With Phillip Lahm set to retire this summer, and Dani Alves nearing the end of his career, there is a dearth of world class right-backs around European football. Juventus already have a potential successor to Alves on their books in Pol Lirola, and the early signs are he could become the next great right-back in European football.

Lirola reportedly turned down moves to Manchester City and Barcelona in favour of joining Juventus from Espanyol in the summer of 2015, and that decision has paid off with the Catalan gaining top level first team experience in Serie A and the Europa League during the first season of a two-year loan spell with Sassuolo.

‘I grew up with the legend of Lahm, but I see more of myself in Dani Alves’ said the 19 year-old, and it’s easy to see why with Lirola’s attacking instincts and all action style a key feature of his game . I Neroverdi have a number of good young players on their books, with Domenico Berardi and Lorenzo Pellegrini both in the thinking of Azzurri manager Gian Piero Ventura, and Lirola has thrived in the environment created by manager Eusebio Di Francesco.

Lirola is expected to return to Juventus in the summer of 2018 after a second season gaining more experience in Modena. If he keeps improving, he is likely to become a member of the Bianconeri first team squad, and Juve fans will be hoping he can eventually develop into a player capable of emulating his hero Dani Alves.

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Sevilla-Europa-League

Sevilla won the Europa League for the third time in as many years after beating Liverpool 3-1 in Basel. This was the fifth time they have lifted the trophy in the past eleven seasons.

The Andalusians title means that with Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid clashing in the Champions League final in Milan, Spanish clubs will have won both European competitions for the last three seasons.

This dominance extends further as eight of the last thirteen teams to win the Europa League have come from Spain, whilst the Champions League will go to a La Liga side for the fifth time in eight seasons.

What makes Spanish teams so successful in Europe and why have they started to dominate? After all, isn’t La Liga dominated by two behemoths and the rest of the league is just weak and would struggle to finish in the top half of the Premier League?

The success of  Barcelona and Real Madrid is the easiest to understand. Their colossal spending power is only matched by a handful of clubs in Europe. In their quest for constant silverware they buy the world’s best players. This means that numerous canteranos are forced to move on to develop their careers and get playing time at other Spanish clubs.

Whilst Spain’s big two spend tens of millions each year, the same cannot be said for the rest of their clubs. Unlike clubs from England’s cash rich Premier League, the majority of Spanish clubs cannot simply go out and spend £10M on a new defender. Instead they rely on successful scouting and recruitment.

Before the Europa League final, Jürgen Klopp praised Spanish clubs for having better scouting, coaches and player development than those in the other major European leagues.

This is certainly true of Sevilla who have bought the likes of Dani Alves, Luís Fabiano, Adriano, Federico Fazio, Martin Cáceres, Ivan Rakitic, Júlio Baptista, Seydou Keita, Christian Poulsen, Grzegorz Krychowiak and Carlos Bacca for a combined fee of approximately £30M. Then there’s canteranos  such as Sergio Ramos, Jesús Navas, Alberto Moreno, Luis Alberto and José Antonio Reyes that they have developed.

You can argue that Sevilla are the exception. That their success if down to the director of football, Monchi. However, numerous clubs in Spain now have long standing sporting directors who oversee their club’s scouting and recruitment and they have remained in place as coaches have come and gone.

Atlético Madrid have reached their second Champions League final in three years. This has come on the back of them winning the Europa League twice in the space of three years. It is no coincidence that during this period, they have been stable in terms of management and recruitment. This has allowed them to thrive.

Atlético’s first team is made up of canteranos such as Koke and Saúl Ñíguez, supplemented by clever signings such as Diego Godín (signed for €6.6M), Juanfran (€4M) and Gabi (€3M). This prudence allows the club to splash out on the odd marquee signing such as Jan Oblak and Antoine Griezmann who have pushed Atlético to the highest level of European football.

At this moment in time Spain and La Liga are miles ahead of the rest of Europe and it appears that they will continue to dominate for years to come.

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Andrija-Zivkovic

Impressive Europa League performances have made Andrija Zivkovic, the Serbian Messi as they call him, one of the hottest properties in European football this season.

It never is easy to be compared with one of the greatest football players alive, and we have often seen those name tags being nothing more than mere marketing tricks.

