Newcastle’s sensible January signings make for a bright future at St James’ Park
Dan Burn might not be a name to muster an army of new supporters in Riyadh and Chris Wood may lack the cachet of, say, Robinho — the marquee signing that heralded the arrival of the Abu Dhabi era at Manchester City.
But in opting for solid citizens over trophy signings Newcastle may just have set themselves up for a productive medium-term future, regardless of what happens in the next four months.
Sure, if millions of Arabian petro-dollars could have brought Kylian Mbappe or Erling Haaland to Tyneside last month you would pull the trigger on the deal but those options simply weren’t out there.
And, faced with that reality, the Magpies’ top brass and new manager Eddie Howe did well to resist the temptation to throw money at less prolific or unreliable options, thus avoiding the bedlam that saw QPR owner Tony Fernandes squander millions in a doomed attempt to avoid Premier League relegation in 2013.
Back then, Fernandes claimed he had allowed himself to be ‘exploited’ by unscrupulous agents and, while it would be unfair to cast aspersions on any foreign star who may have washed up on Geordie shores last month it is not unreasonable to think finishing above Watford, Burnley and Norwich would not have been the carrot some fixers dangled in front of clients in need of a new home.
Instead, Howe largely went for the tried and tested, making a splashy move for Kieran Trippier — who he worked with at Burnley a decade ago — before securing deals for Wood, Matt Targett and Burn. Those four signings tick multiple boxes in that they are likely to improve the team without creating an us-and-them chasm between themselves and their new team-mates.
All four are likely to prove useful and willing assets in a promotion push next season — should


