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Summer transfer links

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[article]Liverpool are on the cusp of signing Steven Gerrard's cousin Bobby Duncan from Manchester City.

The Anfield side have set up a move for the England Under-17 international, who is considered to be one of the most highly-rated players of his age in the country.


The 16-year-old Duncan has been at City for the last six years and has already made headlines after becoming the first England player to score a hat-trick against Brazil at any level.

But, City are going to lose the Huyton-born star after a season in which he has been entangled in an extended contract dispute.

That has led to Duncan not featuring for City's academy for months.

He has decided to stay fit and ready for action by training with League One Wigan ahead of his anticipated move to Liverpool.

Liverpool currently have a ban on signing youth players from English clubs and will not be able to bring him in until the summer.

But he will turn 17 in June and therefore Liverpool will be able to sign for the Reds.

He will work under his cousin Gerrard, who is the club's Under-18s manager.

The deal is expected to cost Liverpool around £200,000 in compensation, which is considered a low figure for a player many expect to reach the top. [/article]
 
What the fuck was he doing playing for their academy in the first place.
Apparently we tried to bring him in but he opted to go to City. Which tells me his da is a bitter.

Na- this is the story:

Duncan, whose younger brothers Ollie (under-13s) and Freddie (under-10s) are both on the books at Liverpool, first caught the eye of professional clubs when he was a prolific goal scorer playing for Mossley Hill at the age of seven.
He spent time at both Liverpool and Everton but neither signed him up. Instead he ended up getting taken on by Wigan Athletic, who spotted him in action for St Helens Town.
After 18 months with the Latics, Duncan was snapped up by Manchester City at the age of 10 and has been there since.
“City were building their new Academy at the time and with all that investment I thought it would be good place to continue my development,” he said.
“Training with the best players and coaches and with top class facilities has definitely helped me.”
 
Quality player, but I think he's left-footed – so would Van Dijk be OK with shifting over to the right?

Here's a recent article:
FC Barcelona will not only meet opposition from Sevilla in their bid to sign defender Clement Lenglet. The Catalan club must also convince the defender to swap the Sanchez Pizjuan for Camp Nou. It's not that Lenglet isn't attracted to the idea of playing at Barcelona. However, he has shown until now that he is very careful at managing his sporting career. He's aware that at his age (he turns 23 soon), his priority is to play as many minutes at the top level as possible so he can consolidate himself at the elite level and be picked for the France national team.

'NO' TO JUVENTUS

Lenglet's urge to resist the siren song is not new. In 2015/16 Juventus knocked on his door but he preferred to stay at recently promoted Nancy. He was convinced that at only 20 years old he would be condemned to a life on the bench in Turin if he moved to a squad teeming with defensive talent such as Bonucci, Chiellini, Rugani and Barzagli.
Barça's interest is not new. Since he arrived in Spanish football in January 2017 the club's coaches have been looking at him. His quality, his quick acclimatisation to La Liga and his accessible buy-out clause (30 million euros) have led to them already sounding out his agents to find out if he would be ready to switch clubs.
COMPETING TO PLAY

The answer, which other big clubs in La Liga, the Premier League and the Bundesliga have also received, is not too different to what Lenglet told 'The Old Lady'. But there are some caveats: he's happy at Sevilla and would only change clubs if he had the chance to keep playing.
Now, to the caveats: Having the chance to play doesn't meant that he is guaranteed to start every game, but rather that he has the chance to compete for a starting place. It should also be said that Lenglet hasn't just arrived at the elite level, but he is a young defender with a great future who has shown that he has a place in the elite in an excellent team, as Sevilla are.
THE CLAUSE

Sevilla don't like the fact that Lenglet's release clause, which is between 30 and 45 million euros according to sources, barely protects his status at the club.
Of course, Barça aren't ready to get into a multimillion-euro bidding war even though the market for centrebacks has gone through the roof recently, with Virgil Van Dijk joining Liverpool for 79 million euros and Aymeric Laporte moving to Manchester City for 65 million.
In any case, Lenglet is now seen as good enough to compete with Gerard Pique, Samuel Umtiti, Thomas Vermaelen and Yerry Mina for a place in Barça's starting line-up.

 
Quality player, but I think he's left-footed – so would Van Dijk be OK with shifting over to the right?

I think Barca have the same issue as Umtiti plays on the left (unless he's right footed), though still stories about him leaving.
 
