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Suso

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Buddha

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As much as he's obviously benefitting from his loan spell, I still can't help wondering if he should have been backed to cut his teeth in the first team this year. He'd have been a viable alternative to Coutinho and would have, at the very least, been useful to bring on for the tiring Brazilian at the 70 minute mark in most games. He could also have played/covered the deeper midfield roles.

Still, he's doing well in Spain....

The player lighting up La Liga who will play for Liverpool in future
By Lee Roden (@LeeRoden89) | Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Get ready for the SASAS, Kopites. talkSPORT's Spanish football correspondent Lee Roden has his finger on the pulse of La Liga and here he profiles the exciting Liverpool youngster learning his trade in one of Europe's best divisions…
Last year was an exceptional one for Jesus Joaquin Fernandez Saez de la Torre, better known as Suso.
At the tender age of 18, by the time the summer had passed, he had won the U19 European Championship with Spain. By the autumn, he had made his first team debut with Liverpool. By the new year, his number of appearances with the Reds had reached double figures.
In the summer of 2013 he faced a different task, however; the challenge of going on loan to a new league, playing as often as possible, and hopefully, returning to Anfield a more mature player, ready to start games regularly in the future.
The good news for Liverpool is that he has grabbed the opportunity with both hands, and is succeeding in his mission. In fact, many in Spain simply can’t stop talking about him.
Suso’s situation at Almeria couldn’t be more different to the one he was accustomed to at Liverpool. At Anfield, the Spaniard was a bright young talent, facing the pressure of breaking into the first team and attempting to maintain a high level that would keep him in Brendan Rodgers’ plans.
At Almeria, on the other hand, he is the club’s superstar – despite still being only 19 – his reputation from Spain’s youth teams as well as the stature that comes with playing for Liverpool elevating him above players with far more experience at the Andalucian club.
In the face of that expectation, the youngster has shown incredible maturity, never shying from the ball and constantly looking to help his side out. Suso seems to thrive on the pressure, aware of what he can bring to the struggling team, and is notably happy to play across any of the attacking midfield positions in order to assist as best as possible.
The player recently spoke at length about his decision to join Almeria, despite other major offers, in an interview with Sandra Galvez. His words show just how dedicated he is to Liverpool.
“I had bigger offers than the Almeria one, in particular one from Germany, but I wanted to stay attached to Liverpool, an important team for me. When I learned of Almeria’s interest, I didn’t think twice. My goal is to play as much as possible, experience La Liga, and help my team to stay up.”
So far, he is certainly doing his best to help them in their goal. Almeria currently sit second from bottom in La Liga, yet with only three points more, they could be three places clear of the drop zone. It’s tight down there, and it is already evident that the Liverpool loanee will be key to their hopes of escaping.
His ability to provide goals is particularly crucial. With five assists so far in the league, he only trails Atletico Madrid’s Koke and Barcelona’s Neymar in that department.
His most recent assist came in a vital 1-0 win over Valladolid last weekend. It is fitting therefore that Valladolid fansite Blanquivioletas.es talked up his ability ahead of the game, noting that he is the ‘kind of player that can cut an opposition defence open and change the tide of a game’.
They add that ‘his strength is undoubtedly his vision, he is capable of threading passes to strikers that most players couldn’t even imagine, and he can do it thanks to his technique and creativity. He’s the kind of player you can expect anything from’.
It’s safe to say that they are impressed with the Liverpool man, therefore, and like many in Spain, they now have a clear picture of his virtues after a relatively short period of time in the league. That says something about the impact he has had.
The eulogies don’t stop there. Vavel.com talk of Suso as a player that is ‘the biggest attraction’ at Almeria. They add that he is ‘one of those players that makes it worth paying for a ticket to see’, ‘when he has the ball you don’t know where he’s going to surprise you, his repertoire of techniques is infinite, it’s very difficult to get the ball off him, and he has a golden left foot’. Again, like the others, they also stress just how important he will be for Almeria if they want to stay up.
In truth, from a Liverpool perspective, it isn’t particularly important if Almeria get relegated or not, but what is important is that Suso is playing regularly and playing well. In that regard, everything is going to plan for the Reds, and if things continue on their current trajectory, it would be a shock if Brendan Rodgers doesn't consider him as part of his plans next season.
As it stands, not only is Suso playing well, but he is playing so well that he could yet save the Andalucians from the drop. Should he manage to do that, he will leave Almeria a hero, just as he already looks likely to return to Liverpool a finished product.

