Is ‘courageous’ decision too little too late for Arsenal?

Dropping your team captain may certainly seem like a bizarre method of trying to save ones season, but if you’re Arsene Wenger, the recent sacrifice of relegating Thomas Vermaelen to the bench might just turn out to be the turning point in Arsenal’s season.

The Belgian international’s recent omission from the Gunners’ victories against Bayern Munich and Swansea City has been much publicized and with Wenger’s men managing to stop the rot with back-to-back victories, the Frenchman has been praised by some for taking the brave step of sacrificing his skipper for the greater good.

Yet despite the recent evaporation of the seven-point gap that had appeared between themselves and Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal head into the Premier League’s final straight with the damage to their league campaign already done. And for as admirable a decision it has been for Wenger to part with Vermaelen, it’s a decision that’s been a long time coming this season and perhaps one he could have made an awful lot sooner.

There is a tendency to read a little too much into a team’s change in fortunes following a minor change in personnel and the Gunners are going to have to sustain their recent good form for a lot longer than simply two games on the bounce for us to read too much into the absence of Vermaelen – and on a similar level, that of Wojciech Szczesny aswell – from this side. Despite the brief period of time that’s passed, however, it feels somewhat difficult to put the subsequent upturn in defensive form down to mere coincidence.

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With Vermaelen on the bench, Arsenal have looked infinitely more confident with the returning Laurent Koscielny partnering Per Mertesacker at the back and the proof has been in the pudding. Far from simply winning what many perceived to be a dead rubber in the Champions League last-16 second leg tie against Bayern Munich, not only did Arsenal run them close to a shock exit, they also became the first side to shut the German team out all season.

Followed up by a crucial 2-0 victory away to Swansea City at the Liberty stadium and in the space of little over 10 days, the Gunners’ season has gone from being planted on top of the proverbial scrapheap by some, back to real contenders for Champions league qualification.

But even if the duo of Koscielny and Mertesacker do go on to start leaking goals over the next couple of games, the question must be asked why it’s taken so long for Wenger to ditch Thomas Vermaelen in favour of giving the Frenchman and the German more than simply the odd run out together.

In recent days, Wenger has suggested that the captain’s armband will play very little part in influencing his decision upon whether to reinstate Vermaelen to the starting line-up. But the fact it’s taken him until mid-March to wield the axe upon the former-Ajax man tells a different story.

Because while it’s been easy to point the figure at Vermaelen for Arsenal’s recent defensive woes, the critique that seemed to descend itself into a moral panic in the wake of this month’s 2-1 defeat to Spurs, served to totally ignore the longetivity of Vermaelen’s descent.

It’s easy to pick upon individually poor flash-points, but when you think of some of the more prominent Vermaelen horror-shows this season, they’ve hardly been consigned to a couple of poor weeks in close proximity.

The games against Manchester United away from home, the 2-2 draw with Liverpool at the Emirates as well as the aforementioned North London derby at White Hart Lane, represent three of the more notably poor Thomas Vermaelen performances of this season. Yet with those fixtures having come in November, January and March respectively, you’re offered a fitting snapshot of the continued mire that Wenger’s number five has endured this season.

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Given that his woeful showing in the 2-1 defeat away to United hardly came after a vintage opening few weeks of the season, you could make a case that he should have been dropped at the start of November, let alone the middle of January. But still Wenger has persisted on playing him, even though Vermaelen has shown little sign of improvement as the campaign had drawn on.

One bad season doesn’t make a bad player and it’s important to note that the Gunners’ defensive problems stem far greater than simply one off-key individual. But regardless of how good Vermaelen might be on his day or how valuable the balance his left-foot might bring to the rearguard, the fact is he should have been axed from the starting XI quite some time ago.

Would the Gunners have been higher up the league had they parted with their captain earlier on in the term? Who knows, but it’s within the latter part of that statement in which it feels hard to buy the sincerity of Wenger’s denial that the captaincy afforded Vermaelen a stay of execution.

As the Frenchman has acknowledged, English football’s natural affinity with the captaincy ensured that there was always going to be a natural furor upon the absence of Vermaelen from this side. Yet judging by the time it’s taken for him to be dropped, you get the impression that affinity perhaps rings a little more prominently for Wenger then he may be letting on.

