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Liverpool Football Club - General Discussion

Postby stmichael » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:00 pm

how would playing gerrard playing in the middle of midfield have got us out of this mess? since we went on this shocking run after losing to fiorientina he's only played been fully fit once and that was against chelsea. he missed sunderland, lyon (away), man united and fulham and went off injured against lyon at home. he came on for 25 minutes against brum, clearly still wasn't fully fit against man city and was still struggling yesterday.

whether you think they offer enough going forward or not, to blame our midfield for our problems is plain daft considering a blind man can see that our problems lie in the defence and the conceding of daft goals.
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Postby tubby » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:00 pm

s@int wrote:
bavlondon wrote:Give me an example of a top team mate not a shyte team that is now relegated from the premiership. You probably wont be able to come up with any becasue it doesn't work like that.

FFS If Rafa has been allowed to spend what he was initially promised we might have had that extra bit of creative flair we are lacking and we may well have found a better replacement for Alonso.

Yes Rafa has made some mistakes but so have the owners. They are the root of the problem, a problem that needs dealing with ahead of any pet peeves people have with our manager.

Spurs when Redknapp took over, Liverpool when Rafa took over.

Spurs were lying bottom when Redknapp took over, Liverpool were 4th but dead in the water (bit like now)when Rafa took over.   

A new manager revitalises players, whether he can then go on to maintain that depends on his ability as a manager.

Players get a fresh start, have to prove themselves again, get motivated, managers favourites get a shock and suddenly find themselves out the door.

To be honest Bav I don't believe if Rafa had been given another £100million would he have built the team of our dreams mate. He makes too many mistakes. Maybe just maybe if luck, injuries and refs all conspired to help us we may have won it once, but I don't believe we would ever have a team that won the league year on year with him. He makes too many changes for that. 

A new manager is not the answer to every prayer either, the right manager would bring fresh impetus but would still need to balance the team and the squad.

As I said before in Fagan's last year we won nothing, finished on 77 points (13 behind the winners). In Dalglish 's first season we did the double winning the league with 88 points 
and with only one buy. So with the same players we improved by 11 points and won a cup.

Ok Spurs is a good example. But they have a better squad man for man than us. Obviously that is Rafas fault for not buying better but im just saying it depends on the personal a lot too.

Do you thinkwith the right manager we can win the league? I think we are still lacking some serious quality all over. We need another established striker not to mention an actual right winger. Another centre half.
Last edited by tubby on Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Effes » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:01 pm

Good shout that s@int.
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Postby heimdall » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:03 pm

stmichael wrote:how would playing gerrard playing in the middle of midfield have got us out of this mess? since we went on this shocking run after losing to fiorientina he's only played been fully fit once and that was against chelsea. he missed sunderland, lyon (away), man united and fulham and went off injured against lyon at home. he came on for 25 minutes against brum, clearly still wasn't fully fit against man city and was still struggling yesterday.

whether you think they offer enough going forward or not, to blame our midfield for our problems is plain daft considering a blind man can see that our problems lie in the defence and the conceding of daft goals.

Well it was against Fiorentina that Rafa reverted to Lucas and Mascha in the middle and we have been mostly :censored: ever since. Stevie's injury has been a problem, but as has been mentioned, we should have been playing Aquaman more.
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Postby heimdall » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:05 pm

bavlondon wrote:
s@int wrote:
bavlondon wrote:Give me an example of a top team mate not a shyte team that is now relegated from the premiership. You probably wont be able to come up with any becasue it doesn't work like that.

FFS If Rafa has been allowed to spend what he was initially promised we might have had that extra bit of creative flair we are lacking and we may well have found a better replacement for Alonso.

Yes Rafa has made some mistakes but so have the owners. They are the root of the problem, a problem that needs dealing with ahead of any pet peeves people have with our manager.

Spurs when Redknapp took over, Liverpool when Rafa took over.

Spurs were lying bottom when Redknapp took over, Liverpool were 4th but dead in the water (bit like now)when Rafa took over.   

A new manager revitalises players, whether he can then go on to maintain that depends on his ability as a manager.

