NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Lyon keep faith in Kadewere

- BY TAWANDA TAFIRENYIK­A Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

FRENCH football giants Olympic Lyon have kept faith in Zimbabwe internatio­nal forward Tino Kadewere despite a dip in form which has seen him get little game time.

The Warriors striker had attracted interest from several European clubs, with Reims, Troyes and Lorient reportedly keenly watching him.

Several clubs continued their pursuit of the forward until the final hour of the transfer deadline on Monday.

However, the Lyon hierarchy, including Dutch coach Peter Sylvester Bosz, declined to let go of the Zimbabwean forward on deadline day transfer.

Bosz believes Kadewere, who had an explosive start to Ligue 1 giants Lyon in the 2020-2021 season after banging in 10 goals in 33 matches and providing three assists in 24 starts as Lyon finished fourth behind French Ligue 1 champions Lille, PSG and Monaco, was the team’s valuable asset.

This is despite that he has since struggled for form this season, having been plagued by injuries. He has only played just six matches with no goal to his name.

The Zimbabwean forward is battling to hold down a place in the team, which has a forward line featuring the likes of Moussa Dembele, Toko Ekambi, Raya Cherik and Bradley Barcola.

Since his return from injury, Kadewere has been coming from the bench in the few matches he has been given a run.

The powerful forward also failed to impose himself at the African Cup of Nations finals in Cameroon, as the Warriors displayed a lacklustre show that saw them exit the tournament in the group stages following defeats to Senegal and Malawi.

Although they went on to beat Guinea in the last match of the group, their fate had already been sealed.

However, his brother Prosper, while acknowledg­ing things have not been the same for Kadewere since his return from injury, said the fact that the coach was giving him some game time showed they had faith in him.

“I think this is normal in football. Every player goes through that, it’s a phase and Tino’s time will come. The fact that the coach is giving those 20 or 30 minutes is a vote of confidence in his abilities,” he said.

“Remember, since his return from injury, the team has been scoring goals and in your opinion, what would be the reason for the coach to change the team? The most important thing is he is in there and his time will come.”

With the departure of Olympic Lyon striker Islam Slimani, who moved to Sporting Lisbon following the terminatio­n of his contract, it means one competitio­n less for the Zimbabwean internatio­nal.

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