Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”

Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”

Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”

Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”

Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”

Loan lifts Wilson’s spirits

admin

Wilson made his ninth Liverpool appearance in a Carling Cup win over Exeter in August but that has proved to be his sole outing for Kenny Dalglish’s side this season.

The former Rangers defender, who left Ibrox in July 2010, joined Blackpool on loan in January and has since played eight games, with an FA Cup tie against Everton proving the only defeat so far.

“It’s been great,” Wilson said.

“I think I was maybe going a bit stale at Liverpool. I was playing reserve games but you want to be playing in front of crowds every week.

“Blackpool came at the right time for me. I’ve had eight games since the turn of the year and I feel good. I feel fit, I feel confident and I’m enjoying where I am at the moment.

“As long as you’re out playing games you have the chance to impress people but I want to do the best I can for Blackpool.

“Hopefully if I’m doing that, it catches someone’s eye at Liverpool.”

Wilson quickly made himself a regular at Rangers in his one and only season in the Ibrox first team and he admits he needed the new challenge at Blackpool, who are fourth in the npower Championship.

“I knew it was a tough league before going there but I’ve been surprised by how physically demanding it is,” Wilson said.

“I think I need that as a centre-half. I just turned 20 at the end of the year.

“This is the time I need to be playing games and really developing. The Championship is a great league to do that in.”

Wilson has won five full caps but he returned to the under-21 set-up for the away qualifiers against Luxembourg and Holland, both of which Scotland won.

Scotland are unbeaten in four games and one point behind the Dutch ahead of the St Mirren Park clash after ending their opponents’ 100% record with a 2-1 victory in Nijmegen in November.

Wilson said: “That game is gone, this game is the most important one.

“I’m sure they will want to come here and prove a point to us and we can only be ready for that.

“We did well over there and we’re confident we can do it again. But we need to go in with the right frame of mind.

“We know they’re going to be good and we know they’re going to have the ball. But they had a lot of the ball over there and we managed to play our own game on the counter-attack and got the goals at the right time.”