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    Henrikh Mkhitaryan



    Liverpool prepare to launch £20m bid for Shakhtar's midfield star Mkhitaryan

    By Dominic King

    PUBLISHED: 22:30, 3 June 2013 | UPDATED: 22:30, 3 June 2013

    Liverpool are ready to launch an ambitious bid to land Henrikh Mkhitaryan from Shakhtar Donetsk.

    The Armenia international has a burgeoning reputation and Liverpool, who have scouted the midfielder on several occasions, would have to pay more than £20million to stand any chance of signing him.

    Such a price tag, though, would not deter Liverpool from moving for Mkhitaryan and he, along with Schalke defender Kyriakos Papadopoulos, is one of the club’s prime targets for the summer window. Liverpool are also tracking Aston Villa’s Christian Benteke.

    The decision to move for the skillful Mkhitaryan has not been triggered by Luis Suarez’s declaration that he is determined to leave Anfield. Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid are leading the chase for the Uruguyan, who has still not told Liverpool directly he wants a transfer.

    Liverpool intend to bolster their forward line and the 24-year-old is viewed as a player who could significantly enhance their bid to get back in the top four – he scored more than 20 goals for Shakthar last season.

    A significant proportion of the fee that Liverpool would be required to pay for Mkhitaryan could be recouped before the end of the week, as Andy Carroll edges closer to a move to West Ham United.

    The England international has been considering his options since the clubs agreed a £15million deal and had not given up the idea of reviving his Anfield career but that avenue is no longer feasible and Carroll has accepted he must move on.


    Liverpool target £22m Henrikh Mkhitaryan from Shakhtar Donetsk

    • Armenia midfielder scored 25 goals for Shakhtar last season
    • Liverpool believe player would be keen on a move

    Andy Hunter
    The Guardian, Monday 3 June 2013 22.31 BST

    Liverpool have identified Shakhtar Donetsk's Henrikh Mkhitaryan as a leading transfer target for the summer and are not deterred by the £22m price tag on one of the most coveted players in European football.

    The Anfield club have registered their interest in the Armenia international, who scored a record 25 goals in the Ukrainian Premier League last season despite operating as an attacking midfielder. Mkhitaryan put Europe's leading clubs on alert following Shakhtar's elimination from the Champions League by admitting he wanted to play for "one of the strongest clubs in the world", and the 24-year-old was subsequently linked with Barcelona, Chelsea and Manchester City.

    Liverpool, however, tracked the midfielder throughout last season and believe Mkhitaryan would consider a move to Anfield despite the lack of European football currently on offer and rival interest.

    Armenia's three-time player of the year was a priority signing for the Liverpool manager, Brendan Rodgers, before Luis Suárez began pushing for the move that could transform the club's transfer strategy and budget. Fenway Sports Group, Liverpool's owners, are prepared to sanction a big money move for Mkhitaryan without a deal in place for Suarez, with both Real and Atletico Madrid interested in the Uruguay international, although uncertainty over other Anfield players is a complication at present.

    Liverpool agreed a £15m deal with West Ham United for Andy Carroll within days of the Premier League season ending and had hoped the transfer would be completed swiftly to allow them to move on to targets such as Mkhitaryan. But the England international has refused to be pushed into joining Sam Allardyce's team on a long-term basis, following a successful though injury-plagued season on loan, and has been waiting for other options.

    Carroll still has three years remaining on his Liverpool contract but has been told he has no future at Anfield regardless of whether Suarez leaves and with Daniel Sturridge likely to miss the start of next season with an ankle ligament injury. Besides forcing his way back into Rodgers's plans, having drawn encouragement from Jordan Henderson and Stewart Downing doing likewise last season, the 24-year-old also wishes to return to Newcastle United but his former club are not prepared to match West Ham's offer.West Ham have not placed a time-scale on an answer from Carroll and, though Liverpool are confident the £15m transfer will eventually proceed, the Anfield club are concerned the impasse could affect other deals.

    Liverpool do expect to complete the £7.7m signing of the Celta Vigo forward Iago Aspas this week, with the 25-year-old due on Merseyside for a medical following his club's relegation reprieve on the final day of the Spanish league season, and have agreed the free transfer of Kolo Touré when his Manchester City contract expires at the end of the month. Rodgers has several targets beyond Mkhitaryan, however, with his defence in need of several additions and the next season's strike-force clouded by Suárez's discontent. Liverpool have yet to receive an official bid for last season's 30-goal striker, who will have to submit a transfer request when the anticipated move from Madrid arrives.