Sam Allardyce Believes Striker Yet To Hit His Prime

West Ham manager Sam Allardyce is still hopeful of signing Andy Carroll on a permanent basis and believes his best is yet to come.

Carroll is still only 24 years old and the Hammers boss feels he is still two years away from his prime.

The former Newcastle striker has been on impressive form for the East Enders in past two months, netting five goals and causing havoc in both penalty areas.

Sir Alex Ferguson was unimpressed with West Ham’s tactics as United once again failed to leave Upton Park with a win but Carroll clearly left his mark on the Champions elect.

Allardyce is hoping that a deal for Carroll will happen at the end of the season and it is only finances that are getting in the way.

“The next move is a critical one for him. It’s about playing, improving and scoring goals” Allardyce told the Daily Mirror.

“That next move has to implement all of that for the team he plays for and him. He, for me, and that team will be successful.

“He is still developing and is not in his prime. He is still two or so years from his prime.

“Considering what he can grow into with those talents – and something nobody has got which is size; physical presence, with talent – if you marry those together, his threat is a very big talent indeed, and a very difficult one to stop.

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“We would love it to work out as a long-term prospect. But things need to be done and identified at the end of the season.

“I don’t see any problem with him being in London. They are good in terms of bonding as a team – he has slipped in really well with Kevin Nolan and others. He is also big buddies with Joey O’Brien.”

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Sir Alex Ferguson looks at midfield recruits

Borussia Dortmund’s Ilkay Gundogan and Juventus’ Claudio Marchisio are reported summer midfield targets for Manchester United, according to Express.

United chief Sir Alex Ferguson has no intentions of standing still in the transfer window and despite Ed Woodward, who will replace David Gill as Red Devils chief executive in the summer, claiming a massive spending spree is not necessary, the Scot will look for reinforcements.

Ferguson is desperate for another Champions League win before he finally calls time on his magnificent tenure at Old Trafford with reports now suggesting he will target 22-year-old Germany international midfielder Gundogan when the transfer window opens.

The player has been instrumental in Dortmund’s march to the Champions League final and recently admitted that his childhood dream was to eventually play in England or Spain.

United will face a fight for his signature, though, as Dortmund are already losing Mario Gotze to Bundesliga rivals and Champions League final opponents Bayern Munich, while striker Robert Lewandowski is also set to leave, so they will not want Gundogan to be part of a summer exodus.

Meanwhile, Ferguson is also thought to be weighing up a £20million raid on Juventus for Italy international midfielder, Marchisio, who has scored six goals in 27 games for the Serie A champions-elect so far this term.

Marchisio is contracted to the Turin giants until summer 2016, but United will hope a sizeable transfer fee would be good enough to secure a deal while the offer of a £120,000-a-week five-year deal should be enough to entice the player to Old Trafford.

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Ferguson will no doubt argue that with Paul Scholes set to retire, Darren Fletcher carrying long-term bowel problems and Anderson poised for the exit door major investment is required in the midfield engine room if United are going to do well in Europe and retain their Premier League crown next season.

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Pulis admits future concerns at Stoke

Tony Pulis admits he does not know if he will still be Stoke boss next season but hopes to remain as manager.

Pulis has come in for criticism from some sections of the Potters faithful over the course of the campaign following a difficult season in which Stoke have been involved in the relegation battle.

The manager insists he wants to remain with the club but Pulis admits he does not yet know whether or not he will still be Stoke boss next season.

“I hope so. I am still enjoying it here,” he told the Sentinel when asked if he was staying as manager.

“Ten years ago I sat down in front of three or four hundred people in the Waddington Suite when I first arrived and said I am very proud to be Stoke City manager… and I’m still proud.”

Despite Stoke’s struggles this year they could finish as high as 10th should they win at Southampton in their final Premier League fixture of the campaign on Sunday.

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Crystal Palace boss denies pointless signings

Crystal Palace manager Ian Holloway has dismissed thoughts that the Eagles made pointless signings in the transfer window, as reported by Sky Sports.

Holloway was the busiest Premier League manager in the transfer window but didn’t add two of his new boys in his 25 man squad, leaving them free to leave already.

The loan window for Football League clubs re-opens tomorrow and so Stephen Dobbie and Florian Marange will both leave the south London club despite only singing a few weeks ago.

Holloway didn’t realise that he would be able to bring in the calibre of player that he did in the final few weeks of the transfer window and wouldn’t have signed the other players if he did.

