Jorge Mendes & the mysterious €9m commission on Kylian Mbappé’s PSG transfer – Mediapart

Mediapart have raised questions over a reported €9m payment received by Jorge Mendes for Kylian Mbappé’s 2017 move from AS Monaco to PSG, because of his total lack of obvious involvement in any part of negotiations.

Get French Football News takes no responsibility for the authenticity of the content.

Kylian Mbappé does not have an agent – he is represented by his parents, who are aided by a Parisian lawyer Delphine Verheyden. PSG and AS Monaco negotiated the deal directly. On the 30th August, PSG and Monaco “declared that not a single footballing agent… participated in the negotiation of the contract.”

Only on the morning of the 31st August is there the first whiff of official agent involvement, when Daniel Bique, Head of Legal at Monaco, changed the declaration to include the name of two agents: Italian Roberto Calenda and Jorge Mendes.

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Mendes has historically been very close to Monaco owner Rybolovlev, but the FIFA rules are very clear: an agent must be mandated in writing by a club before the start of negotiations.

For Mendes, everything appeared to be in order. His involvement was dated the 11th July, with the agent set to receive a 5% commission for the transfer of Kylian Mbappé if he goes for €180m. An amendment dated August 31st indicated that with the deal completed Mendes waste receive €7.25m and another €1.75m once PSG pay a €35m bonus to Monaco.

However, Mediapart claim that the contracts were backdated, with Football Leaks documents indicating that the agreement dated the 11th July was not signed by Monaco VP Vasilyev until September 8th, and that Mendes had still not signed it. Mediapart claim that they cannot find any documentation indicating his involvement apart from a potential discussion on the 23rd August in Monaco – a conversation worth €9m?

On the 22nd of March, 5 months before Kylian Mbappé’s transfer, Jorge Mendes sent an email to Vasilyev with nothing in the body apart from three Spanish press articles citing an interest from Real Madrid for Mbappé, according to Football Leaks.

Monaco’s Head of Communications, Bruno Skropeta, spoke to Vasilyev about the email, according to Mediapart: “Jorge is behind this, he is incredible. Is this good for us or do I pressure Jorge to stop doing this? If you do not want to sell this summer it would be best to limit this. However, if we need to up the price it is not negative.”

Mediapart question whether Mendes was paid by Monaco not for being involved in negotiating Mbappé’s move to PSG, rather for upping the ante with Real Madrid. Mendes did not respond to the French outlet’s request for comment.

The role of Roberto Calenda is just as incomprehensible – he was paid €2m by Monaco, despite having no obvious involvement – the contract concerning his money was also backdated, officially sealed on the 31st August, but not signed until the 29th September.

Mario Balotelli moans on the quality of his Nice team-mates to Patrick Vieira: “We couldn’t string two passes tougher… I don’t have words.”

In a scene caught by Interieur Sport reporters between Mario Balotelli and Patrick Vieira in a documentary to be aired by Canal + later today, the Italian forward takes his frustration out on his team-mates following a training exercise.

“We couldn’t string two passes together. It is difficult to play like this. We are doing an exercise… I don’t have words. There are 4 metres between us all and I had just 4 good passes in 20 minutes of work. Today for example, I missed a shot. I kicked the ball over, which is not good. I am angry because I want to score. They (team-mates), they miss and say to themselves: “It will go in the next time.” No, f*** off! If you miss, you get angry. I want to be playing in those teams again (top European sides).”

Vieira responded:

“I know, but it is still possible. But you need the help of your team-mates. And to receive this help, you have to be an example, you need to be the one who shows the others that in order to do well, you have to apply yourself.”

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Ligue 1 Review – Week 16

It wasn’t supposed to be like this, the Frank McCourt era at Marseille. The American’s purchase of the club, combined with the arrivals of Rudi Garcia as manager and Andoni Zubizarreta as Sporting Director were all signs of true ambition. McCourt may lack the bottomless wealth of the Qataris in charge of Paris Saint-Germain, but he also seemed to want to establish France’s best-supported club as an entity unto itself. His model was success in the now; there was no suggestion of Monaco’s buy low-sell high philosophy, nor of Lyon’s patience with academy players.

Luiz Gustavo, Adil Rami, Dimitri Payet, Steve Mandanda, Kevin Strootman: these were veteran, decorated players, a team for the now, not some idealised, prospective future. Nearly two years on, however, things have turned sour, with no real way forward given the club’s means and the way that “win-now” squad has hindered much of their ability to have any sort of flexibility in the transfer market. Wednesday evening’s defeat to Nantes was Marseille’s sixth of the season in the league; they lost only five matches in the entirety of last season, and even that wasn’t enough to return to the Champions’ League, a stated aim of McCourt’s project.

