Lille are racing up Ligue 1 thanks to their quick and tricky strikers | Football

Lille’s cracking 3-1 win against Saint-Étienne on Saturday afternoon keeps them second in Ligue 1 and three points clear of Marseille. The game also showcased their young Bip Bip strikeforce – Jonathan Bamba, Jonathan Ikoné and Nicolas Pépé – who picked up their name from the cartoon Bip Bip et Coyote, the French version of The Road Runner – and are using their speed and trickery to rival PSG’s very own MCN trio.

Lille are yet to face Lyon or PSG this season, but in their last two matches they have recorded a comprehensive 3-0 win over Marseille and beaten a well organised Saint-Étienne side who arrived at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy in fourth place after three straight wins. They have now scored 17 goals in just nine league games this season.

Their top scorer so far, Bamba, has been a fixture in Ligue 1 for some time now, having made his debut in 2015 aged just 18. He came into his own while playing for Saint-Étienne last season, when he scored seven goals all campaign – a figure he has already equalled this season. The braces he picked up against Marseille and Saint-Étienne in the last two weekends also show he can also be effective against Lille’s toughest opponents.

Ikoné, the youngest of the trio at just 20, is also burnishing his reputation this season after a fitful 18 months on loan at Montpellier, but Pépé is the player who is really taking the league by storm. With six goals and four assists, the 23-year-old has been involved in more than half of Lille’s 19 league goals. He is a far cry from the player who struggled to get a game at Angers behind the then on-loan Bamba 18 months ago.

Like many players who have emerged in French football in recent times – including Ikoné and Bamba – Pépé comes from the Paris suburbs, but he started his career with Poitiers, then in France’s fifth division. He impressed enough to be signed by Angers at the age of just 16. He has been well supported by his family along the way, with his father even registering as a coach to help his son.

Uncapped by France’s youth sides, Pépé’s progression was accelerated by a surprise call-up from the Ivory Coast in November 2016 for a match against France. Despite his status as an international, he often looked like a mercurial talent for Angers so the jury was still out on him when he moved to Lille decided to pay €9m for his services in the summer of 2017.

Lille signed Pépé at the behest of Marcelo Bielsa not for his achievements (he had scored just three times that season), but for his raw potential. Bielsa recognised Pépé’s talent, but he did little to foster it, using him as a central striker after the departures of Nicolas De Préville and Eder. He struggled to adjust to the pressure of being a starter in the top flight for the first time and his profligacy made him a target for the fans’ ire as relegation continued to threaten the side, even after Bielsa was dismissed. However, with the arrival of Lebo Mothiba, Pépé was at last able to play alongside a natural striker and he became a devastatingly effective force as a right-sided forward, scoring nine goals and providing five assists in the second half of last season. Only Florian Thauvin and Memphis Depay were involved in more goals in that span in Ligue 1.

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