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    Adam Hammill Article

    Thought some of you might like to read this, I copied the article from the paper as I've not seen it posted online. Taken from yesterdays Scottish Sunday Times.

    Hammill Tiger by Simon Buckland
    On-Loan Liverpool winger Adam Hammill has added fight to his abundant skill to aid Dunfermiline's battle to beat the drop.

    The house rule of getting a team away from the relegation trapdoor is to send football out the window. Results are ground out the ugly way, the pretty stuff is what caused all this trouble in the first place the standard rationale. The very last thing you do in such dire circumstances is sign an untried teenaged winger on loan and attempt to turn him from a self-confessed showpony into a workhorse. This is what manager Stephen Kenny did, however, when he introduced Adam Hammill to Dunfermiline from Liverpool.

    It is Thursday lunchtime at Dunfermiline's Pitreavie training complex and Hammill is obliging a photographer by running though his extensive tricks repertoire with a ball. He walks across the pitch transferring it from one foot to another without breaking stride; he flicks it up into the air, traps it on the back of his neck and lets it roll onto his thigh. Nobody at Liverpool has ever doubted what Hammill can do with a ball. It is what he was failing to do without it that was the concern. Being at Dunfermiline is helping to resolve Hammill's problem, just as he is alleviating those of the Fife club.

    The mutually beneficial arrangement started with Kenny watching Hammill at Wrexham playing for Liverpool reserves against their Sheffield Utd counterparts. Hammill's representatives had been speaking with Liverpool about a possible January loan deal for several months and, when Kenny made his interest known, it was the Anfield club who effectively chose Dunfermiline for him. Hammill wasn't unwilling, but had his doubts about the over-physical image the Scottish game has south of the border. Kenny had reservations of his own when he collected Hammill from the airport, commenting to the still boyish-looking player, as he led him to his car, that he though his younger brother had turned up instead.

    The concerns of player and manager alike have, happily, been misplaced with a loan deal that has exceeded the expecations of both. Hammill has been instrumental in adding a creative edge to Dunfermiline which has seen them gradually close the gap on St Mirren at the bottom and still find time to reach the Scottish Cup final against Celtic later this month. At Liverpool reserves, Hammill admits, he too often played for himself, perhaps unwittingly. Being at Dunfermiline has given him a cause. Something to fight for other than his own future: that of others.

    "When you're in the reserves at Liverpool your're wanting to impress and I think I overdid it by trying to be too individual at times," says Hammill, "You try to do that bit extra to make people watch you and say, "Wow, look at that", but here I've learned there's no place for that. Extravagant little flights don't really work in your own half, you've got to be workmanlike and solid. It's not all about you, as long as we win I don't really care. Since I've come here I've matured and become a team player. Working with Stephen Kenny has helped me a lot. It's worked wonders for me as a player and brought me on as a person as well.

    "I think Liverpool will see a big difference in my attitude and commitment because it wasn't always there with the reserves. It wasn't that I couldn't be bothered, I just became a bit lackadaisical. It's been an eye-opener coming to Dunfermiline and a real taste of what football's about. Joe Cole's the perfect example for me. If I got a tape of him playing at West Ham I think it would be similar to how I was before coming to Dunfermiline. Looking at him at Chelsea now, he tracks back and defends, which I never used to do when I was younger. Here it's the least expected of you."

    Hammill was playing for a local under-nines team at the age of just six when Liverpool first took note of him and invited him on a trial. He wasn't old enough to make the association with the club more formal, but did so a year later and, unsurprisingly perhaps, of all those youngsters involved with the club at that time he is the only one to still be there. "Since I was seven, I've seen hundreds of kids come and go", says Hammill. "It's hard when you see someone go, but it's every man for himself at that stage, you're playing for a professional contract with the club that you love. A few of them have dropped out of football completely. You do feel sorry for them, but you're still glad it's not you."

    At Liverpool's Academy, the biggest influence on Hammill has been its now retired director, Steve Heighway., a former winger himself. Hammill texted all the Liverpool players involved in the recent FA Youth Cup victory over Manchester United at Old TRafford, as they had done him after Dunfermiline reached Hampden. "I'm a year above them now, but it's a fitting way for Steve to leave," says Hammill. "I've done a lot of training with him behind the scenes. I never played left midfield until I was 15, Steve basically converted me from playing in the hole because he saw my potential."

    Dunfermiline, who meet Motherwell tomorrow, have already mooted the prospect of extending Hammill's loan arrangement into next season. The 19-year-old's preference, however, will be to return to Liverpool. Asked when he believes he will be ready to challenge for the first team, he is categoric. "I want to do it next year. Many nove I've reached the level they wanted. I'm just hoping for the chance, if Rafa (Benitez, the manager) gives me that, I think I can justify it. I'm not saying I could be a regular, but maybe coming off the bench.

    "A Liverpool debut would mean the world to me. I've always been a massive Rreds fan. You get allocated two tickets for home games and while some lads only go to the big ones, I'm at them all. When I was sitting on the Kop as a kid I used to tihnk to myself 'This is the level I want to play at and this is the team I want to play for'. To be able to achieve that, I'd do anything. I'm not saying I was a whild child at school, but I just didn't like going. I had my eyes set on football, Liverpool is a massive club, if they said to me, 'You'll have to wait 10 years for your chance', I would, just to be able to play for them."

    Should Benitez decide Hammill is still an unfinished product he would happily go out on loan again next term, though, be it to Dunfermiline or elsewhere. "This has toughened me up, definitely," he adds. "Down south it's not perceived as a footballing league, but there are a number of teams here that are good on the ball with a lot of undiscovered talent. Players like Scott Brown (at Hibernian) could easily make it down south. I've been targeted in a few games, but if you take a kick you just have to get on with it."

