In some ways you really have to commend what Newcastle
have achieved in the transfer market since 2009. They’ve set their own
rules and their own valuations, and have gone after targets with a
logical approach that means they have rarely paid over the odds on
players who have turned out to be misfires. Yes, there have been
high-profile mistakes like Sylvain Marveaux, Papiss Cisse (to a certain
extent anyway) and Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa, but the real issue in all three
cases is not the quality of the player or the price paid, but the
manager attempting to get the best out of them.
After a summer of heady spending, something looks like it might have
changed. There was already talk that the policy from now on would be the
same as an over=packed nightclub – one in, one out – before the
transfer window slammed shut with two notable outs and no helpful ins in
the last couple of hours – but now it looks like not only will Alan
Pardew’s acquisitions be dependant on freeing up squad space, it will
also depend on fees being freed up by outgoing players. The long and
short of it is that if Newcastle want to sign the centre-half they so
desperately and obviously need, they will have to reinvest the £4m or so
that is rumoured to be coming in when Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa leaves
permanently for Roma.
There are any number of issues with the sentence alone, but the main
issue for the future of Newcastle’s back-line is that whoever replaces
the French international who is currently impressing at Champions League
side Roma (and yet is rendered unplayable by Alan Pardew’s lack of
understanding) will have to cost less than £4m.
Inevitably, that has lead to suggestions that James Tomkins will be
first on the list of underwhelming options to fill in while Jamaal
Lascelles matures (or doesn’t depending on who is in charge of his
development). He would probably cost all of the £4m, or close to it at
least, and would be only a slight improvement on the likes of Steven
Taylor or Mike Williamson for that money. That surely isn’t the way
forward?
The other option would be to bring in someone like Nastasic on loan
from Man City, as was rumoured to have been Pardew’s intention in
August, before the player decided to stay and fight for his place, but
that would probably involve a loan fee, and would ultimately mean
Newcastle would need to sign another centre-back in the summer anyway.
Considering the importance of the position, Newcastle cannot afford to
skimp – just as they cannot on their hunt for another striker – and the
unfortunate reality is that paying too little will yield inferior
talents.
You get what you pay for, after all, and Newcastle need to learn that
investments should be classed as such, rather than identifying
affordable options over their suitability to the first team. Yes, the
sell-on factor is important, but so too is the small matter of actually
stopping balls going into the net. I know which I prefer.
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