Welsh Wonder Woodburn Will Deal With The Noise, Says Liverpool Teammate

Ben Woodburn can cope with the hype surrounding his Liverpool breakththrough – according to clubmate Divock Origi.

Welsh youngster Woodburn became the club’s youngest scorer at the age of 17 years and 45 days, beating Michael Owen’s record by 98 days, with a goal in the EFL Cup quarter-final win over Leeds on Tuesday.

It was a moment that paraded his rich talent to a wider audience and also underlined why many Wales fans want Chris Coleman to give Woodburn a full cap before England lay claim to the Chester-born player.

But Origi – still only 21 himself – believes Woodburn has the temperament to manage the expectations that are now being placed upon the Wales U19 star.

“To be honest, he looks like a very down to earth guy but you could see the emotion in his eyes,” Origi  said.

“I’m very happy for him because scoring at this age at Anfield I think is a huge boost for him.

“He still has to learn but I think he is in the perfect environment because we all want to help each other.

“You can’t imagine a better manager to develop young players so it is all good for him and the other youngsters.

“I think on the human side of managing he (Jurgen Klopp) knows how to handle a group and he knows how to handle players.

“He has a very good understanding of football and these are all things that are very important.

“He has already proved that he can make players big so this is the perfect environment and Liverpool is growing so hopefully they (younger players) can grow with Liverpool here with the project.”

Origi knows what it is like to be under the glare of the spotlight as he arrived at Anfield after a £10million move from Lille, while he also led the line for Belgium as a 19-year-old in the knockout stages of the 2014 World Cup.

While it may not quite be on the scale Woodburn is likely to face after writing his name into the record books, Origi offered some words of advice on how to cope with the expectation.

“Honestly you have to just (put) passion in it,” he said. “When you show that, you have the qualities and you try to learn because you can’t just coach yourself everything.

“You have to cope with it by working, working, working. That makes you calm and confident.

“This is a big club and you have expectations on you so of course there is pressure, but when you know that you have worked hard and given it your all there is nothing more that you can do.

“When you relax a little then you have regrets. From the moment I came here I’ve never had regrets and that is one thing that makes me calm.

“For him it is most important that he enjoys the game, he tries to learn, to learn to make steps.

“This is an age you can make a lot of steps really quickly. I think it is all on him but he has the quality. I hope that we can see more of him in the future.”

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *