With meager few grains of sand left in the top of the hourglass tracking the time left in this transfer window, plenty associated with Premier League clubs will be on edge up until Wednesday’s 11 p.m. deadline.

For supporters, one eye is kept on social media and the other on their television screens, as yellow-clad presenters manically discuss potential deals. It’s a stressful experience, especially if the club you follow has left it late to make key adjustments to the squad; just imagine how testing a day it must be for players potentially in limbo.

Indeed, on the cusp of September, not knowing where you’ll be playing your football for the foreseeable future must be unsettling. Here are five players from the Premier League set to keep their mobile in hand on Wednesday.

1. Jack Wilshere, Arsenal

While former England boss Roy Hodgson may have chosen to ignore his problems, for Jack Wilshere, the last year has been torrid.

Injury issues punctured his first-team chances at the Emirates Stadium once again in 2015-16 and although he was taken to France in the summer to the UEFA European Championship as part of the Three Lions’ squad, his displays were befitting of a footballer with just 141 minutes of league football under his belt.

Wilshere must have been concerned when Arsenal spent big on a deep-lying, dynamic, left-sided midfielder in Granit Xhaka too. Now, according to Sky Sports News, manager Arsene Wenger wants the England man to leave on loan for the remainder of the season.

It’ll be a peculiar move for Wilshere, who was expected to be a linchpin in the Gunners midfield at this point in his career. A temporary switch would be a jolt to his system too; at 24 years old, he’s no longer a bright prospect, but a player who should be seizing control of Premier League games.

Wilshere’s potential has always been a crutch—no pun intended—for his backers, but Wenger looks to have swept it away with this bold decision. A strong season on loan in terms of form and fitness could save the midfielder’s Arsenal career; a continuation of his issues may prompt a more permanent move next summer.

2. Mamadou Sakho, Liverpool

Since Jurgen Klopp took over at Anfield in October 2015, he’s bewitched the Liverpool supporters. But if there’s one factor the club’s fanbase hasn’t wholeheartedly agreed with their boss on, it’s the status of centre-back Mamadou Sakho.

The Frenchman emerged as a favorite with the Kop last term with his aggressive style of defending, some key goals and peculiar social media activity. But Sakho has been told by the club he has to leave on loan before the deadline if he’s to save his Reds career, according to the Liverpool Echo.

Sakho’s endured a tough four months, as he was banned and then cleared by UEFA after testing positive for a banned substance. Klopp also sent the 26-year-old home from Liverpool’s pre-season training camp in the United States for a reported lack of professionalism.

SEE MORE: NBC Sports to broadcast Transfer Deadline Day Special on Wednesday

With Dejan Lovren, Ragnar Klavan and Joel Matip as current centre-back options, Liverpool would potentially be leaving themselves short should Sakho be ushered out. Nonetheless, it seems as though he has a lot to prove to the German coach before he figures in the first-team plans again.

Despite his problems, you sense Sakho won’t be short of suitors on deadline day, as he turned in some brilliant performances at the base of the Liverpool side in the previous campaign. With his Anfield career seemingly at a precarious point, it’s imperative he makes a considered decision over his temporary destination.

3. Bastian Schweinsteiger, Manchester United

Jose Mourinho’s predecessor at Manchester United, Louis van Gaal, seemed to be keen to make an example out of a big-name player at Old Trafford, drastically marginalising Victor Valdes from the squad. The new man seems to be doing something similar with Bastian Schweinsteiger.

Even with eight Bundesliga titles, one UEFA Champions League win and a World Cup triumph under his belt, Mourinho evidently sees no room for Schweinsteiger in his squad. The German has faced the ignominy of training with the team’s reserves and took to social media recently to suggest he’d be on the move.

But with the window of opportunity shortening, Schweinsteiger remains in the shadows at Manchester United. The man himself said he wouldn’t play for any other European clubs, narrowing his options even further; he will surely be encouraging offers from Major League Soccer clubs from across the Atlantic.

The midfielder’s career has been punctured by injury problems as of late, something that held him back during his debut term at Old Trafford. Nonetheless, in a division that’s a little slower in tempo and short of the Premier League’s quality, Schweinsteiger could still have a very big say on the result of football matches.

And while Mourinho may not value his traits, you sense there’ll be plenty of managers on the lookout for one of this generation’s most decorated footballers, not to mention someone who remains a very handy operator on the field.

4. Saido Berahino, West Bromwich Albion

In the early years of his Premier League career, West Bromwich Albion’s Saido Berahino seems to have been involved in as many transfer sagas as he has scored goals.

After links to Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool last summer—followed by an outburst from the player himself on social media when he didn’t get his move—Berahino now has just one year remaining on his contract with the Baggies. And yet, he remains at the Hawthorns.

The club looking the most likely to land the player this summer has been Stoke City, with a whopping £20 million fee mooted in the press. However, the 23-year-old’s hopes of a transfer seem to be in doubt after it was reported he jetted off on holiday in the days before Wednesday’s deadline.

With the Potters fielding Peter Crouch up top on Saturday, it’s clear they need to add to their goalscoring options. Berahino is a player that’d potentially thrive under Mark Hughes and while the Baggies would be delighted to keep him, another season like the last—when he was rotated in and out of the West Brom side by manager Tony Pulis—would be detrimental to his development.

The talent is there with Berahino, although you sense he needs consistency and clarity before he kicks on to the next level. A transfer, following so much speculation, would finally give him that.

5. Wilfried Bony, Manchester City

Unsurprising, Wilfried Bony doesn’t appear to be the kind of player Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola wants to lead the line at the Etihad Stadium and he’s likely to be shipped out.

In truth, whichever manager took over from Manuel Pellegrini at City this summer, Bony may have benefitted from a switch. Since joining the club in January 2015, the forward, who was a brutish and brilliant presence up top for Swansea City, has never been able to show his best.

Guardiola wants forwards who work hard, are mobile and versatile in where they can influence the game. Bony doesn’t possess any of those traits, although for the right club, who play a more fundamental brand of football, the Ivory Coast international could turn out to be a very handy signing.

He scored 25 goals in one-and-a-half Premier League seasons for the Welsh club and was seemingly getting better and better midway through his second campaign. His power, hold-up play and variety of goalscoring may have been scarcely seen at the Etihad Stadium, although at 27 years old, Bony’s best days are far from irretrievable.