Where do Newcastle need to strengthen this summer?
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BBC Sport's Newcastle United reporter Ciaran Kelly will be answering a selection of the questions you have sent in throughout Wednesday.
Liam asked: What positions do you think we need to sign in the summer window?
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Ciaran answered: Where to start?
A new goalkeeper is right at the top of my list, while at least one full-back will be needed.
Throw in a technical central midfielder and a prolific striker and, suddenly, I'm already hitting a nine-figure spend. Gulp.
That's before even taking departures into account, and the gaps that would need to be filled.
Take a long-serving player like Fabian Schar. He may be 34 and entering the final months of his contract, but Newcastle would still have to pay a reasonable fee to find a worthy replacement, even if it is a younger player capable of one day filling the defender's boots.
So do they hand the Swiss another deal or truly overhaul the squad?
It is not hard to envisage a one in, one out policy this summer.
Newcastle are going to have to be smart with their trading to generate the sorts of funds to enable the club to strengthen the spine of the team, which has to be the priority.
That carries an element of risk when moving on one or two key players, but Newcastle have to become good sellers as well as good buyers moving forward.
They can't afford for a saga to rumble on in the way the Alexander Isak affair did last summer or get to a position where they are having to race against the clock to sell the talented Elliot Anderson and Yankuba Minteh to avoid a breach of financial rules like in 2023.
They have to be strategic.
[Getty Images]Ed and Lara both asked: How likely is it that Sandro Tonali will leave?
Ciaran answered: Nothing is cast in stone.
But if you were to push me on it, right now, I would put Tonali in the top two blue-chip players most likely to depart Newcastle this summer.
It's important to note that head coach Eddie Howe has repeatedly made it clear that the Italian is "totally committed" - and I don't doubt that.
Tonali gave an entirely reasonable response earlier this season when he said he was just thinking year by year rather than looking too far ahead.
However, his agent, Giuseppe Riso, has never been so outspoken about his client's future during the entirety of his time at Newcastle.
That does not go unnoticed.
My mind also casts back to an interview Tonali did around this time a year ago with Sky Sports.
He repeatedly made it clear how Newcastle "needed" to qualify for the Champions League before his side secured a top-five finish.
This is the stage Tonali relishes, having previously reached the semi-finals of the competition with AC Milan in 2023, and, like Isak before him, he will want to compete for the biggest prizes in the game as he approaches his peak years.
Newcastle are, obviously, not in a place to do so yet, but the club remains in a very strong position with regards to Tonali.
The 25-year-old effectively has more than four years to run on his contract if, as expected, Newcastle trigger a 12-month extension.
Given the fees midfielders of his age, experience and profile command, Newcastle would stand to make a real profit on the £52m they paid AC Milan if a suitor firms up their interest.
Otherwise what is the point?
No wonder chief executive David Hopkinson made it clear this week that any players who depart will do so "on our terms".
Come back to this page later for parts two and three of the Q&A, which will look at subjects such as Howe's future and the revenue gap to the top clubs.