Not for me no.You can't think of anyone that fits that bill?

Not for me no.You can't think of anyone that fits that bill?
He needs to learn to release the ball quicker. Otherwise yeah, I agreeI don't get why this is even up for debate. The only time we look good is when he's on the front foot of our midfield
yea it felt like there was a lot of conservative play, a bit of hiding, and some hot potato going on. he’s the opposite of that.To be fair to Jones, I actually called something for once. When watching the Arsenal game this season, I said we were crying out for Jones to try and break the lines and progress the ball. From what I can remember, he came on and changed the game, and we even got the Szoboszlai free kick from him being more forward thinking.
To be fair to Jones, I actually called something for once. When watching the Arsenal game this season, I said we were crying out for Jones to try and break the lines and progress the ball. From what I can remember, he came on and changed the game, and we even got the Szoboszlai free kick from him being more forward thinking.
Nah.The funny thing is, Jones is actually doing what Wirtz is supposed to be doing for us - keeping possession, probing and finding line-breaking passes and dribbles - but he is doing it better and he’s more physically robust. I like Wirtz, but we would have been better off giving a lot of his minutes to Curtis this season.
I have to disagree, I would make comparison to Paul Stewart. I admit I was young, and I do remember he was unremarkable and very average with odd moments of brillianceThat tendency to hold onto the ball arises mainly when he is carrying it forward. When he broadly holds his position and looks for a pass based on the movement of his team mates, he doesn't seem to me to be more guilty of hoarding the ball than anyone else. And all of that is, I think, because he is looking for a "safe" pass, by which I don't necessarily mean one that is unadventurous, more that it is a high likelihood of completion (hence his high pass completion stats). In short, he is a player that likes the team to keep possession.
As far as his overall role is concerned, I see him as a quality squad player. I don't ever see him becoming a first choice player, but I'm also not foaming at the mouth every time he starts. He may not set the world alight but he rarely has a stinker and lets us down. Kind of a midfield version of Steve Finnan, which is no bad thing.
I've seen him hold the ball outside our box several times. I don't think the phase matters, he just likes to hold on to the ball wherever he is.That tendency to hold onto the ball arises mainly when he is carrying it forward. When he broadly holds his position and looks for a pass based on the movement of his team mates, he doesn't seem to me to be more guilty of hoarding the ball than anyone else. And all of that is, I think, because he is looking for a "safe" pass, by which I don't necessarily mean one that is unadventurous, more that it is a high likelihood of completion (hence his high pass completion stats). In short, he is a player that likes the team to keep possession.
As far as his overall role is concerned, I see him as a quality squad player. I don't ever see him becoming a first choice player, but I'm also not foaming at the mouth every time he starts. He may not set the world alight but he rarely has a stinker and lets us down. Kind of a midfield version of Steve Finnan, which is no bad thing.
Florian Wirtz has told national teammates at Bayern Munich, with whom he still maintains regular contact, that he is deeply satisfied with how things are currently developing, that his confidence is growing game by game, and that he is becoming increasingly accustomed to the physicality of the Premier League.
In those conversations, one name keeps surfacing in a strangely consistent way, Curtis Jones. Florian has spoken openly about how much he values playing in front of him, and how the balance Jones provides behind the ball has had a direct impact on his own freedom higher up the pitch.
He has rarely encountered a midfielder with such a refined technical level, and has been particularly struck by Jones’ progressive passing, his ability to break lines and move the ball forward with clarity and timing. He has described it as a genuine joy to play ahead of him, believing that Jones’ presence behind him offers the ideal platform to operate freely between the lines, giving him both security and momentum, and allowing him to consistently find and exploit the spaces where he is most decisive.
View: https://x.com/BayernSpace/status/1999570187268555010