The problems plaguing this side are many, but the one that stands out most clearly is the rash of goals which they have conceded: 25 in the league, and December has only just begun. Only Dijon (16th) and the bottom two sides, Amiens and Guingamp, have conceded more. A lengthy injury absence on the part of Rolando has been a key part of Marseille’s struggles, as has the fitness of Rami, who has regularly shown a combination of his age and a summer exerting himself with his country at the World Cup (albeit not on the pitch) has been problematic.

It is not just in the league, however, that Marseille have struggled; the team have conceded thirteen goals in five matches in the Europa League and were eliminated with a match to spare from a group that was not, to be fair, the easiest, with Lazio and in-form Eintracht Frankfurt proving capable opponents. However, for a team that impressed in a way few would have thought possible during a memorable run to the final of last year’s tournament, one point from five matches represents a near-total capitulation.

The defence has been the biggest issue, and it was on display to an embarrassing degree at the Stade Beaujoire. Admittedly Marseille might have earned a point on another night, with Nantes centre back Nicolas Pallois hacking clear a near-equalizer from Gustavo late on, but Marseille were cut to ribbons on the margins, with Lucas Lima thriving in an advanced role on the left and Gabriel Boschilia similarly impressing on the opposite flank. On the evening, there were certainly individual mistakes, with youngster Boubacar Kamara losing Boschilia for the winner, and Lima skipping his way past Rami too easily in the build-up to it, but does Garcia, despite his achievements to date, deserve a share of the criticism as well?

Marseille suffered through three heavy losses to PSG, Montpellier, and Lazio a month ago, and Garcia, frustrated with the ability of his attack-minded full-backs, Bouna Sarr and Jordan Amavi, to track back, opted to play a back three from that point on, a system which was deployed again in Nantes on Wednesday. A back three has many benefits, and Montpellier, Strasbourg, and Nice are among the sides in France that have made great strides this season in using that shape, which allows two strikers to complement each other without sacrificing width or numbers in midfield.

It also, however, requires a great deal of mobility and positional nous on the part of the two centre backs not deployed centrally. Rami is a decent defender, but to call him static would be an understatement; Kamara on the left is an intriguing talent, but still a teenager and can hardly be reasonably expected to grasp the intricacies of a system in which he has barely played. Kamara, however, is hardly the only personnel issue vis-a-vis Garcia’s application of the system. In playing Bouna Sarr and Lucas Ocampos in the wide roles, he has not, like Montpellier (the excellent Rubén Aguilar and Ambroise Oyongo) or Nice (Youcef Atal) deployed players who are naturally attack-minded full-backs in these roles, but used converted wingers instead.

Sarr has admittedly impressed at times this season as a right back in a flat back four, but playing behind a midfield three and a winger had given the former Metz man far more protection. Hiroki Sakai and Jordan Amavi are both more natural fits in those wide roles, but both, despite having been important players last season, have been little-used in this system, save Sakai (who was injured for this match) making the occasional appearance as the right-sided central defender.

There have certainly been other issues dogging Marseille this season as they try to get back into France’s top three. There was the summer’s quixotic pursuit of Mario Balotelli (which now looks as if the club have dodged a bullet), and the failure of any of the three summer signings to really settle, with Duje Caleta-Car, added to bring depth to the defence, in particular having underwhelmed. Steve Mandanda and his deputy, Yoann Pelé, are also getting no younger, something which particularly stings when one sees the good form of former backup Édouard Mendy with Reims, but Garcia, as his record indicates, is a resourceful manager, or, at least, he can be one on his day.

Marseille, despite their recent stumbles, are hardly cut adrift in the race for the top three, — their attack is France’s second-best — there is still plenty of time to recover, if only Garcia would set out his stall in a more ordinary way. A move back to a midfield three and a back four, with Morgan Sanson, who was excellent on the night, regularly included will reinstate the sort of defensive solidity that, while it may not remind anyone of Garcia’s great Lille sides, will, given the variety of attacking weapons at his disposal, allow the southern side to keep up the pressure on the top, with each of the teams ahead currently ahead of them having their own foibles. The summer may not have been kind to Marseille, but the tools are there to make the winter offer no small degree of consolation, if only the manager could end his own season of discontent.

