There was a difficult situation after the World Cup that he missed but Adrien has showed incredible willingness from the first day of training. He has never missed a training session, not a single thing – we can really trust him and count on him.

“Adrien is good, physically, and he is essential for us. 

“Adrien comes from the youth academy and it is very important to have players like him here, to encourage them, support them and place them at the heart of the project.

“I love working with Adrien and I have no influence over the rest.”

Conversely, though, the player has also rejected two contract offers from the club, turning the latest down in mid-August, when he rebuffed a €7.2 million-per-year offer from the Parc des Princes side. This was a slap in the face for PSG as they bowed to his request of a three-year deal – a shorter contract than habitually offered by the powerhouse club. For his part, Rabiot does not want to miss out on a potential switch away in the manner that both Marco Verratti and Marquinhos have in recent times.

PSG have been in this difficult situation with the player before. In 2015, he appeared to be heading out of the club on the advice of his mother, who suggested her teenage son deserved a more regular place in an already world-class midfield. He was pushed to the very fringes of the squad before an agreement was reached and he returned.

“Adrien loves PSG, he’s attached to the club,” the player’s mother protested. “He wants to make a career there, but it’s not possible. He’d need 35 full games a season to continue his progress and that won’t happen. Since he can’t make his way, it’s better to leave.”

At that time, Veronique was accused of holding the club to ransom, yet under duress, it was the player and his mother who blinked. That could be seen as a precedent. 



But what are his other options? Liverpool and Manchester City, where he spent a matter of months as a youth player, have both been closely associated with a move for the player, yet it is Goal’s understanding that there is little substance to the reports linking him with a move to either Anfield or the Etihad.

England, however, is not the only location that Rabiot has been linked with a Bosman move to.

Barcelona have been one of the sides to the forefront of transfer rumours for much of the summer, notably hitting the headlines in August in the aftermath of Rabiot’s rejection of PSG’s terms. Reports state that the Camp Nou side were willing to offer him €10m per season – more 30% higher than PSG’s bid.

The Catalan giants, whose interest in the player has been confirmed to Goal, are Veronique’s preferred destination for her son, and the location that she is doing her best to push him towards. 

However, they view Rabiot as a backup option to Frenkie de Jong of Ajax, who remains their top priority, while they would also seek to sign Manchester United’s Paul Pogba before moving for the Frenchman.

Juventus are the other European giant in the hunt. After splashing out on Cristiano Ronaldo in the summer, a free transfer for such a talented and relatively young player is attractive for a club who have signed many stars on a Bosman in recent years. He would make sense as a replacement for Sami Khedira, who may only recently have signed a new deal with the club, but who will be 32 by the end of the campaign.

Certainly, it is a situation that the Turin giants are monitoring, but at the moment, he is not regarded as a priority.

Given the state of play, it is difficult to discount anything from Rabiot’s future, but equally it is impossible to say that there is a front runner in the early stages of this race. There are many months for this story left to run. 

Roma plot permanent transfer of in form Man Utd star

Manchester United centre-back Chris Smalling could be set for a permanent stay in Serie A after impressing on loan at Roma.

Smalling made the move to Italy after United’s £80m deal to sign Harry Maguire from Leicester meant he was surplus to requirements at Old Trafford.

The club paid an initial £2.7m to secure the loan deal and Smalling has established himself as an important part of Paulo Fonseca’s team.

After initially struggling with a muscle injury, the 29-year-old has done enough to persuade the Serie A giants to sign him permanently.

Smalling has formed an effective partnership with Gianluca Mancini, starting the last three league games ahead of Federico Fazio and Juan Jesus.

 

 

According to Italian journalist Gianluca di Marzio, Roma are keen to open talks with United and Smalling has previously suggested he is keen to stay in Italy.

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When he first joined Roma, Smalling said: “This is the perfect opportunity for me.

“The chance to experience a new league, with a big team that has got big aspirations is exactly what I needed.

“Hopefully I can hit the ground running.

“This is an opportunity that came to me that I was very interested in, and I was very eager to come.

“It happened very quickly and now I focus on the next game, getting up to speed with training in terms of the manager’s methods and then hopefully have a very good season.

“To be able to have the chance at a big club, and then if it prolongs and the club is happy then I can definitely see a longer-term future in Italy.”

An agreement between the two clubs looks likely given the number of centre-back options United have at their disposal.

Along with first-choice pairing Maguire and Victor Lindelof, manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer also has Eric Bailly, Phil Jones, Marcos Rojo and Axel Tuanzebe to call on.

 

Pundit claims Dele Alli could ‘walk into Liverpool’s team’

Former Tottenham striker Darren Bent has claimed that midfielder Dele Alli “is capable of walking straight into Liverpool’s team”.

