Liverpool Transfer News: Curtis Jones Call Could Save Millions in Midfield Rebuild
Pre-season can start, the cones can go down, the running can begin, but that does not mean a squad is ready. Liverpool head into the summer with Andoni Iraola still needing answers, and some of the loudest questions are in defence and midfield.
At the back, the problem looks obvious. Ibrahima Konate has gone to Real Madrid and Virgil van Dijk stands as the only established senior option. That is not squad depth, that is a warning light flashing on the dashboard. Liverpool need a centre-half, and they need one quickly if this season is not to begin with unnecessary strain.
Midfield feels calmer on first glance, but football clubs are often at their most vulnerable when people convince themselves all is well. Alexis Mac Allister’s contract situation is not a crisis, but it is unresolved. Dominik Szoboszlai has spoken publicly about talks, and when a player says “no decision” has been taken and that his future is “not in my hands,” supporters are entitled to feel uneasy.
According to the Liverpool Echo, Liverpool may not do major midfield business unless somebody leaves first. That brings Curtis Jones into focus, and the debate around him says plenty about where the club are.
As reported, “The midfield, too, is an area of intrigue, although Liverpool are unlikely to properly pursue any deals unless one or more of the current senior engine room is moved on, Curtis Jones – in the last 12 months of his contract – the most obvious potential sale with Inter Milan, Nottingham Forest and Galatasaray among the clubs interested.”

Curtis Jones Decision Carries Real Weight
Jones divides opinion because he is one of our own and because he has talent. That combination always sharpens the argument. Inter Milan have had two offers knocked back, with Liverpool valuing him at around £40 million. That feels steep to some, fair to others.
My instinct is simple. Selling Jones cheaply would create another problem disguised as a solution. Keeping him, unless the right bid arrives, could save Liverpool millions in a market where dependable, homegrown midfielders do not come cheap. The club do not need a sentimental decision. They need a smart one. In this case, they may be the same thing.


