Snapshot
Monaco have reeled off five straight Ligue 1 wins and now host Marseille on Sunday evening with third place in sight. Victory at Stade Louis II would move A. Hütter’s side level on 49 points with R. De Zerbi’s visitors, although Marseille’s goal difference of +19 means Monaco would need a sizeable margin to climb above them. With Lens on 59 points in second, Monaco would still trail the automatic Champions League places by ten points, but tightening that gap remains the aim with seven rounds to play.
Form and context
Monaco’s surge has come with sharp execution in both boxes: 14 league wins already and a goal difference of +9 despite an autumn wobble. Their home record is strong—nine victories from 14 in the principality with just four defeats. Marseille have been erratic away from the Vélodrome, taking six wins but also six losses, and their most recent league outing ended in defeat to halt a three-match winning streak. Recent head-to-head meetings have been competitive, with both clubs recording statement victories over the past two seasons.
Tactical focus
Hütter has leaned on a 3-4-2-1 platform with quick switches into the channels for his twin creators. The wing backs pin opposition full backs, freeing the half-space duo to combine with the striker. Expect Monaco to hunt early turnovers, especially given Marseille’s tendency to build short under De Zerbi. Marseille’s coach has installed his signature positional play: a back three in build-up, a double pivot sliding wide to draw the press, and inside forwards arriving between the lines. The battle will hinge on how well Monaco’s midfield can disrupt Marseille’s rotations and whether the hosts’ transitional threat can punish mistakes once Marseille commit numbers forward.
Selection notes
Monaco’s winning sequence has featured a stable defensive trio in front of their goalkeeper with an athletic double pivot screening. The choice at centre forward remains a talking point, with fresh legs keeping the pressing effort high. Marseille must manage minutes for their front line after a busy fortnight; De Zerbi has rotated his wide options but generally trusts a settled central spine. The bench could prove decisive if intense presses cancel each other out after the hour.
What it means
Three points here would strengthen either club’s claim to Champions League football while keeping alive faint hopes of chasing down the league leaders—Paris Saint-Germain sit atop the table with 63 points. Monaco remain sixth on 46 points but carry the division’s hottest form line, while third-placed Marseille’s cushion is down to three points, so any slip could quickly reshape the top-four race.