Players get a fresh start, have to prove themselves again, get motivated, managers favourites get a shock and suddenly find themselves out the door.

To be honest Bav I don't believe if Rafa had been given another £100million would he have built the team of our dreams mate. He makes too many mistakes. Maybe just maybe if luck, injuries and refs all conspired to help us we may have won it once, but I don't believe we would ever have a team that won the league year on year with him. He makes too many changes for that. 

A new manager is not the answer to every prayer either, the right manager would bring fresh impetus but would still need to balance the team and the squad.

As I said before in Fagan's last year we won nothing, finished on 77 points (13 behind the winners). In Dalglish 's first season we did the double winning the league with 88 points 
and with only one buy. So with the same players we improved by 11 points and won a cup.

Ok Spurs is a good example. But they have a better squad man for man than us. Obviously that is Rafas fault for not buying better but im just saying it depends on the personal a lot too.

Do you thinkwith the right manager we can win the league? I think we are still lacking some serious quality all over. We need another established striker not to mention an actual right winger. Another centre half.

there is no doubt that we need investment but what we need first is a new manager who can get the club to the 4th spot, I just don't feel that Rafa can do it at the moment.
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Postby Owzat » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:10 pm

s@int wrote:Spurs when Redknapp took over, Liverpool when Rafa took over.

Spurs were lying bottom when Redknapp took over, Liverpool were 4th but dead in the water (bit like now)when Rafa took over. 

Yet most on here are dead set against changing manager mid-season as it is not "the Liverpool way".............  ???

I think I worked out his form was good enough to finish just behind Arsenal in fourth, not bad for someone working mostly with hand-me-downs. Now look at them, teams don't often whack in nine so don't give me any of the "Wigan r wubbish" kind of line because I think only the mancs have done it between us doing it over palace and spudz doing it over Wigan.

09/10 Tottenham 9-1 Wigan
94/95 Man Utd 9-0 Ipswich
89/90 Liverpool 9-0 Crystal Palace

We won 8-0 over Besiktas in the CL, 8-0 over Stoke City in the League Cup in the treble season, but you can't really knock sides that notch up big scores in their domestic league.

Can spudz be a force under 'arry? I think they can IF he can find quality CBs and get rid of his collection of crocks. I couldn't believe reading he is after Upson!

Dawson - 7 apps in 09/10
King - 8 apps in 09/10
Woodgate - 3 apps in 09/10

Bassong (14) has nearly as many as those three combined!
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Postby stmichael » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:17 pm

Owzat wrote:most on here are dead set against changing manager mid-season as it is not "the Liverpool way".............  ???

no, i'm against changing the manager mid season as it would increase the likelihood of our best players wanting to leave. sacking a manager doesn't mean that things would just magically change overnight anyway.

do you honestly think we have a better chance of finishing in the top 4 with rafa here or without him, considering it's entirely his squad that a new manager would have to work with? and also considering the fact that we have a history of being really strong in the second half of the season and city and spurs have never been in the mix before.
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Postby Dazzer » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:34 pm

Effes wrote:Good shout that s@int.

Well funny how I was banging on about redknapp months ago and getting hammered for it saying he was a merc of a manager.Feck that the guy has great football sense and has been great at every club he has managed.
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Postby Ciggy » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:34 pm

Excellent article.

From Times Online
November 25, 2009

Rafael Benitez must face up to his shortcomings, says Tony Barrett

Times expert delivers his verdict on the key issues facing the Liverpool manager in the wake of his team's Champions League exit. He talks to Ben Smith

How will Rafael Benitez be feeling this morning?

From a personal point of view, he will be hugely disappointed. The Champions League is where he made his name, his teams have always excelled there. Over the past four of five years Liverpool have become a formidable force in the competition and have actually done better than many people thought they could given the players at their disposal.

Their failure to reach the knockout stages is a massive disappointment, but Benitez will know that Liverpool simply haven't been good enough to deserve to progress and that will hurt him more than anything else.

There has been some blame attached to the late goals that Liverpool conceded against Lyons, which were crucial, but there are plenty of other teams who have their own hard luck stories. The truth is, Liverpool haven't made their own luck this season.

