Ryan Babel’s Helicopter Lands in Hoffenheim

By: Noel | January 18th, 2011
   

Babel
He’s off to terrorise turntables
from Munich to Berlin.

After the summer entertainment that was Ryan Babel hopping in a helicopter and buzzing off to all four corners of the British Isles in an attempt to find a new home only for nothing to happen, a transfer deal for the enigmatic attacker has finally been done, as he’ll be heading off to the Bundesliga to join TSG 1899 Hoffenheim.

The reported seven million Euro fee–or just a touch under six million pounds–does seem on the low side for a player Liverpool paid nearly twice that much for. However, he was reported to be on wages up to a ridiculous £70,000 per week and had only 18 months left on his contract, and it would be difficult to argue that the player leaving Liverpool is in any way better than the one who arrived instead of just being older. Whatever the specifics, he certainly was one who frustrated more than he tantalized; one who seemed often disinterested, happy to take his paycheque and indulge in various hobbies rather than strive for improvement as a player; and one who more than anything appeared to lack the game intelligence to ever make effective use of those prodigious raw talents that had made it a coup for Liverpool when they first managed to land him.

For all that the occasional moment of raw brilliance left fans hoping he’d one day put the pieces all together, with each passing year it seemed less likely he ever would. Perhaps, then, he is the sort of player who needs to compete at a slightly lower level, on a stage where that raw talent alone will put him above most of his competition. Or perhaps he simply needs to move to a less physical, less defensively organised league. Whether the German league ends up fitting the bill or not, only time will tell, though at this point it’s hard to think that any belief he would some day come good at Liverpool was more than naive hope.

So yes, the fee seems low, but how many Liverpool fans would be thrilled to see the club pay £5.8M for Ryan Babel today? Having watched him run into dead ends, ignore teammates, and generally be the least effective player on the club relative to his level of talent year after year, I know that I would have a hard time swallowing such a fee for what would amount to a gamble on wasted potential.

Still, this is the enigma that is Ryan Babel we’re talking about. A part of me is still entirely convinced that if he stuck around for just a few more months and got a run of games he’d turn into a superstar. Most of me knows this was never going to happen, of course–probably will never happen anywhere at an especially high level, and certainly was never going to happen at Liverpool.

Hopefully, then, the most important take from all of this will be a freeing up of wages so that even if the fee accepted for Babel was lower than might have seemed ideal, it might still allow Liverpool to make a splashy signing. Elsewhere in transfer land, those Luis Suarez to Liverpool rumours have been heating up, and for a time it was even reported that Babel would be heading to Ajax along with cash to help make up the transfer fee. The new rumour is that Ajax decided to pass on such an offer, preferring a straight cash transfer for the striker who has spent the last year scoring at a rate to match La Liga stars Messi and Ronaldo. Who knows how much–if any–of this is true at this point, but I suspect most would happily accept Babel’s exit if it helped lead to Suarez’ acquisition.

As for Babel, it will be interesting to see if he does finally come good one of these days. He was never going to come good at Liverpool, though, and with 18 months left on his contract and little chance he’d re-sign–or that Liverpool would be willing to offer him a further contract on the wages he’d become used to–his fee would have only dropped a further million or two pounds between now and the summer. In the end, then, all one can say is good luck, I suppose: his time with the club was more frustrating than anything, and moving on seems likely to be in the best interest of all involved at this point.

So yeah: Good luck, and thanks for all the Tweets.


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  • kevin

    He was such a disappointment for Liverpool fans so he did the right choice to leave Liverpool for Hoffenheim. But I hope he'll play and not just fly with helicopters:)

  • Yann

    The football landscape is littered with wasted ‘talent’ and given how many of us would have loved the opportunity to play professionally, I have no time for Babel. In Australian sport, the word “potential” is pejorative unless a player delivers. Too distracted by banal activities and side issues to ever be called disciplined, he played with little passion and for someone wearing the famous red that is unforgivable. Glad to see the back of him.

  • VicCapeTownRed

    My first ever comment here all the way from Cape Town. Babel must have had some passion. He felt so strongly about Howard Webb he sent that tweet. And received a huge ridiculous fine for his pains. I would have loved to see him get a run of 5 or so games and see if he was really any good.

  • Jordan

    Hey! A fellow South African is always good to see :) I am from Johannesburg (by the way).

    I do agree, Babel has often stated that he felt the Liverpool fans' love, and the fine must be an extremely bitter pill for him to swallow, especially now that it was all for his "former club". I too would have liked to have seen him given a run of games in the starting 11, but although in disjointed sequences (pardon the oxymoron), he did have a lot of appearances for LFC, and unfortunately just didn't quite "have it"... I'm sad to see him go though!

