Mika Biereth's value is skyrocketing, leaving Monaco with a big decision this summer
Mika Biereth (22) has been a sensation since arriving in the Principality in January from Sturm Graz, leading the club with 13 goals in Ligue 1. AS Monaco signed the London-born striker for a reported fee of €13m, with an additional €2m in add-ons. The Danish international committed to a four-and-a-half-year deal with the French side.
His immediate impact at Monaco has clearly caught many people's attention. L'Équipe reports that Biereth's current value is three times more than the price Monaco paid for him in January. They say that one unnamed club is prepared to spend €35m to acquire his services.
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He's been a goal machine for Adi Hütter's side, and the former Fulham and Arsenal academy is sure to have plenty of big clubs looking at him, given what he's produced in a short period in Ligue 1.
He'll be one of many names to follow closely for Monaco when the transfer window opens, as plenty of young prospects at the club like Maghnes Akliouche (23) and Eliesse Ben Seghir (20) are potentially on the market as well.
It's a big summer for Monaco, and with only one match remaining in the Ligue 1 campaign, interest in Biereth will likely intensify as we inch closer to the summer transfer window opening.
GFFN | Joel Lefevre

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New York Times
32 minutes ago
- New York Times
French Open finals odds: Aryna Sabalenka favored vs. Coco Gauff, Jannik Sinner-Carlos Alcaraz tight
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New York Times
32 minutes ago
- New York Times
Under-pressure Italy coach Luciano Spalletti vows to fight on after World Cup defeat to Norway
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New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
French Open recap: Why was the roof closed for Carlos Alcaraz vs. Lorenzo Musetti?
Follow The Athletic's French Open coverage Welcome to the French Open briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories on each day of the tournament. On day 13, the Court Philippe-Chatrier roof caused controversy, a strange sequence of tennis results cohered and court assignments yet again let women's tennis down. It was a beautiful afternoon in Paris on Friday, but the 15,000 fans and two players inside Court Philippe-Chatrier wouldn't have known it. The French Open organizers closed the roof for the first men's semifinal, between Carlos Alcaraz and Lorenzo Musetti, which ended up a win for the defending champion after Musetti had to retire with an injury to his left leg. Advertisement It had rained a bit in the morning, and there were some gray clouds floating around, but there was outdoor tennis going on everywhere else at Roland Garros, even on Court Suzanne-Lenglen, which also has a roof. Grand Slam tennis is supposed to be an outdoor sport. 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Any concerns about achieving parity of conditions on a changeable day would fade with the fact that French Open matches are not weighed against each other. Deliberately seeking the same conditions across any two matches would go against the nature of an outdoor event with some covered stadia, given that the entire tournament briefly becomes a two-stadium indoor clay event when it rains. The move appeared to have a major effect on the Alcaraz-Musetti match. Chatrier gets dank once the roof closes. The ball stops flying. Alcaraz's balls, which would kick up off the clay in warm, dry conditions, were sticking in the now-soft surface and now staying right in the Musetti strike zone. It's part of how he won the first set and pushed the second to a tiebreak. Advertisement When he had to retire, it was time to get the stadium ready for the night match — and to open the roof. So much for having the same conditions for both semifinals. 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That Frenchwoman was Loïs Boisson, who was on Thursday competing in the French Open semifinal against world No. 2 Coco Gauff. Boisson was just back from an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear when Tagger beat her, but it remains reminder of how fine the margins are in tennis. Most players in the top 200 to 300 have a story of beating a player who themselves beat a big name in the sport. Maybe Britain's Hannah Klugman is next in line. The 16-year-old faces Tagger in the girls' final Saturday. Charlie Eccleshare French Open organizers say that they don't discriminate against women when they schedule matches each day. They make decisions on what is in the best interests of the sport and its spectators, they say. Friday, with Court Philippe-Chatrier occupied by the men's semifinals, Court Suzanne-Lenglen and Court Simonne-Mathieu were ready to seat around 10,000 and 5,000 fans respectively. Advertisement There were three matches on Suzanne-Lenglen. First came a men's wheelchair semifinal between Tokito Oda and Martín de la Puente. Then came the men's doubles semifinals, which saw Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski beat Christian Harrison and Evan King. Court Simonne-Mathieu seats about 5,000 people. The women's doubles semifinals took place there. The second pitted Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini against Mirra Andreeva and Shnaider. That was a rematch of the Olympic women's doubles final, and the fifth instalment of a developing rivalry at the top of the game. Paolini is a two-time Grand Slam finalist in singles and she and Errani have become one of the most formidable doubles pairs in the game. Andreeva, 18, is a rising star in women's tennis and Shnaider is coming on strong. Both teams laugh their way through matches and have proven to be solid drawing cards when they play at big events. The match didn't turn out to be very good, with Errani and Paolini winning 6-0, 6-1. On paper though, putting this match on the smaller court was a bit of a head-scratcher. Matt Futterman It's already been a good tournament for British players, with three men in the singles third round for the first time in more than 50 years, and three women into the second round. Last year, there were no British women or men in the second rounds at all. Friday was a good day too, with Klugman beating Bulgaria's Rositsa Dencheva to become the first British junior to reach a singles final at the French Open in 49 years. A winner of the prestigious Orange Bowl junior championship, Klugman is looking to make it two girls' Grand Slams out of three for the Brits, after Mika Stojsavljevic's U.S. Open win in September. Elsewhere, Salisbury and Skupski beat King and Harrison on Court Suzanne-Lenglen to reach the men's doubles final. Salisbury has won four men's doubles Grand Slams, all on hard courts, while Skupski is a former Wimbledon champion. Neither has won Roland Garros — nor has any Brit in men's doubles or singles in the Open Era. They take on Argentina's Horacio Zeballos and Marcel Granollers of Spain, the No. 5 seeds, in Saturday's final. Charlie Eccleshare Tell us what you noticed on the 13th day…