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Brentford squad for 2024/25: Thomas Frank's full team for the Premier League, FA Cup and League Cup
By Will Gore,
13 hours ago
The Brentford squad for the 2024/25 season will want more consistency than last term, after they could only manage a 16th-placed finish in the league.
The Bees’ 2023/24 season was blighted by a ludicrous number of long-term injuries, so this time around the main objective will be to get the strongest possible team out on the pitch as often as possible.
New striker Igor Thiago will be tasked with leading the line - though an injury setback will delay that from happening. Thomas Frank will be looking to Mikkel Damsgaard, Kevin Schade, Yehor Yarmoliuk and the other young guns in his squad to establish themselves as consistent Premier League performers as a result.
Inventive attacking set-pieces have been a Brentford trademark for a while now, so whoever is tasked with replacing Bernardo Cueva, the squad’s tactical statistician who has left for Chelsea , will also need to hit the ground running.
It turns out, though, that defending is also quite important… Brentford’s success in their first two seasons in the Premier League was built on an impressive defensive record, but suddenly the Bees’ backline became leakier than a sieve with a hole in it.
The aforementioned injury curse was a big reason for this, however other contributing factors can’t be ignored. Goalkeeper Mark Flekken and defender Nathan Collins both endured shaky starts to their Bees’ careers, and an ongoing failure to defend crosses into the box saw an eye-watering 30 points dropped from winning positions. The quality of defending needs to revert back to type asap.
Brentford squad for 2024/25
Brentford squad for 2024/25: Thomas Frank's full team
GK: Mark Flekken
GK: Matthew Cox
GK: Hakon Valdimarsson
DF: Aaron Hickey
DF: Rico Henry
DF: Kim Ji-soo
DF: Ethan Pinnock
DF: Mathias Jorgensen
DF: Ben Mee
DF: Kristoffer Ajer
DF: Nathan Collins
DF: Mads Roerslev
MF: Christian Norgaard
MF: Mathias Jensen
MF: Josh Dasilva
MF: Frank Onyeka
MF: Keane Lewis-Potter
MF: Mikkel Damsgaard
MF: Yunus Emre Konak
MF: Myles Peart-Harris
MF: Vitaly Janelt
MF: Ryan Trevitt
MF: Yehor Yarmolyuk
FW: Igor Thiago
FW: Ivan Toney
FW: Yoane Wissa
FW: Kevin Schade
FW: Bryan Mbuemo
Brentford squad numbers for 2024/25
Brentford manager
Thomas Frank
Thomas Frank (Image credit: Alamy)
After a summer that included reported interest from Chelsea and Manchester United and a starring role in the BBC’s Euros coverage, Thomas Frank appears to be staying at the GTech for at least another season. Everyone connected to Brentford will be absolutely delighted about that.
Brentford's key player
Rico Henry
Rico Henry (Image credit: Getty Images)
Of all Brentford’s long-term absentees last season, Rico Henry was arguably the most sorely missed. Not only is he a supreme defender, but his pace also makes him a vital component of Brentford’s attack. The Bees will be overjoyed to have him back.
One to watch
Keane Lewis-Potter
Keane Lewis-Potter (Image credit: Getty Images)
Keane Lewis-Potter has had a stop-start Brentford career since his move from Hull in 2022, but the flying winger started to shine in the second half of last season. If he can get an extended run in the side, KLP has the potential to be a real difference-maker for the Bees.
The mood
After the frustrations of last season, there’s optimism that with some new signings to freshen up the squad and better luck with injuries, the Bees will enjoy a more comfortable time of things in the coming months.
Most likely to...
Wind up the opposition. Frankly, who knows? The departing Neal Maupay was the undisputed s**thouse king in 2023/24, enjoying some memorable run-ins with Kyle Walker, James Maddison and Emi Martinez. The Frenchman has left some huge boots to fill.
Least likely to...
Be booked. Ethan Pinnock’s got the kind of impeccable timing that makes a Rolex look like a sundial. The big centre-back has only been cautioned twice in 91 EPL appearances, with just 19 fouls committed in that time to boot.
Last season was challenging. Losing Ivan Toney to a ban at the start of the season was always going to test us, but we weathered the storm and started well. It was losing the other dozen or so players across the campaign, many of them to long-term injuries, that really screwed us. That didn’t stop us from having some fantastic moments: beating Chelsea for the third season in a row on their patch and the 5-1 annihilation of Luton were two high points. And we survived.
The big talking point is will Igor Thiago slot into Ivan Toney’s boots, assuming the latter leaves this summer? Selling players in their prime is just what we do, so it doesn’t phase fans any more. We’ve normally been quite good at replacing key playmakers – Scott Hogan, Neal Maupay, Ollie Watkins, now Toney. The lingering worry is the fact that one day we may get a big one wrong.
This season will be different because we learned how to survive in the Premier League on bare bones. Our squad players gained valuable experience they wouldn’t have got if we didn’t have the injuries. The club also realised that we can’t have a similar season and need to strengthen in a number of key areas to ensure we have more strength in depth. This could see a plethora of new faces pulling on the red and white stripes.
I won’t be happy unless we take at least four points off Fulham. Putney has been a fairly happy hunting ground for us over the past 10 seasons or so. Long may it continue.
Our key player will be Ethan Pinnock. It’s easy to say Bryan Mbeumo, who was brilliant last season when he wasn’t injured, but Pinnock is a rock at the back – we didn’t win for two months when he was out.
Our most underrated player is Vitaly Janelt. Costing 50p from Bochum, he’s the type of player you need in a squad: an unassuming midfielder who you can trust to play anywhere across the pitch. Works super hard, gets stuck in and scores some great goals too.
Look out for 23-year-old midfielder Paris Maghoma, who had a tremendous season for Bolton and won their young player of the year award.
Fans think our owner is quality. A Brentford fan through and through (he bunked off school to see us play top-flight Nottingham Forest in the League Cup back in the ’80s), Matthew Benham put a plan in place to get us to the Premier League 15 years ago and stuck to it – tweaking it here and there along the way. A clever man but also an ardent football fan. We’re very lucky to have him.
The opposition player I'd love here is Alexander Isak, as a safety valve in case Igor
Thiago suffers a slow start to life at Brentford.
The opposition player who grinds my gears is James Maddison. He’s had long-standing beef with Bees fans ever since his unnecessary inflammatory celebrations after scoring an audacious goal back in the Championship days.
The pantomime villain will be Neal Maupay. Absolutely loved by Brentford fans, absolutely hated by opposition fans and players. He’s actually a really nice bloke if you meet him, but boy does he love a wind-up.
The thing my club really gets right is finding players, signing players and giving them plenty of time to develop.
The one change I'd make would be resurrecting the monorail plans for our new stadium, which seem to have been shelved midway through the development progress – something Bees fans were always looking forward to.
Our season ticket prices are still reasonable. However, a 10 per cent rise in one season was fairly substantial and I would be concerned if the same were to happen year on year.
The fans' opinion of the gaffer is that he’s a fantastic manager who gets Brentford. He came in under Dean Smith and learned what was needed not only to take on an English team but also connect with the fans. He can be stubborn and is sometimes indecisive when making key changes, but he’s always learning and is humble enough to admit if he’s made a mistake. We'll finish 12th.
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