Edinson Cavani’s goal was met with a groan. Monaco had embarrassed PSG by capturing the Ligue 1 title 17 months earlier but, just 11 minutes into their match in October, Monaco were already two down. Nacer Chadil’s injury compounded the depressed mood at the Stade Louis II and, when his replacement Jordi Mboula was also forced off, manager Thierry Henry was seen mouthing “wow” to himself on the touchline.
Monaco’s disastrous 2-0 home defeat to bottom side Guingamp on Saturday leaves them 19th in Ligue 1 for the winter break, all positivity decimated while the club suffers through a catastrophic injury crisis and repeated allegations from Football Leaks as relegation looms. “Wow” indeed.
To underline their slump, Monaco have lost nine of their last 12 games in Ligue 1, as many as they lost across the previous 73. Excitement and romanticism aside, Henry has changed little during his 14 games as coach and, after just three wins, even that initial promise has disintegrated. Hope generated in beating fellow strugglers Caen and Amiens, thanks to a Radamel Falcao free-kick and brace of penalties has proven misplaced, as performances again melted away this week.
Henry has come to personify the atmosphere at Monaco. His obvious frustration paired with a sense of desperation came to the fore this week when he criticised his team after the dire 3-0 loss at Lyon.
“Without desire, it is difficult to win. Without showing depth, it is difficult to win,” Henry explained, expanding on a previous claim that his “players are unintentionally refusing to play” due to a crippling lack of confidence.
The increasingly morose Monaco vice president Vadim Vasilyev, who, is alleged to personally pocket 10% of all transfer profits that the club makes according to Mediapart, insisted the club “didn’t bring [Henry] in as a fireman, he is here for the long term, not the short term.” However, Henry’s gloomy persona does not hint at long-term thinking, with the manager often losing his cool. “Like in the second half in Madrid, three-man midfield, Golo on the left,” he told Youri Tielemans during the Montpellier defeat. “How many times do I have to say … in English, in French, what else do you want?”
Criticism of Henry in the French media is mounting as he cuts an increasingly forlorn figure on the touchline. One pundit on RMC, a prominent radio station, deemed him “pathetic”. That sulky, withdrawn attitude has been transmitted slowly to his players, as Henry admitted in defeat to promoted Reims they “practically won all the duels and played as it should be done at home. On our side, the desire was not there.” Although Henry carries legendary status in England, his aura is not quite as lofty in France and his hold over the young squad remains questionable. An exasperated glare at Benoît Badiashile after the promising defender left his chair in Henry’s way as they left a press conference underlined his frustration over widespread inexperience.
Performances have been verging on the inept as well as naive and disjointed; Tielemans, for example, surrendered possession 34 times during the loss to Guingamp while centre-back Jemerson’s form, especially in the conceding two late goals to Montpellier, has been disastrous.
This, however, is only partly down to Henry. Despite doing so expertly beforehand, former coach Leonardo Jardim could not regroup after this summer’s latest exodus of talent, while former Chelsea sporting director Michael Emenalo’s recruitment has lacked direction, the signing of emerging talents in the past such as Thomas Lemar, Benjamin Mendy and Bernardo Silva have been replaced by seven-figure sums for raw teenagers barely ready for the first team.
An injury list numbering double figures for some weeks, including a host of prominent first-team players such as Croatian keeper Danijel Subasic, France full-back Djibril Sidibe, former Manchester City forward Steven Jovetic, summer signing from Strasbourg Jean Ahoulou and last season’s standout forward Rony Lopes has proven insurmountable.
Falcao even went as far to criticise the current squad’s quality, as injuries, departures and questionable acquisitions have left Henry with what is effectively the youth team and a smattering of established names. Han-Noah Massengo and Badiashile, for example, became the first players born in the 21st century to start a Champions League match.
The future of the club itself also remains in question. Rybolovlev, reportedly open to selling Monaco for some time, infuriated by various barriers imposed by Financial Fair Play and the French authorities, was held in police custody in November at the request of a local judge in connection with “active and passive bribery” and “corruption” and his potential complicity in these matters, according to Le Monde. Although a statement maintained Rybolovlev was “presumed innocent”.
Henry insisted he was “not thinking of the winter transfer window” but those above him certainty are with Cesc Fàbregas, Michy Batshuayi and Gary Cahill all linked this week and the former Arsenal forward admitting “we play to survive, we do not play for anything else”. This week perennial Ligue 1 caretaker coach Franck Passi, previously standing in at Lille regularly at Marseille, was added to Henry’s coaching staff. Perhaps a sign that Vasilyev foresees a change.
In 2011, Monaco were relegated and sat bottom of the second division by Christmas before Rybolovlev’s billions rescued them. Now the Russian’s future alongside his manager’s and their Ligue 1 status is again in doubt. This time, however, saviours may not be so forthcoming.
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