    Good luck Ryan!

  • Ed

    I think there's more to this than the two of you are acknowledging...the Australians will no doubt respond in force.

  • ibra

    Babel was ruined, I have no doubt about it. The will and drive to improve is not always something innate, it often has to be taught especially to those with natural talent. It's obvious to me that he doesn't work hard, just look at his physique this season compared to the first, he has regressed considerably. Not nearly as fast and explosive as he use to be and his confidence ofcourse is low. young, misused and mistreated. Sure in the end he's only to blame but the point is, given the right atmosphere and support he could have been great.

  • ffswisstony

    Harsh to say he was crap, but, he did play for 3 different managers, and they obviously didn't see enough in him to play him. Was meant to be an impact player, but his impact was mainly coming off the bench and shooting over the bar from distance. Saying that, Liverpool are in need of players with pace who can turn on a bit of skill and magic, and he has more in his locker than the likes of Ngog and Jovanovic.

  • Chunky

    At last! He can go and swan around Hoff playing music. Finally someone has booted the prat out. This guy simply waltzed around the field pretending all the while. In all his time he "played" only three games. He soon came to realize though that it was a lot easier to just mime his way around the pitch! A waste of space and salary! He definitely will not be nissed.

  • A Blowman

    Thanks f""k for that ,he was CRAP. end of.

  • Had Babel signed for Arsenal instead of Liverpool in 2007 we'd be talking about him as one of the best in Europe. Shame he couldn't come good for us, also a shame that I bought his jersey in 07 ha. (From the guy who also owns a Keane #7 jersey)

  • Eddie

    entirely disagree. babel did not have the attitude and desire to succeed whether at liverpool or arsenal. he was given plenty of opportunites, but never took them. his talent was obvious, but was inconsitent. Players like yossi benayoun luis garcia kelly agger etc took/ have taken their chances and have improved drastically since joining liverpool.

    arsenal too have had problems with players with ability but who never quite made it. remember reyes? jeffers? eduardo? and current players such as vela and koscielney.

    it makes no difference whether he joined liverpool or arsenal or any other club. without the true desire or hunger or ability to succeed at a top club, he was never going to live up to his potential.

  • I'm not so sure about that. Some of the blame might be down to how the club and managers used him, but if a player isn't interested in learning and isn't insanely driven to make himself a better player, it wouldn't have mattered where he was. Every implication is that he's talented but lazy, and at least at this stage in his career he needs to be somewhere where the talent alone is enough to get by on. That obviously wasn't Liverpool, and it probably wouldn't have been Arsenal, either.

    Besides, he isn't an especially technical player. Don't know how being a really fast headless chicken would have fit in with their Barça-light system. Unless he was willing to work 24/7 at improving himself, which he clearly wasn't with Liverpool, so why would he have done it there?

  • Ed

    Lest ye forget, he was also capable of dribble, sprint, stepover, cut right, flail arms, feint, shoot.

    Ingrate.

  • lfc4eternity

    He stole our money, sat on his arse, tweeted and moaned and did nothing to improve himself.
    I really wanted him to succeed....how many of us would have played, worked hard 24/7, tarined till the cows came home to wear the kit???
    If you include his salary and the loss on the transfer fee, I make it that he's cost Liverpool about £5 million per goal.
    Good riddance to the prat.

  • Benko15

    am a big lfc fan from kenya i remember when babel used to come in as a sub & score some goals for us in the matches against the likes of arsenal,chelsea in the CL,man useless etc etc while the likes of voronin/keane cost us and where given big chances to prove themselves so i dont think he deserves to b treated like crap i know given a chance he would have gone good look @ the villa match wish he stayed

  • lfc4eternity

    that should read trained...disqus!!...

  • Cheeky Fellow

    But it did give us this! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

  • All while having a staring contest with the ball. And I won't make the obvious joke there, because it would just be petty and cheap of me.

    Great players are driven. And he did have the talent to be a great player. Wish he'd had the drive, though.

  • Ed

    I think that's what was most frustrating--the singular focus on attacking and getting forward was endearing for about five minutes until it became evident that he hadn't really worked to develop any other part of his game.

    But oh, the stories he told.

  • Dave

    Don't buy any more shirts !

  • Hahaha it's hard to do when I work at a footy shop and have a discount. I played it safe this year though.. Carragher, Gerrard and Kuyt on Home, away and third

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