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Eddie Howe has said Ryan Fraser proved his commitment to Bournemouth in Saturday’s 2-1 Premier League win over Aston Villa .
Fraser, who is out of contract in the summer, irked fans this week after admitting playing for the team in the first half of the season was not his priority as he concentrated on his own future.
The Scotland international, linked with a move to Arsenal , admitted his mistake and put in a wholehearted performance in the vital victory over Villa, which moved the Cherries out of the bottom three.
Howe thanked the fans for their support of Fraser and sympathised with his winger.
“Ryan is an incredible talent, he is a great lad,” Howe said. “Ryan wants to do well, he wants to play for the team and the club.
50 biggest January transfersShow all 52 1 /5250 biggest January transfers 50 biggest January transfers 50 most expensive January transfers Click through the gallery to see the biggest deals, steals and flops in history.
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50 biggest January transfers 50. Paco Alcacer (£19.4m) Borussia Dortmund to Villarreal (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 49. Enzo Perez (£19.5m) Benfica to Valencia (2015)
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50 biggest January transfers 45= Yohan Cabaye (£20m) Newcastle to Paris Saint-Germain (2014)
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50 biggest January transfers 45= Odion Ighalo (£20m) Watford to Changchun Yatai (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 45= Morgan Schneiderlin (£20m) Manchester United to Everton (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 45= Theo Walcott (£20m) Arsenal to Everton (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 44. Lucas Tousart (£20.3m) Lyon to Hertha Berlin (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 42= Nemanja Matic (£21m) Benfica to Chelsea (2014)
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50 biggest January transfers 42= Miguel Almiron (£21m) Atlanta to Newcastle (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 40= David Luiz (£21.5m) Benfica to Chelsea (2011)
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50 biggest January transfers 40= Stanislav Lobotka (£21.5m) Celta Vigo to Napoli (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 39. Sander Berge (£22m) Genk to Sheffield United (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 38. Paco Alcacer (£22.7m) Barcelona to Borussia Dortmund (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 37. Luis Suarez (£22.8m) Ajax to Liverpool (2011)
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50 biggest January transfers 36. Krzysztof Piatek (£22.8m) AC Milan to Hertha Berlin (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 35. Juan Cuadrado (£23.3m) Fiorentina to Chelsea (2015)
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50 biggest January transfers 31= Ramires (£25m) Chelsea to Jiangsu Suning (2016)
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50 biggest January transfers 31= Dimitri Payet (£25m) West Ham to Marseille (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 31= Steven Bergwijn (£25m) PSV to Tottenham (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 31= Lucas Moura (£25m) Paris Saint-Germain to Tottenham (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 30. Goncalo Guedes (£25.5m) Benfica to Paris Saint-Germain (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 29. Reinier (£25.6m) Flamengo to Real Madrid (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 28= Gabriel Jesus (£27m) Palmeiras to Manchester City (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 28= Cenk Tosun (£27m) Besiktas to Everton (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 27. Wilfried Bony (£27.5m) Swansea to Manchester City (2015)
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50 biggest January transfers 26. Inigo Martinez (£28m) Real Sociedad to Athletic Club (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 25. Dejan Kulusevski (£29.8m) Atalanta to Juventus (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 24. Giovani Lo Celso (£30m) Real Betis to Tottenham (2020)
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50 biggest January transfers 23. Willian (£30m) Anzhi Makhachkala to Chelsea (2013)
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50 biggest January transfers 22. Krysztof Piatek (£30.9m) Genoa to AC Milan (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 21. Lucas Paqueta (£31.4m) Flamengo to AC Milan (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 19= Shoya Nakijima (£31.5m) Portimonense to Al-Duhail (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 19= Edin Dzeko (£31.5m) Wolfsburg to Manchester City (2011)
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50 biggest January transfers 18. Julian Draxler (£34.1m) Wolfsburg to Paris Saint-Germain (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 17. Leandro Paredes (£34.7m) Zenit to Paris Saint-Germain (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 16. Andy Carroll (£35m) Newcastle to Liverpool (2011)
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50 biggest January transfers 15. Cedric Bakambu (£35.3m) Villarreal to Beijing Guoan (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 14. Jackson Martinez (£35.7m) Atletico Madrid to Guangzhou Evergrande (2016)
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50 biggest January transfers 13. Juan Mata (£37.1m) Chelsea to Manchester United (2014)
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50 biggest January transfers 12. Lucas Moura (£38m) Sao Paulo to PSG (2013)
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50 biggest January transfers 11. Alex Teixeira (£38.5m) Shakhtar Donetsk to Jiangsu Suning (2016)
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50 biggest January transfers 10. Paulinho (£44.2m) Barcelona to Guangzhou Evergrande (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 9. Bruno Fernandes Sporting to Manchester United (£46.5m)
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50 biggest January transfers 8. Fernando Torres (£50m) Liverpool to Chelsea (2011)
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50 biggest January transfers 7. Oscar (£52m) Chelsea to Shanghai SIPG (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 6. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (£56m) Borussia Dortmund to Arsenal (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 5. Diego Costa (£57m) Chelsea to Atletico Madrid (2017)
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50 biggest January transfers 4. Aymeric Laporte (£57.2m) Athletic Club to Manchester City (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 3. Christian Pulisic (£57.5m) Borussia Dortmund to Chelsea (2019)
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50 biggest January transfers 2. Virgil van Dijk (£75m) Southampton to Liverpool (2018)
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50 biggest January transfers 1. Philippe Coutinho (£106m) Liverpool to Barcelona (2018)
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“The fans were brilliant with him and he was very good in return, he showed how important he is.
“You work with [players] every day and you see their personalities. You know them as people.
“When you see something that has maybe come out the wrong way and he ends up getting criticised, you feel for the lad sometimes, certain players and certain situations. It was nice to see him come out with a good performance.”
Eddie Howe and Ryan Fraser embrace after the full-time whistle (AFC Bournemouth via Getty Images) First-half goals from Philip Billing and Nathan Ake won it for Bournemouth, though after Jefferson Lerma was sent off, Mbwana Samatta made a game of it for Villa.
Samatta scored on his Premier League debut and in the process became the first Tanzanian to net in the division.
“That was my dream, always when I was a kid, until today,” he told the club’s official website.
“It’s a dream come true and for everybody in Tanzania it was a dream to see a Tanzanian player play in the Premier League. But when you lose a game you cannot be happy, because, as a group, we have to win together and lose together.”
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