How Samir Nasri went from next Zinedine Zidane to Man City misfit

While Manchester City and Manchester United go
head to head in the derby on Saturday, Samir Nasri will be preparing
for his Sevilla debut against Las Palmas. The talented Frenchman only
recently turned 29 and should be at the peak of his career, so what's
gone wrong?
When the questioning turned to Manchester City's incoming
manager, Samir Nasri was in no doubt. "If I stay working with Pep
Guardiola, if he wants me, he's just going to be a lucky man because I
will be really hungry," he said. "I am the type of player for his
philosophy and the way he likes his team to play."It was April and Nasri had just scored the winning goal in a 2-1 victory over West Brom at the Etihad Stadium. It was his first start since October after a six-month lay-off with a thigh injury, and the Frenchman was already envisioning a central role for himself in Guardiola's revolution.

Nasri celebrates after scoring for Manchester City against West Brom last season
Nasri insists Guardiola fought for him to stay "until the last moment", but it is tempting to wonder whether the new coach was really so conflicted. Nasri's comments do not always tally with reality, after all. When he was left out of City's Champions League squad for the knockout stages in February, for example, he bizarrely declared he would happily finish his career at the club.
Instead, a player once regarded as the next Zinedine Zidane has left Manchester with his stock at its lowest. Injuries limited him to just 13 appearances in 2015/16, and the best season of his career remains the 2010/11 campaign with Arsenal, when he was named in the PFA Team of the Year after scoring 15 goals in 45 games. When he joined City in the summer of 2011, he was one of the Premier League's most coveted players.

Nasri left Arsenal for Manchester City in the summer of 2011
Bust-ups and stormy relationships have been themes of Nasri's career, but his form dramatically improved when Manuel Pellegrini replaced Mancini at the start of the 2013/14 season, and those who know him best insist there were other, more significant factors at play in his fall from grace over the last two years.
Man Utd vs Man City
September 10, 2016, 11:30am
That view differs from many peoples' perceptions of Nasri, but Constant believes some of the criticism is unfair. "I don't think there was any issue with his character at City," he says. "He's got character, he doesn't deny that, but there's a difference between his career with France, where he had some problems, and his club career. He showed that at Arsenal, where he had no problems with Wenger, but he's someone who doesn't leave you indifferent. You like him or you hate him."
Nasri fell out with France's manager Didier Deschamps in 2014
Nasri announced his retirement from international football after he was overlooked by Deschamps in 2014. It was a messy break-up, and his performances suffered as City surrendered the Premier League title to Chelsea. The whole episode did not reflect well on the 29-year-old, but opinion is split in France - and Nasri is not alone in struggling to meet expectations.
Sevilla vs Las Palmas
September 10, 2016, 5:00pm
Nasri treads a fine line between misunderstood genius and downright petulance, but the question now is whether he can rediscover his best form in Andalucia. "He always told me that he likes La Liga," says Constant. "I don't know if Guardiola wanted him to stay as Nasri said, but he's a competitor, he loves football so much and he's really hungry to show that he can still be a hit in La Liga."

Nasri has joined La Liga side Sevilla on loan until the end of the season
Nasri is not where he was expected to be at this stage in his career, and he will be far from the minds of City supporters when they watch their side at Old Trafford on Saturday, but he is away from the spotlight and he is injury-free. Could the future be brighter? "Who knows?" says Constant. "It wouldn't be the first time he has surprised us."
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