By Sergio Moya
If any team offered, Liverpool would accept between £10m and £15m. We suppose that the proximity to either figure depends on the degree of interest. However, more critically, they would be open to including that as a buy option in a six-month loan, any buyer would find that to be an extraordinarily club-friendly offer.
They could hire Phillips, give him six months to prove himself, and then perhaps pay a low price. We'd be surprised if no clubs took a chance on it because it's so risk-free. In all honesty, we're surprised that Phillips hasn't had a good offer yet, he is a player who, at both Liverpool and Bournemouth, regularly excels when given the chance.
Here's an example of a player who entered the Reds' starting lineup and contributed to their third-place Premier League result. To be able to do it, especially with the inexperienced Rhys Williams as your center-back partner, requires a certain calibre, the final six months of Phillips' Championship season were spent at Bournemouth.
Eventually, they would be promoted to the Premier League, and manager Scott Parker would describe the player as “outstanding.”£10m for that? Given that Phillips is reaching his limit, it seems like a good deal at this stage. He is in a catch-22 situation in many ways since the only thing he needs to get a move is
Regular football, but he needs a move to get it, we anticipate that Phillips will depart Liverpool in the winter and that he will leave a respectable legacy there, whoever does acquire him will do so with a quality player, according to rumours, Liverpool is prepared to approve a transaction that benefits the club in order to offload Nat Phillips. The athlete might quit in January.
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