Faltering stars, backwards transfer policy - why Newcastle are struggling so much this season | Transfermarkt
Newcastle fans were offered some rare good news this week, when the Premier League club confirmed that star winger Anthony Gordon had signed a new “long-term” contract with the club. Although new deals for important players is always welcome news for fans of any club, Gordon’s commitment to the Geordie club would have come as welcomed respite from what has been a new season of misfortune for Eddie Howe’s team and the fans that follow them each and every week.
After eight games, Newcastle sit ninth in the English top-flight table with just 12 points to their name. And what perhaps troubles fans of the club at this moment in time is that the next four fixtures include a double-header against Chelsea in the Premier League and League Cup, before welcoming Arsenal to St. James' Park and a trip to high-flying Nottingham Forest present equally difficult tests for Howe and his side. Which suggests that things could get even worse before they get better. So what’s gone wrong for Newcastle this season and is there any hope for Howe’s side to get back to winning ways?
The most obvious problem with Howe’s side in the Premier League this season is that they simply aren’t scoring enough goals. Last season Newcastle averaged 2.24 goals per game in the English top-flight, but are now averaging just one solitary goal per game this time around. And unfortunately for the club, there seems to be a number of issues at play that have led to Newcastle’s attacking line and flow of goals grinding to a halt. Last time around, Newcastle actually had the third most potent attacking trio in the Premier League with Alexander Isak, Gordon and Callum Wilson bagging a combined 41 goals for the club. Only Manchester City and Arsenal could lay claim to more product attacking lines. However, this season has seen Isak pick up just one goal in six games and Gordon score just two in eight games, while Wilson has yet to feature for the club this season due to a long-term back injury.
However, when we take a look at the club’s top five players for goal contributions per game from last season and this season in the graphic above, we can see that it isn’t just a case of Howe missing Wilson through injury. In the previous league campaign, Howe had five players averaging over 0.4 goals and assists per game for the club in Bruno Guimarães, Jacob Murphy and the aforementioned attacking trio. But this time around only one player in Harvey Barnes has managed to average more than 0.4 goal contributions per game. Here, the most obvious culprits are Guimarães and Murphy, who bagged between them a combined 25 goals and assists in the Premier League for Newcastle last season. This time around, despite featuring in all eight games so far this season, the pair have just three assists to their name. And the attacking problems don’t stop there for Howe.
Perhaps the most under-rated aspect of Newcastle’s attack last season was Kieran Trippier’s playmaking from the right flank. Not only did the England international finish the league campaign with the joint-highest assists in the team, but according to FBRef also completed more passes that led to a shot than any other player in Howe’s squad. However, this time around Trippier has struggled for form and fitness, starting just three of Newcastle’s first eight games and now ruled out of action for the next few weeks with a hamstring injury. At 34 years of age, it’s highly unlikely that the full-back will return to form and prominence for Newcastle like he’s shown in recent seasons, but the worry for Howe is that first-choice right-back Tino Livramento has yet to bag a single assist this season and according to the aforementioned stats website is averaging just 0.41 passes that lead to a shot per game - which is considerably less than the 2.62 passes per game that his predecessor averaged last season.
What will frustrate Newcastle fans about their poor start to the season is that much of it could have been largely mitigated had the club been more effective in the summer transfer window. Rather than effectively sign ideal transfer targets to fill the holes in their squad, Newcastle were held back by the appointment of new sporting director Paul Mitchell midway through the transfer window and the constant threat of breaking the Premier League’s financial fair play rules. This in turn meant that the club not only failed to sign any effective attacking reinforcements aside from back-up striker William Osula, but also sold Elliot Anderson to Forest and Yankuba Minteh to Brighton for a combined €76.2m. Two players that could have unquestionably provided more attacking threat in midfield or on the right wing, where Newcastle have struggled for much of this season.
In fact, Newcastle complete in-action in the transfer window in the summer was so detrimental to Howe’s squad that the Athletic recently reported that the club may be forced to prioritise the signing of a new right winger in the January transfer window. All while the one they sold to Brighton continues to thrive for the Seagulls with two goals and assists in his first seven league appearances for Fabian Hürzeler’s side. In no uncertain terms, if Newcastle want to get back towards the top four of the Premier League table, they’ll have to find a way to support the hard work of Howe and his team with some smart transfer business in the January transfer window.
UK Lead Content Manager for Transfermarkt