Premier League 2023-24 review: signings of the season
Arsenal's Kai Havertz collects the ball from the ne. Pic: Zac Goodwin/PA Wire.
The easiest way to explain Riceâs contribution to Arsenal is that he has somehow made ÂŁ105m look cheap. The 25-year-old â who has missed just one game this season in all competitions â has transformed the Gunnersâ midfield and his defensive nous, tenacity and tactical intelligence has provided freedom and room for others â particularly Martin Ădegaard â to shine. Only Bukayo Saka and Martin Ădegaard have more assists in the league for Arsenal this season â and part of the reason Arsenal have been so effective from set pieces is because of the quality of Riceâs delivery. He is a complete and elite box-to-box midfielder and a natural leader.
âAinât nobody, like Ross Barkley, makes me happy, makes me feel this wayâ. Luton fans might have the chant of the season â to the tune of Chaka Khanâs funky classic â for one of its standout players. Kenilworth Road looked like just the latest pit-stop in Barkleyâs sad decline, which had been steady since swapping the blue of Everton for Chelsea in 2018. But in a new deeper position and wearing the No 6 shirt, the 30-year-old has been a revelation. Luton managed to secure his signature on a free transfer, surely making him the bargain of the season. It helps that Barkley is at a club and under a manager where his talents are unique and revered. The bad news for the relegated Hatters is that they will surely face a fight to keep him this summer.
Life at Palace could hardly have got off to a worse start for the boy from Blackburn. Two days after signing for an initial ÂŁ18m, Wharton was brought on after 28 minutes with Palace 1-0 down away at rivals Brighton. Six minutes later Palace had conceded twice more, with Wharton guilty of losing possession for Brightonâs third. The Eagles lost 4-1 on that day in early February, but since then, the languid midfielder has started every match, and has been key to Palace becoming one of the most exciting teams in the league under Oliver Glasner. Such is the quality of Whartonâs passing, movement and positioning, Gareth Southgate is reportedly considering him for the Euros and Bayern Munich have recently been linked with a ÂŁ60m move, which would represent a threefold return for Palace in under four months. âHe has stepped up so quick,â said Glasner before Palaceâs 4-0 thrashing of Manchester United. âHis decision-making, his pre-orientation, his solutions with one or two touches are amazing.âÂ
There are a few impressive left-sided centre-backs that could have made this list â Manchester Cityâs Josko Gvardiol, Nottingham Forestâs Jeison Murillo, Aston Villaâs Pau Torres â but Van de Ven is perhaps the most exciting new central defender in the league since RĂșben Diasâ arrival in 2020. Voted Tottenhamâs player of the season by supporters this month despite missing three months through injury, Van de Ven already looks the finished product at the age of 23. The son of an undercover detective, the Dutch defender is hardly inconspicuous: standing 6â 4â tall, he is wonderfully aggressive on the ball and has an eye for goal too. Against Brentford in January, the ÂŁ34.5m signing clocked the highest-ever speed by a Premier League player since records began in 2020 â 23.22mph.
It feels like it was an eternity ago that Havertz swapped blue for red, signing for Arsenal from Chelsea last June for ÂŁ65m. Initially deployed as a meandering No 8 by Mikel Arteta (and even as a left-back for Germany in November), Havertz only scored once (a penalty) for his new club in his first 19 games and was widely doubted. But since becoming a false nine, the 24-year-old has been absolutely indispensable to the Gunners with his goals, link-up play, aerial threat and unselfish work rate â no Premier League striker has covered more ground per 90 minutes than Havertz. Without him, Arsenal would surely not have challenged for the title. The scary thing is that while Havertz is already an elite Champions League-winning forward with a wealth of experience, it still feel like there is still room for improvement. Waka waka.
Last summer, Palmer was linked with a loan move to Burnley. This summer, the Chelsea playmaker is off to the Euros with England as one of the most in-form players across Europe. Palmer, who turned 22 on 6 May, is only the third player in history with more than 30 goal involvements in a Premier League season while 21 years old or younger â after Robbie Fowler and Chris Sutton. From his relaxed style to his âColdâ Palmer celebrations, the Wythenshawe-born youngster oozes confidence and class, with some of his performances bordering on a joke, particularly his four-goal haul against Everton. When Palmer was too ill to face Arsenal last month, Mauricio Pochettino said it was âa good challenge for the teammatesâ to replace him. âThis is Chelsea Football Club, not Cole Palmer Football Clubâ, claimed the Blues manager. The result â 5-0 to the Gunners â suggests otherwise.




