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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.

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