Bargain recruit Dame N’Doye could prove a saviour for Hull City Nick Ames It is unrealistic to expect one player’s feats can guarantee his club Premier League safety, a fact Hull City supporters were reminded of when Sunderland’s Jack Rodwell bundled in what may yet be a vital second-half equaliser at the KC Stadium on Tuesday. However, Dame N’Doye is giving it a try and his cutely improvised opener, his third goal in as many starts for the home team, added to the feeling that Steve Bruce’s deadline-day brinkmanship may have brought Hull the most important signing of their present Premier League stint. Bruce was prepared to play a risky game in courting N’Doye, who had joined up with Senegal for the Africa Cup of Nations by the time negotiations with his former club Lokomotiv Moscow began in mid-January. There were no deals in the offing for any other centre-forwards and certainly no other balls in the air when, a few hours after the window had officially closed at 11pm on 2 February, all parties finally concluded matters at a meeting in Paris. N’Doye’s presence had serendipitously been guaranteed by an early exit in Equatorial Guinea, ruling out any need for further-flung travel for those involved, and Hull had their man. Any last-minute glitches and a Hull side that had lost 10 of their previous 14 league games, scoring only seven times, would likely be in far deeper trouble now. In the event, Hull have lost only once since N’Doye’s arrival. He has been eased in gently, starting in his three home games but coming off the bench at Manchester City and Stoke, and his early impact underlines that the right January signing can make a difference that resounds for years – even if the impact on the goalscoring charts is short-term. The five goals from Christophe Dugarry that helped haul Birmingham clear of relegation trouble in 2003, the January transfer window’s first year, are the first example of a winter quick fix that worked. If N’Doye’s form continues then he will be a good bet to see out his two-and-a-half-year contract but it is a curiosity that, having just turned 30, he is only a year younger than the Dugarry who virtually walked on water at St Andrew’s but had been viewed as a spent force after disappointing in a second spell at Bordeaux. However, careers are often defined by well-timed momentum and it is remarkable to think N’Doye was still representing Jeanne d’Arc, back then the Senegalese league’s leading force but nowadays barely a going concern, at the age of 21. The Qatari club Al-Sadd gave him a first move abroad but it was at FC Copenhagen, via modest spells at Académica de Coimbra, Panathinaikos and OFI Crete, that he settled and, between 2009 and 2012, scored 93 goals in 154 appearances. There was little likelihood of his equalling that record over two and a half seasons in Russia but N’Doye continued to score frequently and has since backed up the impression long held by Bruce – who had followed him closely when in charge at Sunderland – that, at nearly 6ft 1in and with a respectable turn of pace, his physical attributes would be a sufficient platform for his finishing ability in the Premier League. He has to keep it up now and maybe there is a lesson in the form of his sometime Senegal strike partner Papiss Cissé, another relatively late developer whose immediate impact after moving to Newcastle in January 2012 was astonishing – 13 goals in all shapes and sizes in 14 games – but preceded a two-year trough from which he has only recently emerged. It is highly unusual for a player’s shock value to last more than a few weeks or months but far from a singular occurrence for him to become lost in the toiling mediocrity of a side constantly scraping to avoid the bottom three. There is an argument N’Doye’s longer-term form is not of huge consequence to Hull. They were not spending an eight-figure sum on a younger, relatively unproven option such as, say, Abel Hernández; January is rarely the time for that and instead Hull cut a deal that said plenty for the player’s willingness to leave Lokomotiv Moscow six months before the end of his contract. “I’ve never known of a player who has taken a bigger wage cut than Dame,” said Bruce of N’Doye, who some sources suggest earned as much as £80,000 a week in Russia. A low transfer fee of around £3m, a manageable wage and a relatively short contract combine to mean that N’Doye’s contribution will have justified the outlay in spades should Hull, who were 18th when he arrived, stay up again. Would it matter if, in an age where joined-up thinking is nearly impossible for those at the wrong end of the table, he faded from view after that? N’Doye would certainly care and, while football increasingly attempts to sand down the rough edges of its young prospects’ career paths, it is heartening to see a genuinely talented individual in the autumn of his career arrive in the Premier League via the most circuitous of routes. And perhaps it is positive, too, to see Hull bide their time and play the January transfer window in exactly the manner for which – for better or for worse – it was intended. http://www.theguardian.com/football...-ndoye-hull-city-steve-bruce?CMP=share_btn_tw
Decent article that..let's hope he's right. I've only seen him play on telly..what do the live crowd think of him ?
Well goals are a strikers stock in trade and they are handsomely rewarded for, after some false dawns looks like City may have found one that doesn't contravene The Trades Description Act. 3 in 3 & long may it continue
He's pretty fast and sharp and looks like he's enjoying his football here. His goal last night was a great piece of improvisation as it flashed into the net in front of us in the south stand. It was good to read an extremely good account of him in a national newspaper too. .
Working on the theory that our Irish players all seemed to gel well and play better together, I'm hoping that N'Doye gets even better once Diame is playing again. If this does happen what are our chances of getting Cisse or Diouf for next season?
If it continues we stay up it's that simple as we only need 8 to 9 points from the remaining 10 games.
A top quality balanced piece that. I particularly liked the assertion that 'so what if he's a flash in the pan?' He's cost little in terms of initial outlay, he's on a manageable wage for a contract of a manageable length. If we stay up this year it doesnt really matter what he does next year. He's not a blow your socks off signing, but he was a very sensible one. Hats off to whoever did the deal. Actually, that begs a question - who is it without a CEO in place? Ehab?
Did anybody read the comments in the article? There is one saying he doesn't pay his child maintenance etc. Hope it aint true.
I would suggest its a load of bollocks, she doesn't even know what team he plays for. The delusional old cow thinks he plays for the mythical Hull Tigers. Few screws loose I reckon.
Well not really. Swansea spent a ****load on Bony - wasnt he their record signing? - he was in his mid-20s and he was highly sought after. We signed N'Doye for relative peanuts, in terms of age he's regarded as the wrong side of his peak and we were apparently the only club after him. I'd actually suggest the only similarity is their continent of birth.
I sincerely hope so. What a striker Bony is. N'Doye doesnt have his physicality but he really looks like the goal grabber we've needed and he puts in a shift. Excellent in the air too and is a double threat with Jelavic on those balls into the box. What a great acquisition by Bruce. His goals could be the difference in keeping us up.
Which begs the question why would she be using a Canadian lawyer to pursue a case against a guy who was in Denmark and Russia?
If we stay up I dont see that being to much of a problem. I doubt we sell him like we did Long (12 mill) as that put us in a pretty dire situation striking wise. I would think it would take quite a bit more than the amount we sold Long for to purchase him.