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Summer 2019 Transfer Thread


Anubis
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The club should be providing funds for;

 

One big spend on a pacey forward who can play across the front line and chip in with 10+ goals a season. 

 

Cover at LB, be an advantage if they can play RB too. 

 

Experienced backup keeper. 

 

 

Then depending on money generated from sales I’d like a more creative option for the AM/No10 role. 

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The fees and wages for players now, how the fuck can anybody afford to buy anyone and still be run like a business.

 

Second in the league and European champions. I want two first team top class players. Squad depth will take care of itself. I don't watch other football have no idea about other players. So fuck knows who. 

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Guest Pistonbroke
10 hours ago, TheHowieLama said:

I think they chose to keep the ban in place while they go to CAS

aka the Sakho Strategy

Ah, cheers for the good news. Chelsea will be recalling a load of their loan players no doubt. 

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25 minutes ago, Bad Red Bull said:

Nobody quite good enough for us. Isco maybe, Asensio at a stretch but that's it.

I'd take Theo Hernandez. Maybe Ceballos as well, depending on the price and what other deals we were doing.

 

Hernandez for sure would be a decent buy, though. We tried to buy him 2 summers ago from Atletico and Madrid outbid us. So now that he's 21, has had a decent (though not great) loan at Sociedad, and Madrid are ready to scrap him for the latest fad, it would seem a very Edwards move to pick him up for 12m or something.

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Latest from Neil Jones. Nothing new really. 

 

https://www.goal.com/en-gb/news/how-liverpool-can-create-a-footballing-dynasty-following/1is5oi10inlxvzegd6a6g74n2

 

How Liverpool can create a footballing dynasty following Champions League success

 

The Reds are in a strong position on and off the field as they look to challenge for honours in the coming years

 

The party was only just getting started in Madrid, but Liverpool’s players were already talking about the future.

 

The message was clear.

 

“For us, it’s the start,” said Mo Salah. Jordan Henderson was in agreement. “I want the team to keep improving,” said the captain. “I want to win more.”

 

Joe Gomez talked of “limitless” boundaries for Jurgen Klopp’s team, while Daniel Sturridge spoke of “opening the floodgates” for a new era of Anfield success. The striker won’t be around to witness it, but he fully expects the Reds to kick on from their Champions League triumph. “It’s that culture of getting over the line,” he said.

 

James Milner concurred, citing Manchester City’s FA Cup win in 2011 as the day everything changed at that club. “Getting the first one under your belt is massive,” he added.

 

So what comes next for the European Champions? How can Liverpool build on this and, for want of a better word, create a new kind of dynasty at Anfield?

 

It won’t be easy. The standards set this season have been remarkable – Liverpool lost just one league game and dropped just 17 points in total – and in City they have run into a once-in-a-lifetime foe. Pep Guardiola’s team, clearly, will be the ones to beat again next term.

 

The good news for Liverpool is that the core of their side remains fresh, hungry and experienced enough to perform consistently, yet young enough to improve too. 

 

The majority are aged between 22 and 29 with only Milner, of the regular starters, the wrong side of 30. Additionally, the key members of the squad – from Salah to Trent Alexander-Arnold to Sadio Mane – are tied to long-term contracts, none of which contain release clauses. Getting a player out of Liverpool in the next couple of years will be nigh-on impossible, even for the likes of Barcelona and Real Madrid.

 

The Reds will offer new deals to Milner, Joel Matip and Divock Origi, all of whom are entering their final year, while Virgil van Dijk can expect an extension too. Eighteen months into his Anfield career, the PFA Player of the Year has certainly earned his payrise.

 

Ideally, Liverpool would extend Klopp’s deal this summer too. The German is contracted until 2022, and would only need to say the word to be granted an extension. As much as Liverpool’s success is a collaborative effort, there is an appreciation from Fenway Sports Group, the club’s owners, that without the 51-year-old at the helm, their collegiate efforts would be in vain. The value of a strong, open-minded leader, able to manage relationships as Klopp does, cannot be underestimated.