“It is utter madness,” said Holloway.

“Clearly, the rules have been brought in to guard against the top clubs stacking and racking players because they have the finances to do just that.

“But when I signed Dobbie and Marange, I can promise you that I did so in good faith.”

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“I had no idea when we did the deals for Stephen and Florian that we would be able to conduct so much business in the final few days of the window.”

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Ex-Arsenal ace urges Bundesliga star to reject Gunners

Former Arsenal icon Jens Lehmann has told Borussia Monchengladbach goalkeeper Marc-Andre Ter Stegen to reject interest from the Premier League leaders in favour of a move to Barcelona.

The German stopper has been heavily linked with a switch away from the Bundesliga in recent times, and is thought to be a January target for the London club.

However, Barca are also keen on the 21-year-old, who has emerged as a genuine alternative to Liverpool’s Pepe Reina, as they search for a replacement for the soon to be out-of-contract Victor Valdes.

Arsene Wenger is believed to be looking into the possibility of replacing his current number one Wojciech Szczesny, and is thought to see Ter Stegen as player with huge potential.

But, former Arsenal keeper Lehmann has urged his compatriot to look past English interest and instead pursue a transfer to Barca.

“Ter Stegen would be a great goalie for Barca,” Lehmann told The Express.

“He’d adapt well to the Spanish league, he plays well with both feet and Barca’s style of play would suit him down to the ground.

“I see him better off there than in the Premier League.”

Could Marc-Andre Ter Stegen revel at Arsenal?

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Tell us what you think below!

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Did Tottenham make the wrong transfer choice?

This season was supposed to be the start of a new era for Tottenham, the chance to finally move on from the waning memories of Champions League football under Harry Redknapp and to carve out something special under AVB.

But as is so often the case with Spurs in the last few years they have found themselves mid-way through a season and back to square one. AVB’s grand master plan failed to convince, and under new man Sherwood the signs so far just point to more of the same mediocrity. We were promised a return to the good old days of eye-catching attacking football, but in reality the Premier League club have continued their trend of ponderous and ineffectual forward play.

The stats don’t lie, Spurs have mustered a miserly 37 league goals so far; almost half the amount Liverpool have managed in the same amount of time.

Spurs’ Champions League charge has been blighted by a goal shy frontline, and given the investment made in the summer have the club simply made the wrong choices?

Roberto Soldado is undoubtedly a world-class striker; his return of 25, 27 and 30 goals in his three seasons at Valencia underlines this, but for Spurs the Spanish forward has been woefully below par. So is this a case of square pegs in round holes for the club that pride themselves on the way they conduct their transfer business?

For Valencia Soldado was the main man, the focal point of every attack and the person that the rest of the team were hell bent on supplying. The likes of Feghouli, Mata and Silva were all charged with finding the Spaniard, and more often than not he was there to provide that clinical final touch.

At Spurs though the blueprint seems to be different; there seems to be a need for a more complete type of forward. It is no wonder that someone like Defoe has been so marginalised throughout his time in North London given how little he contributes to all-round play, for me Soldado suffers these same shortcomings. Adebayor by contrast is your typical Premier League lone striker, someone that can hold the ball up and run into channels throughout the 90 minutes. Soldado by contrast needs someone in and around him to create his chances, but with the midfield three sitting so deep it is unsurprising that he has netted just the 6 league goals.

So the question really is why didn’t Spurs go for someone else last summer?

The club surely knew what they wanted, so the decision to go in for Soldado over someone like Christian Benteke seems a little baffling. When you fork out £26m for a frontman you get the impression money isn’t really the issue here, Benteke was well within the clubs reach yet they chose to pass up on the Belgian forward.

Benteke ticks all the boxes; he is an imposing presence able to lead the line but with the inherent qualities to test even the best defences. To cap it all off he is just 23, the sort of age that fits Daniel Levy’s transfer model and someone with the potential to grow further still. Benteke may not be having the best of seasons at Aston Villa, but if you take his 18 months in England as a whole you see someone that has had a profound effect on one of the divisions struggling sides.

What makes things worse is that Benteke wanted to leave over the summer, a written transfer request for many spelt the end of his time in the midlands, with North London his likely destination. Some may argue that Benteke was the greater risk, his youth and inexperience rendering him inadequate for leading the Spurs line at this stage. That said 19 league goals in a pretty average Villa side would suggest he has what is required to flourish at a bigger Premier League club even now; an opportunity that Spurs unfortunately passed up on.

