
At
the start of last season he was an unknown outside of Ukraine with a
transfer value of under £1m. Now he is one of the most coveted young players
in Europe. Following an explosive rise, Mykhailo Mudryk looks destined for
big things.
The 21-year-old, who showcased his thrilling speed and one-on-one ability in
the Champions League group stage earlier this season, has been described by
Darijo Srna, Shakhtar Donetsk's director of football, as "the best player in
Europe in his position" after Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior.
There may be a hint of exaggeration to that statement but Srna is not the
only one to hold Mudryk in high regard.
His list of suitors is a long one but it is Chelsea who now look set to win
the race for his signature, the Blues having agreed a deal worth £85m ahead
of Arsenal, who were previously confident of taking him to the Emirates
Stadium.
Shakhtar have been adamant about securing their huge valuation of the player
- "if someone wants to buy Mudryk, they must spend a lot of money and
respect our club," added Srna recently - but is the hype justified?
Attitude shift under De Zerbi
Mudryk has long been viewed as a player of huge potential in Ukraine, where
he started out in Metalist Kharkiv's academy before moving to Dnipro and
then Shakhtar, but it took longer than many expected for him to start
flourishing.
Paulo Fonseca, Shakhtar's former manager, saw his potential during his time
in charge, bringing him into the first-team fold and handing him his senior
debut at the age of 17 in 2018.
For all Mudryk's talent, though, his attitude caused doubts.
"He sometimes didn't hear what the coach said to him," reflected Shakhtar
captain Taras Stepanenko recently. Fonseca, meanwhile, aired his own
concerns after a friendly win over Azerbaijani side Qarabag in January of
2019.
"Mykhailo scored today, but he still has a lot to learn," he said. "I am
definitely convinced by his talent, but first of all, he must understand
that he still has a lot of ways he can improve… he has to change his
attitude a bit on the pitch."
Mudryk was sent on loan to Ukrainian Premier League rivals Arsenal Kyiv only
a few weeks later. Another loan spell, this time at Desna Chernihiv, would
follow that, with Shakhtar hoping greater exposure at senior level would
help him mature.
But it was only after the appointment of Roberto De Zerbi, now of Brighton,
in the summer of 2021, at a time when Mudryk was valued at under £1m by
Transfermarkt, that his fortunes - and indeed his attitude - began to change
back at his parent club.
"Everybody knows Mudryk is an amazing talent but not a lot of coaches can
find a connection with him," explained Srna, before adding that one of De
Zerbi's first acts in charge of Shakhtar was to pick up the phone to the
on-loan youngster.
"He told him, 'You will become a player with me, or you will not be a
football player,'" added Srna of that De Zerbi phone call. "From that day,
Mudryk changed things completely."
De Zerbi made Mudryk a personal project.
"I need not only to win the league and the cup, as well as to play well in
the Champions League, but also to educate young players," he said. "Mudryk
is one of the best young footballers in Europe. If I don't bring him to a
high level, I will consider it a personal defeat."
Mudryk was one of several Shakhtar academy products thrown into the team by
De Zerbi and he rewarded his faith emphatically, the winger becoming a
regular starter before the 2021/22 campaign was disrupted by the pandemic,
and subsequently breaking into Andriy Shevchenko's national team.
Champions League breakout turns heads
The doubts over Mudryk's attitude swiftly disappeared and soon his ability
was coming to the fore.
Indeed, since his breakthrough at the start of last season, he has scored
nine goals and provided 13 assists in 23 Ukrainian Premier League
appearances - and that despite the upheaval caused by Russia's invasion of
the country as well as the pandemic.
The numbers are impressive but it is on the European stage that Mudryk has
really turned heads.
He was used primarily as a substitute during Shakhtar's group-stage campaign
last season, but he certainly made his mark on his first start, his
eye-catching display in a 2-1 defeat to Real Madrid earning him an ovation
from the home fans at the Bernabeu when he was substituted in the second
half.
It was a significant moment in Mudryk's rise to prominence and this season
he has continued to grow in stature, starting all six of Shakhtar's group
games and contributing three goals and two assists, a combined total
bettered by only seven players in the competition so far.
Celtic will not remember their meetings
with him fondly.
In the first of them, played in Warsaw in September, Mudryk scored
Shakhtar's equaliser with a powerful, diagonal finish having latched onto a
Heorhii Sudakov through-ball with a well-timed, and explosively fast, run in
behind Celtic right-back Josip Juranovic.
Then, at Celtic Park a month later, he again made another decisive
contribution, scoring another equaliser, this time with a stunning
individual effort from outside the box following a counter-attack as Ange
Postecoglou's side were knocked out of the competition.
Mudryk was even better in the 4-1 win over RB Leipzig which came prior to
those two games, setting up Shakhtar's opener after darting inside from the
left and outfoxing his marker with a series of stepovers, then finishing off
a rapid counter-attack himself before producing another assist with a low
cross for striker Lassina Traore.
Mudryk's main strengths were plain to see in those games - his pace and
power when cutting inside from the left to use his stronger right foot; his
speed in transition; his clinical finishing ability - and his ability to do
it on the Champions League stage only added to his appeal to a growing list
of suitors which includes Arsenal.
Chelsea, Arsenal interest explained
Chelsea's lack of firepower has already seen them secure a loan deal for
Atletico Madrid's Joao Felix, who was sent off on his debut against Fulham
on Thursday, but Mudryk has been a rumoured target since the start of the
window.
The Blues are desperate to improve their attacking output having only scored
21 goals in 18 Premier League games this season. Arsenal, meanwhile, have
been far more prolific but lack depth beyond Bukayo Saka and Gabriel
Martinelli in the wide positions.
Part of Mudryk's appeal to both sides is in his ability to play on either
flank. He generally prefers to operate as an inverted winger on the
left-hand side, but he is happy on the right too.
"It's more comfortable for me when I play on the line where I can show all
my potential one against one," he said when asked about his favoured
position in an interview with The Times in September.
"I have more space to move to the front and I can create a lot more chances
when I play on the line. There are more people in the middle. But, you know,
the middle is also OK for me.
"My inspiration is Cristiano Ronaldo because of what you can do if you work
hard and believe in yourself. I like the way Cristiano plays. I see myself
like that - a winger."
That is not to say he might not one day be comfortable playing centrally too
- "I need more time to change my position from 11 or 7 to 9, but with time
it is possible," he added to The Times - but he is above all a player who
carries the most threat from the flanks.
It remains to be seen what happens next but it looks increasingly likely
that Mudryk, although a little-known figure outside of Ukraine only a year
ago, has a tantalisingly bright future ahead of him.