Read more at http://talksport.com/football/playe...erpool-future-13110566992#XylzdbqtEFmPDcI1.99
 
It's best he's getting constant experience, in a tough situation. We'll either sell him (I sadly think this will happen) or he'll be far more ready to impose himself on games. It was a good move for both sides.
 
instead of buying the bench warmers for 7m...it is better to use such a talent next season, thw academy bringing fruits finally :happy:
 
I've always liked him and have had high hopes for him.
He's definitely got that Barca DNA in him and would really really help us keep the ball.
Where can he play for us though?
In an attacking position, he could play one of the 3 in a 4-2-3-1:
----------------Sturridge-----------------
Coutinho-----Suarez----------Suso

Which is fine, but to me I still think his best position is one being occupied by our captain, and he's just not going to get dropped.

If we played 4-3-3, had one really good DM, then Suso and Gerrard (if he gets his act together), or with Allen if he can regain his form, with Coutinho and Suarez coming deep to help out, we'd have a very very good side that could pass around teams all day long, and surely that's what Rodgers is aiming for.

I really hope Rodgers has it in him to integrate Suso into the team (provided he keeps working on his work rate), and by that I don't mean just putting him out on the wing in the last 15 minutes and hoping for the best, but to let him play to his strength in a more central position for several games so he and his teammates can start understanding each other and realising that passing around forever in our own half, getting pressured, thus going long, and hoping for the best from our top class forwards is not the way to go.
 
Juniourmember has hit the nail on the head, we can accommodate a whole host of creatives if we can just get a proper DM in January. I know Mascher won't come back but we need a Mascher-type so for the purposes of suggesting a team I'll put his name in (as I can't think of any other DM'ers who might fill the gap at present)......

.......................................Mignolet
McLaughlin.............Agger............Skrtel..............Glenjo
.......................................Mascherano...........................
...............Suso.............Allen...............Coutinho............
.......................Suarez............Sturridge....................

That team would "out-football" Arsenal!
 
Trust the board to sell Suso on the cheap.

Or.....when he comes back, sit him on the bench and hardly play him, hence triggering his decline into oblivion.

We are normally experts in these areas.
 
Suso is such an exceptional talent. We'd be mad to sell him. He'll be ready for the first team next season thats for sure. If we sell him i'll be well pissed off.
 
BYkxTMWIMAAHt2M.jpg:large
 
[article=http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/11096/9020837/suso-blossoming]Almeria made it three consecutive wins in La Liga at the weekend to move clear of the relegation zone. Suso was suspended for that game but the Liverpool youngster has been the star man for the Andalusian side this season and could yet have a big future at Anfield, argues Adam Bate.

Osasuna legend Ion Andoni Goikoetxea provides an analysis column in the team's matchday programme and he was in no doubt as to the identity of the key man for weekend visitors Almeria. His predictions was that Suso, serving a one-match ban after picking up five yellow cards, would be sorely missed at El Sadar. As it turned out, the Liverpool loanee's team-mates managed a smash-and-grab 1-0 win without him to make it three consecutive victories for the newly-promoted side. It seems Almeria, like Suso himself, are blossoming in La Liga.

When Brendan Rodgers first took over as Liverpool manager in the summer of 2012, the young Spaniard quickly caught his eye. He was introduced to the first-team squad and given his Premier League debut at Anfield against Manchester United that September. A promising future was predicted and the attacking midfielder became something of a poster boy for the Rodgers regime - a symbol of his intent to institute a change of philosophy.

"Suso makes things happen," said Rodgers at the time. "He is tactically very good and strong technically with the ball. I love that type of player.He knows he still has a lot to learn but he's a good kid. He has got a really good appetite for the game. He is on the same page in terms of the tactical idea for the team. If his fight matches his talent then we will have a very good player."

