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Rhys Williams

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I wasn't that impressed with Rhys after his first appearance, think it was against Lincoln.
Played with more confidence against Arsenal and did better.
He looks like a player that will grow and improve the more he plays.

And what a journey...
Going from a 15th placed team in the sixth tier of English football to potentially starting in the EPL...amazing and a bit scary at the same time.
 
He looked as competent as the vastly more experienced Gomez last night , that's a fine starting point
 
He certainly looks calm compared to the likes of Lovren....

But tbh we need to see how he deals with better quality opposition.

Sometimes because of others misfortune you get a chance and this is his big chance to make something of himself.
 
His loan was a good idea. He got used to the physical side of the game unusually quickly as a consequence. But what he now needs to get used to is the speed of thought and speed of action shown by the best players. And he needs tolerance and patience from fans who aren't slow to hammer Gomez for any mistake, so god help this lad. He WILL get caught out on occasion, he will make errors, and he just needs to learn, quickly, from them. It's probably lucky for him he'll do that without masses of fans jeering and whistling inside the stadia.
 
His loan was a good idea. He got used to the physical side of the game unusually quickly as a consequence. But what he now needs to get used to is the speed of thought and speed of action shown by the best players. And he needs tolerance and patience from fans who aren't slow to hammer Gomez for any mistake, so god help this lad. He WILL get caught out on occasion, he will make errors, and he just needs to learn, quickly, from them. It's probably lucky for him he'll do that without masses of fans jeering and whistling inside the stadia.

I'd like to think we would cut him slack because he's very clearly 5th choice CB, but some of our fans made necos life hell after 1 average game, so I'm not optimistic
 
He's going to fetch a good £10-15m in the summer, and that's the most important thing during these times. Klopp is probably the best manager in the world in any industry when you compare his salary to the value he creates for the business. The guy shits money.
 
https://www.skysports.com/football/...er-harriers-to-filling-in-for-virgil-van-dijk

[article]Rhys Williams has emerged as a viable option for Jurgen Klopp in the Liverpool defence in the absence of Virgil van Dijk; 19-year-old spent last season on loan at Kidderminster Harriers where his development was overseen by now-manager Russell Penn.

"He looks the part; he looks like the next (Virgil) Van Dijk and he is performing like it at the moment."


In just his fourth senior appearance for Liverpool, 19-year-old Rhys Williams impressed as a first-half substitute for the injured stand-in centre-back Fabinho in a 2-0 Champions League win against FC Midtjylland on Tuesday.

Earlier this year the Reds academy product was plying his trade in the National League North with Kidderminster Harriers.

But the early signs are that Williams is a viable option for Jurgen Klopp amid Liverpool's defensive injury crisis which began with the ACL injury sustained by Virgil van Dijk earlier this month.

Despite surprise at the rapid nature of Williams' introduction to the first-team fold at Liverpool, Kidderminster manager Russell Penn is in no doubt of his talent having watched first-hand his performances last season.

Penn - who was assistant to John Pemberton when Williams joined Kidderminster - admits the defender initially struggled with the physical demands of non-League football but quickly settled into his stride.

"We definitely knew he had something in football terms straight away because of his ability on the ball, his composure at his age," Penn told Sky Sports News.

"The way he moved was graceful really and we just knew with his height and his stature that he is going to have a half decent career. The first month I think he'd hold his hands up, he struggled, he got caught, he got bullied a little, pushed off the ball."

Amid managerial upheaval at Kidderminster, Williams played every game for the club up to when the National League season was cut short in March due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Fast forward a few months and Williams has started out on the path to match the expectations Liverpool have held for him.

Penn added: "What I do know is he was highly thought of. He was the next best thing because Liverpool kept telling us.

"He was training with the first team during the end of the season and he has been in the mix since the start of pre-season.

"I am expecting big things moving forward. He just needs to keep a level head and keep plugging away."

It remains to be seen whether Klopp will opt to give Williams his Premier League debut from the start against West Ham on Saturday, live on Sky Sports, with Joe Gomez the only fit senior centre-back available amid doubts over whether Joel Matip will have recovered from a muscle injury.

But Penn, who concedes Klopp will be targeting reinforcements in January, is confident Williams will not be short in belief should a run of games come his way.

"He is a very confident individual," Penn added. "I don't mean that like he is big time and very arrogant. I mean that he knows his ability.

"I can only go [with what I know] as a Kidderminster manager and he knew how good he was at our level last year. You would like to think that is a natural habit to have.

"You don't get that a lot with teenagers. You get very shy teenagers who are very scared going around the first-team environment. He looks to embrace it all."

Speaking after the 2-0 win against Midtjylland, Klopp said: "He [Williams] did really well. The only problem now is we have four days until the West Ham game, you will make a story of him every day and then he has to prove he can deal with that again.

"Everything was calm around him. We will try to do that as well.

"To be really clear and positive, Rhys was not in one situation tonight a problem for us, he played a really good game."[/article]
 
From the Echo:
Williams has barely played for Liverpool's senior side, with all of his first-team appearances coming this season in the Carabao Cup and the Champions League. However, he does possess some desirable traits that bode well for his ability to perform for the Reds despite his inexperience, with aerial prowess being his most prominent strength. The teenager has contested 17 aerial duels so far, winning 12 of them which leaves him with a success rate of 70.6%; Van Dijk placed amongst the best in Europe's top five leagues last season with an average win rate of 74.2% in the Premier League. Joe Gomez, for perspective, posted 62.8% in England's top-flight last season. Standing 6-foot-3, Williams is able to cope when the ball leaves the ground, and Pep Ljinders captured exactly why that's such a valuable trait for a Liverpool centre-back in one of his recent press conferences.

The Dutch coach stated: “As a pressing team you have to accept a lot of long balls and second balls, so it’s important you have centre-backs who are good in the air so they can win the first challenge.” As a consequence of Liverpool's game under Klopp, his central defenders have to be dominant and well-rounded in order to cope with the requirements of the role, with very few weaknesses. It's reasonable to suggest that Williams doesn't quite tick every box, but as a stopgap who will play to his strengths and take very few risks - if any - the English defender could prove to be useful and Liverpool could certainly do worse. Supporters will learn more about his level moving forward but based on the minutes he's played so far, he does seem to be fairly comfortable executing a physical and proactive style of play.
 
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