french association football player

Tiémoué Bakayoko ( bear 17 August 1994 ) is a french professional football player who plays for Serie A club AC Milan, on lend from Chelsea, and the France national team. Bakayoko plays as a center midfielder, but can adapt to early positions such as a box-to-box midfielder ascribable to his ability to break up turn. He is considered to have all-around ability, vitamin a well as possessing physical baron and athleticism, with France coach Didier Deschamps describing him as “ a accomplished midfielder. ”

After suffering a fracture leg as a young player, Bakayoko joined the academy at Rennes at the age of 13. At 14, he was turned down by the Clairfontaine academy. His senior career began at Rennes where he made 24 appearances before moving to Monaco in 2014 for 8 million EUR. [ 4 ] In his first two seasons at the clubhouse, Bakayoko made 31 Ligue 1 appearances, but was a regular newcomer in the 2016–17 season, contributing to Monaco ‘s Ligue 1 entitle gain adenine well as being named in the 2016–17 UEFA Champions League team of the season. In 2017, he joined Chelsea for £40 million. Bakayoko made his first elder international appearance for the France national team in March 2017 .

early life [edit ]

Bakayoko was born in Paris [ 5 ] and played for Paris 15sème O at the historic period of five. Aged nine, he played for CA Paris Charenton before moving to Montrouge FC 92. As a young player, Bakayoko suffered a broken leg which stopped him playing football for eight months. [ 6 ] In 2008, at the senesce of 13, he joined the academy at Rennes. [ 6 ] At 14, he was rejected by the celebrated Clairefontaine academy. [ 7 ]

Club career [edit ]

Rennes [edit ]

Bakayoko made his debut for the Ligue 1 team on 24 August 2013 in a Ligue 1 match against Évian TG, playing the wholly match in a 2–1 away win. [ 8 ] [ 9 ]

monaco [edit ]

Bakayoko playing for Monaco in 2014 Bakayoko joined Monaco in July 2014 for £7 million, [ 10 ] and made his debut for the club on 10 August 2014 in a Ligue 1 match against Lorient. He was replaced by Valère Germain after 32 minutes in a 2–1 home plate loss. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] [ 13 ] His early substitution by Monaco coach Leonardo Jardim created a sift relationship between the two, with Bakayoko saying : “ From then on, something was a little broken between him and me ”. [ 6 ] After his debut, Bakayoko did n’t start another match for over two months, with the end of his season blighted by injuries and inconsistent kind. [ 7 ] Difficulties between Jardim continued, with Bakayoko feeling unfairly treated by his director who had become frustrated at Bakayoko ‘s build up, questioned his attitude during aim and was critical of Bakayoko for sometimes being former for meetings. [ 7 ]

“ Makélélé helped me greatly. When he arrived at Monaco I was n’t a very, very good actor, but I had a set of discussions with him. He gave me a batch of advice and he allowed me to play my dash of football more just. ”

– Bakayoko on the advice he received from Claude Makélélé [ 14 ]
Following his foremost two seasons at Monaco, in which he made 31 Ligue 1 performances, Bakayoko decided to change his behavior to fulfil his potential, which included moving from a luxury villa to an apartment and changing the color of his car from tap to black. [ 11 ] [ 6 ] additionally, he began boxing, changed his diet and improved his persuasiveness. [ 7 ] He was helped by former France external Claude Makélélé, who had been appointed film director of football at Monaco in 2016, [ 15 ] on how to improve his football and take manage of himself off the sales talk. [ 11 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 14 ] Bakayoko besides sought advice from his former youth coach at Rennes, Yannick Menu. [ 11 ] [ 7 ] As a result, and with Jérémy Toulalan and Mario Pašalić having both left the club in 2016, Bakayoko became a even crank for Monaco, helping the clubhouse to the Ligue 1 title in the 2016–17 season and named in the 2016–17 UEFA Champions League squad of the season. [ 11 ] It was a decisive season for Bakayoko. not lone had he established himself as an important part of Monaco ‘s team with reproducible performances, he had fewer injuries and his application during training was nobelium longer criticised. [ 7 ] During the 2016–17 UEFA Champions League round of 16-second branch catch at the Stade Louis II on 15 March 2017, Bakayoko scored the concluding goal ( it was his first gear ever UEFA Europa League or UEFA Champions League finish ) with a header from a Thomas Lemar free-kick to help Monaco secure a critical goal against Manchester City. Monaco won 3–1 and won the tie on the away goals principle ( aggregate score 6–6 ). [ 16 ] During an interview, Bakayoko said a recurrence of an stifle injury from 2015 leading to a crack up in the meniscus caused him a distribute of discomfort during his concluding season at Monaco : “ People do n’t know but throughout the whole of last temper I suffered because of my stifle. I very had to grit my teeth in every match. ” [ 17 ]

Chelsea [edit ]

Bakayoko playing for Chelsea in 2018 On 15 July 2017, Bakayoko signed for Premier League clubhouse Chelsea on a five-year contract for a fee around the margin of £40 million, [ 18 ] [ 14 ] making him the golf club ‘s second most expensive bless at the meter, after Fernando Torres. [ 19 ] He made his Chelsea debut in a 2–1 away win over Tottenham Hotspur in the Premier League on 20 August 2017. [ 20 ] On 5 February, he was sent off for the beginning prison term in his Chelsea career, in a 4–1 loss aside to Watford. Bakayoko was given his marching orders for two bookable offences, one on Étienne Capoue and the other on Richarlison, both in the first gear half. [ 21 ] Bakayoko failed to impress in his first season. He was criticised for his performances by fans and pundits alike, with games against both Watford, where he was sent off after lone 30 minutes, and a 3–0 away kill by Newcastle United on the last day of the Premier League season being singled out as two of his worst. [ 22 ] [ 23 ] [ 24 ] [ 25 ] [ 26 ] Bakayoko continued his poor people form into the 2018–19 season, finding himself blameworthy for Inter Milan ‘s counterweight in a 1–1 pre-season pull, having lost possession in midfield. [ 27 ]

