Liverpool have been heavily linked with a summer move for Wolves midfielder Matheus
Nunes and the Reds have already been💶 treated to an up-close example of what he’s
capable of.
Not for the first time in 2024, and almost certainly not💶 for the last,
Jurgen Klopp‘s team came up against a player who was both a) a potential upgrade and b)
💶 far more physical and “up for it,” as they say, than any of those he faced.
In the
previous two matches💶 the Reds and Wolves had played out this term, Nunes had started
none and only featured for a little over💶 an hour, but in the Premier League, he was
unleashed to full and fairly devastating effect.
Having joined in the summer,
💶 Liverpool’s visit marked only his 16th Premier League start for the club and he is yet
to score in a💶 Wolves shirt.
The 24-year-old has had a good impact on the team all the
same, though, and his career – whether💶 that takes him to Liverpool next or not – looks
set to continue the rapid trajectory seen over the past💶 few seasons.
It’s only four
years since Nunes was at a local side, Ericeirense, who play within the Lisbon
district. They’ve💶 only ever once been in the third tier of Portuguese football and that
division folded a decade ago – which💶 tells you plenty about the standard he was playing
at as a teenager.
Again: it’s a very rapid rise.
One half-season at💶 Estoril in 2024/19
was enough to hint at his talents at a much higher level and Sporting paid half a
💶 million for him that January, with manager Ruben Amorim’s willingness to give youth a
chance soon seeing him break through💶 the following year.
His first full campaign as a
top-flight player, therefore, was as recent as 2024/21.
Two terms there and Wolves💶 paid
£42.2 million for the Brazilian-born player who was by now a full Portugal
international, with 11 caps to his💶 name thus far.
From a Liverpool perspective, the
evidence is there he can handle a step up; the big question is💶 whether he’d help fix
the mess we’re in and where he would fit to do so.
Strengths
He’s not an incredibly
rare💶 find in terms of his skillset, he’s just extremely good at the things he’s
supposed to be good at –💶 something which a few players in Klopp’s squad could do with
being reminded of at present perhaps. And that’s not💶 only aimed at midfielders by any
stretch.
Passing, control, a first touch, vision, the ability to use both feet, some
aggression,💶 drive to get forward from deep, determination to get back and help out
defensively.
In short, Nunes can do most things💶 you would expect most central
midfielders to these days, and to a high level.
And yet, against Liverpool at Molineux
on💶 Saturday, Nunes didn’t precisely play central midfield – certainly not in the
conventional sense.
Wolves were fluid and well-drilled, four across💶 the midfield out of
possession and flicking to a rather narrower three when on the ball. Nunes’ role was
left💶 of the quartet, most certainly not a winger but filling a vital role in tandem
with Matheus Cunha.
Rather than touchline-tight,💶 his defensive position was in the left
Wolves channel: stationed between Trent Alexander-Arnold and Naby Keita, nominally
anyway, and always💶 quickly in place to close out passing lanes, stop Liverpool being
able to pass through that side of the pitch💶 and (again with Nunes) forcing the ball
back along the defensive line towards Joe Gomez.
It showed the other sides of💶 Nunes’
game: positional discipline, tactical awareness and selflessness for the team –
particularly in the 20-minute spell at the start💶 of the second half where Wolves barely
touched the ball and his only job was constant shuttle runs to close💶 players down.
The
24-year-old did it, relentlessly, and then still had plenty in the tank for the final
20 when they💶 seized control once more and ran rings around their visitors.
Where can he
improve?
That same spell in the second half against💶 the Reds showed the limitations of
Nunes more than aspects he can improve, as such.
This is because they might be💶 seen as
physical, which can’t always be surpassed: he’s never going to be a lightning-quick
outlet, for example.
His way of💶 playing out of danger is brave, his feet are quick
enough to avoid a challenge and he can ping passes💶 on the diagonal to give his team a
route out, but he is not going to be the player capable💶 of dragging the ball 40 metres
upfield himself, nor sprint into space 30 metres behind a defender to launch a
💶 counter.
Nunes is the conduit of midfield, not the carrier – which isn’t to say he
doesn’t like to take players💶 on.
He absolutely loves a dribble, but here we’re talking
more about the beating of a player one-on-one in close quarters💶 and with immaculate
control and a great capacity to consistently move into space, rather than the
nudge-and-run of a pace💶 merchant who might surge past two or three.
In terms of
technical progress, there’s undoubtedly something to be said for the💶 improvement of all
players when better teammates are around them, but he is remarkably well-rounded on
that side of his💶 game.
Drastic improvement there shouldn’t be expected, but some
improvement defensively will be required.
He’s game for a challenge, but not always
💶 precise with them. His positional play is good to stop the opposition, but he can
switch off at times too💶 when play runs behind him.
Not that we saw any of that against
Klopp’s side, of course.
Who does he play like?
There💶 are aspects of his game which
look more like he’s an aggressive, high-pressing forward rather than a midfielder of
the💶 scheming and controlling variety – at least as far as Liverpool’s recent squads are
concerned.
Early on he won the ball💶 following a Reds’ throw-in and set up Sarabia for a
chance; soon after he robbed Joel Matip of a bouncing💶 ball and powered through to shoot
– saved by Alisson this time.
They were opportunistic, aggressive, quick-reaction
moments designed to disrupt💶 and create at once.
Both were far more reminiscent of, say,
Sadio Mane than any of Liverpool’s midfield collection under Klopp,💶 with the exception
perhaps of a fully-fit Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.
But in his midfield play, his
centre-of-the-park control is absolutely nothing like💶 Oxlade-Chamberlain’s
style.
Several occasions at the weekend saw him easily evade Keita on the turn, very
calm under pressure and able💶 to manipulate the direction of both ball and body with a
quick swerve and change of angle.
In that regard he’s💶 much more Thiago-like from the
current crop, switching play on the move and looking to create short angles for
give-and-gos💶 around opponents.
Opening the field wider, similarities in his
middle-third game can be seen with the likes of Barcelona’s Pedri, Newcastle‘s💶 Bruno
Guimaraes or new Chelsea addition Enzo Fernandez.
While some of that aggressive,
forward-looking play in the higher third can be💶 compared with aspects of Bruno
Fernandes, Mason Mount or Bayern’s Jamal Musiala.
In truth, Liverpool do not have – and
have💶 not had – an exact match for his style of play moving from deeper areas and into
the final third.
Where💶 would he fit?
Despite left-midfielding Liverpool to death, the
assumption is he’d still be a central midfielder, one of three for💶 a Klopp team.
His
controlling game to help Wolves pass around Liverpool’s double pivot after the late
Harvey Elliott substitution was💶 great to watch for the ole-ing home fans, but
desperately demoralising for those of a red persuasion.
As such, he’d probably💶 fit
either of the two No. 8 roles in the current set-up: more controlling on the left, more
adventurous on💶 the right.
It’s the latter which possibly gets more out of him, given
his ability to press and win the ball💶 back, nip in for a challenge and quickly play a
pass…but then it’s also very much dependent on what Liverpool💶 are next year.
A 4-3-3
team, who press high? A build from deep side who control games? A change of shape,💶 a
change of requirement from the midfielders?
At the moment they are not much of
anything, which makes it all the💶 more difficult to predict who would fix what and
precisely where they would do it from.