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Leeds boss Farke details reasons sending Spence back to Tottenham

Leeds United boss Daniel Farke has explained releasing loanee Djed Spence back to Tottenham.

Spence's season-long loan was cut short this week.

"It's not for me to speak in public about what was missing or the weaknesses of Djed Spence because as long as I'm in charge I want us as a club to handle such a situation with class and style," said Farke on Friday.

"We say thanks a lot for your service and wish him all the best because he's a cool guy with lots of potential and a good kid with a great heart.

"In the summer we came here to bring new values and to create a new culture within the club and when we speak about a player if he's here permanently or on a loan deal we have expectations.

"These are important in several areas – the potential and quality of the player but also his professionalism, discipline, workload on and off the pitch and the soft skills, if he's positive, committed, good for the group and engaged.

"Our demands are very high and we don't differentiate between loan and permanent players. We are pretty picky. There is no player in the world who is perfect in all aspects. We have to decide who we want in the squad.

"We analysed what has happened in recent months and came to the decision it's for us as a club the right decision to end the loan."

He added: "I've always been careful on this because one thing is the quality and the potential of a player but I've always been on it to get good personalities and character as well. People desperate to defend the shirt, love the badge and give everything and also be professional and positive with good energy for the group, thinking more about the group than themselves.

"We were quite careful who we brought in during the summer and I think it's the reason why many of the signings worked out. We will keep going this way because we've got a good group and we don't want anything that distracts them."

Farke, however, also explained: "He came in pretty late and then to suffer an injury which kept him out of team training for eight-and-a-half weeks was also unlucky and no one can be blamed for that.

"When a player comes in on loan the first few weeks are important and if you're spending the first eight-and-a-half weeks training alone at different times it's not the easiest way to integrate to a group.

"Also something tragic happened in his private life and he had to stay on London for a few days. When he got back to fitness he had to help a bit on the left, where he hasn't played often in his career.

"These lads don't need sympathy because they lead a privileged life and earn so much money but sometimes it can be difficult and unlucky."

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