Liverpool Loan Watch

By: Noel | November 2nd, 2011
   
joe cole cafe france lille

The good, the bad, and the really, they’re still technically Liverpool players? Not to mention the I really wish they were still at Liverpool players. Plus Joe Cole. It’s time to get up to speed on how Liverpool’s loanees are doing as the club moves into the meat of the season…

Alberto Aquilani

Remember when everybody was cool with Alberto Aquilani leaving because he really didn’t want to be at Liverpool and he was soft in the tackle and the club had Raul Meireles anyhow, who at least was already proven in the Premier League, and as long as the club kept one of them around they’d be deeper in midfield then they had been the year before so it’d be cool? Yeah, the summer transfer window was a blast. My liver would especially like to thank Twitter for taking ten years off its life.

In any case—and unlike Luka Modric, who once again looks Spurs’ best player after being forced to stick around—Aquilani got the move he wanted with another loan that sees him back in Italy. In his first match for AC Milan he started the move that led to the club’s first goal of the season before later registering an assist off a corner, and on the 18th of September he scored a header against Napoli for his first goal with his second Italian club in the three years he’s been on Liverpool’s books. Got that all straight? Me neither.

In any case, he’s playing regularly, he’s happy, the Milan fans love him, he’s defensively responsible, and everything’s just flowers and sunshine if you’re Alberto Aquilani. Meanwhile, Steven Gerrard’s continuing injury woes and Liverpool at times looking as though they could use a driving, creative spark in midfield for when Adam starts to wheeze on sixty minutes makes it hard to imagine Aquilani wouldn’t have seen at least a little bit of action had he stuck around. And no, I’m not bitter. Why do you ask?

Dani Pacheco

After rather confusingly being loaned out to Atletico Madrid for the season—with the Spanish side given a set option to buy the young attacker at the end of it—only for Atletico to then turn around and immediately loan Pacheco to Madrid minnows and La Liga new boys Rayo Vallecano, things haven’t gotten a whole lot clearer when it comes to the player’s future. To date he’s made only seven appearances and registered six shots, all while coming off the bench, and by most accounts hasn’t made much of an impact either for the club he’s physically with at the moment or for the other club in Spain that has recall and purchase options on him should he at some point do something especially impressive with the club he’s physically with right now.

If all of that’s a touch confusing, then it’s no more so than Pacheco’s career trajectory, as the player has quickly gone from a lock to make it at Liverpool as the next big thing to a player who can’t make it with a newly promoted La Liga side. Given that he had already integrated himself into Norwich by the end of last season while on loan with the then Championship side, one has to wonder if a better move for all involved wouldn’t have been sending Pacheco back to the Canaries where he likely would have seen more action—and where it would have been Premier League action, no less.

Joe Cole

We used to make fun of him for looking a bit like Napoleon, standing around winded with his hands on his hips and seeming five inches shorter than everyone else on the pitch, but now Joe Cole is eating baguettes, drinking espresso, and smoking Gauloises while becoming something of a fan favourite for Lille. Oh, and he’s playing a lot as a driving, creative spark in midfield for the defending Ligue 1 champions. And he’s still making over £90k per week, most of it coming from Liverpool, for doing so.

So it’s probably safe to say that Joe Cole has come out the winner on this one, and he’s even making sounds about being willing to take a pay cut to move to France long term at the end of the year. It might be tempting to see Cole actually being an effective football player and as a result think that Liverpool could use him again, but it’s just as likely that his sudden blossoming into something that vaguely resembles the footballer he was always supposed to be is down to the slower pace of the French league, something Cole himself has acknowledged.

Like Aquilani, Cole registered an assist in his first game with his new club, beating four Saint-Etienne defenders in the process. Since then he’s added two goals in league action and one in the French Coupe de la Ligue, and while he isn’t yet anything like a lock to start week in and week out, he’s at least getting playing time in almost every match one way or another and proving to be an increasingly valuable contributor for his new side.

David Amoo

At the end of September, Amoo joined Bury on a month long loan, scoring a goal in his second game—and first start—after coming off the bench the week before on his debut. In total he’s made two starts to go along with a pair of substitute appearances, and on October 20 his loan deal was extended until January.

Peter Gulacsi

After extending his Liverpool contract, Hungarian U21 international goalkeeper Gulacsi joined Hull City on a season-long loan and started his first three games with the Tigers in August. However, when journeyman keeper Adriano Basso joined the club as a free agent, Gulacsi quickly found himself relegated to second string. He has since made a pair of cameos off the bench, and after appearing promising in the beginning, this loan intended to get a Liverpool prospect valuable playing time he never would have seen stuck behind Pepe Reina has come to seem far less beneficial for all involved.

