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The new lads going on tour.

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Red Astaire

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Came across this handy article highlighting the new faces from the academy, U21's etc going on the pre season. Made for good reading.

http://www.thisisanfield.com/2015/0...stars-included-on-liverpools-pre-season-tour/

Who are the 10 academy stars included on Liverpool’s pre-season tour?

Jul 12, 2015





With 10 young academy stars included in Brendan Rodgers‘ 30-man squad for Liverpool’s pre-season tour, Jack Lusby profiles these lesser-known talents.
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Liverpool announced their 30-strong squad for this summer’s pre-season tour of the Far East and Australia on Saturday, and while most of the focus was on the inclusion of Raheem Sterling and the exclusion of Mario Balotelli, there are some interesting names on the list.
Namely, this comes in the form of 10 academy stars deemed good enough to perform alongside Rodgers’ first team this summer.
The manager is a strong advocate of youth talent, and this four-game tour could see some players stake a claim for a first-team role in 2015/16.
So who are these 10 young talents, and what will they bring the Reds this pre-season?

Ryan Fulton
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Age: 19
Best position: Goalkeeper
Years with Liverpool: 7
Offered a scholarship with Liverpool at the age of 15, a year before he was officially able to turn out as a scholar, Fulton has long been regarded by the club as a hugely promising talent.
An imposing goalkeeper, Fulton was competing with Danny Ward and Lawrence Vigouroux for an U-21s role last season, but still made seven appearances for the Reds in the Premier League, conceding 10 goals and keeping two clean sheets.
Although unlikely to feature in pre-season, with Simon Mignolet and Adam Bogdan blocking his path, Fulton is set for a first-choice role for the U-21s this campaign.

Joe Maguire
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Age: 19
Best position: Left-back
Years with Liverpool: 10
One of the youngsters on standby for Steven Gerrard‘s All-Star game back in March, Joe Maguire’s inclusion showed Rodgers’ faith in him—the 19-year-old left-back came on for Lucas Leiva and impressed.
A shuttling full-back, Maguire was one of the U-21s’ more impressive defenders last term.
Listing Roberto Carlos as his footballing idol, the raw talent of Maguire still needs a lot of honing to reach even top-flight level.
But with four assists in 28 Premier League games last season, he is an intriguing prospect.

Joe Gomez
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Age: 18
Best position: Centre-back
Years with Liverpool: 0
Likely one of the more familiar names for Liverpool supporters, former Charlton Athletic defender Joe Gomez joined in a £3.5 million deal earlier this summer, and has trained with the first team throughout pre-season so far.
Strong, intelligent, pacy and versatile, Gomez has all of the attributes of a Rodgers defender—able to play at centre-back and right-back, he has a chance of a senior role in 2015/16.
Likened to former Manchester United and England centre-back Rio Ferdinand, there are serious expectations for Gomez.

Daniel Cleary
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Age: 19
Best position: Centre-back
Years with Liverpool: 4
A significantly less established talent than Gomez, Irish centre-back Daniel Cleary is still a highly talented young defender.
Boasting a looming physique and impressive defensive strength, one of Cleary’s defining attributes is a surprisingly wide passing range—perhaps one of the indicators as to why Rodgers has favoured him over the Blackpool-bound Lloyd Jones this summer.
Cleary is behind the likes of Martin Skrtel, Mamadou Sakho, Kolo Toure,Dejan Lovren and Gomez within the Reds’ central-defensive ranks this season, so he may have to settle for another campaign of U-21s football.



But if given the chance, he does have the raw attributes required to impress.

Pedro Chirivella
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Age: 18
Best position: Central midfield
Years with Liverpool: 2
Pedro Chirivella joined Liverpool from Valencia in 2013, with the Reds said to have paid at least £2 million for his services.
A highly rated talent in Spain, the midfielder arrived on Merseyside with a big reputation.
He has since established himself as a key member of Michael Beale‘s under-21s side, with his composed Sergio Busquets-like performances at the base of midfield a vital component for the Reds.
David Vizcaíno, Liverpool’s chief Spanish scout, said in May: “In England there would have to be 100 Pedro Chirivellas in order to revolutionise English football.
“Chirivella is football, he is intelligence, control, technique, personality. I expect great things from him.”

Jordan Rossiter
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Age: 18
Best position: Central midfield
Years with Liverpool: 12
Jordan Rossiter was incredibly unfortunate to end the 2014/15 season with a serious ankle injury, with this setback not only hampering his U-21s progress but arguably his route into Rodgers’ first-team thinking.
Instead, U-21s captain Cameron Brannagan took his place on the Liverpool bench as Rodgers saw out a sixth-placed finish.

He did, however, make his mark earlier in the season with a fine goal on his first-team debut against Middlesbrough in the League Cup.
Combative, authoritative and tactically intelligent beyond his 18 years, Rossiter is one of the most likely to make the immediate step up this term.

Joao Carlos Teixeira
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Age: 22
Best position: Attacking midfield
Years with Liverpool: 3
While not technically an U-21s player, Joao Carlos Teixeira is another who is still something of an unknown quantity to Liverpool supporters.
Having made his first-team debut midway through 2013/14, he was then loaned to Brighton and Hove Albion for last season.
He was one of Sami Hyypia’s key players during his ill-fated reign at the Amex Stadium, but was utilised less under the Finn’s successor, Chris Hughton, before a broken leg derailed his season.
A hardworking attacking midfielder with an eye for a pass, Teixeira is somewhat similar to Reds No. 10 Philippe Coutinho.
However, at just a year younger than the Brazilian, it is unclear whether he has a future under Rodgers—this could be a defining season for the young Portuguese.

