The new Ligue 1 season gets underway on Friday after a summer dominated by behind-the-scenes turbulence at champions Paris Saint-Germain and the return of Monaco as a major force.
After
winning their third league title in May, PSG saw coach Carlo Ancelotti
leave for Real Madrid before influential sporting director Leonardo
stood down after being banned for 14 months for pushing a referee.
Having
missed out on numerous higher-profile names to replace Ancelotti,
including Fabio Capello and Andre Villas-Boas, the capital club settled
for former Bordeaux and France coach Laurent Blanc.
"Laurent Blanc is the best choice for us. He was one of our priorities," said PSG's Qatari president Nasser Al-Khelaifi.
However,
Blanc has won Ligue 1 before, with Bordeaux in 2009, so he has the
credentials to get the best out of a squad that has been further
strengthened by the summer signings of Lucas Digne, Marquinhos and Edinson Cavani for a combined total of €114 million.
Uruguay
star Cavani, the top scorer in Serie A last season with Napoli, cost
€64 million, a fee that broke the French transfer record set just weeks
previously by Monaco's signing of Radamel Falcao from Atletico Madrid for €60 million.
The
presence of Cavani and Zlatan Ibrahimovic in attack combined with
Thiago Silva in defence means PSG are the favourites to retain the title
but Monaco, without the distraction of European football, will hope to
push them hard.
The principality club are
back in the top flight as Ligue 2 champions, and the backing of Russian
billionaire owner Dimitri Rybolovlev has allowed them to spend almost
€150 million on the likes of Falcao, Porto duo James Rodriguez and Joao Moutinho, Eric Abidal and Jeremy Toulalan.
Falcao is the big draw though, having netted more than 50 goals in La Liga in the last two seasons with Atletico Madrid.
"With Falcao,
we will start every game a goal up already," says Monaco coach Claudio
Ranieri. That may be exaggerated though, and the principality club were
due to begin the season with a two-point deduction after a series of
incidents at the end of a game last season.
The
combined budget of PSG and Monaco amounts to almost two-thirds of that
of the rest of Ligue 1 combined, and the gap in financial power means it
is hard to see anyone else competing for the title, but Marseille could
be dangerous outsiders.
Low profile Marseille
OM are back in the UEFA Champions League and have invested intelligently this summer, with winger Dimitri Payet, outstanding last season for Lille, their major recruit.
OM are back in the UEFA Champions League and have invested intelligently this summer, with winger Dimitri Payet, outstanding last season for Lille, their major recruit.
"There will
always be clubs capable of upsetting the odds. Paris and Monaco have
made extraordinary signings, but we will start the season level with the
rest," says Marseille coach Elie Baup.
The
outlook is a little less positive at Lyon, where president Jean-Michel
Aulas has been busy trying to slash his wage bill, and Remi Garde's side
must return to the Champions League group stage to boost the atmosphere
around the Stade de Gerland.
Elsewhere,
having lost Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to Borussia Dortmund, League Cup
holders Saint-Etienne will do well to repeat last season's success,
while Nice, who move into a new 35,000-seat stadium next month, have
their work cut out to finish in the top five again.
Lille
are rebuilding under new coach Rene Girard, who has been replaced at
Montpellier by Jean Fernandez, while Philippe Montanier is aiming to
revive Rennes after doing a fine job in Spain with Real Sociedad.
Meanwhile,
Ajaccio have handed former Italy striker Fabrizio Ravanelli the chance
to prove himself in a dugout. The Corsicans will be delighted just to
stay up, as will the division's other newly-promoted clubs, eight-time
champions Nantes and Guingamp.
Guingamp
host Marseille in their opening game on Sunday, but the first match sees
the last two champions clash at the Stade de la Mosson, with
Montpellier hosting PSG.
French Ligue 1 fixtures
Friday
Montpellier v Paris Saint-Germain
Friday
Montpellier v Paris Saint-Germain
Saturday
Bordeaux v Monaco
Evian-Thonon-Gaillard v Sochaux
Lille v Lorient
Lyon v Nice
Nantes v Bastia
Rennes v Reims
Valenciennes v Toulouse
Bordeaux v Monaco
Evian-Thonon-Gaillard v Sochaux
Lille v Lorient
Lyon v Nice
Nantes v Bastia
Rennes v Reims
Valenciennes v Toulouse
Sunday
Ajaccio v Saint-Etienne
Guingamp v Marseille
Ajaccio v Saint-Etienne
Guingamp v Marseille
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