Yesterdays showing may have renewed some of the early optimism regarding Soldado, with fans keen to buy into this development of a partnership with Adebayor. When you spend £26m you want something ready-made and not someone that you need to try and ‘fit in’.

Soldado is world-class but unfortunately at completely the wrong club given the way they are looking to play. Perhaps Spurs got carried away with the Bale money and sensationalism came ahead of rationality on the transfer front.

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If AVB had been bought Benteke rather than Soldado then he may still be in a job.

Further evidence of a misguided transfer policy here?

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Why fans should not lose faith in Ipswich Town

It is almost impossible to feel optimistic about Ipswich Town Football Club after the owners have pilled up huge amounts of debt and settled the team into a mid-table Championship side, but I don’t believe it is time to give up hope.

During the years of underachievement fans were always given the same lines of “it will be better next season” or “we are just one or two players from being a top side”.

For a while it seemed like the majority of fans, including myself, bought into those ideas and were always optimistic about the future of the club. However over the last ten years we have seen a series of bad managerial appointments and even worse signings that the club are now starting to pay for in more ways than one.

Naturally the majority of fans that were optimistic about the future of the club are now extremely pessimistic about the chances of things improving. The shift in the supporters mindset can be seen in the form of dropping attendances in more recent years.

When the club was managed by Roy Keane and then Paul Jewell there was still a reasonable amount of positivity floating around even though the results were a lot worse than they are now. Due to the disappointment of that era I think that fans are now a lot more negative about the future of the club even though things are slowly improving.

At the risk of sounding naive, I do believe that the Tractor Boys are now finally heading in the right direction under Mick McCarthy. The term ‘more money than sense’ springs to mind when I think back to when Marcus Evans first bought Ipswich but that can’t be said now.

Mick McCarthy may not be a modern day football manager but for all the criticisms you can aim at him he does have a lot of common sense and organisational abilities that have stabilised the club.

Although it was never confirmed it seems extremely likely that Mick McCarthy was the one who forced Simon Clegg out of the club, which for me was the first sign that common sense was starting to return to Portman Road.

It might appear to be a bit of a crude argument to say that common sense will be enough to get Ipswich moving in the right direction but so many clubs now are run by incompetent owners with neither money nor sense. The Suffolk side have appointed a sturdy manager and have stopped over spending whereas other Championship sides are struggling to appoint a manager that will last even one full season.

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The team no longer have the big names or Premier League experience that they once had in the form of signings like Ivan Campo or Jimmy Bullard but instead they are a tight unit of average players that are well organised and managed.

It is hard to see the bigger picture when you see the team get out classed by others like Leicester and it is also difficult to build up optimism after so many years of under achievement. I wouldn’t go as far to say that the current squad are good enough to get promoted but I am certain that Ipswich will improve under McCarthy as he continues to separate the wheat from the chaff and build a strong unit.

Does this Arsenal star even deserve to go to the World Cup?

Since Roy Hodgson took the England hotseat in summer 2012, the former West Brom and Liverpool boss has maintained an insistence upon bringing through young home-grown talents towards international standard. That ultimate aim has been reinforced by Greg Dyke’s target of winning the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

From the days of the failed ‘Golden Generation’ it’s a refreshing change; dependency upon the Three Lions’ already established stars has undoubtedly contributed to the ill-heath English football, and particularly the English national team, is currently enduring.

But the unforeseen after effect has been that certain players, due to their age representing the illusion of high potential, are regularly given free passes into Hodgson’s squads regardless of their fitness or form.

The most notable example of this is public petition victim Tom Cleverley; the Manchester United midfielder’s form has been so stale over the last eighteen months that England fans have felt compelled to take legal action to stop him making it onto the plane to Brazil. Regardless of the wishes of the supporters, he will probably be one of the first names in Hodgson’s World Cup squad.

But we now have another protected champion in our midst whose place in the national team appears cemented on reputation alone – Arsenal’s Jack Wilshere.

No doubt, the 22 year-old is a bright spark and a talented prospect, but if we were to judge his current state on fitness and form – undoubtedly the criteria that will determine the World Cup fates of Rickie Lambert, Jay Rodriguez, Steven Caulker, Aaron Lennon, Michael Carrick, Ross Barkley and Adam Johnson, to name but a few players on the England fringe – does the Gunners midfielder actually deserve to be going to Brazil 2014?