    Rodgers, who plans to move for the Sunderland goalkeeper Simon Mignolet should Pepe Reina leave this summer, is willing to pay £12m for his first-choice central defender, Kyriakos Papadopoulos, and is also keen on Tiago Ilori, of Sporting Lisbon. But Schalke are insisting on closer to £20m for Papadopoulos, who missed the final months of the Bundesliga season with a knee injury, and Liverpool are reluctant to be dragged into an auction for the Greek.
    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

    #2
    Who's place would Mkhitaryan take in our latest formation assuming Coutinho sits behind the striker?
    Was muß, das muß.

    Comment


      #3
      25 goals for shaktar eh, the local kebab 11 must be rubbish
      removing all the weak links makes us stronger

      too many gutless players, no beef or desire. pussies everywhere... sack them all.

      Comment


        #4
        Another name with a spelling nightmare.

        Not seen much of this lad, is he worth that kind of money?
        The times they are a changin'.

        Comment


          #5
          Never seen him but I'm excited anyway
          Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

          Comment


            #6
            I bet he's a wonderful technician
            A lot of people run a race to see who is fastest. I run to see who has the most guts, who can punish himself into exhausting pace, and then at the end, punish himself even more.

            Comment


              #7
              Let Me Introduce You To Henrikh Mkhitaryan



              April 14, 2013 / by Eziz Allamov / 0 Comment

              Last Sunday just a bit more than 66,000 football fans gathered to watch another Ukrainian derby between the country’s biggest two clubs Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk at NSC Olimpiyskiy. It was another victory for Shakhtar in the Clásico – fifth in a row. It was another fantastic performance from that man again – Henrikh Hamletovich Mkhitaryan. Standard.

              The Shakhtar boss, Mircea Lucescu, firmly believes that there can’t be any leaders in a team, instead the team leads itself. However, it would be silly to deny that Henrikh Mkhitaryan has become the focal figure of the Ukrainian side this season.

              Born in 1989, in the capital city of Armenia, Henrikh spent first few years of his life in southeast of France where his father played as a striker for the local side Valence. Sadly, Mkhitaryan Sr. had passed away of brain tumor when his son was only seven, and the family had to return home. It was then Henrikh decided to follow the dad’s path and joined the Yerevan-based football club Pyunik. In 2003 he was invited to have a four-month long trial at the Brazilian club São Paulo where he trained alongside the likes of Hernanes and Diego Tardelli, currently of Lazio and Atlético Mineiro respectively. Three years later Henrikh Mkhitaryan made his first team debut for Pyunik at the age of 17. He would go on to make another 69 appearances for the club and score 30 goals. This ability to score goals from midfield would soon attract interest of clubs such as Lyon, Lille, Dynamo Kyiv, Lokomotiv Moscow and even Boca Juniors.

              However, due to a good relationship with the then coach Nikolay Kostov, the promising Armenian youngster was persuaded to join Metalurg Donetsk in 2009. The adaptation to a new country and more competitive football league went surprisingly smooth and he soon became the team captain, aged only 21 – the youngest captain in club history. Mkhitaryan played 46 times for the club scoring17 goals and making 11 assists. It soon became obvious that in order to progress his career Mkhitaryan had to move to bigger things and in 2010 another Donetsk club, Shakhtar, agreed a €6 million transfer fee for the 21-year-old midfielder.

              At that point Lucescu admitted that he had been tracking the Armenian for more than three years, since his Pyunik days. Upon arriving to the Donetsk club, Mkhitaryan was mainly deployed as a holding or central midfielder by the Romanian specialist. His functions included mainly defensive contributions but also initiation of attacks. It took a bit of time before Mkhitaryan mastered the new position, understandably, as he spent most of his career at the offensive end of midfield. Lucescu recalls that “it wasn’t easy for him from the start, but his integration was sped up by his high level of football intelligence.” The defensive position has only improved the footballer. The new responsibilities have helped him improve his positional and tactical awareness, ability to read the game as well as the physical side of his game – something which was lacking before.

              Despite operating deeper than usual for first two seasons, Henrikh still managed to contribute to 26 goals in all club competitions, assisting his teammates 11 times and scoring 15 of them himself. The number of goals scored could have been even higher but for poor conversion rate – it was another weakness the player was rightly criticised for at the time.

              The turning point in Mkhitaryan’s career at Shakhtar Donetsk came in January of 2012. The fan favourite attacking midfielder Jádson had to return back to Brazil for family reasons and the Ukrainian club were forced to accept a €4 million bid from São Paulo. It was thought to be a huge loss as the Brazilian magician became so important to the way the team played and was central to success achieved in last seven years by the club.

