What a summer it is turning out to be for the romantics. First, David McGoldrick decided to head back to his boyhood club Notts County after leaving Derby and now Aaron Ramsey is set to rejoin Cardiff City, the club he left as a teenager for Arsenal. Theirs is a well-trodden path with mixed results for brave boys coming home. If Ramsey wants to review the history of such transactions, we have had an admittedly minor delve through the archive to see how others have done by going home. From Robbie Fowler to Billy Sharp, completing the journey, however circuitous, can be a appealing notion … but the realities can be different. Fowler, the boy from Toxteth, was incredible in the 90s at Liverpool. He was the golden child coming through the ranks, someone earmarked for the top, and he backed it up with goals in the Premier League to become a hero on the Kop. A tricky relationship with Géd Houllier resulted in him being sold to Leeds, but five years later God returned to Anfield, although he had lost some pace and dynamism. “I honestly feel like a kid waking up on Christmas morning every day now,” Fowler chirped. He was a bit-part player for 18 months before packing himself off to Cardiff with his best years long behind him. Then there is Willian, who was rather unhappy at Arsenal so decided to cheer himself by booking a flight to São Paulo and rejoining Corinthians a mere 14 years after leaving. “I want to thank the fans for their love,” he parped. “I will do everything to make the Corinthians fans happy.” He left a year later after a desperately poor time, which even resulted in him receiving threats. “The authorities tolerate this. I have learned one thing, that we cannot complain about what we tolerate,” Willian sighed. “I am here to say we are outraged by this situation. We have to join together to combat violence in football.” At least Fulham got a good deal out of it. Carlos Tévez went full circle too, coming back to help Boca Juniors win two titles before calling it quits. Sharp, meanwhile, has spent most of his career at Sheffield United after they originally deemed him not good enough. There is plenty of joy to be had by going back. Ramsey need not fear, however, because Cardiff are at a pretty low ebb after finishing 21st in the Championship last season, so it ought not get too much worse. He could have taken the easy option and headed to Saudi Arabia to pocket a load of coin, but went for the idealistic choice, the one that could fill his heart with warmth or, equally, break it. |