Don’t get me wrong; there’s certainly been patches of Wilshere’s season that I’ve found incredibly impressive. Who can forget his deft finish on a stunning Arsenal move to net against Norwich back in October? Or his brace in the Champions League against Marseille? And even as recently as mid January, the England international ran the show against Aston Villa, picking up a goal, an assist and a man of the match award in the process.

But overall, these performances have been far too sporadic. In between the match-winning, buccaneering, dazzling displays, Wilshere’s outings have ranged from sturdy to sub-standard.

In previous campaigns, we could have given the midfielder the benefit of the doubt. But he’s now an established member of an Arsenal side that spent four months at the top of the Premier League table, yet his domestic return of three goals and four assists in 23 appearances fails to represent either of those feats.

Just to put that into perspective, Barkley has found the same amount of  successful strikes in his first full Premier League campaign, Sunderland’s Adam Johnson produced more goals in January alone, and Adam Lallana has been responsible for four goals and one assist more at Southampton.

Admittedly, it’s not all about attacking output – although you have to question the purposes of an attacking midfielder who has been outscored and out-assisted by a number of full-backs, centre-halves and defensive midfielders in the Premier League this season.

But it would take a blindly-loyal fool to admit that Wilshere hasn’t become a shadow of his former self. His short passing game has become sloppy, his effort off the ball lacks energy and desire, and those trade-mark surging runs at opposition defences, that once made the 22 year-old stand out against the grain of immobile, technically-challenged home-grown players, have been replaced by five-yard dribbles that most commonly end in a rather dubiously-awarded free kick.

Once hyped as the saviour of English football and worthy of a place in Barcelona’s legendary midfield, the last nine months of Wilshere’s Arsenal career can be best defined by the amount of fouls he’s won by exaggerating the robust challenges of opposing midfielders. If Arsene Wenger wants Arjen Robben to quit the theatrics, I suggest he quarantines the infection  in the Emirates camp first.

Ok, so current form aside. We shouldn’t discredit the fact that Jack Wilshere has put in a number good performances for England in the past – most notably against Brazil at Wembley – and seeing as Ashley Cole and Jermain Defoe’s England inclusion will be decided on prior international showings, that right should be extended to the Gunners star.

But now the young midfielder faces a lengthy injury lay-off for a hairline foot fracture, requiring six weeks of rehabilitation before he’s allowed to return to training at London Colney. England’s first World Cup match is on the 14th of June, giving Wilshere just a month and a half following his sideline bout to fully revive his fitness and form.

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As if fate had foreseen, Roy Hodgson informed reporters just hours before Wilshere was stretchered off against Denmark that ‘loyalty’ wouldn’t affect his decision to only include fully fit players in his World Cup squad.

But through reputation alone, the Arsenal midfielder’s situation will force the England manager to go back on his word. No matter how impressive the likes of Tom Huddlestone, Ross Barkley and Gareth Barry are between now and May-time, Wilshere’s name has already been written on the team sheet in permanent marker. Whether he walks, runs, crawls or is carried on a stretcher, his place on the plane comes with a guarantee.

At the start of this article, I described Hodgson’s emphasis on youth as a refreshing change. However, considering the 66 year-old is now selecting World Cup places not on the best England has to offer but on what could be the best we have to offer in five or ten years-time, ignoring the fitness and form of far more deserving players in the process, is this change actually making the English game any healthier?

No – it’s teaching players like Wilshere that heralded potential alone can get you into the England squad, regardless of whether or not you’ve proved you deserve to be there.

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FIVE World Cup semi-finalists Liverpool would love to sign

It is time to shed a collective tear football fans, because arguably the greatest World Cup of all time is less than a week away from it’s ultimate conclusion.

But before we’re all hit by a case of post-tournament blues, there is still plenty of football to look forward to, first and foremost two zesty semi-finals this week. Hosts Brazil will take on bookies’ favourites Germany on Tuesday evening, whilst Wednesday will witness and equally enticing clash between the Netherlands and Argentina.