Alli‘s best period in a Spurs shirt so far came two seasons ago when he scored 22 goals and assisted 13 others, but he has struggled to find that level sharpness in recent months.

The England international has lost his place in the Three Lions side after only making six appearances and scoring the one goal this term, which rescued his side a point late on against Watford.

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Speaking to Football Insider, however, Bent said that in full flow, Alli would be a serious addition to Jurgen Klopp’s side.

“On his day, when at his best Dele Alli is capable of walking straight into Liverpool’s team,” the pundit said.

“The Dele Alli who was scoring goals and getting assists consistently is more than capable of being a player who’d benefit their team.”

Liverpool have not had a typically creative midfielder since they lost Philippe Coutinho to Barcelona in January last year, but since then full-backs Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson have stepped up in some style.

One player who could become Liverpool’s driving force in midfield is Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, who looked back to his best when scoring two goals against Genk in the Champions League on Wednesday.

 

Klopp praises Liverpool’s non-Fabinho ‘perfect midfielder’

Jurgen Klopp has paid tribute to Liverpool’s “perfect midfielder”: Georginio Wijnaldum.

Wijnaldum has started all nine of Liverpool’s Premier League games this season, having played a vital part of their Champions League success last campaign.

His two goals were pivotal in the Champions League semi-final win over Barcelona at Anfield, and his “importance” to the cause in an otherwise jumbled midfield has not gone unnoticed by Klopp.

“Gini speaks on the pitch for the way he plays. It’s just so obvious, his importance,” he said.

“It is both directions, small spaces, big spaces, it is hard challenges, fine football, pretty much all of that.

“Is he the perfect midfielder? Yes, from the skill-set, 100 per cent. He has all that you need.

“There was his header against Barcelona too. He is not the ­tallest, but he is good in the air.

“He is a good jumper with good timing, all that stuff. It all makes him a pretty good footballer.

“That is how it should be. It is not my fault if he goes under the radar. You cannot ask me why he goes under the radar. I don’t set the radar!”

 

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Explosions At Mosque Kill At Least 62 People In Afghanistan

A volunteer carries an injured youth to a hospital after an explosion that killed at least 62 people in the Haska Mina district of Nangarhar province Friday.

Two blasts devastated a mosque in eastern Afghanistan during Friday prayers, killing at least 62 people and wounding dozens more, according to the local government in Nangarhar province.

There has been no claim of responsibility so far. Afghan outlet TOLOnews reports, “The Taliban has denied responsibility for the blasts.”

“The spokesman for the provincial governor said the blasts caused the roof of the mosque to collapse on top of worshippers who had gathered for Friday prayers in the Haska Mena district,” NPR’s Diaa Hadid reports from Islamabad, Pakistan. “It’s the most serious militant attack against civilians in weeks. ISIS has attacked Shiite places of worship in the past — but it wasn’t immediately clear why this mosque was targeted.”

President Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack through his spokesman, Sediq Sediqqi. Despite reports of the Taliban’s denial of involvement, Sediqqi called out the Taliban, saying via Twitter, “The Taliban and their partners heinous crimes continue to target civilians in time of worship.”

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres “strongly condemns” the bombing, in a statement issued by a spokesman. That message adds, “Those responsible for this attack must be held accountable.”

The mosque attack comes one day after the United Nations issued an alarming report saying Afghanistan has seen an “unprecedented number of civilian casualties” in the past three months.

July was the country’s bloodiest month of the past decade, as civilian casualties rose to a tragic level that hasn’t been seen since the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan began systematically documenting the toll of violence in 2009.

In the first nine months of 2019, UNAMA said, Afghanistan has sustained more than 8,200 civilian casualties, with 2,563 people killed and 5,676 more injured. In that period, the U.N. agency said, “anti-Government elements were responsible for more than 5,000 civilian casualties, comprising 62 per cent of total civilian casualties for the time period.”

The report also revealed other troubling trends. UNAMA reported that “41 per cent of all civilian casualties in Afghanistan were women and children” from January through September.

And after starting the year with lower levels of civilian casualties compared with 2018, Afghanistan saw deadly violence ramp up as it approached its national election in late September. The results of that vote have not yet been revealed.

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As UNAMA released its report, Tadamichi Yamamoto, the secretary-general’s special representative for Afghanistan, urged all sides to avoid harming civilians. He also said it’s further proof that the country desperately needs peace talks that can produce a cease-fire.

“Civilian casualties are totally unacceptable,” Yamamoto said, “especially in the context of the widespread recognition that there can be no military solution to the conflict in Afghanistan.”

