The preseason is upon us, and the season itself will be here before we know it. And in (almost) every club that means someone who urgently needs to advance to relive a stagnant career or just escape his [Insert Team] Nightmare.
Here’s one of those players for every Premier League club that needs a transfer, aside from the three promoted clubs, because even we are not the idiots to tell newly promoted players that this is not for them and that they should probably come back. fuck it. to the Sky Bet where they belong. It is simply cruel.
Arsenal: Lucas Torreira
His last move for the Gunners was on the bench for the 2020 FA Cup final and he was loaned out to Atlético de Madrid last season, where he started just three games in their La Liga win. It looks like he’s been on the verge of joining Lazio for at least six weeks, but for now he’s still technically an Arsenal player. Wherever it ends, Arsenal looks set to take a good beating with a £ 26 million fee that actually seemed like a good deal in the goofy, carefree days of 2018.
Aston Villa: Conor Hourihane
The temptation here with the arrival of Emi Buendia is to be fat again for Anwar El Ghazi, but when we did it last year when he couldn’t get onto the field for the first six games of the season, he quickly went and scored five goals in five. Premier League matches, so we won’t make that mistake again. Long useful life However, Conor Hourihane feels like a safer bet. Barely seen in the first half of last season before ending up on loan in the Championship with Swansea. A return to the second division with one of the relegated duos West Brom or Sheffield United seems their most likely course of action.
Brighton: Percy Tau
In three years, according to Brighton’s books, he has managed 103 minutes of Premier League football and two assignments to Belgium. He is 27 years old. It’s time to move on, it’s unworthy.
Burnley: Dale Stephens
It all depends on what a 32-year-old wants out of life, of course, but if it’s more than sitting on the bench and watching Burnley play football, stepping off that bench every now and then for the final stages of losses to Manchester City. or Tottenham, then Stephens has a choice to make.
Chelsea: Tammy Abraham
It really wasn’t that long ago that Abraham looked like the most likely inhabitant of Harry Kane’s coveted substitute job on the England team. Now he can’t get a match for Chelsea, a club that doesn’t hide his desire at all to bring in the hottest young striker in the world. Take the hint, Tammy. We still don’t know how good Abraham is or could be, but there have been plenty of indications, both on his loan and the season he was Chelsea’s main striker, to suggest that the answer is ‘pretty good’. it could be, actually. ‘ We and he won’t know as he warms up Chelsea’s couch, living off Carabao’s crumbs. Now he’s at the level of Arsenal.
Crystal Palace: N / A
For next season there are only seven real footballers in the Palace team. No one needs to leave Selhurst Park to play soccer at this stage.
Everton: Fabian Delphi
A total of 261 minutes of Premier League action last season. A total of 49 of those minutes in 2021. Still only 31. Time to move on.
Leeds: Costa clara
Nobody really needs to leave Leeds; the old warhorses are gone and most of the rest of the first team team will be very happy with their luck. But if there is someone who seems a bit superfluous, it is Costa. He doesn’t have to move, Leeds doesn’t have to fire him. But if a new attacker comes in, Costa seems more likely to leave. Maybe even to make the move easier. See, some are tougher than others.
Leicester: Hamza Choudhury
It really is huge as there is actually no one in dire need of a Leicester relocation for whatever reason. It’s Leeds with buttons. It is a good club that does good things and with all the prospects for more good things to happen in the coming years. They also have a small team and many of them get injured regularly to make sure everyone has enough opportunities. But the fact that Choudhury is a supporting actor feels a bit unfortunate.
Liverpool: Jordan Henderson
Especially because all of Fleet Street seems to have absolute connections just the thought and we are very excited to see what they do when it actually happens.
Manchester City: Aymeric Laporte
How curious is Laporte. A true world-class center-back who had to change nationality to play international soccer and now may need to change teams to play club soccer. Even in a superpower like City, Laporte is an absurdly flamboyantly talented reserve. And yet, thanks to Ruben Dias and John Stones, it’s a reservation. That can’t be correct, can it?
Manchester United: Jesse Lingard
In fact, it’s rare that a loan works so well for everyone involved. Lingard’s move to West Ham was the absolute ideal. The player had a good time, his temporary club qualified for Europe, mostly because of his great contribution, and his parent club sat back and watched his value rise and fall. Delicious things. It is clear that if he then returns to the Manchester United bench, much of that advantage will be lost. That is why it is important for everyone to move. West Ham is an obvious possibility, but there is an intriguing possibility that it could be in the across the Moyes Derby at Everton with Rafa Benítez…
Newcastle: Dwight Gaylea
He signed a contract extension literally weeks ago, but it still seems unlikely that anything good can come of it. There was a point last season where Gayle was Newcastle’s only fit forward and still couldn’t play a game. He started just four games last season, scored just once, and it seems unlikely that a brilliant new contract will lead to a big increase in that number next term.
Southampton: Shane Long
The 34-year-old was loaned out to Bournemouth in the second half of last season and appears to have no place in Ralph Hasenhuttl’s first-team plans. Last season he played just 201 minutes in the Premier League, but the Danny Ings situation Of course, it could have an impact on Long’s future.
Tottenham: Moussa Sissoko
It’s unlikely there were 14 starts in 18 Premier League games in the middle of last season, but we can’t remember that no matter how many sites we check to confirm that it actually happened. Then he only started one of Tottenham’s last 17 league games, which is much more similar, and he wasn’t even selected for the last two games of the season. Of course, a new coach could turn things around, and it looks like a lot of things are going to change at Spurs, but it’s hard to see a new rebirth for Sissoko. Also notice how we resisted Harry Kane’s easy talk here, and I appreciate that.
West Ham: Andriy Yarmolenko
Maybe next season will be different, but the facts are that a) West Ham were really good without him (he only started one Premier League match the entire season) and b) he’s too good to sit on the bench. West Ham may no longer be the disaster of yesteryear, but seeing one of the real stars of Euro 2020 sitting on his couch is still too much.
Lobos: Patrick Cutrone
Because something has to change. Not to try, you must say. He made appearances in three of the five major European leagues last season, and that’s something. Another thing is that he has not scored a single goal with Lobo, Valencia or Fiorentina. It’s unclear exactly where he’s headed, Sampdoria has been touted as a possibility, but at least it can only get better.
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