 

Klopp’s relationship with FSG is stronger than ever. He is particularly close to Mike Gordon, the president, and held lengthy conversations with John W Henry, the principal owner, and Tom Werner, the chairman, in Madrid. He has hinted in the past that he may look to take a break from football when he leaves Liverpool, but FSG hope that he will be around to guide their club for many years to come. Certainly, he is happy and settled for the time being.

 

Settled, too, is the club’s off-the-field setup. Commercially, the Reds are making significant strides – in February they recorded a world-record net profit of £106million ($135m), with the club’s turnover up to £455m ($578m). Its estimated value, according to Forbes, is £1.7billion ($2.2bn).

 

Those numbers will only increase in the coming years. Liverpool will earn close to £100m ($127m) from their Champions League exploits this season, and are hoping to sign the most lucrative kit deal in their history in time for the 2020-21 season, most likely with Nike, the American giants. Unsurprisingly, brands are desperate to be associated.

 

Further expansion of Anfield remains on the agenda. Liverpool have until September to proceed with existing plans to add 5,000 sets to the Anfield Road stand, but reports this week suggest they could pursue a bigger project that could raise the stadium's capacity past 60,000. FSG, of course, know that they would be able to fill that 10 times over, such is the demand.

 

Yes, these are exciting times on Merseyside, with the move to a new £50m ($64m) training complex at Kirkby set to be completed next summer. That will bring together the first-team and the Academy on one site, creating, in Klopp’s words, “the football headquarters of Merseyside.”

 

Hopes are high for the next generation of young stars. Rhian Brewster and Ki-Jana Hoever, 19 and 17 respectively, are already part of the first-team setup, while Barry Lewtas’ under-18 side won the club’s first FA Youth Cup for 12 years in April, beating City in the final.

 

Liverpool are also set to benefit from an improved loan strategy, which has allowed younger players to gather experience and create value by performing elsewhere. The likes of Harry Wilson, Ryan Kent, Marko Grujic, Herbie Kane and Taiwo Awoniyi have put themselves in the frame for big moves this summer, whether on loan or permanent. Liverpool will, if needed, be able to raise significant transfer funds that way.

 

It is not expected to be a huge summer of spending, mind. More than £170m ($216m) was committed last summer, but the word this time around is that it will be about fine-tuning more than anything else.

A back-up full-back, for example, will be needed, and probably a goalkeeper too. In an ideal world, Klopp would add a young, pacy, multi-functional forward player too. If Liverpool lacked anything this season, it was an extra game-changer from the bench.

 

The good news is that the club’s recruitment team, led by sporting director Michael Edwards, continues to deliver. The Reds’ transfer record in recent years is as good as any.

 

Anfield is now a destination for players, rather than a stop-off point. From worrying about key men leaving, Liverpool can now attract anyone. They don’t need much of a sales pitch these days.

 

That’s what Klopp and Co. have created. Now, the challenge is to take the next step, to turn it into something which will last.

 

Limitless boundaries, indeed.

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7 hours ago, lifetime fan said:

The club should be providing funds for;

 

One big spend on a pacey forward who can play across the front line and chip in with 10+ goals a season. 

Cover at LB, be an advantage if they can play RB too. 

Experienced backup keeper. 

Then depending on money generated from sales I’d like a more creative option for the AM/No10 role. 

 

The players the manager wants. 

 

Agreed. 

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BARCA PLAYERS IN DEMAND

Barcelona have concrete offers from clubs across Europe for Malcom, Jasper Cillessen, Andre Gomes, Denis Suarez and Nelson Semedo, according to Mundo Deportivo.

However, no interest has been shown in Philippe Coutinho, a player the La Liga champions are hoping to cash in on to fund incomings

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21 hours ago, Boss said:

Yeah, it's just this mythology around him that he signed obscure players and then turned them into stars. He didn't. He signed mostly proven stars or kids that we're massively hyped at the time he signed them.

Who did he buy from the lower leagues who was a success? I don't remember any, but that could be down to my old mind! Early on he bought some players like Irwin and Bruce who were pretty low key, but I think still seen as good too flight players. Aside from that i don't really recall many good value signings. The rest were top money for the times and their age as I recall. 

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