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  • John Fleck’s career seems to have been spent trying to fulfil potential. Finally, the Sheffield

  • United man seems to be doing just that.

  • Five Premier League goals and two assists from midfield by the end of January was a

  • decent return by anyone’s standards, but for a player who not so long ago seemed destined

  • to play out his prime years in League One, Fleck’s seamless adjustment to the top level

  • has been nothing short of remarkable.

  • The subject of an unsuccessful £4 million bid from West Ham United a year ago just as

  • the January window was about to close, the 28-year-old’s form has been such that his

  • value in the transfer market has increased exponentially.

  • Not bad for a player who arrived on a free transfer in Chris Wilder’s maiden summer

  • at the helm in 2016.

  • Three-and-a-half years later, both are excelling in the Premier League and Fleck has become

  • an even more important cog in the United machine since Wilder moved away from playing a No

  • 10 behind two strikers in favour of a flat three-man midfield.

  • The new role grants Fleck licence to get forward much more — a point underlined by a goals

  • tally that is already a personal best for a season. No wonder Wilder is so keen to tie

  • the Scotland international down to a longer contract, with his current deal set to expire

  • next summer.

  • He has been incredible,” the United manager says about a player once dubbedthe new

  • Wayne Rooneyafter making his competitive debut for Rangers at the tender age of 16.

  • By embracing every level he has played at, he has moved forward each time. He also

  • has a wand of a left peg and when he hits the ball, it stays hit. Proper power.”

  • That kind of praise feels long overdue, especially for those who remember the hype surrounding

  • him in those early days at Rangers.

  • A year or so after making his first team debut for the Glasgow giants at 15 on a pre-season

  • tour of Germany came the notable accolade of being the youngest player to feature in

  • a senior final in Britain. That winner’s medal, after coming on for the final five

  • minutes of the 2008 Scottish Cup final victory over Queen of the South, was expected to be

  • the first of many.

  • The reality, however, was very different. He did enjoy a couple of decent runs in the

  • Rangers first team in 2009 and then again 18 or so months later. But, by the summer

  • of 2011, it had become clear that a spell away from Ibrox would be in his best interests.

  • Sheffield United offered a route out of Glasgow but a mix-up with the paperwork as the minutes

  • clicked down towards the end of the transfer window eventually scuppered the move. Fleck

  • left Rangers for good the following summer in the wake of their financial collapse.

  • Four years at Coventry City, by then mired in crisis, followed, before Wilder brought

  • Fleck to Yorkshire soon after succeeding Nigel Adkins at Bramall Lane.

  • The early signs weren’t overly encouraging. Fleck struggled with the running during his

  • first pre-season training camp with Wilder vividly recalling the Scotgasping for

  • breathin one demanding session.

  • Now, though, the United manager says Fleckjust goes and goes and goes”. Those energy

  • levels have helped him get forward regularly enough to create 30 chances for otherssecond

  • highest in the squad behind Norwoodand have 17 attempts on goal of his own. Fleck’s

  • shooting accuracy of 64.7 per cent is the highest among Wilder’s players.

  • All this points to a career finally starting to resemble the one expected all those years

  • ago when Fleck was coming through at Rangers.

  • Recognition from Scotland, long overdue in the eyes of Sheffield United supporters, arrived

  • last autumn with a first senior call-up. His debut came in a Euro 2020 qualifying defeat

  • to Russia in Moscow.

  • One man who has been following Fleck’s progress with interest ever since those early comparisons

  • with Rooney is former Sheffield United assistant manager Stuart McCall. As Gordon Strachan’s

  • right-hand man with the national team, he kept a keen eye on all those hoping to make

  • the breakthrough at international level.

  • “I remember watching John play for Scotland Under-16s at Scunthorpe,” McCall, a five-time

  • title winner at Ibrox as a player and later appointed their manager, told The Athletic.

  • England won quite comfortably because they were more powerful and that bit stronger.

  • We did not have the physicality and were blown away, in truth.

  • But, to me”, continues McCall, “he was the best player on the pitch. He was only

  • young but there was a real player in there, no doubt about that.

  • “I have followed his career ever since. What I most like about him (now) is (that)

  • he dictates and dominates games. Not everyone is capable of doing that in the Premier League.”

  • One of those United player who did not last the journey between the divisions is James

  • Wilson, now at Ipswich Town. He was one of Wilder’s first signings in the same summer

  • Fleck arrived from Coventry.

  • Flecky always looked a good player,” the Welsh defender told The Athletic. “He

  • was a big part of the team that won promotion.

  • Watching Flecky score goals and get all this praise is no surprise to me. It might

  • be to those who have not been familiar with what has been happening at Sheffield United

  • but not me. Flecky is a special player and it is great to see things going so well for

  • him.”

  • Chris Hussey, another who moved to Bramall Lane the same summer as Fleck but moved on

  • after a year, agrees. “He was no different back then to what he is now,” says the 31-year-old,

  • now with Cheltenham Town. “Quiet and just wanting to get on with his job with the minimum

  • of fuss.”

  • Fleck, for his part, admits feeling his time at Sheffield United has flown by.

  • Those days in League One seem far away now,” he says. “But it is only two to

  • three years ago. We have come such a long way in a short period of time.

  • Now part of the international fold under Steve Clarke, Fleck has a chance to make history

  • in that arena, too. Not since the 1998 World Cup have Scotland qualified for a major tournament,

  • but March will bring a chance to book a place at Euro 2020 via the play-offs; a home semi-final

  • against Israel, with the winners to visit Norway or Serbia five days later for a spot

  • in the finals.

John Fleck’s career seems to have been spent trying to fulfil potential. Finally, the Sheffield

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