Ademola Lookman’s Move Abroad a Blueprint for English Player Education

Ademola Lookman scored on his debut for RB Leipzig after joining the Bundesliga club on loan from Everton. Photograph: Lukas Schulze/DFL via Getty Images
Ademola Lookman scored on his debut for RB Leipzig after joining the Bundesliga club on loan from Everton. Photograph: Lukas Schulze/DFL via Getty Images
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Ademola Lookman’s Move Abroad a Blueprint for English Player Education

Ademola Lookman scored on his debut for RB Leipzig after joining the Bundesliga club on loan from Everton. Photograph: Lukas Schulze/DFL via Getty Images
Ademola Lookman scored on his debut for RB Leipzig after joining the Bundesliga club on loan from Everton. Photograph: Lukas Schulze/DFL via Getty Images

With all of the transfer talk predictably revolving around the big-money moves to Champions League-level clubs by players such as Alexis Sánchez, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Aymeric Laporte, there was one loan deal involving an overseas club in a Champions League place that really caught my eye. Ademola Lookman took a brave decision – seemingly against the wishes of his Everton manager, Sam Allardyce – in leaving the comfort zone of staying in this country and joining the Championship side Derby and instead pushed for a move to RB Leipzig, who are third in Germany’s Bundesliga.

For years I have looked at the number of young English players whose footballing intelligence and education could be much greater advanced by sampling a different footballing environment in a top league while coming to terms with learning a new language and culture, assimilating a different style of play and adopting different tactical approaches and principles that are being taught to them on the training ground.

Because of the fact that our Premier League is the most wealthy – and therefore most able to pay players the highest salaries – it is seen as illogical for our most talented players to leave the comforts of home and the good money they are earning here to really push to play in the Bundesliga, La Liga or any other league of a similar level.

If you look at our outfield England squad preparing for this year’s World Cup, only Eric Dier, who played for Sporting Lisbon, has had more than one year’s experience of playing abroad and learning his trade in a different footballing environment. I would also argue this about Dier: his versatility as a central defender and a tactically adept and positionally sound defensive midfield player means he is the only player of his type who will be a part of our squad in Russia and therefore a key component in our team.

The positioning and tactical awareness he exhibits for Spurs and England are qualities that, when I was growing up in the game, coaches in this country did not preach, teach or encourage as much as they did on the continent. When I speak to players from abroad who come to England, each of them has explained to me how much they have to improve as footballers. They do it without the benefit of speaking their native language or understanding the different principles of play that they have to acclimatize to here in England, and they have to adapt and improve their footballing abilities to be able to deal with the completely different rhythm and tempo they find in the Premier League.

They also have to grow up and improve as young men. A lot of them come with young families to a completely different culture and way of life, and have to quickly learn the language and way of life. Forsaking their comfort zone, they say, when they finally overcome these initial problems, has very quickly made them better footballers and professionals. This is nothing but beneficial in the long term for their development as players on the pitch and human beings off it, and I sometimes wonder how much better our national team would be if we had more players exposed to solving these problems on and off the field of play.

It’s interesting that one of the major accusations of our players when we were knocked out by Iceland in the European Championship in 2016 was that they looked like they couldn’t find their own tactical solutions to the problem on the field of play or that token argument that comes out in every big defeat that we seemed to “lack leaders”. We also speak about the need for our young players to come out of their comfort zone in order to grow as people, especially within an industry where thinking for yourself is not on the top of the agenda for a young, gifted player.

Being a professional footballer for more than a decade and also only playing in this country, I cannot really remember a time in my life where I felt uneasy or unfamiliar with my environment. Every day my schedule was set, I’m told what to do on the field of play and I know exactly where to go if I ever have any problem on or off the pitch to be sorted out for me by either my agent, adviser or a player liaison officer employed by a football club to enable me to concentrate on my job on the pitch.

With age and hindsight, one of the biggest regrets of my career was not experiencing football abroad, so I credit and applaud Lookman for taking his step to advance his footballing education – he is a young player who has always impressed me whenever I’ve seen him play. The fact he scored on his debut is great for him personally but whether at the end of season the loan is seen as a success or a failure by his parent club, fans or the media is immaterial from my point of view.

He will be learning lessons every day on and off the pitch that he wouldn’t on our shores and I’m sure they will stay with him for years to come. I hope his move is the start of more young English players being brave enough to leave home and their comfort zone behind.



Hamburg Fires Steffen Baumgart as Coach after Five Games without a Win

08 November 2024, Lower Saxony, Brunswick: Hamburg coach Steffen Baumgart gives an interview before the German Bundesliga 2 soccer match between Eintracht Braunschweig and Hamburger SV. (dpa)
08 November 2024, Lower Saxony, Brunswick: Hamburg coach Steffen Baumgart gives an interview before the German Bundesliga 2 soccer match between Eintracht Braunschweig and Hamburger SV. (dpa)
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Hamburg Fires Steffen Baumgart as Coach after Five Games without a Win

08 November 2024, Lower Saxony, Brunswick: Hamburg coach Steffen Baumgart gives an interview before the German Bundesliga 2 soccer match between Eintracht Braunschweig and Hamburger SV. (dpa)
08 November 2024, Lower Saxony, Brunswick: Hamburg coach Steffen Baumgart gives an interview before the German Bundesliga 2 soccer match between Eintracht Braunschweig and Hamburger SV. (dpa)

Former Bundesliga heavyweight Hamburger SV has fired Steffen Baumgart as coach after five games without a win across all competitions.

The second-division club said Sunday it was letting Baumgart go because of a “crisis of performances and results” after the team’s 2-2 draw at home with Schalke on Saturday.

That left Hamburg eighth in the 18-team division, four points behind early leader Paderborn after 13 rounds.

“Steffen gave everything with great passion, energy and commitment right up to the end for HSV. However, our analysis of the current situation and yesterday’s game has once again made it clear that we believe a new impetus is necessary,” Hamburg sporting director Stefan Kuntz said.

The club said Baumgart, who was a Hamburg fan as a child, took the news “calmly” on Sunday morning.

“It was an exciting and very intense time,” the former Cologne coach said. “I remain connected to the club and hope that HSV achieves its goals.”

Hamburg has been bidding to return to the Bundesliga since its demotion from the top flight in 2018. It had been the only ever-present team in the league since it was founded in 1963, earning the nickname “der Dino.”

But every season since relegation has ended in disappointment. Hamburg rival St. Pauli was promoted last season to add to Hamburg fans’ woes.

Baumgart, a former Hansa Rostock and Union Berlin forward, took over as Hamburg coach in February, when the team was third, but ultimately it was unable to improve and finished fourth – one place behind Fortuna Düsseldorf in the promotion playoff spot.

Hamburg said Baumgart’s assistants Rene Wagner and Kevin McKenna were also let go, and that assistant coach Merlin Polzin will prepare the team for its next game at Karlsruher SC.

There was no mention of a permanent successor.