Milan ( lend ) [edit ]

On 14 August 2018, Bakayoko signed for Serie A cabaret AC Milan on a season-long loan for a fee of €5 million with an option to make the move permanent for €35 million. [ 28 ] [ 29 ] His career in Italy did not get off to a adept start, and he was labelled ‘confused ’, ‘a disaster ‘, and ‘messy ‘ after a poor performance in a UEFA Europa League game against Olympiacos, in which he gifted the Greek team the opener in a 3–1 win. [ 30 ] [ 31 ] however, his form improved dramatically former in 2018. [ 32 ]

Bakayoko was subjected to racial abuse by the travelling Lazio ultras during the second leg of the Coppa Italia semifinal equal against Lazio, in which the plot was not suspended and saw Milan eliminated 1–0. [ 33 ] [ 34 ]

tax return to Monaco ( loan ) [edit ]

On 31 August 2019, Bakayoko agreed to rejoin Ligue 1 club Monaco on loan until the end of the 2019–20 season, [ 35 ] with an option to make the motion permanent wave for a report fee of €42.5 million. [ 36 ]

Napoli ( loanword ) [edit ]

On 6 October 2020, Bakayoko returned to Italy with Napoli on a season-long loan. He would play again for Gennaro Gattuso, the current director of the club who was in charge of A.C. Milan when Bakayoko spent the 2018–19 season there. [ 37 ] He made his debut for the club on 17 October 2020, as Napoli beat Atalanta 4–1 at home. [ 38 ] On 10 January 2021, he scored his first base goal for the golf club to grant Napoli a late win, 2–1 at dwelling to Udinese. [ 39 ]

Return to Milan ( loan ) [edit ]

On 30 August 2021, Bakayoko returned to Milan on a biennial lend until 2023 with an choice to buy. [ 40 ]

International career [edit ]

In 2014 he became the finalist of 2014 Toulon Tournament. [ 41 ] He was approached by the Ivory Coast national team before he chose France in 2017. [ 42 ] [ 43 ] Bakayoko was called up to the elder France team for the first time to face Luxembourg and Spain in March 2017 after Paul Pogba withdrew through injury. [ 44 ] He made his debut on 28 March 2017 against the latter, replacing Adrien Rabiot at half-time of a 2–0 friendly home personnel casualty. [ 45 ]

dash of bet [edit ]

Bakayoko has been compared to Yaya Touré due to his strong all-around qualities of footstep, intelligent reading of the game, ability to intercept passes and accomplished undertake, travel by and trickle, [ 11 ] [ 46 ] adenine good as being physically knock-down and athletic. [ 11 ] He plays as a center midfielder in the center of the pitch, breaking up attacks and making driving advancing runs ; as such, he has besides been labelled a “ box-to-box midfielder. ” Bakayoko ‘s coach at Monaco, Leonardo Jardim, said : “ He wins a lot of balls, brings balance to the team. He passes the ball well and wins his duels. That is Bakayoko ‘s function. ” [ 47 ] [ 48 ] France coach Didier Deschamps described Bakayoko as “ a complete midfielder ”, and said : “ He has an authoritative athletic presence, he ‘s good at convalescence, he scores decisive goals and is able to project himself. ” [ 49 ] His director at Milan, Gennaro Gattuso, said that Bakayoko plays as a deep-lying midfielder in an atypical way, because sometimes prefers to point and go past the opposition rather of launching the ball, therefore creating a numerical advantage in privilege of his team. [ 50 ] [ 51 ]

personal life [edit ]

Bakayoko is of Ivorian lineage. In October 2020, controversy arose when it was discovered that Bakayoko, among a few other outstanding french footballers liked a endanger Instagram post by ex-MMA fighter Khabib Nurmagomedov calling for “ the Almighty to disfigure the face of this creature ”, referring to President of France Emmanuel Macron. The post was written by Khabib in reaction to the french President publicly condemning the holocene mangle of Samuel Paty. [ 52 ]

career statistics [edit ]

club [edit ]

As of match played 4 December 2021[53]

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition

Club

Season

League

National Cup[a]

League Cup[b]

Europe

Other

Total

Division
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals

Rennes
2013–14
Ligue 1

24
1
3
0
1
0


28
1

Monaco
2014–15

Ligue 1

12
0
1
0
2
0
3[c]
0

18
0

2015–16

Ligue 1

19
1
2
1
1
0
1[d]
0

23
2

2016–17

Ligue 1

32
2
1
0
4
0
14[c]
1

51
3

Total

63
3
4
1
7
0
18
1
0
0
92
5

Chelsea
2017–18
Premier League

29
2
5
0
4
0
5[c]
1
0
0
43
3

AC Milan (loan)

2018–19
Serie A

31
1
4
0

6[d]
0
1[e]
0
42
1

Monaco (loan)

2019–20

Ligue 1

20
1
2
0
1
0


23
1

Napoli (loan)

2020–21

Serie A

32
2
4
0

7[d]
0
1[e]
0
44
2

AC Milan (loan)

2021–22

Serie A

8
0
0
0

2
0

10
0

Total

39
1
4
0

8
0
1
0
52
1

Career total

207
10
22
1
13
0
38
2
2
0
282
13

International [edit ]

As of match played 28 March 2017[54]

Appearances and goals by national team and year

National team
Year
Apps
Goals

France

2017
1
0

Total
1
0

Honours [edit ]

Monaco
Chelsea

Read more: Sevilla FC

Individual

References [edit ]