1 | Having dropped points their first points away to Bordeaux on Sunday, PSG are now winless in two as a stoic Strasbourg emerged with a draw from a boisterous evening at Stade de la Meinau. Just like last season, the hosts led; PSG fan Kenny Lala’s penalty forced the halftime introduction of Kylian Mbappé. Neymar injured, the Frenchman took charge, drawing a reckless Lala challenge – Edinson Cavani crashing home the resulting penalty. Adrien Thomasson thought he had made it two wins from two consecutive visits of PSG, only to be belatedly given offside. PSG are yet to win at the Meinau since Strasbourg’s Ligue 1 return, their ferocious support could again be key for the survival.

2 | After promising much, Bordeaux were heading for another transitional season as Gus Poyet was sacked for publicly berating his board over transfers. However, now coach Éric Bedouet and General Manager Ricardo Gomes have settled into their unorthodox partnership, Les Girondins are improving. A flagging Europa League campaign has been salvaged while a deserved point against PSG this weekend followed an credible draw at Parc OL; a late Wednesday win over St Étienne their latest impressive display. With François Kamano ably assuming Malcom’s mantle and new Brazilian international defender Pablo in the form of his life, their fresh-faced American owners have much to build on. A place in Europe could again be theirs.

3 | Rennes sacked Sabri Lamouchi on Monday after a 4-1 home loss to Strasbourg. Despite the disastrous defeat the decision may prove rash, Lamouchi seemingly a victim of his own success. Despite a lower mid table position, the top 8 remain in reach despite a youthful, inexperienced team unsurprisingly struggling with a draining Europa League schedule. Despite some poor displays, last season’s successes, in finishing 5th, deserved more respect, while Europa League knockout stage hopes endure and another top six finish remains possible with a talented team and Ligue 1 being so tight. Despite a 2-0 win at Lyon yesterday, the Rennes’ hierarchy may come to regret their decision with their club again, in some respect, back to square one.

Results: Amiens 0-2 Monaco, Nice 0-0 Angers, Montpellier 0-1 Lille, Bordeaux 3-2 St Étienne, Caen 1-2 Nîmes, Dijon 2-1 Guingamp, Lyon 0-2 Rennes, Nantes 3-2 Marseille, Reims 0-1 Toulouse, Strasbourg 1-1 PSG.

E.D. with A.W.

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Dortmund make offer for Lucas Da Cunha (Rennes)

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Bundesliga leaders Borussia Dortmund have submitted a 5-year contract offer to 17-year-old Rennes attacking midfielder prospect Lucas Da Cunha, according to our colleagues at Foot Mercato.

Da Cunha signed a professional contract with the Brittany outfit in December 2017 until 2021, but that has not stopped Europe’s giants from seeking to move on the teenager. Dortmund’s offer includes a €4m bid to Rennes – it is currently unclear whether or not Les Rennais have responded to the bid.

Da Cunha has represented France at U18, U17 and U16 levels so far, winning the U17 national title this year.

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AS Monaco in preliminary discussions to sign William Vainqueur

Our colleagues at Foot Mercato report that Ligue 1 side AS Monaco have had preliminary discussions with 30-year-old French midfielder William Vainqueur.

The former AS Roma and Marseille player, who was worked with Thierry Henry’s new assistant Franck Passi before, is currently contracted to Antalyaspor, but is surplus to requirements in the eyes of the Turkish side.

Talks are expected to accelerate for him imminently on Monaco’s part.

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Channel Islands Air Search Chief Officer John Fitzgerald on Emiliano Sala’s plane disappearance: “I do not think they are still alive.”

Speaking in an interview with So Foot, Channel Islands Air Search Chief Officer John Fitzgerald gave an update on the ongoing search for the plane that was carrying Emiliano Sala from Nantes to Cardiff last night which disappeared halfway through its journey.

What is the status of the search?

We were called yesterday at 20:30 and the search continued until midnight. Then we took a pause before picking back up until 2am this morning. This morning, we started again at around 08:00.

It is said that the weather was poor last night…

During the first part of the search, the visibility was good, but we had to deal with some fierce rain that fell at around 23:30. As the search progressed, the clouds came down and we had to stop the search, as we could not see anything. The conditions were just too bad for lifeboats.

And this morning, what have the conditions been like?

This morning, the sea was very calm, the sky was very blue, with perfect visibility. We can perfectly see the sky, and the surface of the water, which is very important. The wind is blowing at about 50km’s per hour.

Based on your experience, what are the chances of finding the individuals as survivors after a night in the water?

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If they are really underwater, I would tell you there is no chance. I went swimming the other day and I lasted 30 minutes. It is excessively cold in the water, a person submerged in it probably wouldn’t survive for more than an hour unless they have some protection.

