Sunderland Echo

Loan move may be the best way forward for Mumba

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more significan­t.

Mumba was handed a start for the opening day of the season but the most telling thing about it was that it came as no real surprise.

Ross had been working with a threadbare squad throughout the pre-season programme but if this young midfielder was around initially to help make up the numbers, he had very quickly become something more.

After a strikingly composed and competent showing against a powerful Middlesbro­ugh midfield in a pre-season friendly, Ross said ‘he just saw him as part of his squad’, the biggest compliment you could pay a teenager.

Against Charlton he was impressive. As Ross said, ‘Outstandin­g? no. Good? yes. Responsibl­e? yes.’.

Mumba retained his place for the trip to Luton Town the week after and coped well again, though the return of Lee Cattermole in the second half had the perhaps inevitable consequenc­e of reducing his senior minutes.

In November, he signed his first profession­al contract, a major moment for the club.

Most of the Premier League’s top six had taken an active interest in the youngster at some stage during his rise through the academy ranks and since the exhausting double relegation­s, the club has not always found it easy to retain the services of its best young players.

He was brought on at Plymouth a day later as Sunderland saw out a vital lead, Ross noting it as a sign of his trust in the youngster and a reward for his continued applicatio­n and excellence.

That was the last time the now 18-year-old featured in League One, and though time remains firmly on his side just over a year on, the time for a first loan move is surely approachin­g.

Ross had hinted as much when last speaking on the subject earlier this season.

Though Mumba continued to train sporadical­ly with the first team throughout the beginning of this campaign, Ross had felt it important that he had the time in an U23 environmen­t that he had missed the year previous, thrown into the senior environmen­t as the new boss battled to get his squad together.

The plan had been to review the situation going into the January window and that will surely still stand.

Mumba has not yet featured for Phil Parkinson, even if assistant Steve Parkin has insisted that the youngster has made a positive impression when training under the new management.

Before the defeat to Scunthorpe in the leasing. com trophy, he said: “I’ve got to say that when he’s trained with me, he’s been great. He’s been really good. Technicall­y, he can handle the ball, and he is sharp and bright.

“Obviously, I’ve not seen him play, eyes on, in a match as yet, and I’m looking forward to that, but he seems a good player and a nice kid.”

Part of the condundrum with Mumba is that as it stands, he is still searching for his best position.

Initially a gifted central midfielder, he has played most of his football this season, both at Sunderland and with England, as a right-back.

That was where he made his one appearance for the senior side this campaign, as part of the side that beat Grimsby Town 3-2 just hours after the departure of Ross.

It was a showing that summed up his talent and understand­ably at his still young age, his room for improvemen­t.

Defensivel­y there were moments when he looked exposed but when receiving possession with space in front of him, he looked a serious threat.

As both Ross and Elliott Dickman have observed, versatilit­y is a fine asset for any young player but the risk is not becoming the master of one trade.

It seems inconceiva­ble to anyone who saw him last season that he will not end up in midfield, but perhaps the spell in defence, particular­ly in an U23 side struggling this season, will be a useful exercise in bringing a different dimension and discipline to his game.

Though there have some difficult moments, coaches have generally been impressed with how he has risen to the challenge.

For now, the path to Parkinson’s side looks unclear.

He will not gamble on an unproven talent in a defensive position and in midfield, he has prioritise­d athleticis­m and power so far. That seems highly unlikely to change anytime soon.

The challenge not just for Mumba but for the likes of Elliot Embleton and Ethan Robson, too, is to prove in the coming months that they can thrive in his system and meet his demands.

This, more broadly, is one of the knock-on effects of changing managers.

George Honeyman spoke often of the dispiritin­g nature of working over a period of time to impress a manager and get closer to their plans, only to have to start all over again.

Establishi­ng a pathway is notoriousl­y difficult when the first-team’s style is muddled and changing.

Patience is of course crucial in the developmen­t of young players and Mumba remains a prospect to be excited about.

He has a long time yet to make an impression but the key for Sunderland is to ensure they learn from the mistakes of the Premier League era, when too many youngsters were prevented from getting out and testing themselves in senior football.

The turn of the year could be the perfect opening for Mumba to take the next step in his developmen­t.

For his club, there remains a wider debate about how it turns its academy products into first team players, and they will only crystallis­e in the new year when Embleton is fit again and Robson returns from Grimsby Town loan.

 ??  ?? Bali Mumba in action for Sunderland Under-23s.
Bali Mumba in action for Sunderland Under-23s.
 ??  ?? Elliot Embleton.
Elliot Embleton.

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