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Summer Transfer Window

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Ok @bluebell - Frimpong aint all that, many of those players in the German league look good onlynin that league and if they played here they would have a tough time. Also, just like RM did not want to sign Bobby when he became available for free (Vini tried to get him to join asking the president of RM) , RM decided getting Bobby would mean too many Brazil players in the squad....so I really domt want to add another Dutch player.

Im terms of what I want, I have stated LCB, DM, and RW. Who they should be ... I dont know.

I would like Diaz to leave, I think Cody Gakpo should have that position. Diaz does not give us either the assist or goals of a prime Mane.
I think you agree that Morton, Steph and Fab need a fair chance to make a claim for first team? On the hypothetical Morton and Steph meet the grade, where does that leave us for MF. Lets say Salah plays next season, he will play most games so we need someone who is happy to play second fiddle and do the job like Fab C, where does that leave us for RW.
We have 4 CBS and 4 Fullbacks, adding more players without selling them brings in problems of its own. I was all for getting a new DM but since Leipzig have come in asking for Morton, I want to give the kid a chance - if we have to get a DM, then lets sell Endo first and get an upgrade
 
Fabrizio Romano has revealed that Liverpool have been in contact with the agents of Atalanta midfielder Ederson.

The 24-year-old has previously been linked to the Reds.

The Brazilian, who is also in the Copa America squad, had an outstanding 2023/24 campaign that saw the Bergamo side crowned Europa League champions against Xabi Alonso’s Bayer Leverkusen.

Speaking on streaming site PlayBack, Fabrizio Romano said:

“I see many Liverpool friends are still waiting for [concrete] updates, but nothing advances in terms of negotiations.”

“The midfield still could be a position to cover [for Liverpool].”

“I will not be surprised if Liverpool goes for a midfielder this summer.”

“For example, they had several meetings and contacts with the agents of Ederson from Atalanta.”

“He is one of the players that Liverpool considered in the midfield but never sending a proposal – also because they know it will be difficult and complicated.”

“Atalanta don’t want to sell both of the top players that have in midfield: Teun Koopmeiners and Ederson.”

“Ederson is appreciated by Liverpool, yes, but at the moment there is no negotiations?

It’s not even a player they have in the guaranteed shortlist.”

The 24-year-old can play multiple positions and roles in midfield and has caught the eye on many occasions.

He has earned the trust of manager Gian Piero Gasperini after his reported €21 million switch from Salernitana back in 2022, although it took a bit of time for him to get into the starting XI.

This season, playing in a box-to-box role, Ederson has managed seven goals and one assist in 35 Serie A games.

Atalanta are tough negotiators and will want a substantial return on the aforementioned transfer fee.
 
right time for kev, he’s on the wane and not going to last much longer in the city side
 
Fun how we are always link with the Selfridge/Harrords type players and we end up with the Tesco/Sainbury brand of player, and on occassion we get to shop at M&S/Waitrose

Just can't get excited with the transfer spec' until I see what this Manager/Coach is all about
 
We’ve been pretty good at signing players. We’ve been excellent in fact. And now Edwards is back as well. The summer will be fun I reckon.
 
Happy with Diaz to leave. He can’t make a pass and runs into blind alleys all the time.

Happy with Gakpo and Gordon as left side options and Gakpo/Salah covering Nunez in the middle.

I'm not happy with that line-up down the middle at all. None of them convince me in that position.
 
Happy with Diaz to leave. He can’t make a pass and runs into blind alleys all the time.

Happy with Gakpo and Gordon as left side options and Gakpo/Salah covering Nunez in the middle.
And Jota as 4th choice keeper
 
Well, the likes of David, Osimhen, Boniface and Openda had stints in Belgium too (and Brentford already secured one for the upcoming season). 😛


View: https://twitter.com/AnfieldEdition/status/1788134634376560726

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Mohamed Amoura poised to become flag-bearer for next generation of Algerian talent

It is the sprints, ball at his feet, that catch the eye, that push the speedometer’s needle so it twitches up above 36 kph. But there’s a good deal more to Mohamed Amoura, flag-bearer for Algerian football’s next generation, and a star on the rise just when his country needs one.

Besides the acceleration, he has a springy leap from his low base. Witness the most spectacular of the goals Amoura has been decorating the top flight of Belgian football with this season, a dashing overhead kick that, back in November against FC Bruges, truly established the 23-year-old as the man to build a title-chasing team around.

That team, Union Saint-Gilloise, or USG, on Thursday seek to extend their reputation as the sharpest-eyed, best-run talent-spotters in European club football’s middle tier, up against Turkish heavyweights Fenerbahce in the Uefa Conference League, with a quarter-final place at stake over the two legs, the first of them in Brussels.

An "anti-Amoura plan" is anticipated by USG’s coaching staff, such has been the impact of the striker since he joined them last summer. They suspect the Fenerbahce defence will sit a little deeper to counter those sprints; and perhaps some extra-robust marking of Amoura to examine any brittleness in his temperament.

Further along the road, USG are making post-Amoura plans, acknowledging that, as one of the game’s hottest young prospects, he may no longer be spearheading them beyond this season’s likely Belgian league title – the club have an eight-point lead at the top – the Belgian Cup final – USG’s first in more than a century – and wherever the Conference League adventure ends.

The hope is to emulate, at least, last season’s run to the quarter-finals – they lost 5-2 to Germany's Bayer Leverkusen over two legs in the last-eight of the Europa League in 2023.

