The Sentinel

POTTERS LOOKING TO STRIKE THE RIGHT BALANCE FOR CAMPAIGN

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- Peter Smith STOKE CITY

THERE is a lot to debate about what Stoke City need to get right this summer.

There is just as much to say from our collective experience over the last few years about what not to get wrong, the pitfalls to avoid and mistakes they can’t afford to repeat.

It is the first summer transfer window in charge for head coach Steven Schumacher, sporting director Jon Walters and head of recruitmen­t Lee Darnbrough and there is a lot of trust being placed in them to pull everything together.

So, with two signings already in the bag and talks well underway about the rest, here is the anti-bible for the next two-and-a-half months to take us up to deadline day.

EXPENSIVE SIGNINGS THAT GO WRONG CAN REALLY STING

No-one is expecting Stoke to spend nearly £50m in the market this summer like they did in 2018, but there will probably be one or two who require chairman John Coates to get out his pen and sign a cheque. And it’s these deals where there is the most pressure to get it right. They should and can have the most impact, both positive and negative. The fees and wage packets won’t have the same long-term burden as happened with Giannelli Imbula, Kevin Wimmer, Badou Ndiaye, Benik Afobe and Saido Berahino – five of the club’s six most expensive ever transfers – but they should be the players who will fly the flag, set the standards and lead the drive onwards and upwards.

A big signing gone wrong is a millstone for everyone. A big signing that goes right – even like spending up to £2m on Bae Junho, in the context of a Championsh­ip club without parachute payments, perhaps – fills everyone with hope and optimism about the here and now and the future.

AN IMBALANCED SQUAD CAN BE A RIGHT HEADACHE

Stoke have had a busy conveyor belt of signings over the last seven years but, for some reason, some positions have been consistent­ly overlooked. Stoke haven’t had a goalkeeper or left-back to hang their hat on for at least most of a season for far too long. Viktor Johansson arrives with full confidence that he can sort out the former, Enda Stevens ended last term on a high in hope that he can sort out the latter. There is still scope for another left-back, perhaps, given Stevens’ injury record.

It has been maddening to see Stoke have so many central midfielder­s or right wingers and then asking a midfielder or right-back to fill in at left-back. Patience will be tested if a square peg is squeezed into a round hole.

It has been infuriatin­g too to block the path of promising players with players who have clearly not been good enough. Who knows how Tom Edwards’ career might have been different if Rowett hadn’t signed Cuco Martina? Jones brought in Cameron Carter-vickers and Liam Lindsay and sent Harry Souttar out on loan to Fleetwood.

There are promising youngsters hoping to bang down the first team door over the next year or 18 months and Schumacher and Walters have both talked about the importance of streamlini­ng the squad with this in mind.

THE DANGER OF FIRST-YEAR LOANS

Stoke’s loan recruits in the Championsh­ip makes for eye-catching reading.

Jaden Philogene, Taylor Harwoodbel­lis, Will Smallbone, Liam Delap and Jack Clarke have all gone on to be leading Championsh­ip players. Abdallah Sima scored for fun at Rangers last season, Leo Ostigard has played in the Champions League for Napoli. Harry Clarke helped Ipswich win promotion.

The problem for Stoke has been that they’ve got them – partly because of the financial fair play situation when Michael O’neill was shopping for bargain loans – as they got their first real tastes of men’s football. The leap from junior to senior is big and at times it has felt very much like they have just been developing a player for someone else’s benefit.

A scoring record in Premier League 2 might be magnetic and some players can hit the ground running but it’s clearly a gamble. Relying on loan players is frustratin­g enough but getting them before they’re really ready to make an impact is doubly so.

BUILDING A SQUAD FOR STOKE CITY

Everyone hopes Steven Schumacher can bow out in 20 years’ time having establishe­d Stoke as European regulars. But even he was asked in his first press conference about the revolving door at Clayton Wood, with Mark Hughes, Paul Lambert, Gary Rowett, Nathan Jones, O’neill and Alex Neil all asked to hand back their initialled jackets in the past six years. Each has put their own stamp on the squad and left the next wanting to tweak or overhaul what they inherit. The big change this time around is that Schumacher is head coach rather than manager and, although he will have a big input in recruitmen­t, he knew he was buying into a Stoke City way. The Stoke City way, however, needs to be developed too and that’s the job of Jon Walters, working with the manager, Lee Darnbrough, coaches, staff and chairman. They need to have a crystal clear identity for the long-term as well as realising the importance of the short-term just as much.

 ?? ?? HUNTER: Steven Schumacher is looking to add to his squad during the summer.
HUNTER: Steven Schumacher is looking to add to his squad during the summer.
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