Kalvin Phillips: What Man City would gain and what Leeds would lose - BBC 20/6/22
By Phil Dawkes
Near the start of last season, then Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa
was asked about the potential departure of Kalvin Phillips from his hometown
club.
"I'm sure the day he leaves Leeds will generate
disappointment," said the Argentine. "But I am sure the way he does
it is going to solidify his link to the club, the people and the city."
That emotional moment appears to be imminent for the
midfielder in the shape of a highly expected move to Manchester City. The
Premier League champions have made him their number one transfer target this
summer and are expected to pursue a deal more vigorously now Phillips has
completed his international commitments with England for the summer.
While there is obvious sadness for the Whites and their fan
base, there is an acceptance that this deal may be best for club and player.
But what of the reaction from City fans? And how will the 26-year-old England international fit in to Pep Guardiola's trophy-laden side?
Rodri's understudy at the Etihad?
On a purely practical level, it is clear to see why City are
looking to sign Phillips. He is a midfield replacement for Fernandinho, who
ended his glittering nine-year spell at the club this summer.
He is likely to slot in behind Rodri in the pecking order
for the single defensive midfield position favoured by Guardiola.
It is a role Phillips knows well from his time at Leeds,
especially in the past four years spent largely under the management of Bielsa,
who did more than anyone to turn the player from one drifting through the
Championship to winning individual awards for his country.
Phillips was arguably Leeds' key player under their former
boss - a shield in front of the defence but also the pass-providing
quarter-back through which the team would transition into attack.
That Phillips was moulded by Bielsa will only make him more
appealing to Guardiola, who cites the Argentine as an inspiration and with whom
he shares a similar possession-focused, attack-minded philosophy.
Phillips is likely to be asked to perform a similar role for
his potential new club, albeit in a side with an even greater share of
possession in games and generally under less attacking pressure from opponents.
Should Guardiola need him to operate in another midfield
role higher up the pitch, Phillips has demonstrated his ability to do so with
England, as part of a successful double pivot with Declan Rice.
At Euro 2020, he did some of his best work pressing high up
the field and showed a glimpse of his creative ability with the powerful,
driving run and pass for England's opening goal of the tournament against
Croatia. Those performances led to him being named England's player of the year
in 2020-21.
In contrast to his time at Leeds, Phillips is unlikely to be
first choice at City, with Rodri firmly established as Guardiola's go-to man in
the middle of the field.
City play plenty of games a season (57 in 2021-22), so
Phillips' chances will come, but the move still presents a risk for the player
in a year that ends with the World Cup and his England place not a certainty.
Exposure to the Champions League will do his selection
chances no harm, but he will not want to be regularly sat on the bench given
Jude Bellingham, Jordan Henderson, Conor Gallagher and James Ward-Prowse are
rivals for the role alongside Rice in Gareth Southgate's side.
He was not alone, but Phillips was poor in England's
humiliating 4-0 loss to Hungary last week.
It was this that further emboldened some to question: is he
good enough for a side looking to defend their Premier League crown and conquer
Europe for the first time?
In Phillips' favour is his nationality (contributing to the
homegrown player stipulations domestically and in Europe) and capacity for
improvement under a coach who has shown a preference for adding the final
polish to burgeoning elite players with the ability to fit his system.
Paul Pogba, who is leaving Manchester United this summer,
and Barcelona's Frenkie de Jong have been touted as potential incomings, but
neither have the hallmarks of a City signing under Guardiola.
Where Phillips differs from those two and excels is in his
defensive work, according to the statistics of FBref.com.
He ranks in the 95th percentile for tackles and tackles won
among Premier League midfielders and in the 97th percentile for pressures
applied to an opponent and how successful he is with these.
These are from an injury-impacted 2021-22 campaign in which
he was not at his best. In the previous season he was similarly impressive in
his defensive work but also the 95th percentile for completed long passes and
92nd for touches in the defensive third - reflective of a game about control
and progression as well as destruction.
There is still much room for improvement if he is to match
up to Rodri in his distribution and attacking skills, with the latter vastly
superior in his pass completion and contribution to creating chances.
Some caution should be shown in too close a comparison,
though. The sides they played in last season had very different ambitions -
City were competing for the title; Leeds were fighting for survival.
What is unquestionable is Phillips' level of fitness when
operating at full steam - a quality honed under the strict regime of Bielsa,
which led to Leeds topping the charts for sprints and high-intensity running.
Those attributes will be a huge loss to Leeds. So can they
afford to lose him?
The 'Yorkshire Pirlo' as Phillips is known in Leeds, greeted fans at Elland Road to celebrate their promotion to the Premier League in July 2020
A reluctant but necessary sale?
Leeds owner Andrea Radrizzani has been vocal in his desire
to follow Leicester's recent approach to the Premier League - namely realising
potential by building incrementally through the development and big-money sale
of players before reinvesting the proceeds.
Phillips' potential sale certainly fits into this model.
With his stock high, two years left on his contract and his
27th birthday approaching, Phillips' value is unlikely to be as high again as
it is now.
Already the rumour mill is alive with suggested replacements
- RB Leipzig's Tyler Adams, Sheffield United's Sander Berge and, intriguingly,
City's own Romeo Lavia have all been mentioned.
Having only survived relegation by the skin of their teeth
last season, Leeds need not only to bolster a midfield that was woefully short
of numbers and quality in 2021-22, but lift the general levels of a squad that
has served them well but is reaching the end of its shelf life.
Another aspect to Phillips' sale is whether he is as crucial
to current manager Jesse Marsch's way of playing as he was to Bielsa's.
The American prefers two players in front of his defence as
part of a narrow formation that congests play into the centre of the pitch,
thus denying Phillips some of the time and space he was previously afforded to
pick long-range passes.
A good player will always fit into and improve a side, but if Leeds are in the business of sacrificing someone for the greater good, changes at the club could well have tipped Phillips into the expendable bracket.
What muddies the water are the emotions involved. Phillips
was raised in the Leeds suburb of Armley, has been with the club since he was
14 and is emblematic of their rise and return to the Premier League.
Few will begrudge him the move, though. He has left his mark
on the city in more ways than one. While he goes on to no doubt win trophies in
the blue of City, a mural painted in 2020 will ensure he continues to stand
tall over Leeds city centre in the colours of his hometown club.