USG, only promoted from Belgium’s second division in 2021, are propelled by an enviable upward mobility, but so are the talents they expertly scout.

Last season’s leading scorer, the Nigerian Victor Boniface, was sold to Leverkusen, where he is on course to win the 2023/24 Bundesliga, for more than €20 million. Union had bought him, from the Norwegian club Bodo-Glimt, for €6 million just 11 months earlier.

Amoura’s valuation is charting the same trajectory. He cost around €4 million, from Lugano in Switzerland, last August; there’s interest in him from the Premier League, from France and major clubs in Italy and Germany.

“He’s got the characteristics to thrive in Germany or Italy,” believes Nordin Jabri, the Belgian-Moroccan former international turned television analyst. “What coaches see, beside the goals and the pace, is that he has the capacity to keep running and running to press the opposition.”

“He’s been an absolute blessing for the Belgian league,” enthuses Philippe Albert, Jabri’s former teammate in the Belgium national team and a fellow pundit.


Amoura will turn 24 in May, and, as he admitted in December, the ascent has often seemed as dazzlingly fast as one of his swift breaks from the halfway line.

“Four years ago, I was fresh out of a little club in Algeria and now I’m an established first-teamer here,” he told reporters. “It makes me want to tell young Algerian players they too should believe in themselves.”

It has been an inspiring journey, and mould-breaking in a period when, for aspiring footballers across the Maghreb, it can look more and more like the fast-track to elite-level success is through a European club academy and indeed through an entire hothoused upbringing in Europe rather than in North Africa.

Like the successful Morocco squad who reached the 2022 World Cup semi-final, Algeria, Africa Cup of Nations winners in 2019, have a large proportion of European-born-and-raised players in their senior national side. Some previously represented France at age-group level; almost all learnt most of their football amid the coaching dogmas and the high-grade facilities of European club academies.

Amoura represents a different route to becoming a professional. “I come from the mountains,” he says of his roots, in Taher, near Jelil, eastern Algeria.

His father worked on farms; his own love of football grew from playing in streets, and, in his early teens, became a vocation only once he had found allies to offer him a place a stay so he could enrol at training with the youth teams of JS Djijel, a club in Algeria’s regionalised lower divisions.

He endured setbacks, like a rejection from the Paradou academy in Algiers. Arouma suspects his height – he’s a diminutive 1.68 metres – counted against him.

But he kept dribbling, kept refining his tricks, and found his way to ES Setif. There, he scored on his senior debut, aged 19. He finished his first full season at Setif with 17 goals.

Lugano recruited him, and after very few training sessions he had a new nickname. Teammates called him “little Salah,” for his speed, his confidence on the ball and for the career parallels with Mohamed Salah: a North African prodigy signed young by a Swiss club, as the Egyptian was by Basel.

The Lugano chapter had its frustrations, Amoura often used as an impact substitute when he’d have preferred to start games. But USG looked less at the number of minutes he played that what he did with them.

The Belgian club applied the mix of observational expertise and data-driven metrics they have pioneered in scouting to feel sure of Amoura’s potential to develop. “They’re a club who for the past three years have built teams really effectively and with flair,” says Albert.


In Amoura’s case, the flair is carefully curated. “He’s an out-of-the-ordinary player,” adds Albert, “and the key challenge is to preserve the spontaneity in his game. He’s about so much more than just speed. He’s two-footed and has a real poise in his finishing.”

The statistics, in this his first season in a new league, speak for that. Amoura’s 17 league goals for USG have been scored at one every 80 minutes on the pitch, a rate comparable to Harry Kane for Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga, and a little more frequently than Kylian Mbappe for Paris Saint-Germain.

Granted, those two feted strikers are working in stronger domestic competitions than USG operate in, but Amoura can expect soon enough to be keeping the same sort of elite company.

He can look forward to a more prominent role with his national team, too. Algeria’s new manager Vladimir Petkovic, appointed following Djamel Belmadi’s departure in the wake of a dismal Afcon in January, has a manifesto for renewal.

Supporters are eager for an attacking figurehead to succeed Riyad Mahrez, the standard-bearer when Algeria were Africa’s champions but much criticised in recent months and dropped by the end of the last Afcon campaign, where Amoura was only called into action once Belmadi’s men were sliding towards an ignominious group-phase exit.

“It’s important to start afresh,” says Petkovic. Time for the starlet from the mountains to lead his country’s uphill climb.

Bicycle kick around 0:26:


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4nHIbMAwTPs


Joined Wolfsburg


View: https://x.com/UnionStGilloise/status/1810301831161037106
 
Calafiori seem to be Arsenal bound. Not sure what Artetas plan is now that he has about 6 x CBs and two of them will be playing full back. Bought Timber last summer as well.
Maybe has a bit of the Guardiolaitis and gets to clever for himself?
 
I think we may get Frimpong (probably the only signing where I and @moron have disagreed on) which will give us width on the RW. If the Holland's answer to Chris Evans stays, it wouldn't make sense to get another CB on top... And you'd only get LB if one of our current LB leave
 
Good, I'd rather save £40 mill and play Sepp.

Not convinced about van den Berg. I know he's done well elsewhere but that doesn't make him LFC first team standard.

That said, I wouldn't go in for Calafiori either. I never quite trust the hype that builds up around the latest Flavour of the Month.
 
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