Samuel Edozie's route to gaining first-team importance is more complicated than the Saints' trail to winning ways. A solution for Edozie is around the corner if he hears a loanee's experience.
Not winning league games is a premature warning for failing badly on the division's title. But for clubs hustling in the unambitious lower half of the table, as well as rallying a neat and tidy scoreline for opponents except one night, the situation is more manageable than thought.
Mid-table clubs throughout the stretches of European football will willingly carry this domestic routine, but it's Italian side Genoa's day-to-day for now. Putting on the Southampton lens, past loanee Albert Gronbaek is catching up on individual rhythm with such a dependable bunch behind his back.
The playmaker's share of goods can be on the way, but playing time is a field Gronbaek can level from his St. Mary's days in one competitive trip. Don't feel alone, Saints, as there are many eager faces among us to know how a frequent matchday outcast pulled it all.
Edozie can treat his unlucky scenario with Gronbaek's wisdom
As quoted by Ekstra Bladet, Gronbaek resorted to saying: "It's about being much more careful when choosing a club. This summer, I was very careful, thorough and very sure that the next step should be a place where I could get stability."
If the Southampton faithful were to handover these lines to any present star, then Samuel Edozie would be the majority's chosen one.
His Belgian dream has hit a standstill, even after he parried away the top-five division's doors for this year. Plus, if Club Brugge are over from their mutual Edozie urge, then the wideman will have to wear the wounds of his rushed judgment.
Goals are still a lineup spot-saver but beating the fixtures backlog over forwards who have tackled more hardships than you from the go, is undeniably tough.