Jonjo Shelvey

Jonjo Shelvey is the new Charlie Adam. He might even be worth £10M for his corners alone. Or maybe just for his goals, seeing as he’s scored five of them so far for Blackpool. In any case, the attacking midfielder has made an instant impact with the Championship club, stepping in to replace the departed Adam as the Seasiders’ driving, creative spark in midfield. He may not have been able to replace Adam’s range of passing for Ian Holloway’s side, but he has added a late-arriving goal threat that has been of great benefit to the club.

In total, Shelvey has started six games, scored five goals and an assist, taken thirteen shots, and drawn six fouls. Though it’s at a lower level than either Aquilani or Cole, it’s safe to say that no Liverpool player out on loan has made anything like the impact Shelvey has for Blackpool—and no other player out on loan is as safe a bet to start the next match as he is.

There will always be doubts about Shelvey’s ability to make it at the very highest levels due to his lack of pace, but in almost every other way he has bags of talent as an attacking midfielder, and at this stage in his career what he needs more than anything are games. Right now he’s getting them, and the early results are extremely promising. Also, he scored a hattrick against Leeds on Tuesday. Which probably counts as part of that “promising” dealie.

Nathan Eccleston

Rochdale are currently stuck in the relegation zone in League One, and Nathan Eccleston has made three appearances for them since joining in October, scoring in his debut against Exeter. As with Amoo it’s a one month loan, and though he’s made an immediate impact it will be a week or two yet before we find out if it’s going to be extended as Ammo’s was. If it isn’t and he’s forced to search for another club looking to take him on loan then it’s probably the fault of the Masons. Also, I’m pretty sure they’re the ones stopping me from getting millions in grant money for my valuable, ongoing contributions to research on drunken napping. Bastards.

Stephen Darby

Also on loan with Rochdale is Stephen Darby, though in his case the defender joined in July and will be there until the end of the season no matter what. So far the right back has started every game for the club and is highly thought of by their fans and coaches, and given that it seems increasingly unlikely that the 23-year-old has any kind of future at Liverpool there’s every chance that he could be there longer than just this season if they manage to stay up. If not, a move to another League One or mid-level Championship side seems the most likely future for Darby.

p.s.: Driving, creative spark in midfield.


Some Related Liverpool Posts:


Tags

   
  • I like Jonjo Shelvey.  But I don't like the idea of him going to Blackpool to become a new version of Charlie Adam.  After getting a good look at how they play it would be great to loan players to Swansea and Norwich in the future.  Brendan Rodgers and Paul Lambert seem like great coaches/managers.  

  • NotTooXabi

    Remember last year, when a headline reading "Liverpool Loan Watch" would have meant some Fowler-awful update on declining equity, debt burdens, and T*m Fucks bending over LFC "Christmas-Tree-Knife-in-American-Me" style?

    Yep, me neither. Thanks, Mr. & Mrs. Scotch.

    In a year or two, a narrow-middle 3 of Lucas - Henderson - Jonjo would not be too Xabi. At least, in theory. Which is where I like to operate on Thursdays.

  • Latortillablanca

    fantasyland transfer scenario #1,309: aquaman plus cash (escalating to 10mil lets say) for boateng.  how much ground do u reckon a boateng/lucas pairing would cover? 

  • PDubz18

    They could cover a lot of ground, but a Allegri-style trequartista would have to do some convincing before I think he's suitable to be a double-pivot midfielder...then again Adam still has some convincing to do in that respect as well...

  • Latortillablanca

    he plays box to box for ghana and kills it. and honestly recently he's been playin a pretty true cm position cuz ambrosini looks like he's finally losin it...

  • I wouldn't turn my nose at that, but Aquilani's set fee for AC is rather south of £10M and already negotiated, so I can't see them desperately trying to find a way to cover it by sending Boateng the other way in a plus cash.

  • Latortillablanca

     def.  in particular not after that friggin man bear pig performance couple weeks ago.  it was almost frightening how dominating he was...

  • Redarmy

    Of all those loanees, Shelvey is really the only one I care about, cause he's the only one to have a (bright!) future with us. He's only 19 and clearly the best player on a decent championship side. That's what you hope for, for a guy to distinguish himself. There are not a lot of 19 yr old guys who have done that before. Very impressive! I can see him beeing a natural fit for that right midfield slot, where we try to plug in Henderson. ( I wonder if Hendo would have that kind of impact on a championship side, I seriously doubt it)

    On a side note, I'm generally disappointed with our academy/youth department. We have not produced anything close to a top player for almost a decade. We have to pay 17mil for a guy like Henderson, where you would expect us to have at least 3 Henderson-type players within the academy...

  • Latortillablanca

    *sigh* cmon man... a.) shelvey is just about as fleet footed as carra. and he's 19.  right midfield slot? b.) bit harsh on hendo not making an impact on a championship side since he already did it once in his career, only to go on to make a steady impact on a premiership side and develop into one of the 4 hot british prospects of the past year.  c.) patience on the academy.  you gauge academies in decades, not seasons.  so from 2001 to now, ya absolute shite.  but from now till 2021? i'd say we're set up to bring more players through to the first team than anyone else in the prem barring arsenal and maybe manure...

