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Marli Salmon is quickly becoming one of the most interesting defensive prospects at Arsenal, and there is a growing feeling around Hale End that he is a player with a real first-team future.
At just 16, Salmon has already done things that are unusual for a defender of his age. Young attackers often break through early because managers can give them minutes from the bench, let them play with freedom and accept a little chaos. Centre-backs are different. They are judged on concentration, positioning, duels, decision-making and how they respond to mistakes. That is why Mikel Arteta giving Salmon opportunities already says plenty about how highly Arsenal rate him.
Salmon is a centre-back who can also play at right-back, and that versatility is part of his appeal. He is tall, already physically impressive for his age, and comfortable enough on the ball to fit the way Arsenal want to build from the back. He is not just a defender who attacks headers and clears danger. He looks like a modern Arsenal defender: composed, brave in possession and willing to step forward when space opens.
His youth-team numbers also explain why the club are excited. Across Arsenal's academy sides this season, Salmon has been credited with around 25 to 30 appearances across U18, U19 and U21 football. That is a significant workload for someone still so young, especially in defensive roles where coaches are usually more cautious. He has played regularly in Premier League 2, featured in the UEFA Youth League and gained valuable minutes in the FA Youth Cup. He is not producing goals or assists, but that is not the point with him. His statistics are more about trust: starts, minutes, clean defensive performances and the fact he has been pushed above his age group.
That last point is key. Salmon has not simply been kept with players his own age. Arsenal have tested him. He has played U21 football as a schoolboy, which is a major sign of confidence from the academy staff. For a defender, being trusted against older, stronger and more experienced attackers is a far better indicator than raw numbers. If a 16-year-old centre-back can cope physically and tactically in those environments, clubs take notice.
Arteta clearly has. Salmon has spent a long time around the first-team environment, training with senior players and learning the standards required at London Colney. That matters. Arsenal's first-team group is intense, technical and tactically demanding. A young defender dropped into those sessions has to think quicker, pass sharper and defend with far less margin for error. The fact Salmon has continued to be included suggests he has not looked out of place.
His first-team involvement has only strengthened the hype. Arteta gave him minutes in senior competition, including a Champions League appearance against Club Brugge, making him one of Arsenal's youngest European debutants. He was also involved in FA Cup action, with Arteta publicly praising the young players after trusting them on a senior stage. For Salmon, those chances are huge. A teenage defender earning that kind of exposure under a manager as detail-obsessed as Arteta is not normal.
What makes Salmon one for the future is not one single standout trait. It is the combination. He has size, calmness, tactical intelligence, academy experience above his age group and the trust of a manager who does not hand out first-team minutes cheaply. Arsenal know they have a serious prospect.
There is still a long road ahead. Young defenders develop differently to forwards, and mistakes will come. Salmon will need more U21 football, more senior exposure and probably patience before becoming a genuine Premier League option. But the signs are very strong.
EYEFOOTBALL RATING
Current Ability: 34/50
Potential Ability: 42/50
Written by Ketan Patel
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