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‘So, so good’ Tyler Morton reality becomes clear as Liverpool face uncomfortable £30m transfer truth

Kelan SarsonKelan Sarson3 min read
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‘So, so good’ Tyler Morton reality becomes clear as Liverpool face uncomfortable £30m transfer truth

Liverpool have spent years cultivating a reputation for outsmarting the market. However, as Tyler Morton dictates the tempo in Ligue 1, the £15m fee Richard Hughes accepted last summer is beginning to look less like a masterstroke and more like a clerical error.

Selling a homegrown prospect for eight figures usually satisfies the pragmatists at the AXA Training Centre. However, football has a funny way of punishing those who value the balance sheet over the engine room. In Lyon, Morton has become a necessity rather than a luxury. He is now a “huge part” of Paulo Fonseca’s tactical blueprint.

When Tyler Morton packed his bags for Lyon in a £15m deal last summer, it felt like a pragmatic, if slightly uninspiring, piece of business.

The Reds were coming off the high of a Premier League title win. Morton—despite his obvious technical ceiling—looked like a victim of a crowded engine room. At 22, he needed to play. Also, Slot needed “elite” depth. The result was a permanent parting of the ways.

Fast forward six months, and that decision is under the microscope. While Slot grapples with a midfield that has occasionally lacked the very “control” Morton is now providing in France, the playmaker is busy making a mockery of his modest price tag.

The Fonseca factor: why Lyon ‘had to have’ Morton

Morton hasn’t just settled in Ligue 1 he’s dictated it. Under Paulo Fonseca, he’s become the heartbeat of a Lyon side that values the “sting-less” recycling of possession. European football expert Andy Brassell highlighted just how much Fonseca staked on the Englishman during a recent chat with talkSPORT.

“Tyler Morton is a huge part of that because he was someone who [Lyon manager Paulo] Fonseca was adamant about,” Brassell explained. “He said, ‘We absolutely must get him.’ He’s a player with a specific use—keeping the ball moving in the attacking half and taking the sting out of the game. Liverpool sold him for £15m; he must be worth three times that now.”

‘It wasn’t about ability’ – Morton’s honest Slot admission

For England U-21 international, the move to France wasn’t just about a new challenge it was about finding the belief he felt was lacking during the Reds title-winning campaign. Despite showing flashes of brilliance in cup competitions, the midfielder rarely found himself as more than a peripheral figure in Slot’s Premier League plans.

Speaking with refreshing honesty about his final months Morton suggested that his exit was a matter of “trust” rather than his actual level on the pitch.

“I think [Slot] thought I was a good player, but I don’t feel the trust was there as much,” Morton admitted. “In my opinion, the limited opportunities were down to trust and not ability. I personally disagreed with the amount of game time I got, but that was out of my control. I did everything I could.”

The Michael Edwards safety net: a 20% silver lining

While fans might grumble about seeing a homegrown talent thrive elsewhere while the current midfield looks a little leggy, Liverpool’s recruitment team now spearheaded by Richard Hughes did ensure the club wouldn’t be left entirely empty-handed.

The Reds reportedly tucked a 20% sell-on clause into the deal that took Morton to the Groupama Stadium. If Brassell’s valuation is correct and Morton is indeed pushing the £45m mark, Liverpool could be looking at a nearly £10m windfall should Lyon decide to cash in.

It’s a classic Anfield move: protecting the bottom line even when a decision on the pitch looks increasingly complicated. Whether that financial cushion makes up for the loss of a player who could have offered Slot the “intelligence” he’s currently searching for, however, remains a very different debate.

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