Trent Alexander-Arnold on the rise: Why he can get better and better

By Adam Bate, Comment and Analysis @ghostgoal

Image: Trent Alexander-Arnold has been rewarded for a remarkable season for Liverpool

Trent Alexander-Arnold's amazing season just keeps on getting better. Into the Champions League final with Liverpool, the 19-year-old has now been called up to England's World Cup squad.

Last month Adam Bate assessed the reasons for his success, with the help of former Liverpool captain Phil Thompson...

It was the opening goal against Hoffenheim that convinced Phil Thompson. Trent Alexander-Arnold stood over the free-kick and curled it into the back of the net. "It was a big moment," the former Liverpool captain tells Sky Sports. "For him to take charge was quite something. To have that confidence, not to overrule, but to say leave this to me. They trusted him.

"Usually, when you are a young player coming into the side you kowtow to what the big boys tell you. I have been through that at Liverpool as a young player coming in. You know where you are in the pecking order. But for him to do that shows character and I like that in a player. He has got the cojones, as they call it now, to step up and take responsibility."

Not that everyone was surprised. Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson noted that it was "no coincidence" that Alexander-Arnold was the player taking the free-kick - he had assumed those duties for the U23 side when aged just 18. His manager Jurgen Klopp was quick to point out that "the goal is the same size" in senior football too.

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Gareth Southgate has revealed the 23-man England squad for the World Cup in Russia.

Nevertheless, Alexander-Arnold is still just a teenager in fledgling stages of his professional career. But after getting the better of Manchester City's Leroy Sane over two legs and impressing again against Roma, he is also now almost certain to be lining up for Liverpool in a Champions League final.

It has been an extraordinary rise, albeit one that echoes the progress of Liverpool full-backs from years gone by. Like Alexander-Arnold, Steve Nicol, then an uncapped young Scot, had made only a handful of appearances for the Reds prior to his breakthrough 1983/84 season that culminated in European Cup final glory against Roma.

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Rob Jones, meanwhile, was only four months and 17 league games into his own Liverpool career when he made his senior England debut against France at Wembley in 1992. Alexander-Arnold could yet eclipse them both. Phil Neal told Sky Sports he sees something of himself in the youngster. Jamie Carragher has tipped him to break his appearance record.

Alexander-Arnold says Jurgen Klopp is like a father figure to him and gives him the confidence to play and not worry about making mistakes.

With Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain also saying the sky is the limit and Klopp calling him incredible, it would be easy to get carried away, but the signs are that Alexander-Arnold remains remarkably level-headed. The feedback from a recent Sky Sports shoot was that he was unusually conscientious, humble and keen to get it right - much like on the pitch.

"You can never be satisfied with anything in football because there's always someone trying to stop you getting to where you want to go," he told Sky Sports. "If you take your foot off the gas there's always someone who wants your spot. So it's important you don't do that. Every day when I was told I was going to train with the first team I'd to take it day by day.

"The coaching staff at Melwood helped because they didn't tell us that we were going to be here for four weeks. They'd say, 'Yeah, you're coming back tomorrow'. Every day you'd go on the pitch not knowing if you'd be back at the academy or staying. So you left everything out there. That's what I've really taken with me, train every day like it's your last session."

Alexander-Arnold says he has achieved things he did not expect this season

The attitude certainly seems spot on. But what exactly is it about him that has impressed everyone so much? Firstly, he has the physical capabilities to play in a position that Klopp describes as "one of the most important in world football" because of the need to defend and attack. "He is the modern-day full-back," says Thompson.

It is not just that Alexander-Arnold gets into the position, he is able to execute when he gets there. His delivery from wide right has caught the eye, with some of the crosses reminiscent of his idol Steven Gerrard. "His final ball is terrific and he is learning when to deliver," Thompson adds. "It is that early ball played in between goalkeeper and defence."

This willingness to sling the ball into the box with quality is a key trait that marks him out even among his peers. Alexander-Arnold has put in almost five crosses from open play per 90 minutes in the Premier League this season. That is more than any other full-back or wing-back at a top-six club, including Andrew Robertson out on the other flank. He is a threat.

Image: Alexander-Arnold has enjoyed a breakout season

Of course, he also has a defensive responsibility and has been particularly impressive in the Champions League. No defender in the competition has made more combined tackles and interceptions than Alexander-Arnold. But having been partially culpable for goals conceded at Crystal Palace and Manchester United recently, there is still much to learn.

"He is an exceptional talent but he absolutely has to learn not to get caught the wrong side," says Thompson. "We saw that against Manchester United. It is stock-in-trade defending. As a full-back, you sweep round. But he got caught ball watching. His body shape was not correct. You have to be tucked in enough to provide the cover.

"That will be a big learning experience because opponents will look at that. Good players will go running into that space between the centre-back and the full-back. He is getting better at it and I suppose the good thing about it is that the best way to learn quickly is to make mistakes and get punished for them because you do not forget that.

"It is tough for young players from the academy. You don't get the time to make those mistakes. The big clubs will buy so you don't get trusted. Chelsea or Manchester City, they are not going to trust many academy players to come through because they want instant success. Most importantly, the managers want it because they are not staying a long time.

Trent has a good manager who trusts him and I think that is a big thing. If you have that trust it makes you play better.
Phil Thompson

"But Trent has a good manager who trusts him and I think that is a big thing. If you have that trust it makes you play better because you have someone who believes in you. Hopefully, Klopp is different because he has that vision. He has a project at Liverpool that he wants to fulfil and that is when you see young lads getting their opportunity."

The player himself - a midfielder with Liverpool's youth team - still insists he does not really have a preferred position but perhaps it is the flexibility of someone else - Manchester City's Kyle Walker - that could open the next door for Alexander-Arnold. Walker's recent position switch for England, being used in a back three for the recent friendlies against Netherlands and Italy, changes things a little.

It is thrilling to imagine what could follow for this teenager. As it stands, Trent Alexander-Arnold could have a Champions League winners' medal around his neck on May 26 and be heading off to represent his country at the World Cup. What a season that would be.

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