QPR did complete the signing of Southampton winger Jason Puncheon on loan before the transfer window closed after all, the club has claimed.
It was Championship side Plymouth that took a chance on him, spending £250k to secure his signature in June 2008 but he would go onto appear on only seven occasions for the Pilgrims and actually played more than 50 times back with the MK Dons while he was at Home Park in three separate loan spells across three seasons.
He did enough there to earn another permanent move to a south coast club, Southampton this time, but again he failed to make the grade and by the middle of last season his relationship with the usually affable Saints boss Nigel Adkins had disintegrated to such an extent that he was allowed to leave the club on loan again. Ian Holloway took a chance on him, signing him for then Premiership side Blackpool, and he impressed despite their relegation scoring three goals in six starts and five sub appearances. He also spent time with Millwall. Blackpool were keen to tie up a deal for him this summer but couldn't agree a fee with Southampton who have held out for £1m despite not giving Puncheon a squad number and forcing him to train with their youth team.
Puncheon has signed a loan deal with Rangers until January.
"Yes he has had problems at other clubs, but when he was with us (Millwall) he was superb, we have been after him for a long time. Kenny Jackett rates him highly and I think he will surprise a lot of you. We went to £750,000 to sign him, but refused the £1m asking price. Disregard what you hear if he likes where he is, he will be as good as swp, good luck." Kitkev
I’m not convinced by Puncheon as a Premiership player. He was reasonable last year for Blackpool in a brief loan spell, nothing more than that, and as I said when I wrote up the DJ Campbell signing it wasn’t hard for forwards to impress in that Blackpool team given the tactics of the team. Puncheon has always had a lot of potential, but he’s had good chances at decent clubs in the Championship like Southampton and Plymouth and he not only hasn’t succeeded, but he’s consistently fallen out with people while doing it.
Shaun Wright Phillips is a superb signing, but we’re not short of options for that side of our attack. Jamie Mackie is on his way back, Tommy Smith has started the season well, Akos Buzsaky likewise, Joey Barton has now arrived, Adel Taarabt can play there, Jay Bothroyd, DJ Campbell and so on and so on. It just seems to me that Puncheon isn’t as good as a lot of those players, and is already somewhat surplus to requirements. It’s a strange one, I look forward to seeing what Neil Warnock has in mind for him.
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