Over 90% of homes flooded by Typhoon Hagibis ineligible for Japan government support

More than 90 percent of the approximately 68,000 homes that experienced water damage from the destructive Typhoon Hagibis saw flooding at levels of less than 1 meter, the government said Wednesday, making the homeowners unlikely to receive financial support under current law.

In cases of water damage, the law on financial assistance to disaster victims stipulates that they can be awarded up to ¥3 million for rebuilding. But this, in principle, is limited to flood levels of 1 meter or more above ground.

It remains to be seen if households that sustained extensive water damage, despite low flood levels, will receive support.

According to data collected by the Fire and Disaster Management Agency, roughly 33,000 homes suffered “underfloor flooding,” meaning water soaked levels below the ground floor, while around 29,000 homes had their floors submerged but not destroyed.

The figures, which are only rough estimates, are expected to continue to rise.

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Many of those affected are finding it difficult to live in their homes even if they are deemed to have not been destroyed by water, said Eiichi Yamasaki, a professor of social safety sciences at Kansai University in Osaka Prefecture.

“There is a disconnect between people being forced to pay large sums (for repairs) and the criteria (to assess damage),” he said, adding that the government should consider expanding the scope of the law or allow people to move into temporary housing, regardless of the level of damage.

The farm ministry said that, as of Wednesday, the typhoon had caused ¥87.6 billion in damage to the agricultural and fisheries industries in 37 of the nation’s 47 prefectures.

The amount, which has already exceeded the figure for last month’s Typhoon Faxai of around ¥50.9 billion, is expected to climb further as the ministry works to grasp the full extent of the damage.

Meanwhile, Ryota Takeda, minister for disaster risk reduction, said water is expected to be restored to all areas experiencing outages from the latest typhoon by the end of next week.

The infrastructure ministry said separately that drainage operations in residential areas of Osaki, Miyagi Prefecture, have been completed, a move that has almost fully alleviated flooding in residential areas of the prefecture.

Aging main complex of Nagoya fish market to close amid drop in popularity of seafood

The main building complex of Yanagibashi Central Market, a fish market a short walk from Nagoya Station, will close at the end of this month due to deterioration, ending its run of more than 50 years.

Amid the continuing decline in the popularity of seafood, the association of the facility’s owners, which is made up of wholesalers, decided to sell the building to a land developer, with some of them choosing to quit the business entirely.

After giving the issue much thought, Kozo Nomura, 72, closed Nomura Marine Products, his tuna wholesale store in the complex, on Oct. 12.

“I couldn’t see any prospect in moving somewhere else and continuing the business in this time and age,” Nomura said. “It’s too bad since I’m still fit to work.”

The market, located in the Nakamura Ward business district, was opened more than 100 years ago by a group of fish dealers. With some 300 stores, it boasts of being one of the nation’s largest privately run fish markets.

Nomura first started working at a different wholesaler in the building 50 years ago after graduating from university. The wholesaler had 450 employees at its peak, and a sushi shop, one of its major customers, made 6,000 sushi dishes a day, he said. A great amount of fish was bid on every morning, snapped up by buyers.

In the 1990s, after the burst of the bubble economy, however, the situation began to change, with people consuming less fish and more major retailers directly buying seafood without going through wholesalers.

Sales of high-priced fish — the main product at the market — dropped, and many of its customers, including high-end Japanese restaurants and fresh fish stores, closed.

Nomura started his own business 16 years ago and survived the financial crisis following the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers. But this time he decided to close down.

Out of 50 companies in the complex, 14 firms including Nomura’s chose to close. About a dozen companies willing to continue their business considered moving together to the municipal-run Nagoya Central Wholesale Market in Atsuta Ward. But they had to give up the plan because of legislative issues and decided to move to a building near the market. The rest will move to different buildings within the Yanagibashi market or switch to delivery-based wholesaling without a store.

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The complex was built in 1965 under joint investment by association members. As more than 50 years have passed since its completion, the Nagoya Municipal Government requested that it undergo seismic reinforcement work.

However, because the work costs some ¥900 million, placing a great financial burden on the association, it conducted a vote last year on whether to maintain or disband. Seventy out of 73 members voted for the latter.

“It was a tough decision to make to dissolve an association with a long history,” said Tetsuya Asaoka, head of the association.

The complex is located in an area currently under major redevelopment in connection with the scheduled 2027 opening of a maglev shinkansen line linking Tokyo and Nagoya.

The focus now is on how the site of the building will be used, but the association refrained from revealing such information, including to whom the place was sold and at what price, due to confidentiality obligations.

The market itself will continue operating, but similar issues are likely to come up with other building complexes that are also aging, putting the historical market at a crossroads.

This section features topics and issues from the Chubu region covered by the Chunichi Shimbun. The original article was published on Oct. 17.