However, such is not the case with the Serbian starlet Andrija Zivkovic.

The 19-year-old Partizan winger has caught the attention of a great number of Europe’s top clubs over the past few months due to his stellar performances for Serbia and for his club in the UEFA Europa League.

Nine goals in just 12 games for Partizan this season, five of which came in the European competition and the latest one at AZ Alkmaar on Thursday have alerted the likes of Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham, Atletico Madrid and Inter Milan among others, who would love to see the young player in their ranks.

Partizan wunderkind has been voted Europa League player of the week earlier in the competition, following his impressive display in the 3-1 win over Augsburg in the UEFA Europa League group stage Matchday 2, thus once again announcing himself to the footballing world.

This boy has made a steady progress since he was 17 years old, but the 2015 has actually been the year of his true making.

Leading his Under 20 teammates at the FIFA U-20 World Cup in New Zealand, Andrija Zivkovic was the key man in Veljko Paunovic’s team which were crowned the world champions in the summer. He scored two goals, added four assists and played every minute on his team’s route to the title.

Leader on the pitch, Zivkovic missed out on the most valuable player award despite being the most outstanding performer in the final game against Brazil as well.

Undeterred in his rise to prominence, Zivkovic went from strength to strength as a Partizan regular, keeping his feet firmly on the ground. Humble and modest despite the hype surrounding him, Zivkovic wants to remain in Belgrade and help his team overcome the domestic struggles.

Andrija Zivkovic possesses great pace and stamina. Highly explosive player, he is one person with the ball and different one without it.

His off-ball movement rarely goes out of his position and tactical routine, but with ball at his feet Zivkovic uses his phenomenal dribbling ability to beat the defenders with his cut-ins, strong shot and precise final pass for his teammates.

Unpredictable with his finish, Andrija Zivkovic has a lot to offer as you never quite know what his next move will be.

The uncertainty and unpredictability, however, go far beyond his footballing qualities.

Coming through Partizan youth ranks and the renowned football academy, Andrija Zivkovic is the youngest player to make a senior appearance for the Serbian national team, but also the youngest Partizan captain ever.

He signed his first professional contract in 2013, having agreed on a three-year deal. His contract expires at the end of the season, but both Partizan and Zivkovic seem willing to sign a new deal. However, with certain issues and problems regarding his contract it will be interesting to see if Partizan will be able to hold on to him past January.

In a move that has been described as controversial, the former Partizan management structure had sold the majority of Zivkovic’s contract (75%) to Pini Zahavi’s investment fund for €1.25 million only a year ago.

Current structure headed by the chairman Zoran Popovic is actively looking for a legal solution to the problem, attempting to retrieve the part of Zivkovic’s contract with the mission to prevent Pini Zahavi from taking the player to his club Apollon Limasol before selling him further on to the interested parties.

Andrija could be forced to go to a club that is not of his own liking due to the legal complications which still remain unresolved and which prevent his current club from making any decision with an ownership claim of only 25% in his deal.

Such is the poor destiny of Serbian clubs, who are often forced to sell players in order to keep their books in the green.

Partizan and another bright Serbian pearl Andrija Zivkovic are, unfortunately, not an exception.

About the author – Miloš Markovic

Sports journalist from Serbia, Editor in Cheif at Sportske.net and contributor to FutbolgradLive. Worked with Inforstrada and FIFA covering Serbia’s international games during the 2014 World Cup qualifiers.

twitter: @milosemarkovicu

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Unai-Emery-and-Sevilla

Unai Emery and Sevilla, in many ways, has been the perfect match. They’ve been together since January 2013, and came to be at a time when prosperity had gone awry for both parties. While Emery’s Eastern European adventure with Spartak Moscow had fallen before it began, Sevilla had blitzed through three managers in as many seasons; finishing ninth in the season before the 43-year-old arrived.

Together, they were fragile. But in time they would facilitate each other’s resurgence.

From 2013 to 2015, his team asserted themselves as the Europa League’s finest by a sizable margin. Although their first win was by no means routine, the struggle in doing so gave them something more profound. It meant that in the following season, Emery’s Sevilla would find true meaning in the defence of their trophy; a unified goal which would support their every move as a club, and dispel the theories of European obligations being a hindrance to that of the domestic kind.

