The Chronicle (UK)

Howe I’d love to bring in another Ramsdale

BUT IT IS NOT A PRIORITY AT THE MOMENT FOR NEWCASTLE ADMITS BOSS

- By CIARAN KELLY Football writer ciaran.kelly02@reachplc.com @Ciarankell­y_

EDDIE Howe would love to sign another Aaron Ramsdale in the future but the Newcastle United head coach has admitted bringing in raw young players with ‘potential’ is not his priority right now.

The Newcastle head coach will come up against the former Bournemout­h goalkeeper when the Magpies welcome Arsenal to St James’ Park on Monday night.

It was Howe, of course, who signed Ramsdale for the Cherries for an initial £800,000 in 2017 when the shotstoppe­r was just 18 years of age.

Bournemout­h had tracked Ramsdale’s progress at Sheffield United for two years before making a bid for the youngster and it was actually Howe’s nephew Andy, the club’s then head of domestic player scouting, who recommende­d him. The younger Howe noted how Ramsdale ticked a number of boxes, technicall­y, with his confidence in playing out from the back for Sheffield United’s under-21s.

The talent-spotter was also encouraged by how Ramsdale responded to making an error and how the teenager fared when he stepped up with the Blades’ first team.

It took time for Ramsdale to realise his potential at Bournemout­h he missed the bus for a Carabao Cup quarter-final against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge before maturing on loan at Chesterfie­ld and AFC Wimbledon - but he went on to become the Cherries’ number one at the age of just 21.

The England internatio­nal returned to Sheffield United for £18.5m in 2020 before joining Arsenal last summer for a fee which could rise to £30m.

Andy Howe, meanwhile, has

since followed his uncle to Newcastle as the club’s head of first-team technical scouting so are these the sorts of players the Magpies could one day look at?

As ambitious as Newcastle are, they have to comply with the Premier League’s profit and sustainabi­lity rules after all.

Howe said: “We signed him for less than a million pounds but there was a long wait for Aaron to be the player he is now.

“There were several loan spells and, then, of course, he moved on to Sheffield United and then to Arsenal.

“Whenever you sign a player who is potential you have to be very patient and be prepared to wait two, three, four years before that potential flourishes into your team.

“From my recent experience­s, sometimes, there is a lack of patience from everyone connected with football. They want the readymade product now.

“That is definitely an avenue and one of the things I’ would love to do: to sign young players, develop them and work with them on the training ground to try and help them reach their potential.

“You need the facilities to do that, you need the squad size and the readymade players in their position to allow them to flourish.

“That is certainly something we will look at in the future but I would not say, at this moment, that is necessaril­y high on my list of the things we need to do.”

Howe was keen to bring in Premier League experience in his first window in charge last January, and that remains the case this summer.

However, the Newcastle head coach is also conscious of the need to reduce the average age of his squad given the majority of the individual­s at his disposal are 28 or older and players in their twenties from abroad will also be targeted.

 ?? ?? Aaron Ramsdale in action for Arsenal
Aaron Ramsdale in action for Arsenal

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