Jack Clarke joined Queens Park Rangers on-loan in January.

The 19-year-old has had a contested second season in the Championship. Last year he was one of the best young players in the division - he burst onto the scene with Marcelo Bielsa's Leeds United, making 24 appearances in the league and scoring twice.

He was so impressive and at such a young age that Tottenham Hotspur paid £10 million for him, and chose to loan him straight back to Leeds for this season.

Though in Bielsa's second bid for promotion, Clarke had dropped right down the pecking order and come the time of his Spurs return in January, he'd made just one substitute appearance in the Championship all season.

Jose Mourinho was keen for Clarke to find another, more involved loan-deal in the second-half of this season, and QPR beat a number of other Championship competitors to sign him until the end of the campaign.

QPR was said to be a preferred choice of Spurs, not only for it's proximity to the club but because of Mark Warburton. The ex-Brentford boss arrived at QPR last summer, and was tasked with bringing about a new generation of young stars at the club.

The early signs were hugely positive - QPR had a host of young players that showed potential last season, but Steve McClaren wasn't able to get the best out of them.

Warburton arrived and implemented his attacking-minded philosophy instantaneously, and that forward mentality has allowed the likes of Ebere Eze, Bright Osayi-Samuel, Ilias Chair and Ryan Manning amongst others to prosper.

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McClaren's QPR were boring, cowardly and simply dull to watch. But Warburton's are exciting, fearless and brilliant to watch at times - literally the polar opposite of the QPR of last season.

So having seen the progress that QPR's younger players had made in the first-half of the season under Warburton, Spurs wanted the same for Clarke.

He made his debut against no other than Leeds, playing the final 15-minutes as QPR claimed a surprise 1-0 win over Bielsa's side. He was then granted his first start for the club, and his first start of the season in the following FA Cup game against Sheffield Wednesday.

QPR lost 2-1 on what was a poor day out for the R's, and Clarke stood out as someone who really struggled. The occasion and the pressure seemed to get to him - fans were really keen for QPR to make good progress in the cup, but they faced a Wednesday side who'd just been beaten 5-0 at home by Blackburn Rovers.

Wednesday then had a point to prove, and they got through the QPR challenge with relative ease. Clarke hasn't started a game since, but has made three substitute appearances in the Championship, but without really garnering any attention in any.

He arrived at QPR as damaged goods - Clarke went from being one of the most anticipated talents to being one of the most seemingly overrated in the space of a year.

It's easy to forget that he's only 19-years-old, playing for a big European club in Spurs and trying to learn his trade in arguably the most compeitive league in the world.

Warburton would likely take him on-loan again next season if the option was there, and with several outgoings likely to happen at the club over the summer, he could yet prove himself with another season at QPR.