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Hugo Boss

One thing I noticed about Isaks goal reel was he started scoring a lot more tap ins/goals in the six yard box last year, which swelled his his numbers. I feel Ekitke needs to go on a similar journey. From all the highlights I've seen he often seems to end up drifting wild, or lays on the assist, etc. Here we need someone to link the play in deeper areas and in transition, but nearer the oppositoon box, he's going going to have a world of creativity around him and would benefit from staying between the posts.
 

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rI_AhXT8fZw&t=273s


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noY71PCbk4Y&t=138s

ANYWAYYYYY. He obviously does not have Isak's unworldly ability to rifle in shots from ridiculous distances / angles

But Wirtz, Szobo, Salah, and Bradley/Frimpong are clearly going to have a lot of fun playing with our new No. 9.


He's kind of weirdly awkward and ungainly, isn't he?

Like, he'll do some mad intricate bit of skill and beat his man, but you're not quite sure if that's what he actually meant to do or it was by accident.

He sorta reminds me of Paolo Wanchope
 
SCM: WE NEED A NEW STRIKER!!!!!!!

Simultaneously SCM: But not anyone who's too expensive, not expensive enough, too old, not old enough, the finished artical, not yet the finished artical, actually available to buy, not actually available to buy, looks good using XG stats, does not look good using XG stats, looks good on YouTube highlight reels, does not look good on YouTube highlight reels, has ever played in a league that's not the English league, has ever missed a chance, or basically isn't the second coming of Ian Rush...

Have I left anything out?
 
SCM: WE NEED A NEW STRIKER!!!!!!!

Simultaneously SCM: But not anyone who's too expensive, not expensive enough, too old, not old enough, the finished artical, not yet the finished artical, actually available to buy, not actually available to buy, looks good using XG stats, does not look good using XG stats, looks good on YouTube highlight reels, does not look good on YouTube highlight reels, has ever played in a league that's not the English league, has ever missed a chance, or basically isn't the second coming of Ian Rush...

Have I left anything out?

Is Ian Rush available this summer?
 

View: https://x.com/OptaAnalyst/status/1945835903332843819

After a fantastic season in Germany, Hugo Ekitiké looks set to be the next player to make a big-money move to the Premier League. Newcastle United appeared to be in pole position for his signature until Liverpool stepped up their pursuit of the 23-year-old striker from Eintracht Frankfurt.

Liverpool’s first choice was seemingly Alexander Isak, but with Newcastle staunch in their position that he’s not for sale, attention was diverted to Ekitiké, the player Eddie Howe wanted to partner their Swedish striker.

Neither club looks like having both Ekitiké and Isak in their squad for next season, but are Liverpool really having to settle for second best? The statistics suggest maybe not.

Ekitiké made his top-flight debut in France in October 2020 at hometown club Stade de Reims, but despite two Ligue 1 substitute appearances in 2020-21, he had to wait nearly a year for another first-team opportunity.

New coach Óscar García put his faith in the then 19-year-old, gradually building up his minutes after playing him off the bench in Reims’ opening-day draw at Nice in 2021-22.

His breakthrough season in France saw him end with a very respectable 10 goals in 24 appearances and with one of the best minutes-per-goal ratios in the French top flight (127).

Ekitiké’s impact on the team was clear, scoring twice as many goals as any other player at Reims and recording a team-high 13 goal involvements, which helped him secure four of the nine Player of the Month awards at the club in 2021-22.


Ekitiké was the obvious jewel in the Reims crown; a standout player in an ordinary side, and this is when Newcastle’s interest first developed. The Magpies reportedly made an offer for the teenager, but no move materialised until he eventually chose Paris Saint-Germain.

That transfer began as a season-long loan in the French capital for the 2022-23 season, with Ekitiké arriving as a relatively inexperienced forward and trying to compete with the already sensational talents of Kylian Mbappé, Neymar and Lionel Messi. As a result, his playing time was largely restricted to appearances off the bench, coming on as a substitute in more Ligue 1 matches (13) than he started that campaign.

With only Renato Sanches (462) playing more minutes as substitute in Ligue 1 for PSG than Ekitiké (352) in his first season at the club, he would have hoped to kick on in 2023-24. But Mauricio Pochettino left as coach, and his successor, Christophe Galtier, had other plans.