Dani Ceballos rumored to be coming here, after Real decide to let him go.

How is this guy?
 
:D
csi.jpg
 
If Can does go,Grujic can more than adequately fill his shoes (imho). Max Meyer on a free will go to further strengthen the midfield. This frees up cash to go for a world class AM like Isco.
 


[article]In Portugal, nine out of the country's 10 most valuable footballers have placed their careers in the control of super-agent Jorge Mendes. Hardly a move is made in the local market without his knowledge. He’s the one who makes things happen.

It doesn’t mean, however, that all of the footballers who work with Mendes’s agency, Gestifute, have had chance to meet the man himself. As strange as it may sound, a large number of them have never discussed any details in person with the former nightclub owner who has Cristiano Ronaldo, Jose Mourinho and David de Gea among his clients.

Speak to any footballer from the Portuguese league and it’s not even unusual to hear the sentence: “Mendes represents me, but I’ve never talked to him.”

That happens because Mendes has two right-hand men who are always travelling around the country and handling the issues concerning more under-the-radar stars. A retired centre-back, Hugo Valdir, takes cares of Lisbon and the surrounding region. Meanwhile, Joao Camacho is responsible for Porto and the north of Portugal.

Camacho watched Ruben Neves coming up through Porto’s academy. He saw the player become the youngest captain in Champions League history, when Neves led his boyhood club at the age of 18 and 221 days in a group match against Maccabi Tel Aviv in October 2015.

With achievements like this, the highly-rated midfielder earned the right to have Jorge Mendes close to his career, and not one of his lieutenants.

The Portuguese agent didn’t have to do much to persuade Neves to switch from Porto to Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers in a £15.8m transfer that stunned world football in July 2017. The 21-year-old Neves trusts in Mendes implicitly – and the mastermind of football's second-most surprising transfer of last summer is ready to do it again.

Despite public statements saying that Neves wants to remain at Wolves next season, having helped the club end their six-year exile from the Premier League, sources have told FourFourTwo that the outstanding midfielder has an ongoing negotiation with Liverpool – and that he can leave Molineux if the Merseyside board comes in with the right offer.

Neves’s entourage recently made the trip to England and were informed that, although a deal is still far from reached, it could advance in the coming weeks.

Mendes has been working on it and has potentially lined up Anderson Talisca (currently on loan at Besiktas) as a replacement for Neves, even though the duo play different roles on the pitch at present.

The Brazil U23 international has refused overtures from Chinese outlet Changchun Yatai and told his representatives that he wants a Premier League move once the current season is over. One of the most influential Brazilian agents, Carlos Leite, has been working with Gestifute to settle the playmaker’s future. Leite is an old pal of Mendes and acted as his key man in Brazil in the early 2000s.

Besiktas have the option to sign Talisca permanently for £18m this summer from Benfica, but so far have failed to convince the Portuguese giants to accept the payment format (the fee would be paid in instalments).

Wolves’s relationship with Mendes, whose agency has seven clients at the club, has attracted criticism from rivals after they clinched promotion at a canter. The West Midlands club claim they haven't broken any rules, though, and have no reason to end the relationship.

Replacing Neves with Talisca, who started his career as a central midfielder in Brazilian football, is an example of how the Portuguese agent works; moving pieces around to make sure the transfer window remains profitable, with everyone having a place at the table.

Neves is not new on Liverpool’s radar, and has been watched since his Porto days. A move to bring him in was considered before, with former first-team development coach Pepijn Lijnders pushing for his purchase before Jurgen Klopp’s appointment. Lijnders revealed how highly he rates the midfielder, who he had coached at Porto, in an interview with the Times.

“If you bring one or two young players through it opens a pathway for all the rest – it was the same with Porto, with Ruben Neves getting in,” he said. “Ruben opened up the door for everyone by accelerating the process with young players and creating the right projects around young players... giving them the belief that it’s possible.”

With six beauties netted from outside the area in 39 games this season, Neves would seem the ideal replacement for Emre Can, whose contract expires in June. Napoli’s Jorginho has also been touted to fill in the space that could be left open, but his agent Joao Santos, who is based in Istanbul, says his client has not been approached.

