• ’It’s about a much bigger picture – a change of course for Southampton’ • Holland defender can be accepted by players and fans, argues Ralph Krueger

The Southampton chairman, Ralph Krueger, is adamant that Virgil van Dijk is “not for sale in this window” as keeping the defender is “the statement we need to make”.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest ‘We want to mature, we want to be a team that can create a much more attractive football,’ says Ralph Krueger Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

The future of Saints’ unsettled 26-year-old centre-back has proved one of the more turbulent transfer sagas of the summer. Southampton asked the Premier League to investigate an alleged illegal approach from Liverpool in June, leading the Reds to swiftly make a remarkable statement publicly dropping their interest in Van Dijk.

Speculation continues to link the Holland international with a move to the likes of Jürgen Klopp’s side and Premier League champions Chelsea, and the defender took matters into his own hands by handing in a transfer request last week.

Van Dijk has been training away from the main group as he attempts to force an exit, but Krueger has reiterated that the defender is not going anywhere. “Virgil is not for sale in this window and it’s not personal,” the chairman said, just days after the Gao family bought an 80% stake in the club. “It’s not about him, it’s about an overall much, much, much bigger picture – a change of course for Southampton.

“The first summer I was here five players went out and six went in, not counting academy. Second summer three went out, seven came in, and third summer five went out, five came in. Now it is one out and two in, and this is who we want to become.

“We want to mature, we want to be a team that can profit from synergies that create a much more attractive football and a better product for the fans, and gives us a chance to get back into Europe.

“That’s one player in this whole equation of 25 and it is the visible one, but for us it’s the principle and it’s the path and it’s the statement we need to make to get to a new space as a club. We are very, very adamant about carrying this through. The new partnership has completely and wholly backed our strategy and plan and on 1 September people will see how serious we were and are.”

It is a big statement from a club synonymous with seeing their best players leave on an annual basis. None of Southampton’s previous key players has gone as far as to make a public transfer request, yet Krueger believes Van Dijk can be integrated into the group and accepted, if not forgiven, by supporters.

“First of all, they have experienced it here before on multiple occasions and it hasn’t been a problem,” the former head coach of the National Hockey League’s Edmonton Oilers said. “I can go back to Morgan Schneiderlin in our first summer and I could list others, but let’s not do that. We’ve had other examples of that where it was no problem, so I don’t see that as a problem.”

Krueger praised “strong leader” Mauricio Pellegrino for the way he has dealt with the situation, saying the Saints manager has kept everybody focused on the job while dealing “very well” with Van Dijk as the pair continue to communicate “openly with each other”.

Rather than lose a key player, plans are afoot to strengthen the group further, before the end of the monthwith the Lazio defender Wesley Hoedt among those targeted. “We’re definitely not done,” Krueger said after Saints signed the Juventus midfielder Mario Lemina and the Lech Poznan defender Jan Bednarek.

“We’re looking at options but again we’re not in a position to just bring in anybody. It would have to be a player that would fit and tick all the boxes of our needs, not only short-term but long-term. Football is still active, the black box is buzzing.”