Despite his loan move being made permanent and the exits of Neymar and Messi after 2022-23, Ekitiké’s chances at PSG almost entirely disappeared in 2023-24, not helped by the arrivals of Ousmane Dembélé, Randal Kolo Muani and Gonçalo Ramos.

The nine minutes he played as a sub in the opening-day draw with Lorient was the only game time Ekitiké saw in the first half of the campaign. Eintracht Frankfurt offered him a way out and the opportunity of a fresh start in Germany in January 2024. Taking up that offer changed the trajectory of his career.

A relatively slow start at Eintracht saw Ekitiké gradually integrated into Dino Toppmöller’s side. Following his signing on 1 February 2024, the youngster made just two starts and accumulated 312 minutes out of a possible 900 across his new club’s first 10 Bundesliga games after signing.

Toppmöller handed him his third league start in the home meeting with FC Augsburg on 19 April, and everything began to click. His four goals and five goal involvements in Frankfurt’s final five games of the Bundesliga season from that game on were more than any other player at the club, while nobody created more chances from open play (7).

Since that day, only Harry Kane (39) and Andrej Kramaric (29) have been involved in more goals than Ekitiké’s 28 (19 goals, 9 assists) in the German top flight.


Making the move to Germany permanent ahead of 2024-25, he signed a four-year deal with Eintracht. But both parties knew that if his form continued how it left off in his final months on loan from PSG, he wouldn’t be there for long.

Now, a year later, Ekitiké looks set to move to the Premier League for a fee over three times what Eintracht paid for him. His attacking output in 2024-25 might explain why.

At a top level, his 15 goals saw him finish as the joint-sixth highest scorer in the Bundesliga in 2024-25, while only seven players assisted more than his eight. Ranking joint fourth for total goal involvements (23), he helped Eintracht secure their best league finish in 13 years and secure qualification to the UEFA Champions League.

He was adept at bringing teammates into play, ranking seventh for open-play chance creation (44) in the league, but it’s his ability to pop up in dangerous areas that was the most eye-catching.

Across the top five European leagues in 2024-25, Ekitiké was one of just four players to play at least 1,500 minutes and average both more than four shots per 90 (4.1) and over seven touches in the opposition box per 90 (7.2) alongside Lamine Yamal, Mbappé and Dembélé – that’s certainly esteemed company to keep.


Drilling into the underlying numbers further, he has elite attacking output when considering non-penalty xG and xG assisted, too.

Again, only looking at players to play at least 1,500 minutes across the top five European leagues in 2024-25, Ekitiké ranked fifth for non-penalty xG per 90 (0.67) and among the top 50 for xG assisted (0.24). He was higher than Isak in both metrics.

As both a threat in front of goal as well as creatively, that placed Ekitiké among the most threatening attacking players in European football last season.

Of attacking midfielders, wingers and forwards to play 1,500 minutes across those top five European leagues, only a select few were able to average a higher combined non-penalty xG and xG assisted per 90 than him (0.91).

Ekitiké’s knack of being able to get himself into great positions in front of goal was clear in 2024-25, with the Frenchman accumulating the third-highest xG total from non-penalty shots across the top five European leagues (19.2) and ranking joint sixth for non-penalty shots inside the box (85).

But this also had a downside, as it gave him more chances to miss. Overall, he scored 14 goals from non-penalty shots in the Bundesliga last season, with that underperformance (-5.2) compared to his xG (19.2) the highest across the major European leagues.

Of the 38 players to attempt at least 80 non-penalty shots across the top five leagues in 2024-25, his average shot quality was among the best (0.17 – joint sixth), but he converted just 12.3% of these shots, which placed him 23rd.
Comparing that to Isak, whose average shot quality wasn’t too dissimilar (0.18) and scored with 20% of such shots, could alarm some Liverpool fans. It’s crucial to take these numbers with a pinch of salt, though.

Ekitiké is young. He’s still yet to play a league game as a 23-year-old following his birthday in June, and with just 5,817 minutes of top-flight league football under his belt, he is still refining his craft. Having the ability to train and play with elite players at Liverpool, not to mention the guidance of Arne Slot, could elevate his performances.

Underperformance of xG isn’t a red flag for finishing quality unless sustained over a considerable amount of time – the same goes for the opposite too; if someone scores a lot of goals from a relatively low xG total over a period of one or two seasons, that doesn’t immediately qualify them as a legendary finisher.