  • Redarmy

    I admit I'm a bit harsh on Hendo, but to be among the 4 best british prospects.. well.. you see any of those pathetic U-21 games?
    Shelvey's lack of pace may be a problem at some point, but at least he's got some flair, some creativity, something that is thouroughly lacking among so many british prospects.

    Hope you're right about the academy though!

  • Ed

    Judgments based on U21 performances without mentioning Stuart Pearce are invalid.

  • Latortillablanca

    lol re: brit prospects...  trust, i love me some jonathanjoseph magic, but he's a deep lying playmaker if there ever was one.  either that or a goalkeeper, he's so slow.

  • Suarez from the car park...

    Hendo has many attributes to his game with pace and good feet, and 2 seasons of PL experience.

    Just his head that needs to be sorted out.  Learn to be cool on the pitch and be decisive.  

    currently he isn't doing that enough and resorting to back passes as an easy out.  Overpriced?  Certainly.  But definitely the potential to be very good with coaching to help him make better onfield decisions.  

    I just think he's a little anxious right now, the whole move away from home and wearing a big badge etc.  
    It looks like it'll take a season for him to really settle down, and then he'll spread his wings a bit more.  But he's 21, can you really criticise his courage right now?

  • Latortillablanca

    ya. i dont think u can say that he hasn't progressed every week in one area or another, u know?  thats what u like to see at that age.  there's only so many "leaps and bounds" progressions you can make, but the little things, that's what separates bad from decent, good from great.

  • Sandro

    Agree that it's great to see Shelvey playing so well, in a perfect world we make it into the Champions League and he returns next season to give us the necessary midfield depth which allows us to save money and shell out the $35m needed for Hazzard... if only... 

    Rafa reformed the academy in his last year meaning it would take 2-4 years for the new young prospects to come through. We are beginning to see that reform materialise now in the shape of Flannagan, Robinson, Suso, Sterling, Morgan ect... most of whom are around 18, so still a couple years let to go but the talent is there now

  • Geza27

    What about a Deggen and El-Zahr special? I am kind of misssing them....not.

  • They've moved on more permanently.

  • Latortillablanca

    is it too much to ask that word 'degen' gets thrown on the must-moderate list...?

  • Ed

    Right now that's reserved for Po**sen. 

  • Mike

    Why don't we just sell Aquilani? He will never play a season for us, so just cash in already. And call back Jonjo, he could be a nice asset off the bench.

  • Latortillablanca

    you say that like it wasn't a top priority the entire summer... its not fifa, man, its hard to get rid of a player for his proper value when you have demonstrated he's obviously not in your plans.  he was sold to juve, but then conte came in and decided pirlo was his boy, and blah blah blah.  i just hope his form continues for milan so they pay fair value for him.

  • Suarez from the car park...

    Fee's already set, and it's absolute daylight robbery.  

    Something like £6m, paid over 3 years if he plays 25 games this season and Milan's lawyers don't find a way out of paying for it/going through with the deal!!

    They also made a point of publicising it as a 'free loan for the first year' I seem to remember, so I don't even know if they are paying his wages this year.

    Makes me so mad, I'm going to push some of those random keys on the keyboard that you never use and wonder why they are there.

    ¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

    hhaarrrrummphhhhhh.

  • Latortillablanca

    whoa.  i must have suppressed that horrible, terrible, no good, bad memory.  thanks for bringing it back up, bud.  i'll be in the corner twiching and repeating "6m"

  • mardia

    Aquilani's on the same level as Meireles for me--not disputing their skill, but for me, thinking about them in connection with LFC is kind of pointless, since what's done is done, you know? Realistically speaking, there's no way Aquilani ever comes back to LFC, just like Meireles' time at the club is done.

    Credit to Joe Cole for settling in so well at Lille. The book Soccernomics has made the argument that the England NT would be better off if more English players didn't play in the PL, and instead plied their trade elsewhere, like Spain, Italy, etc. (One big reason, they'd be more likely to get rest during the winter than their contemporaries in England.) Now, obviously Joe Cole isn't going to have a lasting impact with the NT at this stage, regardless of what he does at Lille. (Although with Rooney out of the group stage...) But in a broader sense, it's interesting to think about.

    I am curious to see what Shelvey can do once he returns, though. Anyone who's seen him at Blackpool, does he work harder defensively than Adam?

  • Latortillablanca

    no, he doesnt.  he's basically a right footed adam.  but that's a compliment (coming from me at least).  his passing range is impressive, and that arrive-late-at-the-edge-of-the-box-and-bulge-the-net thing he's got goin doesn't come around very often, so he's really got a big future if we can develop him correctly.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Follow Us

           




England National Team News

Search The Offside


 




Related Links


Categories


Send Your Tips!

Found a great story, photo or video that's perfect for The Offside?
Email liverpool[at]theoffside[dot]com

Write for The Offside

Archives