Nasri looks to emulate Pires' greatness with Arsenal and France

John Nisbet
Tuesday 02 September 2008 19:00 EDT
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Samir Nasri said yesterday he hoped to emulate his fellow midfielder Robert Pires by having a successful club career at Arsenal that would also secure his international place with France.

Nasri, 21, who joined the Londoners from Marseilles in July and marked his Premier League debut with a winner against West Bromwich Albion last month, is one of a new generation of players coming into France's team.

Asked about his career in England, he said: "You're playing with the cream of European football. It will allow me to get up to international standard and play a part in the French team."

Pires, who also played at Marseilles before capturing five trophies with Arsenal, was a key figure for his country. He scored 14 goals in 79 matches, helping France win the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 before falling out of favour with the coach Raymond Domenech. Speaking at France's training centre, where he is preparing for the World Cup qualifier against Austria on Saturday, Nasri said Pires was both an inspiration and a difficult act to follow at Arsenal. "They were expecting a successor to Robert Pires. It's flattering but hard to live up to," he said. "I would like to have the career he had at Arsenal."

Nasri said the club's strong French connection, built up under coach Arsène Wenger, had helped him. "The integration has gone well. The team is very young and there are a lot of French there so I don't feel out of place."

On the international front, Nasri won the first of his 12 caps against Austria in March 2007, having a hand in the goal in a 1-0 friendly victory in Paris. It could be a good omen for the game in Vienna on Saturday when France will look to turn the page on their dismal group-stage exit from Euro 2008. "Austria is a good memory, it was my first match but the context is different," Nasri said. "After the disappointment we had at the Euros we can't allow ourselves to take any match too easily."

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