It’s also crucial to analyse Ekitiké’s shooting statistics with the consideration that Eintracht were one of the most prolific sides at attacking in transition last season. They led the Bundesliga for shots attempted (53) and goals from (12) fast breaks last season. The only team to post higher numbers across the top five European leagues in 2024-25? That would be Liverpool.


The Reds had 66 shot-ending fast-breaks and scored 14 of those, so adding a player who’s good at running with the ball seems a no-brainer.

Ekitiké thrived in the space created while attacking in transition at Frankfurt, and only three players across Europe’s top five leagues had more shots following ball carries in 2024-25 than he did (44) – Yamal (56), Mbappé (50) and Mason Greenwood (45).

Eintracht Frankfurt weren’t a side who based their game around a high press in the Bundesliga last season. They ranked about midway in the competition for PPDA (opposition passes per defensive action), while only six of the 17 other clubs made fewer high turnovers in 2024-25.

But when they did press high up the pitch, they made it count.

Just five teams saw a greater proportion of their high turnovers end in shots (16.7%), and only Borussia Dortmund (3.4%) and Bayern Munich (4.6%) had a greater share lead to goals than Eintracht 3.2%.

Based on Opta Vision data, which combines computer vision and generative AI techniques to provide dynamic off-ball metrics, Ekitiké played a big part in this.

Despite many of Eintracht’s overall pressing numbers being in the lower half of the Bundesliga, the Frenchman ranked in the top seven players in the competition for pressures applied (both overall and those deemed high pressure) in the opposition’s half and final-third pressures applied (again, both overall and high pressure).


When Eintracht did press high up the pitch, it was quite often Ekitiké putting in the hard yards. Across all players at the club last season, he averaged 15.3 high-intensity pressures in the final third per 90 minutes, which was more than any teammate (Mario Götze averaged the next most, with 12.6 per 90).

Newcastle would have been an interesting destination for Ekitiké, as the Magpies showed similarities with Eintracht, in that they weren’t prolific at pressing high up the pitch but were highly efficient. For instance, only Nottingham Forest (4.3%) saw a higher proportion of high turnovers end in a goal than they did (3.7%), while their proportion of high turnovers ending in shots (19.5%) was bettered by just three teams in 2024-25 – all despite tallying the 14th-most high turnovers (241).

With Isak seemingly staying put at Newcastle, it’s clear why Liverpool diverted their attentions to the 23-year-old French forward. Stylistically, they are very similar.

Isak played an almost identical role in Newcastle’s press as Ekitiké did at Eintracht last season.

Like Ekitiké, Isak was one of the most prolific final-third pressers in the Premier League last campaign, ranking fifth overall for final-third pressures applied and third for high-intensity final-third pressures despite Newcastle being mid-ranking in the Premier League as a team.

Isak averaged a team-high 19.6 high-intensity pressures per 90 in the Premier League last season
, leading the way in the metric for Newcastle, with only Anthony Gordon (15.0) averaging nearly as many as the Swede.

Using our Opta Player Radars, we can compare different players’ rankings across various aspects of the game based on their position, and produce a similarity score.

Last season, the player deemed most like Ekitiké based on their statistical output was Isak, with an 84% similarity. If Isak was Liverpool’s first choice then Ekitiké isn’t an unconventional second.


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strap-on is no-parts backwards and you'll be getting an ekitike shaped one right up your arse next time you stay in ours if this shitakekatihs mushroom looking mofo doesn't give me fomo
I really did not get all that...but is fomo something good and sexual?
 
SCM: WE NEED A NEW STRIKER!!!!!!!

Simultaneously SCM: But not anyone who's too expensive, not expensive enough, too old, not old enough, the finished artical, not yet the finished artical, actually available to buy, not actually available to buy, looks good using XG stats, does not look good using XG stats, looks good on YouTube highlight reels, does not look good on YouTube highlight reels, has ever played in a league that's not the English league, has ever missed a chance, or basically isn't the second coming of Ian Rush...

Have I left anything out?

