You all look the same to me!It’s like saying Irish people are British.
You all look the same to me!It’s like saying Irish people are British.
Because tossing in the best young player in world football adds good balance to the discussion. ARE YOU A REAL FUCKING PERSON?He’s not best in class. The very best players in the world at that age don’t play u21 football, they play senior football. It’s like saying he’s the best of the championship.
Still a great little player but if the likes of Yamal etc played that tournament it would be Harvey who?
Why do you keep referencing a lack of pace? If he's playing the same role as Wirtz, he's central and close to the attack, he's quick enough and particularly on the break. He's not playing as a winger or on the shoulder. He's about as fast as Macca, maybe quicker, David Silva (as an example) wasn't a lightening quick player (nor was he big, the same height actually), you don't have to be in that role, it's about intelligence. Some people don't half talk FIFA generation rubbish.If he was a foreign player coming through the Sporting academy I can promise you that the debate would be about how he could adapt to the physical side of the league, pressing/defensive contribution and his lack of pace. 100%.
David Silva wasn't lightning quick as you say but he wasn't slow either. He was a winger at Valencia.Why do you keep referencing a lack of pace? If he's playing the same role as Wirtz, he's central and close to the attack, he's quick enough and particularly on the break. He's not playing as a winger or on the shoulder. He's about as fast as Macca, maybe quicker, David Silva (as an example) wasn't a lightening quick player (nor was he big, the same height actually), you don't have to be in that role, it's about intelligence. Some people don't half talk FIFA generation rubbish.
Hopefully the manager learns from last season and uses his squad.@mark1975 so, let's say he ends up staying. How do you see that going?
Hopefully the manager learns from last season and uses his squad.
Why do you keep referencing a lack of pace? If he's playing the same role as Wirtz, he's central and close to the attack, he's quick enough and particularly on the break. He's not playing as a winger or on the shoulder. He's about as fast as Macca, maybe quicker, David Silva (as an example) wasn't a lightening quick player (nor was he big, the same height actually), you don't have to be in that role, it's about intelligence. Some people don't half talk FIFA generation rubbish.
Who knows Keni. We're in FOUR competitions, we've sold players and will sell more, we haven't just bloated the squad, you know this. The question is whether Elliott should be one of those players who goes. He's a much better player than Jones.He's spent 100M on Wirtz though. Wirtz is going to be first choice and then he has Szobo and Jones who he seems to prefer to rotate with.
Is it likely that Elliot will get games do you think?
Oooh now that is a fighting statement ! Where's Moron?He's a much better player than Jones.
Certain aspects of Harvey's game are better than Jones's, but overall?
I'd say that Jones is the better player. Hence why he's getting picked for England too.
Harvey Elliott to TAW: “If I had my way, I’d be at Liverpool for the rest of my career. I love everything about the club, but at the same time I kind of need to be selfish and see what’s best for me. I have big ambitions. I want to go to the World Cup. It’s still something I need to review”
Who knows Keni. We're in FOUR competitions, we've sold players and will sell more, we haven't just bloated the squad, you know this. The question is whether Elliott should be one of those players who goes. He's a much better player than Jones.
Elliot engenders a lot support / sympathy for his situation and I get why. He clearly loves the club and he's not without talent by any means.
I think what most are saying in this thread is come on, let's be realistic. We are in four competitions, sure, but we're talking about keeping a supposed 40M asset around to play in the domestic cups and maybe get the odd sub appearance here and there.
There are clubs that keep young players hanging about (like Chelsea and Real Madrid) but I don't think it's in either ours or Elliot's best interests to do this. The best way forward as things stand - given the actual reality of the situation (not the reality we wish) - is to sell with a buy back clause because unlike most players, I reckon if Elliot did manage to properly establish himself somewhere and we wanted him back, he'd come.
Bought young then loaned out, and sold a couple of years later when they've matured, they likely bring in a greater ROI than investing that money in stocks or a fund. It's a means to a financial end not sporting.I don't even know if it's true to say Chelsea and Real keep these types of players hanging around. They typically go out on loan or, like we've seen with Madueke recently, get sold. Some of them go onto become very good or even great players, most of them are just assets that bring in funds to buy stars.
