Leeds chief executive Angus Kinnear was on The Square Ball podcast this week, discussing kits, pre-season results, stadium redevelopments and, of course, transfers.
You can read about stadium plans and what returning to Elland Road will be like here, or you can listen to the whole thing by searching for โThe Square Ballโ in a podcast app or using the player below.
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But this is what Kinnear had to say when our Dan Moylan asked him, have Leeds United signed anyone yet? Why havenโt Leeds United signed anyone yet? And when will Leeds United sign someone?
โIf I was going to bet on that,โ Kinnear said, โI would suggest that thereโll be little movement between now and the end of the season. But if youโd have asked me at the same time last season, Iโd have said there wouldnโt have been any movement, and then we brought in Raphinha. So it can change, and the strategy is very much to be ready, but it has to be an exceptional opportunity. It has to be a player that really moves the team forward.โ
As ever, Victor Orta has done his usual work with Marcelo Bielsa to identify targets, but with the market quiet itโs a case of waiting for something, somewhere to shift and get things moving. Manchester City spending an awful lot of money on Jack Grealish might help, even if a big part of the problem stems from clubs below Leeds, not above them, struggling for funds.
โItโs generally quiet,โ says Kinnear. โI think itโs driven by clubs in Europe struggling from Covid, and clubs in the Championship particularly struggling from Covid. Those types of deals that might have gone through, with Championship teams paying six or seven million pounds, other than Fulham buying Harry Wilson, there havenโt really been many Championship big buys.
โI think some of the deals which are happening at the top level will create liquidity in the market to an extent. Weโve seen that already with Jack Grealish, and thatโs cascaded down with Ings and Buendia. I wouldnโt be surprised to see Norwich and Southampton reinvesting that money, so I think thereโll be some movement. But generally we expected it to be slow. Teams are nursing losses in the tens of millions from Covid, so no oneโs prepared to take big gambles on mediocre players.โ
Mediocre players like Arsenalโs Joe Willock and Eddie Nketiah, who are both available for ยฃ20m plus (more than Leeds paid for internationals Robin Koch and Diego Llorente, not to mention the magnificence of Raphinha) despite having fewer than thirty Premier League starts to each of their names. Thatโs why Leeds have once more been busiest with their Under-23s recruitment, trying to identify talents like Lewis Bate โbefore those prices go stratosphericโ.
โThatโs the challenge. And thatโs why we believe you can work in advance of that. Marcelo spends so much time with the Under-23s. Mark Jackson does a great job, but Marcelo is working hand in hand with him. A player like Lewis Bate could have chosen most clubs in the country to join, but he wanted to work under Marcelo because he was ambitious and wanted to develop as a player.
โSo I think we can work at the level before they get to twenty, [rather than] buying English players at ยฃ20m-25m who still havenโt properly delivered in the Premier League. Nketiah, Willock, both are fantastic talents, but they are big bets to put on players to deliver immediately in the Premier League. And we think the level just before that is probably the optimal time to approach them.โ
As weโve already seen with Nketiah, loaning these types of players from the Super League Six can be problematic too, as their parent clubs insist their youngsters be guaranteed the first team football theyโre refusing to give them. Hence why Leeds could buy Bate from Chelsea but not loan Connor Gallagher, who instead joined Crystal Palace.
โGallagher was [a target], but as part of a long list, so it was not critical to the plans. Heโs a player that our scouting team thought had potential. One of the challenges we have is that you have to be guaranteeing a loan player first team football at that level. When we look at our loan strategies, itโs going to be very difficult to look at who in the team is going to be shifted out of their position by a loan player. Thatโs why I donโt think youโll see much loan activity this season.
โWeโre not ashamed of the fact we have very high benchmarks for the players that we want to bring in. They have to have the talent. They have to have the confidence that theyโre going to be able to force their way in the team. They have to have the ambition and discipline to be prepared to work with Marcelo and the regime that he puts the team through. And if theyโre not, then theyโre not the right players for Leeds United. So weโre not apologetic about that. We want to create a high bar for players to join. And if we get any sense the player isnโt up for the battle, then we know theyโre not right for us.โ
Is Huddersfield Townโs heavily-Leeds-linked Lewis OโBrien up for the battle?
