by mynameisred » Thu Jul 01, 2004 12:32 pm
Right for a start I respect everyones veiws on MO, however the peopel who claim he had a poor tournament are joking. He worked his socks of in all Englands games after all how the hell do you think that Rooney was able to have so much space and thus be so destructive. Baros has definite potential as obviuolsy does Rooney but until the day day I see the scoring figures to match MO they cannot be placed in his class. MO won the cup final against Arsenal on his own and he has provided our only real goal threat for England and Liverpool for at least two seasons. If you want the player to carry on in that way he is going to burn out soon and be of no use or worth to the club. Yes MO may have lost a yard of pace but that is down to the above, as the only goal threat especially for Liverpool he had to play even when not fully fit. If you want to find out what happens to even the greatest of players when they are forced to play before they are physically raedy I suggest you read J.Burns Hand of God, its astonishing the pressure and the lengths at which clubs go to and if you think because its Diego its not the same think again. We have put years on MO with the pressure and the way we play and I for one am glad that finally there are players around him at club and international level who can finally share that burden. If it means that MO is no longer in the spotlight and the plump scally grabs the headlines so be it. MO is a top class player, will always be and more importantly a model professional for the young lads in Liverpool to aspire to.
The best bit of advice on this thread is about a more creative midfield, Ive seen Rosiky talking about playing for us and he would be exactly what we need with Ballack alongside Stevie G in the centre Kewell and Rosiky, Cisse and Owen up front. Awesome.
P.S the only predictable thing about MO is the feeling you get when he has a chance, you just know he is gonna score. Thats why its such a big surprise when he actually misses.
Peace.
The man who came to merseyside from Newcastle, the man who says he's part of Liverpool as much as the Liver building. When he was needed Alan Kennedy was there. And with now just 8 minutes to go it could be that Alan Kennedy has made a little history.