The Asian Age

Liverpool strike trio seek elusive breakthrou­gh

- STOCKPILIN­G

London: Around the time 17year-old England striker Rhian Brewster became the first player since Pele to score a hat-trick in a semi-final at any World Cup on Wednesday, another gifted Liverpool attacker signed a new five-year contract.

At 18, Wales internatio­nal Ben Woodburn is six months Brewster’s senior but two years younger than Dominic Solanke, the third of Liverpool’s trio of young forwards who have all made an impact on the internatio­nal stage as they await their chance under manager Juergen Klopp.

Earlier this season, Woodburn even scored a goal in a senior World Cup match, netting on his debut in the 1-0 victory over Austria in a vital qualifier, while Solanke won the Golden Boy award as the best player at the Under-20 World Cup, which England won.

Meanwhile, Brewster awaits what could be his crowning moment in Saturday’s final against Spain.

“Brewster will walk back into Liverpool’s Melwood training ground feeling a million dollars,” said Jamie Redknapp, a former Liverpool midfielder and England Under-21 captain who helped his side win the prestigiou­s Toulon tournament in 1994.

“Now it is important Brewster keeps a level head. He and his England team mates are entering a crucial stage of their developmen­t. Far too often, English clubs give players aged 16 to 19 ridiculous contracts that they have not earned,” he wrote in the Mail newspaper.

No details are available of the size of Woodburn’s new deal but British media reported Solanke signed a contract worth $26,458 per week in the Daily year after, like Brewster at a younger age, moving from Chelsea.

Both believe their chances of breaking into the first team are better at Liverpool, although their battle appears to be just beginning.

Award-winning author Michael Calvin has specialise­d at tracking progress from academies to the profession­al ranks and says the odds are heavily stacked against any youngster.

“Only 180 of the 1.5 million boys who play organised youth football will play one minute in the Premier League — that is a success rate of 0.0012 per cent,” he said.

“And it can get worse. Arsene Wenger told me that 67 per cent of boys who get a profession­al contract are out of the game by 21. Of those, one or two will leave as millionair­es without kicking a ball in first-team football.”

The problem remains the stockpilin­g of resources by the big clubs, with the best young talents getting experience in short bursts.

That is Solanke’s current role at Liverpool: he has played a total of 93 minutes in seven appearance­s off the bench this season plus a full 90 in the League Cup loss at Leicester.

Woodburn has appeared more for Wales than Liverpool, for whom he has managed a solitary half against Leicester this season after making his senior debut last November. At 17, he became the club’s youngest ever goalscorer, beating Michael Owen’s record by 98 days.

Although Woodburn has only played Under-23 football this season, captaining Liverpool in the Uefa Youth League, he remains hopeful of getting his chance soon.

“I feel like at this club, there is a pathway to the first team and you get given chances here,” he said this week. “I want to show what I can do.”

 ??  ?? Ben Woodburn has captained Liverpool in the Uefa Youth League.
Ben Woodburn has captained Liverpool in the Uefa Youth League.

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