โHis name has been on the scouting reports, but thereโs no movement on that at the moment.โ
At the moment? Gotcha; thatโs the clickbait headline sorted. What about Matheus Cunha? Or Nahitan Nandez?
โThe reality is that the names that we get linked with in the press all feature on the scout reports because theyโre players of exceptional calibre. But to date, there has been nobody that we have pursued with any firm intent and meaningfully missed out on.โ
So Leeds are keeping an eye on plenty of names, but even when they think theyโve spotted an opportunity to sign a good player for decent value, convincing Bielsa itโs the right move can be the hardest part of the job. And ending up not buying any is the hardest part for fans to understand.
โI understand the frustration,โ says Kinnear. โI understand the narrative that signing players is exciting. And, you know, we get excited by it, too. But, driven by Marcelo and Victor, there is a bigger picture. Marcelo doesnโt want to buy players which destabilise the club. He doesnโt want to buy players who arenโt going to fit in, who are going to damage the ethos.
โThere is a team spirit there that we donโt want to damage that has served us really, really well. So I think people have to look beyond, โThereโs an exciting name and thereโs great YouTube highlights of them and wouldnโt it be great to have them,โ versus, โWhat does it mean for the team you have at the moment? Where would they fit in? Do they have the ethos? Do they have the work rate? Do they have the principles or the right type of character? What does it mean from a salary perspective?โ
โBut I can categorically say, and Iโve read it a few times, that the transfer window to date and going forward hasnโt been shaped or influenced by financial limitations. We have fantastic backing from Andrea, fantastic backing from the 49ers, the clubโs performing very well commercially. And weโre in a healthy position. But sometimes being selective and discerning is the right decision. And filling the squad with people who arenโt up to the level or arenโt going to fit with the current squad is really counterproductive.โ
As well as recruitment, Leeds are also working on player retention, trimming some fat by letting younger players signed as Championship prospects fulfil their potential elsewhere now the club has progressed beyond that point, while tying down key first team players to longer contracts, more of which should be announced in the next few days. Cityโs purchase of Grealish, despite Villa insisting they didnโt need to sell, is a warning. After all, if Grealish is in demand after a few cameos at the Euro, then Kalvin Phillips is definitely attracting admirers. He isnโt the only one.
โThis summer weโve received a number of firm expressions of interest and some offers for players that would be perceived as our marquee talent,โ says Kinnear. โAnd weโve received offers for, or interest in, players at the level below that. But even the level below that is in the tens of millions for some of the players. None of them have been entertained. No discussions have taken place, no negotiations have taken place.
โThe first objective for this season, in the transfer window, was holding the team together. And I know clubs never get any credit for that. But Illan, Kalvin, Patrick, Stuart Dallas, all the players right at the core of what weโve done, theyโre not for sale. Weโve made it very clear to the market that theyโre not for sale. And I think thatโs going to be the core of our success next season, that weโve resisted any of those types of offers.
โBut the reality is, and this was proven at Aston Villa โ hugely ambitious club, really well run, really well backed, but ultimately the lure of the Champions League and to play for a team which is going to win trophies turns the players. I know from Christian [Purslow], the chief exec of Aston Villa, they didnโt have to sell Grealish, even at that value. They wanted to keep him.
โBut when the player ultimately wants to go, then you have a problem. So our job, which I think Marcelo and Victor and Andrea are fantastic at, is making sure all the players feel wanted and valued and that they can grow at Leeds United.
โ[Phillips] is a long term pillar for the club. Weโll work with Kalvinโs representatives to make sure he feels valued and motivated and wants to be at Leeds United. But at the moment, heโs got three years on his contract and itโs a healthy contract. We donโt have to rush into any of these things, but we will defend our interest in our players very vigorously in the marketplace.โ
Hang on a minute, did he say someone tried to sign Stuart Dallas? Well, itโs good to know who Pep Guardiola wanted before making do with Grealish.
To hear the rest of the interview, listen to the full TSB Podcast episode with Angus by finding ‘The Square Ball’ in a podcast app, or using the player below.
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