Alvaro Negredo – Will City Regret Letting Him Leave?
2 Sep
A raft of important contract renewals, high-class strength in depth added to an already powerful squad and plenty of deadwood out; Manuel Pellegrini and the Manchester City hierarchy will no doubt consider the summer transfer window an overwhelming success. Under the stewardship of Txiki Begiristain, the club have secured lengthy extensions for a handful of the squad’s most crucial stars, injected genuine quality to areas which were lacking and have managed to ship out a number of those who needed, or were looking, to move on.
In comparison to many clubs, deadline day at City was a quiet affair with just a smattering of departures taking place. Micah Richards went on loan, initially, to Fiorentina, Emyr Huws turned his move to Wigan into a permanent one and Alvaro Negredo returned to La Liga to link up with Valencia. It is that last move, however, which raises a question or two about the make-up of the squad. In short, has Negredo’s journey back to Spain left City one striker light?
Manuel Pellegrini has repeatedly stated his desire to have two players competing for every position and the summer arrivals of Willy Caballero, Bacary Sagna, Eliaquim Mangala, Fernando and Frank Lampard reflected that wish. City are challenging on four fronts again this season and with such heavy fixture congestion Pellegrini will rotate regularly in order to maintain freshness, yet the obvious conclusion to draw from Negredo’s departure is that the Blues have now left themselves one forward too few.
It is easy to forget just how outstanding Negredo was when he first joined the club. Signed last summer, he needed no period of adaptation to impose his blend of physical strength and delicate technique on English football. Aerially dominant and unflinching in the face of robust challenges, he played like an old-fashioned bully, but to term him as such would be doing a huge disservice to his other, more intricate abilities. His first touch and awareness of what was around him caught the eye and his intelligence on the ball – of knowing when to hold on to it and when to move it on quickly – was noteworthy. Moreover, he formed a startlingly impressive partnership with Sergio Aguero, the like of which the Argentinean has not otherwise had at the club. They just clicked and it was thrilling to watch.
It terms of standout moments, Negredo doesn’t have too many – perhaps his turn and goal v Tottenham, his volley at home to West Ham and his sumptuous outside-of-the-foot pass to set up James Milner against Fulham – but that is symbolic of how he wasn’t interested in personal fortunes, rather those of the team. He was consumed by the concept of the collective. Even when his performances dropped off following a shoulder injury sustained in the Capital One Cup tie with West Ham, his attitude remained ideal. Although his form in front of goal completely deserted him, he contributed to the group, always maintaining a supportive mentality. Something that will stick in the mind with Negredo is how, after scoring a goal, rather than celebrate his own success, he would always go to the player who provided the assist. It was a simple gesture, but one that revealed plenty.
And yet he’s now gone without being replaced. Homesickness has been cited as a reason for him moving back to Spain, but from what I’ve heard, that stems more from Mrs Negredo than it did Alvaro. Despite missing Spain, he would have been happy to stay and fight for his place, but his wife failed to settle in Manchester and was desperate to return home. It may not be a coincidence that she comes from Valencia, the club that have now acquired her husband’s services. Again, that says a great deal about his values: placing the interests of his family above those of his immediate career, but City would have known about the wish to leave the club and it has to be asked, therefore, why more was not done to sign a replacement.
The trio of strikers now left at the club are Aguero, Stevan Jovetic and Edin Dzeko. Very talented players, of course, but from a cynical point of view, it could be said that the first two are injury-prone and the third is inconsistent. It does look a little light in that area.
What we may see is a change in tactics from Pellegrini. The Chilean has been a passionate advocate of operating with two strikers in his time at the club, but it is very feasible he may now look to use just one up front more often, with an extra midfielder slotted in behind. That would release David Silva to play just off the front man, his best position and one from which he sparkled towards the end of last season. Yaya Touré can push forward, too, and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see him there in Champions League fixtures, with Fernando and Fernandinho forming a destructive base. Pellegrini certainly has options, but if he were to continue to play with two strikers it would look as if there is too great a burden on the three left at the club.
Removing the emotion of a fan from the deal, it is a great piece of business for the club and one which makes perfect financial sense. City signed Negredo for around £16 million and sold him a year later for (what will be) £24 million. That is a very good amount for a 29-year-old striker who was third or fourth choice and who wasn’t unhappy to leave. In terms of helping the club adhere to the Financial Fair Play regulations, it is a no-brainer, but football is nothing without emotion and it is sad to see him go. Call it a sensible business deal or very obliging from the club to let him and family depart if they so wanted to, but I just hope City won’t regret the decision come the end of the season.
Congratulations on what is an excellent and astute piece of writing. Spot on! I too was baffled as to why we would/could let the Beast go? Him & Kun were so awesome last season and I was so looking forward to seeing that partnership back up & running when they destroyed everything in their wake. A joy to watch. The point of allowing Merlin to sit just behind is a valid one, Yaya too (when he can be bothered putting the effort in). Merlin, especially, is wasted out wide. We need him in the mix of it all creating through balls that we lack so much from the stagnant going nowhere passes of Nasri.
Sad to see him go. However I think we will be much stronger playing 1 up front, Jovetic can still play on the left or just behind. When playing 2 up front we seem to lack control in games especially against the big teams. I also think we will be able to break teams down easier with yaya pushed forward or navas on the right with silva playing in the middle where he is much more effective. Hopefully we will see a change of tractics after that awful performance against stoke.
If we do miss him it will be injury or loss of form that makes this the case. The three forwards that we have are excellent and it looks as though John Guidetti could also be available if the Celtic appeal to Uefa falls on deaf ears. He is a physical player, he is still young and although the decision appears to have been made to let him go permanently when an opportunity arised I would like to see him get a chance to make a statement. I saw a fair bit of John pre-eason and thought that he was getting back close to his previous best. There is also young Kelechi Iheanacho would not suffer from a bit of top class competitive exposure. Whilst he was only taken along to whet his appetite and at 17 or so has a way to go in his development, he looked very much the part. If Raheem Sterling can shake off the ‘ageist’ doubters then maybe Kelechi can too?
……and Gary, every player will not excel every game. Samir Nasri and Yaya Toure have both served the club well and have many more positives racked up against their names than negatives.
City did the right thing to let Negrado go. As much disappointed as I am due to the fact I really liked the guy(great attitude, great player, and giving it all with no fuss), his family seems not have settled in Manchester and the last thing you want is to exacerbate the situation which would be a lose-lose to all parties.
Good luck to you Negrado, you would always be remembered fondly by City fans.