Mads Bidstrup’s failure to have prominence at Brentford saw the English club send him out on loan to FC Nordsjælland in January 2022.
Last summer, the Bees extended the 21-year-old’s temporary stay at Nordsjælland until the end of this season.
Operating in the middle of the pitch, the Brentford owned player has been a regular for the Danish club, featuring 17 times in all competitions this season. The midfielder is unsure about his long-term future at the Premier League side.
“The plan I have been told is that I will at least continue here at Nordsjælland until the summer, and then we will have to evaluate the whole thing again. But I found out that they [Brentford] have been really happy with my [performances in] autumn,” he said, as quoted by Tipsbladet.
The Denmark U21 international’s contract with Thomas Frank’s side lasts until 2024 and he doesn’t want to return to Brentford if he’s not going to have a prominent role.
“I think that the most important thing for me is that I am in a place where I feel that I can develop, where I feel comfortable and where I feel that there are people who trust my project and me as a player,” Bidstrup explained.
“Now, of course, the most important thing is to win the Danish championship and continue the momentum that we’re on. But it’s clear that I follow an insane amount of what’s happening over there, and then we have to decide what is the best for me and the best for Brentford this summer.”
Bidstrup will have a year left on his Brentford contract in the summer and it may be the last big opportunity for the Bees to cash in from his sale, if they decide not to hand him a new deal.
Reports in the Danish press have stated Nordsjælland’s league rivals, FC Copenhagen, are looking at the Brentford man and he’s responded to these links.
“There has been a lot of this with FCK [FC Copenhagen]. I haven’t really decided on that. I don’t really think it was relevant in relation to the fact that things have gone insanely well here. I’ve been insanely happy with it up here and I’m just looking forward to continuing with this project,” Bidstrup stressed.