Even now, you can detect his panic. Danny Ings tells the story of the day his career was given lift-off, but does so with a degree of trepidation.
Ings, 26, hates flying at the best of times, so you can imagine how he felt when the private jet he had boarded in Manchester on August 15 was buffeted by turbulence as it sped towards Southampton.
To make matters worse, this wasn’t a normal journey. It was a race against time, a trip to determine whether he could become a ‘proper’ Premier League player once again. Any type of delay and the ramifications, in all likelihood, would be another six months in the shadows.
‘Oh my God I was scared!’ says Ings. ‘It’s probably the bumpiest flight I have ever been on. There was a lot of turbulence. To make matters worse, it had arrived late to pick us up. I kept thinking, “Ugh! Is this going to happen?” We literally signed the deal sheets on the runway when we landed.
‘I didn’t want to get my hopes up just in case we had run out of time and I couldn’t get excited even when we were travelling down. David (Threlfall), my agent, had actually told me earlier in the window that it was going to come down to the last second.’
He was right. It was clear all summer Ings would leave Liverpool but his decision to sit tight until the end has reaped dividends. Here he is, back home in Southampton. He grew up in the city, dreaming of doing what his hero Matt Le Tissier did, and at long last his wish has come true.
Such was the fraught nature of deadline day, Ings signed an initial 12-month loan but the reality is he will not be going back to Anfield. His transfer will be made permanent next summer for £20million and, if he carries on as he has started, that fee will represent superb business.
A fresh start, after all, has proved invigorating. Liverpool would have been happy to keep Ings but, for his sanity, he had to leave. It’s all very well hearing praise for being professional and having an exemplary attitude but it means nothing to footballers if they don’t play.
This is not going to be an interview that dissects his time at Liverpool, which was punctured by two serious injuries.
His affinity for them is obvious and he departed having entered into a competition with Mohamed Salah as to who will score the most Premier League goals. Now there must be closure.
He knew that moment arrived when he watched his old team beat Paris Saint-Germain on TV without regret gnawing away. He didn’t even return to Anfield for last Saturday’s league game, instead he stayed in Southampton to do extra training to be ready for tomorrow’s trip to Wolves.
‘There is a part of me that will miss them, as Liverpool is a club of such magnitude,’ said Ings, as we talk at Southampton’s Staplewood HQ. ‘I was part of a squad that reached the Champions League final last year. But the feeling (of being important) is something I’ve craved for a long time.
‘I want to show people what I can do again.’
Those last words explain why, in his words, he ‘grabbed with both hands’ the No 9 jersey when it was offered to him. When he moved from Burnley to Liverpool in 2015, Ings picked No 28 as he felt he had to earn his spurs and to take one of the elite squad jerseys would have been presumptuous.
At St Mary’s however, there was no such hesitation. From the moment he saw it hanging in the dressing room ahead of his debut against Burnley, Ings knew it would be the perfect fit and three goals in five appearances provide vindication.
‘You know how hard I have worked to get to this moment,’ he said, referring to those endless, soul-destroying days in the gym when it felt as if the world was ending. ‘I feel like I have developed a lot, even though I have missed a lot of football. That’s why I took the No 9 shirt.’
A question for the future is whether he will wear an England shirt again. He finds this difficult to broach and his words should not be viewed as trumpeting his claims to be picked to face Spain and Croatia next month after some encouraging displays.
Yet Gareth Southgate is a firm admirer of Ings, the pair having worked closely together for a two-year period with the Under 21s. At a time when English strikers are in short supply, surely he knows what doors will open if he flourishes on the south coast.
‘There are a lot of unbelievable footballers in this country,’ said Ings. ‘They did so well in the World Cup and have really come on under Gareth, so it is going to be difficult to ever make a squad again. If one day it happens, I’ll be over the moon. That will almost feel like a great comeback story.’
The key word is comeback. England, you see, fills him with pride but it also triggers feelings of despair. The third anniversary of his one and only senior appearance in Lithuania is approaching but so, too, is the third anniversary of when he ruptured his anterior cruciate ligament
‘That was the highest point of my career, playing for England,’ he says. ‘That is the pinnacle for an English footballer, to represent your country.’
Has he ever watched that Euro 2016 qualifier, which England won 3-0, again?
‘No,’ he replies, his voice considerably lower. ‘I have watched my clips. It was a strange night. It was freezing cold on Astroturf.
‘I remember Alex Oxlade- Chamberlain scoring and celebrating with him. But because of what happened two days after, I’ve never gone back to that moment properly.’
His dad, Shayne, has his shirt and cap from the game — Ings laughs at the idea those souvenirs made up for him cancelling the fishing trip on the Solent the pair were supposed to go on before Roy Hodgson called him up — but, for now, he has no wish to look at them. He wants to look forward.
‘I don’t want to be a guy that has got one cap,’ he said. ‘I have had lots of hurdles to overcome and now feel I’ve got over the last hurdle. I’m just working as hard as I can now to try and get another moment someday. Hopefully one day it will happen. I’m back in a happy place.’
Danny Ings is promoting SportPesa, the Official Betting Partner of Southampton FC.
cepaceimnu
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I thought I'd seen Danny Ings somewhere before.
[image]
u need a better pair of eyes.
Zackvsco
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I thought I'd seen Danny Ings somewhere before.
Mageecolun
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Danny Ings plays & he scores, anyone who doubts his talent is stupid! It was a great move from Southampton & a wise move from Danny too.
lightfor
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So happy Danny Ings is doing well at Southampton. Great striker that's just been unlucky with injuries
Chinyerers
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Danny Ings has 3 goals in his first 5 PL games for Southampton, I’m glad he’s doing very well since asking for regular first team football we couldn’t give.
amicablea
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He's in good shape. I'm sure he would like to show that his time at Liverpool was unlucky.
kiss4
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Danny Ings are much more deserving of an England place than Welbeck.
Backyard
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Danny Ings to continue his good form, underrated
flash888
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Good to see Danny Ings scoring
Sangder
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Keep Ings fighting-fit throughout the season & the Saints will finish in the top-half.
Shuntamallett
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So pleased its working out for him there, gutted we let him go
Oxford
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Danny Ings over the next few weeks with a view to calling up the striker for the next England squad
Bigthree
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Danny Ings has a brain like Sheringham... Sooner or later he will get a chance
posilios
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Ings had to endure a nightmare flight to Southampton to complete loan deal Striker had a great affinity with Liverpool despite suffering two serious injuries
Hesslertown
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Danny Ings' decision to sit tight during transfer window was rewarded
oversb
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Love Danny gutted he left Liverpool they got a brillaint player and person
urately
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If Danny Ings scores 20+ premier league goals...is there any chance we can cancel the loan deal
NOher
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Magnificent play from Danny before the penalty. Feels so good to see him back to his best days!
Bensons
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nobody runs like Danny Ings
Robindon
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He chose "life in the shadows"
promised
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Good luck to him... coming back from 2 knee injuries is awesome in my humble opinion.... I had 1 knee op and never kicked a ball in anger again ( Mickey mouse level... nothing decent) Hope he has a good season.
oscillate
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Good luck to him. Nice guy who had an unlucky time with injuries. YNWA
tension
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Good for Southampton and if he carries on good for England.So unlucky at Liverpool,and when he finally got fit he had the holy trinity in front of him! Good luck Danny
Fordroad
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Good luck Danny Ings. I hope he continues to do well at Southampton.