              However, Mr. Lucescu was confident that the Armenian versatile midfielder would be more than able to fill the gap left by Jádson. He moved Mkhitaryan further up the pitch to play in the position behind the striker(s) but also asked him to track back and press opposition players when the team is defending. And it worked. The 24-year-old has been on fire thus far scoring 21 and assisting 5 goals in just 22 league appearances this season. He only needs two more goals to break record for most goals in a Ukrainian season currently held by Sergey Rebrov and Maxim Shackikh. The difference is that the current record holders, unlike Mkhitaryan, were strikers.

              It should be mentioned though that ability to score goals is not the only valuable asset of this player. According to his manager, Henrikh is very similar to Kaká as he possesses fantastic technique, speed, great passing ability, outstanding vision and creativity. Rather interestingly, Mkhitaryan also wears a shirt with number 22 on the back as the Brazilian used to do during his prime time at Milan. Owing to determination to work hard for his teammates and desire to improve every aspect of his own game, Henrikh Mkhitaryan has become an inspirational leader and the engine of the Donetsk club.

              Apart from his club career, Henrikh has also excelled in the national team shirt. Having represented and captained Armenia from U17 level, Mkhitaryan made his full national debut in 2007. In 36 other matches he played for the national team, Mkhitaryan scored 10 goals – only two away from becoming the all-time top scorer of his country. He was voted best Armenian footballer on three occasions in last four years, missing out on the award only in 2010.

              He has received a lot of praise for his performances both for club and country but undoubtedly the highest praise came when the Azzurri defeated Armenia in a World Cup-2014 Qualification game. After the match, Cesare Prandelli said:

              “For me, he was the stand-out performance today. He ran his socks off and scored a fantastic solo goal. Henrikh Mkhitaryan is a footballer who has quality to fit in any leading European national football team.”

              His football might have attracted scouts from top European clubs – such as Arsenal, Liverpool, Juventus, Barcelona and Real Madrid – but, off the pitch, Henrikh Mkhitaryan remains to be a down-to-earth guy. With the annual salary of “only” €276,000, he must be one of the most underpaid talented footballers in the world. However, this might change if one of the aforementioned clubs decide to meet his release clause of €30 million this or next summer.

              He’s an intelligent young man as well – someone who enjoys reading books especially those of Paulo Coelho, or so he claims. In addition, he speaks five languages including English, French, Portuguese, Russian, and of course Armenian. Having graduated from Institute of Physical Education in Armenia, he is currently studying Economics in a Saint Petersburg university. The next aim is to apply for a law degree in the same university.



              Last edited by marcus50bucks; 25-06-13, 08:51 PM.

              Comment


                #8
                Never really bother watching Shakhtar but he sounds fantastic!

                Comment


                  #9
                  He genuinely knows his stuff on football in that part of the world

                  John Bradley ‏@JBcommentator
                  Having watched Henrikh Mkhitaryan grow as a person and a player at Shakhtar Donetsk, I will dance a jig if he signs for Liverpool #player
                  Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                  Comment


                    #10
                    he can play either of the non holding roles in a 4-3-3 or behind the striker.

                    and, of course...

                    [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTHglhf_Hgk"]Henrikh Mkhitaryan || Shakhtar Donetsk || 2012/13 || HD - YouTube[/ame]
                    dave of mutilation

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I know Shaktar are a good footballing side, but I thought Willian was their main outlet
                      The times they are a changin'.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by little dave hedgehog View Post
                        he can play either of the non holding roles in a 4-3-3 or behind the striker.

                        and, of course...

                        Henrikh Mkhitaryan || Shakhtar Donetsk || 2012/13 || HD - YouTube
                        FM experience?
                        The times they are a changin'.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                          He genuinely knows his stuff on football in that part of the world
                          Does he support Liverpool or Shakhtar?
                          Trey Nyoni: countdown to stardom- 2 years 1year 0.5 years

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Kenneth View Post
                            Does he support Liverpool or Shakhtar?
                            Us - he's a freelance commentator, and is one of the main two on LFCTV but earns most of his living commentating on the Russian and Ukrainian leagues.
                            Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                              He genuinely knows his stuff on football in that part of the world
                              Will he have any good contacts, works for LFCTV and espn for the Russian/Ukrainian games, I realise he won't actually go to Russia or Ukraine but might know a few people, go on ask him
                              Last edited by doogle; 03-06-13, 11:11 PM.
                              RIP IRWT post/rant, best ever

                              Comment

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