FINIAL NEWS: Bruno Guimaraes and the £52 million Italian were both beaten by Sean Longstaff in

Sandro Tonali is struggling in his new home and Eddie Howe must work out how best to use him… Sean Longstaff outshone both the £52m Italian and Bruno Guimaraes in Newcastle’s draw at San Siro

Sandro Tonali said this week that he felt lost after leaving AC Milan for Newcastle. He is yet to find himself.

There have been flashes — and a brilliant debut fuelled by adrenalin — but, for now, the search intensifies for the player that Eddie Howe was convinced is the midfield upgrade his team needs.

Sandro Tonali reveals Newcastle struggles and explains viral Wetherspoons  trip - Mirror Online

Tonali will be given time to adapt to the Premier League, of course, but the Champions League at the San Siro should have been his stage. He has shone in these conditions before, leading his boyhood club to the semi-finals last season

He was given the noisiest of welcomes on his return, but the performance that followed was subdued. Maybe the emotion of it all left him drained, for his running was not as hard as it should have been and his cunning was also lacking. He was withdrawn on 72 minutes — again, to much applause — but that was because of his history.

The future is Howe’s concern. The boss has a selection problem now: which of Tonali and Bruno Guimaraes does he leave out? Together, they are not working, and the man they were signed to replace in Howe’s strongest XI outperformed both here.

Sean Longstaff was Newcastle’s best midfielder. As a unit, though, they are not functioning, and have not since the 5-1 opening-day win over Aston Villa.

When Tonali and Guimaraes sat next to each other on the team’s flight to the United States in July, there was much excitement given the pedigree of the pair. But their partnership remains grounded.

Sean Longstaff was Newcastle’s best midfielder. As a unit, though, they are not functioning, and have not since the 5-1 opening-day win over Aston Villa.

Newcastle enloquece con Bruno Guimarães y Sandro Tonali - AS.com

When Tonali and Guimaraes sat next to each other on the team’s flight to the United States in July, there was much excitement given the pedigree of the pair. But their partnership remains grounded.

But maybe it is that a piece of Tonali’s heart remains at the San Siro. It was telling when he opened his pre-match press conference with those revelations of feeling lost and struggling to find his place in his new home.

Where is his place in the team? It was on the left of midfield here, but he was not signed to charge down wings, the domain in which he found himself most often last night.

There were nice touches — he is a talented and classy player — but Newcastle needed a dominator this summer, not a decorator. Tonali needs to discover that authority on Tyneside.

 

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