We are all old. Ergo we've seen a bunch of strikers with boots this gangly fuck isn't fit to lace, but he probably could rather easily using his weird physiologically impossible appendages. It's like if Mr tickle had some random bones you had to make sure to remove when you are eating him. That's what comes to mind when I'm watching him play. He plays like mr greedy choking on mr tickles broken limbs. And those are the highlights!

He just is underwhelming. They all are in different ways. Most clubs buying a striker right now are overpaying relative to many other positions. I'm not so sure it's that smart, but at least there's an upside with this one. The market is such a seller's market that there's some assurance that losses are mitigated in the event of a bust, when buying youth. Plus, we will won't have to pay massive wages.

He isn't great though. I'm not particularly excited to watch him play.

If we didn't have Nunez and were watching his highlights, and thinking who to spend 80 million on, there'd be a lot of calls to bring him in.

We aren't being weird to want more out of this level of investment.
 
Doesn’t really matter though as long as the data nerds like him, our scouts like him and Slot rates him.
Some of our fans can think he isn’t great or easy one eye, but in the end they will be proven wrong by the people at the club, again.
 
Doesn’t really matter though as long as the data nerds like him, our scouts like him and Slot rates him.
Some of our fans can think he isn’t great or easy one eye, but in the end they will be proven wrong by the people at the club, again.
Yeah, you're right, there's no point to this forum anymore because our nerds have zeroed in on one of the four strikers fucking everyone has been talking about every second of every day for the last several months.

Where do they unearth these gems? And for the low low price of 70million! It's like they are paying us!
 
Yeah, you're right, there's no point to this forum anymore because our nerds have zeroed in on one of the four strikers fucking everyone has been talking about every second of every day for the last several months.

Where do they unearth these gems? And for the low low price of 70million! It's like they are paying us!

Yeah it hasn't escaped my notice that one of us lot could've come up with Frimpong, Kerkez and Wirtz too.
 
Yeah, you're right, there's no point to this forum anymore because our nerds have zeroed in on one of the four strikers fucking everyone has been talking about every second of every day for the last several months.

Where do they unearth these gems? And for the low low price of 70million! It's like they are paying us!

This would actually be funny if we hadn’t scouted him for years, but carry on.
 
We are all old. Ergo we've seen a bunch of strikers with boots this gangly fuck isn't fit to lace, but he probably could rather easily using his weird physiologically impossible appendages. It's like if Mr tickle had some random bones you had to make sure to remove when you are eating him. That's what comes to mind when I'm watching him play. He plays like mr greedy choking on mr tickles broken limbs. And those are the highlights!

He just is underwhelming. They all are in different ways. Most clubs buying a striker right now are overpaying relative to many other positions. I'm not so sure it's that smart, but at least there's an upside with this one. The market is such a seller's market that there's some assurance that losses are mitigated in the event of a bust, when buying youth. Plus, we will won't have to pay massive wages.

He isn't great though. I'm not particularly excited to watch him play.

If we didn't have Nunez and were watching his highlights, and thinking who to spend 80 million on, there'd be a lot of calls to bring him in.

We aren't being weird to want more out of this level of investment.

We are, if when the player who bring us more is basically twice the cost of this lad, and we're also saying that THAT price is too high as well...

This time last year, we melted down because we didn't spend a penny - Now, we're arguing because we're spending too much... This is just the cost of football these days. I think it's f@#$ing mental, but there it is. If this lad's the best option there is, so be it. If he's not, let's get somebody else.

But the point of my post was that we're moaning at every single alternative that's being suggested... Nothing is good enough for us, it seems. At some point we have to decide what we're going for and just buy the player we identify as the one that best fits that plan.
 
strap-on is no-parts backwards and you'll be getting an ekitike shaped one right up your arse next time you stay in ours if this shitakekatihs mushroom looking mofo doesn't give me fomo
… and Brizzle spoke so highly of you …
 
But the point of my post was that we're moaning at every single alternative that's being suggested... Nothing is good enough for us, it seems. At some point we have to decide what we're going for and just buy the player we identify as the one that best fits that plan.

What I'm saying is that the strikers available are shit and everyone needs one. So yeah. It's the housing market. It doesn't mean you don't buy a house, but it does mean you are justifiably not excited when you do.

Isak is a decent striker that costs 150 million and etikite is a project at 75. It's not odd to not be over the moon at either. They're insanely overpriced. This isn't reactionary, it was exactly what we expected at the beginning of the market.
 
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