After Josh Onomah's static campaign with Sheffield Wednesday last season, Tottenham Hotspur are reportedly looking to send the 22-year-old on loan again.

It is reported by Football Insider that Huddersfield Town have opened 'talks' with the North London side, but the Examiner believes the contrary.

Onomah has had previous Championship experience by making 49 appearances with the Owls and Aston Villa in the past two seasons.

Regardless of the conflicting reports, Huddersfield will be dealt a combination of positives and negatives if they were to sign the youngster this term on loan.

Pro: Hunger to impress Pochettino

Onomah will have the ultimate goal to impress his parent manager Mauricio Pochettinho and this will work to Huddersfield's benefit. The attacking midfielder could be on his last legs to do this, due to his injury-hit campaign last season and Spurs' growing desire to win trophies.

With this, they will need to know every player is good enough to compete at the highest level. Still at the age of 22, Onomah is by no means out of the chance to do this and Huddersfield could be the platform for him to show he is worthy of keeping.

The Argentinian has been patient with his current crop of players, as seen with Moussa Sissoko. One successful campaign with the recently relegated Huddersfield could be the moment Onomah turns his Tottenham career around.

Pro: A platform to grow and improve

Young players sometimes need the right culture, team and manager to prove what they are capable of. It was displayed fully at Derby County as Premier League loanee's, Harry Wilson and Mason Mount stole the show; and almost stole promotion with it.

While Onomah has never fully blossomed on loan so far, that could be changed in an instance under Jan Siewert who, like David Wagner and Jurgen Klopp, will likely transfer the mentality and style he learnt at Borussia Dortmund, to the Terriers. He could finally unlock Onomah's talent.

 Con: Worth the risk?

On the other hand, the free-for-all onslaught that the Championship has become, with the Premier League as the ultimate goal, it could be too risky to trust a player than has had two static loan spells in the division already.

He contributed to a goal every 268 minutes while at Villa, and it was to increase to 302 minutes at Hillsborough. The Terriers will be looking to bounce back from their disappointing Premier League season, and whether they can trust Onomah to help guide them, is a subject that they should be concerned with.

Con: Unsuitable for the bench

Another problem upon Onomah's potential arrival is whether both parties will feel comfortable with the role the player is given. Onomah will most likely be a backup attacking midfielder to Alex Pritchard, if he does not leave, and winger Adama Diakhaby.

Given the limitation of first-team opportunities potentially, Onomah may not be able to, again, prove himself with consistent game time. 39% of his Championship appearances have been from the bench so it could prove beneficial for the Terriers to look at alternatives, that do not involve a youth player spending time on the bench.