Liverpool want £75m forward to help improve Isak with three transfers on radar
There was a social media post doing the rounds last week that asked an awkward question about Alexander Isak.
Would you cut your losses, sell him for £80m and reinvest in a more reliable player? Seen 385,000 times, the replies were surprisingly mixed. For every five accusing the original poster – a high-profile Liverpool account – of rage bait, there was one admitting he might have a point.
It is not a feeling shared inside the four walls of Anfield. Liverpool sources insist they retain confidence in Isak – to the extent that their summer transfer plans revolve around signing a right-footed winger who will draw the best out of their record signing.
The transfer plan was always to build on last summer’s substantial spend – their player trading strategy giving them room within the financial rules – but the departure of Mo Salah and Hugo Ekitike’s serious injury have focused minds. Everything still revolves around Isak.
Arne Slot drew criticism when he referenced Newcastle’s Jacob Murphy, who dovetailed so effectively with the Sweden striker at St James’ Park, as the sort of player Liverpool couldn’t call upon but the message clearly got through to the hierarchy. They are prepared to commit up to £75m to sign RB Leipzig’s Yan Diomande, with Bradley Barcola of Paris Saint Germain another possible target.
Antonio Nusa, who primarily plays on the left, is another on Liverpool’s radar and all would probably give Isak a better chance of returning to the sort of form that persuaded the Reds that they were signing a “sure thing” when they paid Newcastle £125m for him in September.
What’s gone wrong?
Clearly, the impact of a summer of turmoil has lingered. Sources at Newcastle always described Isak as a confident, thoughtful and popular member of the dressing room but the manner of his departure was bitter and consumed the club.
David Hopkinson, Newcastle’s CEO, hailed it as a “good deal” for the club recently but the Magpies have not really recovered from it. At one point Newcastle’s entire legal department were so busy working on Isak’s transfer that Odysseas Vlachodimos was left in limbo over his own loan move. That didn’t feel healthy – and neither did training on his own for months.
Sessions lacked intensity and Isak, according to one source who witnessed the summer’s events, became “deconditioned”. That was a dangerous position for a player whose fitness had to be carefully managed at Newcastle.
Sure enough he was a long way from match sharpness when he eventually moved to Anfield, unable to replicate the explosive bursts of pace that made him so unplayable for Newcastle.
A broken leg suffered just before Christmas – just at a point when Anfield insiders felt he was approaching something like the Isak they signed – was a significant setback. He worked hard alongside Liverpool’s head of rehab physiotherapy Lee Nobes to get back but even now he looks a pale shadow of the player they were supposed to be signing.
‘He’s got to deliver’
“He’s never really looked anything like the player I believe we signed,” Dan Clubbe, presenter on Redmen TV, tells The i Paper.
“The numbers speak for themselves: no 90 minutes completed, four goals, no assists. That’s damning in itself but he just hasn’t passed the eye test. Even when he’s been getting back fit, looked to be getting back to groove, the system around him doesn’t make much sense.
“And of course he’s still got that instinct in front of goal but the other stuff – the dribbling, the running off the ball, the coming deep – he’s not been doing any of that. No one is going to write him off, he’s clearly a wonderful footballer, but I think he’s going to have to deliver next season.”
Isak has not been helped by a changing of the guard at Liverpool, with reliable Jurgen Klopp lieutenants like Andy Robertson and Salah moving on. While there is little doubting the technical quality of the players the Reds signed in the summer, some fret about the lack of true “leaders” in the dressing room now.
That probably doesn’t help Isak, who left a Newcastle team full of forthright personalities. Liverpool is a different kettle of fish – a club expected to challenge for titles every year.
A changing of the guard
While supporters may be losing patience with Slot, there’s no suggestion that the club are readying the ground for a change. Liverpool are unmoved by Xabi Alonso’s advanced talks with Chelsea – first revealed in The i Paper this week – and Slot’s own comments appear increasingly bullish.
But there may be change elsewhere. Sources have told The i Paper that sporting director Richard Hughes is set to join his former colleague Simon Francis at Al-Hilal at the conclusion of the summer transfer window.
What that might mean for the future direction of the club is unclear but one thing is certain. Hughes’ biggest gamble needs to start paying off next season.
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