In terms of the temperature?

I cannot tell you nonsense. The water in the Channel is around 10 or 11 degrees.

Is there any chance that they will have landed on some land strip?

I find it difficult to think that they could have done anything other than a sea-landing, or at least touching the water somehow. The radars lost their trace north-west of Alderney, 24km from the north of the island of Guernsey. Next, owing to their altitude, they were able to travel an additional 3 or 4 kilometres in the direction in which they were heading. Had they landed somewhere under surveillance, air traffic would have been informed.

Does this sort of thing happen often?

It happens occasionally, but not in this way. Sometimes, there are planes that simply do not have enough fuel and fall in the sea before the coasts, but I do not think that this is what has happened in this case. I do not understand how a plane could disappear from the radars. There must have been a technical or mechanical problem. The plane that they took, the Piper PA-46 Malibu, is a very good plane, but something catastrophic must have happened, there is no reason for this plane to have encountered a problem.

What are the possible scenarios?

It is very difficult to answer this question, because there was no radio contact between the aircraft and any control tower at the time of the accident. They just… disappeared.

Is the searching zone big?

It is quite a big zone, because the tide is strong there. We started looking about 10km’s north of Alderney and now we are looking south of the island. There are two English coastguard helicopters that have been working since this morning, two lifeguard boats and a plane and also the fishing boats that are on site.

In the case of crashes in the middle of the sea, you very rarely find the bodies…

What we are looking for first, is the carcass of the plane. If the plane actually crashed in the season, but remained in one piece, they you have to pay attention for traces of oil that rises to the surface. If it blew up in flight – which cannot be ruled out – then we will find debris on the surface… If the plane blew up in flight, they may no longer be on the plane, in which case we may find them, but I just don’t know when. It could be today or in two, three weeks. Sometimes, taken by the currents, we find bodies on the beach in Brighton. It might seem horrible, but that is the way that currents flow.

When you say bodies, are you excluding finding them alive?

Oh yes. Absolutely. Personally, and I can only speak for myself, I do not think that there is any chance that they are still alive at this point.

Thierry Henry announces 1st team squad purge in bid to turn form around

AS Monaco manager Thierry Henry informed journalists in this afternoon’s press conference ahead of this weekend’s match with Dijon that he has banished multiple 1st team players to the reserves because they are not invested enough in the club’s cause to avoid relegation from Ligue 1.

“We will have to see. There were not many people at training yesterday (Wednesday). We will see today (Thursday). We must react at Dijon (to the embarrassing Coupe de France loss to Ligue 2 side Metz on Tuesday). We are in a critical situation, sadly, that has not changed. We have cut the squad down to size. At one point or another, you need guys who want to save the club, not just think about their own futures. We have done some sorting. We are going to war.”

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Leonardo Jardim had an offer from an unnamed English club in recent days

Téléfoot report this morning that Leonardo Jardim had received an offer from an unnamed English side in recent days, but decided to return to Monaco to attempt to save the Principality club from relegation to Ligue 2.

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This mysterious offer is not adjudged to have been from Leicester City, who had however placed the Portuguese technician on their shortlist to replace Claude Puel, were the Frenchman to face the sack.

Jardim will receive €4m a year net on his new 2.5 year Monaco contract, the same amount he was earning before he was sacked, on top of the €8m in severance pay that he received for being sacked in the middle of last October.

The return of Jardim also marks the renewed power of Jorge Mendes on the Principality, who is responsible for the imminently confirmed arrivals of Gelson Martins (Atletico Madrid) and Carlos Vinicius (Napoli).

Monaco continue to advance on Lille midfielder Thiago Mendes (26), with just hours remaining of this January window.

Thiago Silva: “One word for our fans? Sorry.”

Speaking to RMC Sport after losing 3-1 at the Parc des Princes to Manchester United in a result that knocked PSG out of the Champions’ League, captain Thiago Silva had the following to say.

“It is difficult to speak now, it is very fresh. It is a shame… we executed the match well over there, we played very well. But at home, we did not do the things that we said before. It is a shame that it stops here, we had a good run. And once again, it stops here. This was a match of the highest level. That is football. Real Madrid went out to Ajax having beaten them 2-1 in the 1st leg. We worked hard for today and we never gave up.”

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“I just want to ask for forgiveness from our supporters… They had three referees and all three gave the penalty. It is a shame, we did not have the time to react, even during the 90 minutes, we didn’t do it… Each time that we fall, we must quickly get ourselves back up. But we have to continue. We still have the league, even if we are already nearly champions.”