Despite going on to feature in a further 13 Premier League matches after being thrown in against United, Suso failed to complete the full 90 minutes in any of his appearances. He showed glimpses of the quality that had earmarked him for stardom, but - playing in a position that Rodgers had memorably described as "a false winger, that seven-and-a-half role" - it proved a steep learning curve. Suso scored no goals and claimed no assists.

Rodgers had initially refused to allow the player to go on loan abroad last season, but by March he was forced to reassess the situation. "Does he actually have to go and play somewhere for a year and get experience?" he asked. "Does he need to show he can go and get goals and create goals and then we know what we have?" Well, Suso has gone on loan to the Spanish top flight with Almeria and is doing just that.

As Goikoetxea suggested, it is no exaggeration to describe Suso as the star turn for the Andalusian side this season. As assist on debut against Villarreal was followed by another impressive performance at Getafe and a great goal from long range in a man-of-the-match display against Levante. More recently, Suso has provided three assists in his last four appearances, including the equaliser in the victory at Valencia and the cross for the only goal of the game in the win over Valladolid.

assist.jpg


His tally of assists for the season now stands at five. It's a mark only bettered by Koke, Neymar and Cesc Fabregas. Given that those players turn out for the current top two in the division, it is a huge credit to Suso that he is achieving such numbers in a relatively struggling side. Prior to the weekend, only 10 players from clubs in the bottom half of the table had produced more key passes than the 19-year-old playmaker.

Much of those passes have been provided from wide positions on either the left or the right, where his close control has caused problems for full-backs. Following his efforts against Valladolid last week, there were only six players in the entire Primera Liga - including the likes of Lionel Messi and Neymar - with more completed dribbles. And yet, the man himself still eyes a central role. "My position is as a naturally deep-lying forward but I will play wherever the coach wants me - on either wing or in midfield," said Suso upon his arrival at Almeria.

This hints at a growing maturity. And Suso has had to grow up fast. After being involved for Spain at the European Under-19 Championships in 2012, he went straight into a tough pre-season in England. Then there was the U-20 World Cup in Turkey in the summer before joining Almeria for their anticipated relegation battle. And yet, he has responded. If his season in the Premier League was the making of him physically, it seems a year in La Liga could be the making of him mentally.

That offers the tantalising prospect of Suso returning to Liverpool next term as a far superior player to the one that left Melwood in the summer. The technical and tactical proficiency that so intrigued Rodgers, allied with an experience of regular senior football and the ability to effect the game for his team. "I think his best position is that number 10 role and we'll nurture that over the next couple of years," said the Liverpool boss last season. After such a hugely encouraging start to the campaign, the likelihood of Suso fulfilling that role in a Liverpool shirt has dramatically increased.[/article]
 
Going by Rodgers comments Suso is very much in his plans and he sees him in the nr 10 role.
 
[article=http://www.football-espana.net/37849/suso-explains-u-21-absence]Almeria’s on-loan winger Suso has explained that he did want to join up with the Spain Under-21 squad, but could not through injury.

The youngster was one of Julen Lopetegui’s notable squad members to drop out for European Under-21 Championship qualifiers this month with Bosnia-Herzegovina and Albania.

“Lopetegui spoke to me before the squad was announced, I was overloaded and had discomfort in the groin and told him,” explained Suso this week to reporters.

“And he told me not to worry about the qualifiers, that there were more colleagues eager to go.

“I also wanted to go, but was injured and I could have recovered with them, but there was no need for that.”

Suso is spending the international break with his club instead, who are on a roll of three consecutive wins after a difficult start to life back in La Liga.

For the 19-year-old on loan from Liverpool, the break is not a disadvantage.

“To us it is okay to rest. On Thursday we have a game at Sevilla [the Trofeo Antonio Puerta] and we have no internationals.

“The other teams around us do and [Week 14 opponents Real] Madrid have them all away, so we will be good.

“Our improved form of late? Neither before were we so bad nor now are we so good. This is a team that has always done things well and now we have the points that we did not have before.”[/article]
 
Juniourmember has hit the nail on the head, we can accommodate a whole host of creatives if we can just get a proper DM in January. I know Mascher won't come back but we need a Mascher-type so for the purposes of suggesting a team I'll put his name in (as I can't think of any other DM'ers who might fill the gap at present)......