Nah. You can't evaluate it like that. That's far too simplistic. Maybe those players they sold all accrued more than 10-20% net profit which was then reinvested in better players.Last 3 seasons Chelsea have signed 31 players for 1 billion € and sold 33 players for 600 million €.
So far it’s not the best ROI. Their most valuable players in terms of sales are Palmer and Caicedo. The rest are not worth much more than what they paid for them.
Last 3 seasons Chelsea have signed 31 players for 1 billion € and sold 33 players for 600 million €.
So far it’s not the best ROI. Their most valuable players in terms of sales are Palmer and Caicedo. The rest are not worth much more than what they paid for them.
Nah. You can't evaluate it like that. That's far too simplistic. Maybe those players they sold all accrued more than 10-20% net profit which was then reinvested in better players.
A bit like FSG buying Liverpool for £300m, reinvesting profits in players and which is now worth $5.37 billion despite not taking any profits out of the club.
Actually it's the opposite of grim ! Many are very young players bought for relatively small fees (20 of those players for under £20m) and many that are now out on loan. Those are in the investment basket.Its marginal for the few young players that have moved on after being bought. Some young expensive transfers are out on loan and not succeeding. Quite a lot of them as well.
But so far that doesn’t matter cause you have so many bad transfers that dwarfs any potential income:
Sterling, Joao Felix, Dewsbury Hall, Nkunku, Mudryk, Fofana, Disasi.
That’s 370 mill £ just there which will never ever get any positive return.
Go through the list and look at the young players they’ve bought and where they are today. It’s grim. As said previously.
Actually it's the opposite of grim ! Many are very young players bought for relatively small fees (20 of those players for under £20m) and many that are now out on loan. Those are in the investment basket.
To counter that you have those that they paid more for and that were destined (supposedly) for the first team. Those are the ones they have to worry about (lost £13m on Koulibaly) and will lose a fortune on Sterling, Fofana, Nkunku and Cucurella. But they are quite distinct from the investment youngsters.
Even then they made £22m on Maduoke and bought Palmer for £42m (worth £120m now)?
Sorry you can't include wages - they did actually use him. And you have discounted his updated amortised value too so on the books it'll be likely be more than the £22m I stated.No, many of those young players have struggled out on loan. Given their bad transfer history for first team players they will have to hit several home runs for this to pay off. Which it doesn’t look like at the moment.
They bought Madueke for 30, paid 5 mill in wages over 2 years and sold for an initial 48. So 13 mill.
Sorry you can't include wages - they did actually use him. And you have discounted his updated amortised value too so on the books it'll be likely be more than the £22m I stated.
As for the youngsters - you are very much speculating, however obviously not all will be profit makers and some will make a lot more so cover the losses.
Did I? Where? I said they are investment material and not all will work out. They won't need to hit the lottery to cover the investment basket when all of those 20 players cost between £7m and £20m ... and with inflation over 3-4 years.And you aren’t? 🤣
They will need to hit the lottery several times to cover their losses given their horrendous transfer history. That’s the point.
Did I? Where? I said they are investment material and not all will work out. They won't need to hit the lottery to cover the investment basket when the majority cost well under £20m and with inflation over 3-4 years.
You have a problem differentiating 'investment for investment's sake' and buying for the first team where they've been abysmal and grossly overpaid. Those are two completely different strategies so separate them in your head.
Brain into gear Hansern.Jeezzees. You can’t separate their costs as it’s quite natural that they are linked together.
Their policy of buying every youngster out there to turn a profit will have to have a record like Babe Ruth to make it all worthwhile given their general outlay.
It’s not like you can say Chelsea’s first team have a -300 mill expenditure, but that’s okay as the youth team is 100 mill in the green.
Excellent. All clear then.
But sure let’s appriciate their youth strategy as they only need to sell the women’s team and some hotels for them to keep moving forward with this approach.
More clubs should follow them with this strategy.