Diamond worth ¥200 million stolen from exhibition in Yokohama

YOKOHAMA – A diamond with a market value of ¥200 million ($1.8 million) was stolen from a convention facility in Yokohama, police said Thursday.

The 50-carat loose diamond was on display as part of a jewelry exhibition at Pacifico Yokohama in the waterfront area of the city, according to the police.

They said an employee of the company providing the diamond noticed around 6 p.m. that the stone was missing and its display case was apparently unlocked.

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As the company said the diamond was in the case at around 5 p.m., the police believe it was stolen during the following hour.

Typhoon Hagibis-hit areas in Japan battered by heavy rain as 60,000 advised to evacuate

A wide swath of eastern Japan hit by flooding and landslides from Typhoon Hagibis two weeks ago was hit with more heavy rain on Friday, with evacuation advisories issued for tens of thousands of people in areas surrounding Tokyo.

Authorities warned of the chance of further landslides and flooding, especially in areas hit by levee breaks that have yet to be repaired even provisionally.

Kamogawa, Chiba Prefecture, saw 85.5 millimeters of rainfall in an hour on Friday morning, a record for the city. Evacuation instructions were issued for 10,000 people in Chiba in Kamogawa, Minamiboso, Ichihara and Mobara. The prefecture was battered by heavy winds from Typhoon Faxai in September, leaving some areas without power for weeks before being hit by rains from Hagibis.

Chiba police said they received an emergency call Friday saying a river in the city of Chiba had flooded and a vehicle was swept away. Several houses nearby were submerged in water, they said.

An evacuation advisory was issued for 50,000 people in Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture, which was hit hard by flooding after Hagibis. Six Sagamihara residents were killed in that storm, including a family swept away in their car, and two remain missing.

At Narita International Airport, nine passenger flights were rerouted to other airports due to heavy rain, according to the airport operator.

The rain was expected to pound the Tokyo area until evening and then move north. Total rainfall in the area around Tokyo was likely to range from 200 to 300 mm by evening, the Meteorological Agency said.

Tropical Storm Bualoi, which battered the Ogasawara islands south of the main Japanese archipelago on Thursday while still at typhoon strength, was headed out into the Pacific and expected to weaken to a tropical depression later on Friday.

At least 85 people were killed when Hagibis lashed central and eastern Japan with heavy rains and high winds, and nine are still missing as of Friday, according to a tally by Kyodo News. The Cabinet Office said 3,864 people were still living in shelters, and the welfare ministry said 9,733 households remained without water services as of Friday. River levees were broken at 140 locations of 71 rivers, and 618 landslides were confirmed in 20 prefectures, according to the land ministry.

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RvP: Why Arsenal boss Emery will struggle to reach Wenger’s level

Robin Van Persie doubts Unai Emery will ever be on Arsene Wenger’s level as he struggles to “connect” with his Arsenal squad.

The former Gunners striker was reacting after Nicolas Pepe scored a late brace of free-kicks to seal an undeserved 3-2 Europa League victory over Vitoria.

The Group F clash appeared to be heading in the direction of the Portuguese side after they twice took the lead at the Emirates Stadium, only for substitute Pepe to convert two set-pieces – the second of which came in stoppage time.

After losing at Sheffield United on Monday night, Emery launched an impassioned defence of his tenure as Gunners boss on the eve of the Group F clash – but what followed was as below-par performance rescued by the brilliance of Pepe, who until then had struggled to live up to his hefty price-tag.

When asked if he thought Arsenal had improved since Wenger left, Van Persie said: “I don’t think so. I don’t think that Emery really connects with his players.

“I think they are still weak on set pieces, which was a problem at my time, to be honest. But everyone should feel responsible. Arsenal lose 12 to 15 points per season by set pieces. That should stop.

“If you want to play for the first couple of places you have to sort it out, you have to find a way.

“As a player you want to have that feeling, you have to sprint back, now I see a couple of players jogging back, and there’s danger there. I don’t feel that in the team.

“If you have a very strong coach, and you are in midfield and you see danger somewhere, you sprint for your life, because you know if you don’t do it you get punished.”

And Van Persie went on to cite a training ground video that was “sent” to him recently showing Emery apparently struggling to communicate.

“I’ve had [Arsene] Wenger, Louis van Gaal, [Alex] Ferguson, I had so many coaches, and their main quality was to be clear,” Van Persie added.

“If I’m really honest…someone sent me a video last week of him [Emery] trying to explain something, and I couldn’t really figure out if he was saying, ‘calm, calm’ or ‘come, come.”

“That is very important, you have to be clear, you have to be the leader and the leader needs to be clear towards his players.”

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