#PLStories- Antonio Conte and Bryan Gil on Tottenham move and future at the club #THFC

Bryan Gil
Bryan Gil

Tottenham need to make a big decision over the future of Bryan Gil this summer less than a year after the Spaniard walked through the doors at Hotspur Way. Spurs had tracked the 21-year-old winger for some time as he built a reputation as one of the most promising young players in Spain, his loan move from Sevilla to Eibar bringing him to the attention of many watching scouts.  Gil was sent off to Valencia on loan until the end of the season, albeit without any option to sign him permanently. However, that move would have proved something of a climbdown for managing director of football Fabio Paratici, who had brought in the young Spaniard among his first group of new signings that summer. Conte then increased that awkwardness by suggesting after Gil had departed back to Spain that the due diligence had not been done in knowing whether the player was suited to the Premier League.

Antonio Conte said: “You know that I like to tell the truth and for sure we’re talking about a really good player in Gil, because he has good quality and he understands football quickly. In this moment, for sure this league is very tough. This league is different. If you compare this league with other leagues, you play another sport here. For this reason when you go to sign a new player, you have to consider many aspects. Not only one aspect, if he shoots well or makes an assist, you have to consider a lot of situations because this league is very difficult. You can be good with quality. You can be a creative player, but at the same time you have to be strong physically. You have to run a lot, to be resilient. The impact of this league is not simple. It’s not simple. For this reason, the market, before signing a player, you have to check many aspects and not going on emotional things. This is very important and I hope I transferred my thoughts to my club because I repeat, I have my vision. I’m here to try to help my club to improve. In my experiences in the past, I have built good structure, good teams that have lasted over time. Also without me, also without me. It means maybe if I tell something and have a vision, I see the situation. Here we need to build, we need to build a good structure and create a good foundation. It will be very important to not make mistakes in the future, because in this moment many teams are higher than us and for this reason, to catch up with them, we have to reduce the mistakes. We have to reduce them, have a vision and follow this line.”

On his part, Gil admitted that the training sessions and the football at Tottenham were tough for him to adapt to and even though he gained weight it was not enough.

Bryan Gil said: “In the Premier League, training sessions are very physical, very hard, and it has helped me not to notice fatigue now. It is very noticeable, really. It is a slightly higher level of intensity. I physically noticed it. The adaptation for me was difficult. It is a very physical football, back and forth. Being there has been good for me. I am more mature. I changed habits like eating, I had a chef at home and I gained two kilos. Even so, I noticed that it was not enough for the physical level that exists in the Premier League.”

Gil’s Valencia loan has had its highs and lows. He impressed from the off after returning to Spain and was a key figure in helping the team reach the Copa del Rey final. At one point he had the fans singing his name and calling on him to stay. That final brought penalty shoot-out heartbreak for Gil against Real Betis and then a hip problem saw his minutes dwindle in the season’s final weeks. In all he played 17 games for Valencia, three less than he did for Spurs, but 12 of them were starts. So what next for the talented young winger? On the eve of that Copa del Rey final a month ago, he told Spanish publication that he believes he can adapt to English football when speaking about Spurs.

Bryan Gil said: “It’s hard because it’s the first time you go out to live in another country, with another language. The pace in England is a bit higher, it takes a bit more physicality and it’s hard, but I think I’ll get used to it. It is a very broad squad [at Spurs], with very good players, they are showing it with a very good winning streak that has placed fourth in the Premier League and they have very top players. They can afford to give [Conte] confidence, letting players like Lo Celso, Ndombele or me play on loan and still keep winning. Which is what Tottenham has shown so far, that they are a very competitive team and that they are at an incredible level.”

On his future,

Bryan Gil added: “Nobody knows what can happen tomorrow and it will be decided in the summer is the only thing that I can say.”

Unless Gil spends the next month transforming himself into his compatriot Adama Traore, the likelihood is that Conte’s opinion on the 21-year-old’s ability to cope with the physical nature of the Premier League is unlikely to change.

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