Ryan Kent
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Age: 18
Best position: Attacking midfield
Years with Liverpool: 11
One of Beale’s key attacking players, versatile attacking midfielder Ryan Kent earned the praise of Rodgers last season, with the managerdescribing him as a “real talent.”
Last year, Kent named Ronaldinho as his footballing idol, and there are hallmarks of the Brazilian’s swagger in his play—although Kent is a much more straightforward attacking player.

Returning from injury towards the end of last term, the 18-year-oldscored four goals and made two assists in seven U-21 Premier League games between April and May.
He could thrive in Rodgers’ bold attacking line.

Sheyi Ojo
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Age: 18
Best position: Attacking midfield
Years with Liverpool: 4
Former MK Dons forward Sheyi Ojo is the outstanding talent within Liverpool’s academy ranks.
Strong and powerful, yet graceful and technically adept, Ojo can perform all across the front line—including as a centre-forward—as well as at central midfield.
Spending a portion of last season on loan with Wigan Athletic following several appearances on Rodgers’ bench, Ojo has clearly shown enough for the Liverpool manager to give him a chance this pre-season.
At his best as a drifting central attacking midfielder, Ojo could provide Rodgers with a useful option this season.

Harry Wilson
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Age: 18
Best position: Right wing
Years with Liverpool: 10
Harry Wilson, along with Kent and Ojo, stood out as one of Liverpool’s best young talents last season—it is clear to see why Wales manager Chris Coleman felt comfortable giving him his senior debut as a 16-year-old in 2013.
While small in stature, Wilson possesses quality in abundance.
He is devastating when running at defenders and effective both in terms of creating chances and scoring goals.
He netted a stunning long-range winner in last season’s 2-1 Merseyside derby win for the U-21s.
Though still a very raw talent with a tendency to drift out of games, Wilson has shown the quality required to become a key feature in Liverpool’s future.
 
Teixeira's contract is ending next year. With the no. of attacking midfielders we have, does he have a genuine chance of making it with us?
 
Is Ojo considered the best young player (not in the first team set up) at the club? That wasnt the impression I was under, I thought Rossiter Sinclair and Kent were as highly rated if not more so. Has something changed in the last 6 month to catapult this young fella up the rankings?
 
Teixeira's contract is ending next year. With the no. of attacking midfielders we have, does he have a genuine chance of making it with us?

He looks really good, I don't know how much last season effected him though. I think it might be a similar situation to Suso, ultimately. Good player who's unfortunately in a position where we're already heavily stocked.
 
Is Ojo considered the best young player (not in the first team set up) at the club? That wasnt the impression I was under, I thought Rossiter Sinclair and Kent were as highly rated if not more so. Has something changed in the last 6 month to catapult this young fella up the rankings?

No, he and Rossiter have always been the outstanding talents at that age.
 
Teixeira's contract is ending next year. With the no. of attacking midfielders we have, does he have a genuine chance of making it with us?

My gut feeling is no unfortunately. His loan spell at Brighton was very frustrating; as many man-of-the-match performances as there were poor performances. On his day he looks seriously good but he lacks any physical presence and disappears quickly from some games, he would need to show a lot more determination in such games.

He'll make the grade somewhere but probably not in England if he doesn't adapt to the physical demands.
 
I've said before I like Fulton - he's got a good, aggressive attitude about him, and a Clemence-style propensity for bollocking his defenders, which is quite good compared to the insipid wimps we've tended to have at that level.

Cleary deserves this, he was probably the most consistent and mature of central defenders last season, and, like Chirivella in front of him, he can play the ball very well.

The rest are obvious inclusions. Kent is the one who needs to be given the licence to really show what he can do. I don't care about his age, and neither should Rodgers. He's precocious, and needs trust and support.
 
They're not really that similar in their roles anyway, so it's a bit of a misleading comparison.

I think Rossiter is going to be the new Scouse heartbeat of the team in a couple of years. There's much more to his game than Chirivella's, and I think he'll end up playing further forward. He's still growing at the moment - indeed, judging from the latest pics he looks like he's changed quite a bit physically since last year - and he's got plenty more developing to do, but he's always been a precocious and prodigious talent. It's not the right time to tie him down to one role; he needs a bit of licence to show where his strengths might best take him. Also, in terms of attitude, he's reminiscent of the young Gerrard in the sense that he's got that 'Just give me the chance and watch me go' sort of confidence about him.

Chirivella, IMHO, is more of a metronomic sort of player, he seems very natural picking up the ball deep and getting the midfield playing, keeping it ticking along. He's got intelligence, technique, control and cool judgement - he's yet really to be tested against the pace and physical power of the Premiership, but that will only come when he's given a chance.

But the two players could easily fit into the same team, they're not really in competition with each other.
 
I see - I was under the assumption that Rossiter was predominantly a holding playmaker as well.
 
I see - I was under the assumption that Rossiter was predominantly a holding playmaker as well.


He's more of an all-rounder. I personally think all his best qualities suit a more defensive role, though - and logically to make it at a top club you really have to exploit your attributes to the max. I think he perhaps lacks a bit of dynamism to play further forward.
 
Watched a chunk of it on some woeful stream, and got to say... Rossiter looked out of his depth. I wasn't expecting heaps I guess, but he's clearly not at this level yet. Misplaced passes, was looking to receive in the wrong areas, and his weight of delivery was bad.

He's young I guess, it'll take time, but I was hoping for more.
 
Watched a chunk of it on some woeful stream, and got to say... Rossiter looked out of his depth. I wasn't expecting heaps I guess, but he's clearly not at this level yet. Misplaced passes, was looking to receive in the wrong areas, and his weight of delivery was bad.

He's young I guess, it'll take time, but I was hoping for more.

I think part of that was because he is coming off the injury and has been growing without playing football recently. He looked the capable his debut against better competition in the cup.
 
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