The Europa League thus became something very special to the club – despite it’s reputation elsewhere. Sevilla’s success in the competition permeated into their other responsibilities, and bonded their part of the city in a way Emery could only have dreamed of. “We love this competition,” he echoed throughout the year. And it was no wonder. Where the current financial barriers of La Liga prevent them from aspiring beyond Champions League qualification, their escapade in Europe’s other competition gave romance to theirs and Emery’s journey.

But having emerged from their two-year high, and with paradigms changing within the club, Emery’s honeymoon has come to a rather abrupt halt. Sevilla’s new common goal has become ambiguous. And for the first time in the Basque’s spell, the legitimacy of his quest at the club isn’t so forthcoming.

At present day, we find a team lurching between competitions with no such substance in any. In La Liga, they sit in 12th position, closer to the relegation zone than Europe, and already trailing fourth-placed Atlético Madrid by eight points. Meanwhile, their Champions League dreams are heading for a blunt, anti-climactic end, barring back-to-back wins in their final two group games. Never before has Emery’s Sevilla felt so unfulfilling.

“Football is emotion,” Emery told the Guardian, back in May. “There’s an economic [imperative] but what fans really want is to enjoy their team. If you have money but don’t generate feeling, it’s worthless. You play the Champions League but get knocked out in the group, losing all your games, and [the fan says:] ‘Sure, you’ve made €20m, but that means nothing to me.’”

Now, Emery’s worst fears are coming true. His hopes of taking Sevilla to the next level in Europe’s premier competition, after two years of dominance in the Europa League, are the very reason that the 44-year-old decided to stay at the club in the summer. And it’s all disappearing before his eyes; like a runaway train mowing through all of the foundations they have been building since 2013.

Though it’s admirable in many ways that Emery decided to take on a contract extension that could make or break him, the dangers of doing so were evident from the start. He knew it himself. In the selling nature of the club, no Sevilla team in history has been able to sustain success (by their standards), beyond a stretch of two seasons. The reality of not only prolonging, but progressing a club, under such circumstances has come down on Emery’s project hard.

Sevilla spent more in the summer than they ever have before, too. In collating the most expensive squad in club history, intentions were set for something great. But at the same time, it spoke to desperation for them to achieve as such; as if blinded by hope and love-struck by what could be a now frontier. While searching for the accelerator, they appear to have hit reverse.

Unfortunately for Sevilla and Emery, his two full seasons in charge have left the club in an awkward space. In essence, he has become a victim of his own success. They are too good for their beloved Europa League and have outgrown it, but they aren’t good enough for the greater horizon that captured their imagination in the summer. And in pursuit of the latter, Sevilla have lost the driver behind what produced two of their most enjoyable seasons in recent memory.

Their constant rebuilding of squads – as accomplished as they have been in the last two years – has proven far from foolproof. Over the summer, they lost talismanic figures in Carlos Bacca, Aleix Vidal and Stephane Mbia. They were pillars of all that Emery’s team achieved last season, and in hindsight, crucial members of what was a perfect storm. By the way of their budget, ambitions and realistic reach, Sevilla had a team that was – until then – untouched by Europe’s bigger clubs, and perfectly suited for Emery’s ideas. Things are different now.

Of the double-digit number of signings the club made over the summer, only Yehven Konoplyanka has become a sure thing in Emery’s preferred XI. And even then, the move has had repercussions given that the Ukrainian’s presence has seen Vitolo, the man who played on the left wing throughout last season, ushered out to a less natural right wing berth.

“In Europe, we want to move forward. And if not, we will continue in the Europa League,” Emery said on Tuesday evening, following their comprehensive defeat at the hands of Manchester City. Except, defending a defence doesn’t sound quite so rousing for a man who stuck around to try and make Sevilla something more than that.

Together, Emery and Sevilla saved each other, but they have ventured too far down the corridor of possibility. And unfortunately, it seem as if stagnation is becoming an increasingly likely best-case scenario for this once-stirring match.

About the author – Jamie Kemp

Jamie is a freelance sportswriter, who writes on English and Spanish varieties of football in the main. He is also the creator of the popular blog El Rondo; a spot where you can find regular musings on the world of La Liga.

twitter: @jamiekemp

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