.......................................Mignolet
McLaughlin.............Agger............Skrtel..............Glenjo
.......................................Mascherano...........................
...............Suso.............Allen...............Coutinho............
.......................Suarez............Sturridge....................

That team would "out-football" Arsenal!


I think the idea is to keep the ball, which makes it quite important that the DM is a genuinely good footballer rather than a mindless beast tackling everything that moves. With a front 5 like that, losing the ball means you're outnumbered and dead regardless of who your DM is. So the only winning option is to pick someone to not lose the ball in the first place as anything else costs you the game.
 
I think it's unfair to label Mascherano a mindless beast dantes, he's keeps possession very well and keeps his passing simple - I would love us to find a younger version of him.
 
But passing isn't so simple for the player in that position, he needs to be pretty clever and know what he is doing with the ball and why. Without performing an unethical experiment upon him, I'm pretty sure Mascherano gets the ball first and then thinks about the simplest way to get rid of it. That's also the reason why he plays in defence for Barcelona.

What we really need is Alonso.
 
But passing isn't so simple for the player in that position, he needs to be pretty clever and know what he is doing with the ball and why. Without performing an unethical experiment upon him, I'm pretty sure Mascherano gets the ball first and then thinks about the simplest way to get rid of it. That's also the reason why he plays in defence for Barcelona.

What we really need is Alonso.
Definitely would prefer Alonso over Mascher but I still think Mascher would do a great job behind that front 5.
 
Lionel Messi overtaken by Liverpool starlet in La Liga assists

Suso moves past Lionel Messi in La Liga assists table






Published 11 days ago by Will Haine, read by 43,011 people.
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Suso enjoying his loan spell. (©GettyImages)
Football News 24/7
Liverpool teenager Suso has been afforded the opportunity to further his education away from the club this season with a loan spell at Almeria, and his performances will provide Reds fans with further excitement for the future.
In his 11 La Liga appearances for Almeria so far this season Suso has contributed five assists, the last of which came at the weekend, and this particular success in the defeat of Valladolid saw the 19-year-old surpass the tally of Lionel Messi.
Five assists places Suso as the joint-fourth highest goal provider in La Liga, level with Cani of Villarreal, and one ahead of Messi, who has laid on four goals for Barcelona so far this term.
Suso is certainly making the most of his temporary spell away from Liverpool, with only Cesc Fabregas, Koke and Neymar having contributed more assists in the Spanish top-flight during the 2013-14 campaign.
The youngster made his first team debut for Liverpool last season, earning 20 appearances in all competitions, but an embarrassment of riches in midfield positions prompted Brendan Rodgers to send Suso away on loan.
Suso joined Liverpool's academy in 2010, seen as something as a coup for the Reds, and is regarded very highly indeed at the club.
 
Juniourmember has hit the nail on the head, we can accommodate a whole host of creatives if we can just get a proper DM in January. I know Mascher won't come back but we need a Mascher-type so for the purposes of suggesting a team I'll put his name in (as I can't think of any other DM'ers who might fill the gap at present)......

.......................................Mignolet
McLaughlin.............Agger............Skrtel..............Glenjo
.......................................Mascherano...........................
...............Suso.............Allen...............Coutinho............
.......................Suarez............Sturridge....................

That team would "out-football" Arsenal!

Not so sure that team would out football arsenal. Suso will not make it here, his end product is not always that clinical
 
Suso can most definitely make it here. If not one of the top clubs will definitely get hold of him.
He's still only 19. 19!
No end product? Only three other players in La Liga have more assists so far, and he plays for a club at the bottom of the league.
He's a true talent who, if he keeps improving (and puts in a bigger shift when without the ball), he has the potential to become world class. Best, or classiest, youth player we've had in a couple of decades.
 
You're on a wind up right? You can't be serious.

Being deadly serious. I just don't see him making it here. I would love to be proven otherwise, but don't think he will. I very much doubt he'll be coutinho class. He's started well to life back in his homeland, but let's see if he can maintain it. In Spain I'm pretty sure he gets more time on the ball, allowing him to flourish, we all know that's not the case here.
 
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