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Jamie Carragher says Newcastle should sell wantaway striker Alexander Isak before Monday's transfer deadline, comparing his situation to that of Fernando Torres at Liverpool.
Isak has been subject of a £110m bid from Liverpool this summer, with the club also signing Hugo Ekitike after Newcastle had been strongly linked with the striker as a potential replacement for Isak.
The Sweden international has not been involved with the first team since the end of last season, instead training away from his team-mates with his future unresolved.
In a twist of fate - and with a week to go until Deadline Day - Newcastle and Liverpool face each other on Monday Night Football, and Sky Sports' Carragher offered his views on Isak's situation ahead of the game.
"I don't think a deal was ever going to get done before this game.
Newcastle head coach Eddie Howe says he is still hopeful of seeing Alexander Isak line up in a Newcastle shirt again but says the situation is still far from ideal.
Liverpool head coach Arne Slot responds to questions over the club's pursuit of Newcastle striker Alexander Isak, after a £110m bid was turned down earlier in the window
As soon as our level dropped, people like Torres, [Javier] Mascherano and [Xabi] Alonso - world-class players - wanted to leave because there was too much of a gap between where they are as players and where the club are.
"So it is not just me having a go at Newcastle and wanting their player to come to Liverpool, I have experience of that situation and when you have a player who does not want to be there it can be an absolute nightmare."
Former Arsenal striker Henry called Isak one the Premier League's best strikers right now, and agreed with Carragher that it is best if he leaves Newcastle.
"He's up there with, if not the, best striker in the league at the moment," he said on Monday Night Football.
"He's a great striker
What he can give you off and on the ball, the way he finishes, but when you have a player in this type of situation where he wants to leave, it's good that people are getting upset, because when a player is not good and a club wants him out, I don't see anyone crying for the player.
"We never know the whole story, but all I say is that you cannot put yourself in a situation when you don't come to train.
"In an ideal world, the best thing for him and for everybody is if he can leave, but I also do believe that when someone makes a mistake, if he apologises, then we can move on.
"If he scores goals and he starts to play the same way he played last year, the Newcastle fans will be OK about it."