They haven't scored enough goals and conceded some silly ones, and only if that is acknowledged by everyone at the club will there be the kind of improvement needed for the Premier League campaign.

Is their failure in the Champions League a measure of how far Liverpool and Benitez have fallen this season?

It is a measurement of how quickly they have slipped. In March they were destroying Real Madrid 5-0 on aggregate and even though they were knocked out by Chelsea, the 4-4 draw at Stamford Bridge was a memorable game and Liverpool were unfortunate to go out.

It has been a very different story this season. When the draw was made for the group stages some people thought it would be easy to qualify. But Lyons and Fiorentina are good sides. Liverpool were always going to need to be near their best to qualify and because their poor form has been condensed into the two months covering the group stages, they gave themselves no chance of going through. The biggest indictment is that Liverpool are going into the final group game at Anfield with nothing to play for, which is unheard of.

Who is to blame?

It has to be shared among a number of parties. When Liverpool won the European Cup in 2005, the manager perhaps got too much credit for his part, as did a number of the players. The reality is you don't win trophies without a major collective effort. Players, managers, owners and the fans all have to combine for clubs to win trophies - it is never done by one of those exclusively.

By the same token you have to share the blame when things go wrong. Benitez will have to look at himself - what he has got right and what he has got wrong. One of the biggest disappointments is that when you look at the team that started in Hungary last night there were only three players who posed a real goal threat. You had David Ngog, who is a young striker making his way in the game, Steven Gerrard, who is still on his way back from injury, and Dirk Kuyt, who is woefully short of form so far this season.

Benitez should have addressed Liverpool's attacking options in the summer, but he didn't.

Should Benitez have strengthened elsewhere rather than spending £18m on Glen Johnson and £20m on Alberto Aquilani?

No one would argue that Johnson has been a big success. He has played really well since his arrival and his quality going forward has made a difference. He is defending much better now than when he first joined and so he must go down as a good signing.

We have not seen enough of Aquilani yet. He was afforded all of 30 seconds against Debrecen last night. If you get to the end of November and the second of your two major summer signings has hardly featured then you have got a big problem. Benitez has to look at himself over these deals because the gamble on Aquilani has yet to pay off. It may well do in time but the void left by the departure of Xabi Alonso remains.

How much of the blame should be levelled at the owners?

The criticism that has been levelled at the owners is as relevant today as it ever has been. Tom Hicks and George Gillett Jr have not given their team the best chance of qualifying from the Champions League and challenging for the Premier League title. The net spend over the past three transfer windows has been negligible and for a club of Liverpool's size is not good enough. The owners haven't provided leadership, they haven't provided finance and they need to look at their part in the slump the club has suffered this season. They need to ask themselves what they could and what they should have done to support the club.

Do last night's events make a difference to the owners' position?

Such is the fans' mistrust and dislike of the owners there will be some Liverpool fans who will see last night's exit as a way of forcing the owners out a bit sooner. If the club's value has dropped down ever so slightly as a consequence then maybe that will bring potential investors out of the woodwork.

The fans want new owners, not new investment. They want to see regime change at the top of the club. If last night's exit was to expedite their sale of the club then that it might be seen as the medicine the club need to take to recover from this.

Will Benitez bolster his attack in the January transfer window?

It would be extremely surprising if Benitez had any serious money to play with. At a club where there isn't millions of pounds to spend on players anyway, it is almost impossible to see, especially after last night, that anything has changed. Benitez will have to generate his own funds and that will be difficult because he doesn't have too many saleable assets. Liverpool do need at least one other forward.

The comments that Ryan Babel made, which came from a Dutch magazine, were a little bit older than some may have thought - but no one at Anfield would be too sorry to see the back of him. He is a player who arrived with a big reputation but he has done almost nothing to justify that. He seems to have natural talent but he doesn't seem to know how to use it. At times his touch is lamentable and his application has been poor. So when you have someone like that who then has the gall to speak out about his team-mates, his manager and the club then at that point a parting of the ways becomes inevitable. The only hopes Liverpool fans will have for Babel now is not what he can do for the team on the pitch, but what he can bring to the club in terms of a transfer fee.