    Hammill accepts it is harder than ever for a player like to him to make it at Liverpool. Whatever happens next, however, he senses being at Dunfermiline will have made it easier for him to achieve it. "I idolise Steven Gerrard and he's been though the same Academy system as me. All the lads look to him and Jamie Carragher because it shows if you've got the ability, yuo're capable of getting there," says Hammill. "If you're born with ability, it's about developing it and not wasting it."

    Kennany has taught his willing pupil all the right things to say at his Dunfermiline finishing school of hard knocks.

    #2
    Cheers for that - an interesting read.
    It'll be interesting to see what Rafa has in store for him.
    Just when I discovered the meaning of life, they changed it

    Comment


      #3
      Thanks for posting that

      He says all the right things and has obviously developed during his loan, whether Rafa will consider him for next season now that we can afford almost anyone remains to be seen.

      I have only seen Hammill in highlights clips so can't really judge him, but it would be great to have another lad from the Academy become a regular 1st teamer over the next few years.

      Comment


        #4
        He is NOT ready to walk into the first team IMO.

        Good prospect though.
        ...
        Don't take life too seriously or you'll never get out alive.

        Comment


          #5
          He puts in more at Dunfermline than Gonzo does with us, and I bet had the roles been reversed and Gonzo gone up there on loan then he would not have made a success of it and would have been sent back packing quickly.

          Oh - and the spelling for a Sunday paper was atrocious! Did it really get published as it is?
          http://www.retroreds.co.uk/

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by lfc4ever View Post
            He puts in more at Dunfermline than Gonzo does with us, and I bet had the roles been reversed and Gonzo gone up there on loan then he would not have made a success of it and would have been sent back packing quickly.

            Oh - and the spelling for a Sunday paper was atrocious! Did it really get published as it is?
            I think he may have typed some or all of it.
            Bill shankly to Tommy Smith after he'd turned up for training with a bandaged knee:
            'Take that poof bandage off, and what do you mean YOUR knee, it's LIVERPOOL'S knee !'

            "Sorry, boss, I should have kept my legs together," said Lawrence. "No, Tommy, your mother should have kept her legs together!," replied Shankly.

            * After Tommy Lawrence had let in a fluke goal between his legs

            Comment


              #7
              thanks for posting it big footy
              Bill shankly to Tommy Smith after he'd turned up for training with a bandaged knee:
              'Take that poof bandage off, and what do you mean YOUR knee, it's LIVERPOOL'S knee !'

              "Sorry, boss, I should have kept my legs together," said Lawrence. "No, Tommy, your mother should have kept her legs together!," replied Shankly.

              * After Tommy Lawrence had let in a fluke goal between his legs

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by lfc4ever View Post
                He puts in more at Dunfermline than Gonzo does with us, and I bet had the roles been reversed and Gonzo gone up there on loan then he would not have made a success of it and would have been sent back packing quickly.

                Oh - and the spelling for a Sunday paper was atrocious! Did it really get published as it is?
                I believe bigfooty said they had to type it out themselves which probably explains the spelling errors.

                Cheers bigfooty though it was much appreciated.
                "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
                -- William Blake

                Comment


                  #9
                  Yeah I couldn't find it online so I copied it. Was touch typing but not really paying attention so might be a few mistakes in there.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by bigfooty View Post
                    Yeah I couldn't find it online so I copied it. Was touch typing but not really paying attention so might be a few mistakes in there.
                    Excellent work then, your copied is different from my interpretation, so apols for the dig!
                    http://www.retroreds.co.uk/

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I reckon that Hammill should be sent out on loan to a club like Bolton, Birmingham, Sheff Utd next season and let him play every week for one of those teams. Rafa could then judge for himself and see if he has what it takes to play in the Prem for liverpool. We would also be doing the right thing by the player himself in that if it is decided that he would not be up to playing for liverpool on a regular basis, then he is in the shop window and it would be possible for another club to buy him for 1 or 2 million.

                      This is the system i would like to see implemented at liverpool. Look at the case of richie partridge a few years ago. In ireland, he was regarded as being a better player than both robbie keane and damien duff at underage level. He went out on loan to coventry and was their best player for the season that he was there (a path followed the following year by stephen warnock) but then partridge came back, never broke into the lfc team and then effectively fell off the radar. I have no doubt that he could be playing for somebody like man city week in week out had he left say 6 months after returning from his loan....

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Much appreciated bigfooty

                        Hammill has got the talent from what I've seen, and it now seems he has the mentality too. I don't want to see him go out on loan to lower league clubs now, and not for more than the first half of next season at a high level club. He should be getting sub appearances for us soon and seeing how it goes from there.
                        Like blood on iron

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Next season, disregarding possible arrivals and departures for the moment, we'll have Kewell, Gonzalez, Leto, Garcia, Riise, Aurelio and Hammill who can all play on the left-wing. Assuming that Riise and Aurelio will play only at left-back, there would still need to be a couple of departures for Hammill to get a look in.

                          He'd be better off going on loan again next season. Personally, I'd like to see him go to Man City. They have no wingers apart from a 35yold (?) Trevor Sinclair, no squad and no money with which to build one (unless they get taken over in time for next season). He'd be perfect for them and they'd be perfect for him.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by lfc4ever View Post
                            Excellent work then, your copied is different from my interpretation, so apols for the dig!
                            Jesus Del - give the guy a break!
                            Just when I discovered the meaning of life, they changed it

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Hammill setup Dunfermiline's first goal, leading 2-0 at the mo.

                              Comment

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