OneFootball
Padraig WhelanĀ·7 May 2020
In partnership with
Yahoo sportsOneFootball
Padraig WhelanĀ·7 May 2020
There are few things that excite a football fan more than one of your own breaking through the academy and into the first team.
That may be about to get a little harder at Newcastle if their takeover goes through and a hefty cash injection is made.
But these are three youngsters who could still carve out a path to the summit ā¦
The Carlisle-born midfielder is clearly regarded highly at St Jamesā Park ā having penned his first professional contract last November.
Football runs in his blood as his grandfather Peter Hampton was a pro himself, featuring for Leeds and Stoke among others.
Steve Bruce name-checked White as one of the most exciting players in the clubās academy and the 17-year-old has already played Under-23 football and trained with the first team.
A tricky playmaker with fast feet, he could be the latest after the Longstaff brothers to fall off the clubās midfield conveyor belt of talent.
A local lad. A striker. Weāve seen this before. If there is one thing Newcastle do well, it is producing homegrown goalscoring machines.
Allan may be the latest to follow in the Shearer/Milburn mould and has made a bright start to his senior career too.
The 20-year-old has scored five times for the clubās youth side this season, prompting Bruce to give him a taste of senior action in the FA Cup replay against Rochdale.
He had an instant impact as he provided an assist for Joelinton on his debut.
Blessed with pace and a natural scoring instinct in the area, the Under-23 sideās captain has a big future in the game.
Noticing a theme here? If all of these lads progress as hoped, Newcastle are going to have a pretty formidable midfield and attack in 2025.
Thomson is viewed as one of the biggest talents Scotland have produced in some time, having made nine appearances in his countryās fourth tier for Queens Park ā making his debut just five days after turning 16!
That prompted the Magpies to move earlier this year to sign him for an initial Ā£50,000 and beat competition from a host of clubs in the process, having impressed against them with a hat-trick from midfield two years ago.
Evidently, that wasnāt forgotten and Thomson has only gotten better in the time since where his energy going forward and eye for goal, even from outside the area, has impressed all who watched him.
While there is still some debate as to whether he is best suited to a deeper lying role or as a No. 10, what isnāt up for argument is his incredible talent.