Thus, as we at Football FanCast wait in near uncontrollable anticipation for the two heavyweight contests, this article takes a look at the FIVE World Cup semi-finalists that Liverpool would love to get their hands on this summer

[ffc-gallery]CLICK ON ANGEL DI MARIA TO REVEAL THE FIVE

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ANGEL DI MARIA

Reportedly offered to the European elite for a more than reasonable £40million despite claiming the Man of the Match award in last season’s Champions League final…

…Liverpool are by no means the only club baying for Angel Di Maria’s signature this summer.

An unexpected transition into a more central role saw the Real Madrid star finish up as La Liga’s top creator last season, as seen below…

Here’s a short clip of his best bits from Los Blancos’ European title campaign…

//www.youtube.com/embed/d_glrv1uzkY

And the 26 year-old netted this late strike against Switzerland to secure Argentina a spot in the World Cup quarter-finals…

With Alexis Sanchez seemingly not keen on an Anfield switch, Di Maria would be a more than suitable alternative – he also meets Brendan Rodgers’ demand for ‘multipurpose signings’.

But recent speculation suggests Manchester United and PSG are planning to blow their rivals out of the water with huge offers for the South American…

MARCOS ROJO

Another Albiceleste star said to be on the Anfield radar amid Liverpool’s need for a high-quality left-back is Sporting Lisbon’s Marcos Rojo, whom they’ve allegedly been tracking for the last 18 months.

The 24 year-old is a classy and confident footballer, typified by this ‘Rabona’ clearance in his own penalty box against Bosnia in the World Cup’s group stages…

In fact, his overall form in Brazil has been incredibly impressive, as seen below:

Capable of playing at centre-back or left-back and valued by Mirror Football at just £10million, the 6 foot 2 South American could prove to be an astute addition for the Reds.

Here’s some of Rojo’s best moments for Argentina and Sporting Lisbon…

//www.youtube.com/embed/9-B_tmW6-_o

BERNARD

Liverpool narrowly missed out on Brazilian prodigy Bernard to Shakhtar Donetsk last summer. But following news that the single-named hot-shot is looking for an exit plan following a wave of civil unrest in Ukraine, the Reds are widely expected to revive their interest…

The 21 year-old has struggled for form with Hirnyky but comes with a preceding reputation from his Atletico Minero days, claiming eleven goals in his final campaign.

The Selecao ace, who featured as a substitute against Croatia and Mexico, offers a mixture of blistering pace, netting prowess and sensational technique, as seen below…

//www.youtube.com/embed/Sb05QPFhqp4

And it’s believed he could be available this summer for around £19million.

Klaas-Jan Huntelaar

//www.youtube.com/embed/VIjIvEDIbZA?autoplay=1

According to the Metro, Liverpool are eyeing Netherlands international Klaas-Jan Huntelaar as a potential replacement for Barcelona-bound Luis Suarez…

The 30 year-old has endured a limited role at the World Cup as understudy to Robin van Persie, but demonstrated his quality with a goal and assist during a 15 minute substitute appearance against Mexico, leading to this unnecessarily aggressive celebration:

..and this lego-based recreation…

Further examples of the Schalke striker’s firepower are not hard to find; he boasts a record of 91 in 139 appearances for the Miners, including this wonder strike against Real Madrid last season…

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Recent speculation suggests the former Ajax, Los Blancos and AC Milan assassin could be prepared to force a move to Anfield:

And with just a year left on Huntelaar’s current contract, Schalke will feel compelled to sell if they’re approached with a decent offer.

JULIAN DRAXLER

Liverpool haven’t been directly linked to Schalke prodigy Julian Draxler for some time – but who wouldn’t want to sign this guy?

The 20 year-old burst onto the scene in the 2012/13 campaign, claiming 13 goals from midfield across all competitions, and has been dazzling suitors with ever since with his mixture of creativity and skill, typified by this sensational assist for Raul…

//www.youtube.com/embed/AbOSUmMlfmg?autoplay=1&loop=1&playlist= AbOSUmMlfmg

Here’s a look at Draxler’s stats map from his breakthrough season at the Veltins Arena…

And despite not matching his proficiency in front of goal from the previous campaign, the Germany international was in good form last season, as seen below…

Here’s a clip of Draxler’s Top Five goals for the Miners:

//www.youtube.com/embed/wnImymrd_60

The Bundesliga youngster is destined for a big move to a major club, but has insisted it won’t happen this summer, amid well-documented interest from Arsenal…

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