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Newcastle want £30m attacker to stay

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Newcastle want £30m attacker to stay
Newcastle want £30m attacker to stay

Will Osula’s Newcastle Rise Gives Eddie Howe a Timely Transfer Answer

Credit to Shields Gazette for the original reporting on Eddie Howe’s latest comments around Will Osula, whose Newcastle United future suddenly feels much clearer than it did last summer.

Osula Takes His Chance

Football has a habit of turning uncertainty into opportunity. Twelve months ago, Will Osula looked like a player Newcastle United might cash in on. Signed from Sheffield United for £15million, then close to a £30million move to Eintracht Frankfurt, his time at St James’ Park appeared to be drifting towards a quick profit rather than a long term plan.

Now, after scoring in Newcastle’s 3-1 win over Brighton & Hove Albion, the 22 year old looks less like a squad gamble and more like a developing Premier League forward. Four goals in six league games has changed the tone around him. More importantly, it has changed the way Eddie Howe speaks about him.

“I think he’s maturing nicely,” Howe said on Osula. “I think it’s difficult to come in and a lot of pressure, a lot of other players waiting for an opportunity, so he knows he has to perform.

“He took his goal really well against Crystal Palace, followed that up well against Bournemouth. And then today, he’d probably back himself to school there, but he’s still got to be in the right position.

“But more than that, I thought for 60 minutes, his running ability, his power, his pace caused him real problems.”

That last line feels important. Goals get remembered, movement gets trusted. Osula is not merely finishing chances, he is beginning to look like a forward who can alter the rhythm of a game.

Howe’s £30m Transfer Decision

Newcastle’s forward line is not short of investment. With Nick Woltemade and Yoane Wissa costing a combined £119million, Osula’s selection carried a message. Howe did not simply pick potential, he picked form, energy and tactical usefulness.

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“I’d definitely like to keep him,” Howe admitted. “I think Will’s a player of really rich promise, and he was when we signed him.

“We signed him with the view of developing him to try and build him to become a Premier League player, because that certainly wasn’t the player that we recruited.

“There was a lot of work and time that’s gone into his development. Graeme Jones, Jason Tindall have done an incredible job helping his development, analysing his game, feeding back to him, and Will’s done really well to stay stable, level, and commit to that development and see the longer-term plan.

“Great to see, then, when he comes into the team and gets an opportunity that he grabs it. He’s very hungry, he’s very motivated, he believes in himself.”

Newcastle’s Long Game

This is where Osula’s story becomes more than transfer chatter. Clubs like Newcastle, ambitious yet still operating within financial restrictions, need development wins. They cannot solve every issue with another high value signing.

Osula represents something different, patience rewarded. His failed exit last summer may yet prove fortunate. Had that deadline day move gone through, Newcastle might have lost a player just as he was starting to understand the demands Howe places on a striker.

There will still be questions. Can he keep scoring when opponents analyse him more closely? Can he lead the line across a full season? Can he refine the rougher edges without losing the raw pace and aggression that make him useful?

For now, though, Newcastle have their answer. Howe wants him to stay, and Osula has earned that faith on the pitch.

Our View – EPL Index Analysis

From a Newcastle United supporter’s perspective, Osula’s rise feels like one of those quietly significant moments in a season. For all the money spent on attacking options, there is something deeply satisfying about seeing a younger player, signed with development in mind, start to make the shirt his own.

What stands out is not only the goals, although four in six Premier League games demands attention. It is the way Eddie Howe talks about him. This sounds like a player who has listened, learned and stayed patient when a move away might have been easier. That matters at Newcastle, because supporters value commitment as much as quality.

There is also a financial angle. Selling Osula for £30million last summer may have looked smart at the time, especially with UEFA rules shaping every decision. Now, though, keeping him feels smarter. A powerful, quick, hungry forward who understands Howe’s demands is not easy to find, and certainly not cheap.

The next challenge is consistency. Can Osula keep producing when defenders start treating him as a serious threat? Can he turn promise into reliability? On recent evidence, he deserves the chance. For Newcastle fans, this feels like development done properly, and maybe even a reminder that not every answer has to arrive through another huge transfer fee.

Original Article

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