The links of Borussia Mönchengladbach’s
midfield enforcer Granit Xhaka with both Liverpool and
Manchester City
that emerged recently, show no sign of fading. Indeed, they are likely
to increase this summer, after he admitted that it is his dream to play
in the Premier League. The 23 year old Swiss International has grown in
stature for the Bundesliga outfit since joining them in 2012 and now
wears the captain’s armband. Representatives of Jürgen Klopp are
reported to have spoken to Xhaka’s agent about the possible availability
of his client this summer and Xhaka himself has admitted he’d be
tempted by Manchester City. So, if does make the move to the Premier
League this summer, I look at what potential suitors would be getting.
Born
in Basel, Switzerland, of Kosovo Albanian heritage, he played for Basel
until 2012, winning two Swiss League Championships before he moved to
Mönchengladbach for a reported €8.5m. It was at Borussia Park, under
Lucien Favre, that he began to make his name and became a fixture in the
side. Under the guidance of Favre, Xhaka steadily improved and was one
of The Foals stand out players last season, when they finished an
impressive 3rd in the Bundesliga, with some outstanding displays along
the way. This season, a terrible run of results saw Favre leave the club
and be replaced by his assistant Andre Schubert; under the new manager,
Xhaka has been pivotal in Gladbach’s run of form and results.
His combative style makes him a natural
for Premier League football, but it is his technical ability, passing
range and leadership skills that has the attention of many of England’s
top clubs. Former Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich manager Ottmar
Hitzfeld once compared him to Bastian Schweinsteiger, lauding his
intelligence and technique. One of Xhaka’s key strengths is his passing
ability and his range of passing; he reads the game very well and
despite not being a regular goal scorer, does have quite a strike on
him.
To compare him with Manchester City and
Liverpool’s current regular deep lying midfielders Fernandinho and Lucas
Leiva, Xhaka does make less tackles per game, but their tackle success
percentage rate is similar. However, where Xhaka really does elevate
himself above the Brazilian pair is with interceptions, almost doubling
them on that statistic. Xhaka’s 85% pass completion is below
Fernandinho’s 88%, but ahead of Lucas’s 82%; to put that in perspective
though, Xhaka is averaging over 20 passes per game more than the two
Brazilians and his average pass length is just over 20 metres. Simply
put, Xhaka is no crab, making short, safe and easy passes; he is willing
to open the game up and make full use of his passing range and vision.
Xhaka does have one prominent weakness
at this stage of his career though and that is discipline. His 6 yellow
cards and 3 red cards in just 15 Bundesliga games this season is an
issue that he needs to address. Over his Bundesliga career at Gladbach,
he averages a yellow card every 3 games and although he had only been
sent off twice before this season, it’s clearly a trend he needs to
reverse.
In a recent interview with German
magazine Sport Bild, Xhaka complained that he was deliberately provoked
by some opponents: “I will not name names, but I know that there are
coaches in the Bundesliga who have said in the team meeting: Provoke
Xhaka, who has snapped sometimes from this. If that happens, I think
that’s sad. This has, in my view nothing to do with football” He
continued: “I can laugh over insults, that goes with it (the game), but
when someone steps on your foot ten times, puts a boot in again and
again, provokes you for 90 minutes – then it is hard to stay calm”
Xhaka does have a €25m (approximately
£19.5) but out clause, but that does not come into effect until 2017, so
the likelihood is that he would cost considerably more than that if he
were to move this summer. So, given the disciplinary issues, would Xhaka
be worth the hefty outlay? Well, provided the fee could be kept below
£30m, then potentially he could be well worth the investment, especially
if he can curtail his temper and further develop his ability to
influence and control the tempo of games as both Liverpool and
Manchester City are currently lacking in that department.

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