Snubbing other offers, trusting Mendes’s advice and dropping down to England’s second tier was a risk, but Neves will be a Premier League footballer from August 2018 onwards – it just remains to be seen whether it will be for Liverpool or Wolves.[/article]
 


[article]In Portugal, nine out of the country's 10 most valuable footballers have placed their careers in the control of super-agent Jorge Mendes. Hardly a move is made in the local market without his knowledge. He’s the one who makes things happen.

It doesn’t mean, however, that all of the footballers who work with Mendes’s agency, Gestifute, have had chance to meet the man himself. As strange as it may sound, a large number of them have never discussed any details in person with the former nightclub owner who has Cristiano Ronaldo, Jose Mourinho and David de Gea among his clients.

Speak to any footballer from the Portuguese league and it’s not even unusual to hear the sentence: “Mendes represents me, but I’ve never talked to him.”

That happens because Mendes has two right-hand men who are always travelling around the country and handling the issues concerning more under-the-radar stars. A retired centre-back, Hugo Valdir, takes cares of Lisbon and the surrounding region. Meanwhile, Joao Camacho is responsible for Porto and the north of Portugal.

Camacho watched Ruben Neves coming up through Porto’s academy. He saw the player become the youngest captain in Champions League history, when Neves led his boyhood club at the age of 18 and 221 days in a group match against Maccabi Tel Aviv in October 2015.

With achievements like this, the highly-rated midfielder earned the right to have Jorge Mendes close to his career, and not one of his lieutenants.

The Portuguese agent didn’t have to do much to persuade Neves to switch from Porto to Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers in a £15.8m transfer that stunned world football in July 2017. The 21-year-old Neves trusts in Mendes implicitly – and the mastermind of football's second-most surprising transfer of last summer is ready to do it again.

Despite public statements saying that Neves wants to remain at Wolves next season, having helped the club end their six-year exile from the Premier League, sources have told FourFourTwo that the outstanding midfielder has an ongoing negotiation with Liverpool – and that he can leave Molineux if the Merseyside board comes in with the right offer.

Neves’s entourage recently made the trip to England and were informed that, although a deal is still far from reached, it could advance in the coming weeks.

Mendes has been working on it and has potentially lined up Anderson Talisca (currently on loan at Besiktas) as a replacement for Neves, even though the duo play different roles on the pitch at present.

The Brazil U23 international has refused overtures from Chinese outlet Changchun Yatai and told his representatives that he wants a Premier League move once the current season is over. One of the most influential Brazilian agents, Carlos Leite, has been working with Gestifute to settle the playmaker’s future. Leite is an old pal of Mendes and acted as his key man in Brazil in the early 2000s.

Besiktas have the option to sign Talisca permanently for £18m this summer from Benfica, but so far have failed to convince the Portuguese giants to accept the payment format (the fee would be paid in instalments).

Wolves’s relationship with Mendes, whose agency has seven clients at the club, has attracted criticism from rivals after they clinched promotion at a canter. The West Midlands club claim they haven't broken any rules, though, and have no reason to end the relationship.

Replacing Neves with Talisca, who started his career as a central midfielder in Brazilian football, is an example of how the Portuguese agent works; moving pieces around to make sure the transfer window remains profitable, with everyone having a place at the table.

Neves is not new on Liverpool’s radar, and has been watched since his Porto days. A move to bring him in was considered before, with former first-team development coach Pepijn Lijnders pushing for his purchase before Jurgen Klopp’s appointment. Lijnders revealed how highly he rates the midfielder, who he had coached at Porto, in an interview with the Times.

“If you bring one or two young players through it opens a pathway for all the rest – it was the same with Porto, with Ruben Neves getting in,” he said. “Ruben opened up the door for everyone by accelerating the process with young players and creating the right projects around young players... giving them the belief that it’s possible.”

With six beauties netted from outside the area in 39 games this season, Neves would seem the ideal replacement for Emre Can, whose contract expires in June. Napoli’s Jorginho has also been touted to fill in the space that could be left open, but his agent Joao Santos, who is based in Istanbul, says his client has not been approached.

Snubbing other offers, trusting Mendes’s advice and dropping down to England’s second tier was a risk, but Neves will be a Premier League footballer from August 2018 onwards – it just remains to be seen whether it will be for Liverpool or Wolves.[/article]


OK, that's it – he's on the list!
 
Rumours that Neves release clause £40m

Also linked in tabloids to Ndidi.

So thats Neves, Dani Cabelos, Ndidi and Jorginho in the mix.

Watch us get none of them.
 
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