Jesse Marsch sends strong message to Leeds United player regarding attitude and professionalism - YEP 4/11/22
Leeds United head coach Jesse Marsch has thrown down the gauntlet to 21-year-old Dutch winger Crysencio Summerville to consolidate his place in the team after goals in back-to-back games
By Joe Donnohue
Summerville celebrated his 21st birthday last Sunday, the
day after his 89th minute goal at Anfield proved to be the winner for Leeds,
subsequently ending their eight-match run without victory. A Dutch Under-21
international, Summerville has predominantly featured for United’s junior side
since arriving from Feyenoord in 2020, but now appears to be forcing his way
into the first-team setup at Elland Road.
Head coach Marsch has challenged the former Under-17
European Championships winner to maintain his current level of performance by
going on record to suggest the youngster’s application hasn’t always been
exemplary. Despite last Saturday’s match-winning contribution, which followed
his first Premier League goal a week earlier, Marsch took the opportunity to
discuss Summerville’s mental development during his pre-match press conference
on Thursday afternoon.
After admitting that in the early stages of his tenure as
Leeds boss, he had considered increasing the Dutchman’s first-team involvement,
if not for an ankle injury which ruled him out until the end of last season,
Marsch went on to discuss Summerville’s attentiveness off the pitch.
"A big factor for him is discipline and professionalism
and work ethic. I've been on top of him again this week to make sure that he
has a very good training week and he has, he's looked really good. And we're
hopeful that he can establish himself more and more,” Marsch said at Thorp Arch
on Thursday.
It is not the first instance in which, unprompted, the
American has offered insight into Summerville’s development as a person, as
well as a player. Previously, Marsch has spoken of the young winger’s character
and application on the training pitch, in a manner unlike his declarations
concerning other players.
On Thursday, the head coach went into further detail about
what his No. 10 must continue to work on, to demonstrate progress and earn his
place in the first-team, as he has done with performances in recent weeks.
"It was a little bit of everything [that needed
improving]: making sure that he was getting here early enough, making sure that
he was putting work in in the gym, that he was preparing for training the right
way, that he was paying attention to video, that he was applying the lessons
that we wanted to learn in training every day.
"He loves the match, right? But it was more about like
helping him understand what the entire process of being a top professional is
and making sure that he's committed to it all the way,” Marsch added.
The American, whose own birthday falls the day before Leeds
travel to Molineux to play Wolves in the Carabao Cup next week, hopes deadline
day signing Willy Gnonto can be a positive influence on Summerville, despite
the Italy international being three years younger than the ex-Feyenoord
forward.
"Willy [Gnonto], I think, is in the same vein, except
that his professionalism and work ethic and clarity for what this world is, is
incredibly good. He's very mature for an 18 year old. And it's interesting
because Cree [Summerville] and Willy have sparked up a really good friendship.
"I think Willy's had a real positive effect on Cree and
I think that those two together can be part of the core of young players, or
can be the core of the young players that can kind of push us forward and
continue to help all the young, talented, specifically attacking players,”
Marsch said.
Gnonto’s first-team and international experience supersedes
Summerville, despite his younger years, however it is the Dutchman who is in
line to retain his place in Leeds’ starting XI this weekend at home to AFC
Bournemouth.
Marsch’s comments can be dissected to reveal a thinly-veiled
challenge to his budding young attacking line, too: “For me, whether you're
young or old, it's all about what you're establishing and exhibiting on the training
pitch.
"His potential is very high,” Marsch said, describing
man of the moment Summerville. “I think he can be a big part of unbalancing the
opponent by scoring goals, by setting plays up, by being good in transition and
certainly being good in pressing.
"We just need to keep pushing him every day in terms of
his mentality of being a pro and then the technical and tactical aspects of
what we're trying to achieve.
"I told him in front of the group that I'm watching him
now and I'm going to stay on top of him even more, and we have to make sure
that there's no slipping back and that we're only going forward from here,”
Marsch finished.
Summerville will no doubt be delighted with his recent
contributions, finally breaking the glass ceiling of Under-21 football, but
Marsch’s words are clear: he must continue in the same vein, crucially on and
off the pitch, to remain in the American’s thoughts after the World Cup break
when fellow attacker Luis Sinisterra returns from a foot injury.