A closer look at Federico Chiesa’s situation at Liverpool as he prepares to take the next step following his £12.5m move from Juventus last month.
Federico Chiesa’s first month at Liverpool has been characterised by a broad smile and questions on just when supporters might finally see him involved in real Anfield action. Having joined as a somewhat surprise addition to the squad in the closing days of the transfer window last month, the new man has been made to wait for the chance to show what he can do.
Arriving from Juventus in a deal worth up to £12.5m, the versatile frontman has been gently eased into his new surroundings, with a sensible and measured approach taken for several reasons.
Prior to Saturday’s substitute cameo in the 3-0 win over Bournemouth, Chiesa’s most recent meaningful contribution on a football pitch came in a defeat for Italy in late June, when the then European Championship holders were knocked out by Switzerland.
A late appearance came in his homeland last week as he emerged as a late sub in the 3-1 win at AC Milan in the Champions League for his Reds debut, but it was the 18-minute run-out at the weekend that gave fans a better idea of what he is all about.
The first taste, in fact, came within seconds of his arrival when a ball that dropped over his shoulder was immediately struck for a dipping, 25-yard volley that was held comfortably by goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga. It was a decent-enough strike and something of an early, direct statement that supporters immediately warmed to.
There was also a left-footed effort that hit the foot of the post before the offside flag was raised and if there was an understandable lack of match fitness, there was a pleasing intent about Chiesa’s business that have endeared further to a fanbase who have largely been impressed with just how delighted the former Juve star generally appears to be at signing for Liverpool.
“Hearing ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ for the first time from the bench was amazing,” Chiesa said after Saturday’s game. “It was amazing against Nottingham Forest but unfortunately we lost, but today was really amazing. I enjoyed every bit of it.
“I think I played seven minutes in Milan, not too much, but I was very, very happy to make my debut against Milan. Today I just had to be ready and when the coach told me to get in the game I was so happy. It was also a relief as I wanted to play here at Anfield.”
Having ticked an Anfield appearance off the to-do list, the 26-year-old now has the opportunity to really build on his opening weeks with West Ham United to come in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday night.
On the evidence so far, Arne Slot does not appear to be a head coach who will rotate for the sake of it but the chance to rest up several of his key men surely won’t be passed up when the holders begin their defence of the competition they have won more times than any other club this week.
A home tie against a struggling Hammers side – one who may have other priorities given the difficult start to life in London for manager Julen Lopetegui – might be an ideal time to bring in players whose minutes have been managed and marginalised so far this term.
Chiesa falls into that category having initially began his first training sessions at the AXA Centre with the club’s Academy contingent during the international break. The handful of eye-catching goals posted on the club’s official channels during those workouts pointed to his international class, but it will be on the pitch with the seniors that will really prove how shrewd the decision to bring him to the club is in the coming months and years.
Having signed one of the stars of Italian football at the age of 26 for the same £10m fee Red Bull Salzburg paid for young hopeful Bobby Clark, there is plenty of wisdom in the suggestions that Chiesa’s arrival could be an astute purchase.
Given his standing in the European game – and more acutely in his homeland – it would be a stretch to claim Richard Hughes was able to use his extensive contacts in Italian football to unearth Chiesa, but there is also little doubt that the sporting director’s broader knowledge of that market helped smooth the pathway and expedite the deal, which was largely arranged over the course of four days in late August.
The Reds have not enjoyed a fruitful history of signing players from Italy, with players like Alberto Aquilani, Mario Balotelli, Fabio Borini and Andrea Dossena producing winces of varying degrees for supporters who remember the struggles of each of that quartet.
That, however, bares little relevance to Chiesa beyond the aforementioned players being his compatriots and if there is to be one genuine question mark over the move, it’s whether he is able to reproduce the sort of form that saw him regularly touted at fees between the £60m and £80m mark just a handful of years ago.
“If you play for Liverpool it’s all smiles!” remarks Virgil van Dijk in reference to that beaming smile that has been perma-slapped on to the face of Chiesa seemingly since he touched down on Merseyside.
“He’s adapting to us, getting to know us personally and on the pitch as well and is a boy with a lot of quality, a big drive and wants to work for the team and they are the basic points you need as a Liverpool player. So far, so good but he is still learning.
“Maybe he should have scored today and it will be something he will be sad about not putting it away but overall he is a very good player and gives another good option for the team.
“If you want to be successful in different competitions we need a very good squad and now it’s time when we are rotating they have to perform and today showed; Darwin scored a fantastic goal (against Bournemouth).
“You see the boys who came in after being rested in midweek produced again and that’s what we need, it’s a sign of a very good football team. It’s the start of the season so there’s a lot to happen but it’s a good sign.”
Progress on a hugely promising career was halted significantly in January 2022 when he needed to reconstruct the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee after suffering the injury in a 4-3 win over Roma. Chiesa went under the knife in Innsbruck, Austria and it kept him sidelined until early November, when he was introduced as a substitute in a Champions League game against Paris Saint-Germain.
The lengthy ovation reserved for him by Bianconeri fans that night spoke to the high regard he was held in at the time but the school of thought that such an injury might hamper a player whose game is based on explosive speed and mobility persisted, and it would be fair to say he has yet to hit the heights of that form showed in 2021 when Juventus committed to paying €60m to Fiorentina.
Liverpool, however, don’t share those concerns, with it being argued that injuries of that nature are becoming more commonplace in football and those on the inside at Anfield feel they have an international player who is about to enter his peak years on a four-year deal. He made close to 40 appearances last term in all competitions, which helps ease concerns over lingering fitness problems.
A key facet of the deal is also the idea that Slot does not need Chiesa to hit the ground running instantly. Whereas Balotelli and Aquilani were signed as replacements for world-class players like Luis Suarez and Xabi Alonso, Chiesa is arriving to supplement a frontline already bursting at the seams with quality.
Liverpool’s front five rattled in 87 goals between them last term and have shared 10 between them so far this time out and Chiesa is not joining a club who need him to be a sure-fire hit straight away, even if that is obviously the hope.
With Mohamed Salah fixed in as the first-choice pick on the right side of the attack, Chiesa will instead be allowed to bide his time and get up to speed with what Slot wants up top and the demands of Premier League football, which is typically seen as more intense than Serie A.
But as the Carabao Cup prepares to roll into focus for Liverpool in the coming days, expect Chiesa’s almost trademark smile to be on full display if he is given the nod by Slot.