Christian Purslow, the Liverpool managing director, has backed Benitez for now, but would that support disappear if Liverpool failed to qualify for next season's Champions League?

The questions marks hanging over him would become even greater if that were to happen, but there has to be a certain perspective taken over this season's exit. Before Benitez came to Liverpool, the club were not Champions League contenders, they got into the competition very rarely and never really threatened to win it.

Equally, Benitez has to take a lot of the blame for failing to get there this time around. The club are taking a very sensible approach right now, because as part of the bigger picture the club are willing to accept this as a one off. They know Liverpool have to be in the top four, Benitez knows that. Not being in the Champions League next season would bring enormous pressure on his position - it comes with the territory at one of Europe's biggest clubs.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol....&page=1
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Postby account deleted by request » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:34 pm

bavlondon wrote:Ok Spurs is a good example. But they have a better squad man for man than us. Obviously that is Rafas fault for not buying better but im just saying it depends on the personal a lot too.

Do you thinkwith the right manager we can win the league? I think we are still lacking some serious quality all over. We need another established striker not to mention an actual right winger. Another centre half.

I think while there is no doubt that we have some world class players we also have some players that should be moved on (sometimes managers don't like to move players on because they bought them!)

So while I believe we have a good first team we would need to both improve the squad and move on quite a few players.

Improving the squad doesn't necessarily have to cost the earth Bav. We have become accustomed to having to pay out record amounts for good players, but a good manager also picks up bargains too.

I think the right appointment wouldn't need much time to turn things around. No need for 5 year plans, hundreds of millions of pounds and a massive turn over in players. We have some great players we just need to get them playing to their potential and have the right players to back them up. 

Appoint the right man and I think we could be title challengers next season....... maybe even title winners.
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Postby Dazzer » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:35 pm

stmichael wrote:
Owzat wrote:most on here are dead set against changing manager mid-season as it is not "the Liverpool way".............  ???

no, i'm against changing the manager mid season as it would increase the likelihood of our best players wanting to leave. sacking a manager doesn't mean that things would just magically change overnight anyway.

do you honestly think we have a better chance of finishing in the top 4 with rafa here or without him, considering it's entirely his squad that a new manager would have to work with? and also considering the fact that we have a history of being really strong in the second half of the season and city and spurs have never been in the mix before.

Yes I do St.

:nod
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Postby The_Rock » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:47 pm

Still waiting thompkins happy clappy crappy article ...  :wwww
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Postby Dazzer » Wed Nov 25, 2009 3:51 pm

The_Rock wrote:Still waiting thompkins happy clappy crappy article ...  :wwww

:laugh:

I like to see how he puts his magic spin on this next one.

No doubt it taking longer to write this time.

Not like we have much to sing about is it.  :angry:
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Postby maguskwt » Wed Nov 25, 2009 4:05 pm

Dazzer wrote:
The_Rock wrote:Still waiting thompkins happy clappy crappy article ...  :wwww

:laugh:

I like to see how he puts his magic spin on this next one.

No doubt it taking longer to write this time.

Not like we have much to sing about is it.  :angry:

better than what you two dish out on here...  :wwww   :laugh:
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Postby The_Rock » Wed Nov 25, 2009 4:08 pm

Whooop.........there it is.

Blah Blah Blah......Stats...Blah ...Stats....Blah tiger woods.....Blah...Pete sampras.....Blah   Colin Montgomerie .........blah.... blah.....  win %....more useless stats...........blah....soccereconomics is the bibile of football....blah blah....    :sleep


http://www.liverpoolfc.tv/news/drilldown/NG166597091125-1427.htm


Rafael Benitez's record in Europe was often used as a stick with which to beat his Premiership performance. Now it's being used to say that his job should be on the line.
Of course, Liverpool have progressed massively as a European club under Benítez, after decades more-or-less in the wilderness. And last season, the club posted a Premiership record that would win the title on many occasions; however, sometimes someone is that little bit better, or luckier.

If you happened to play tennis when Pete Sampras was around, or golf when Tiger Woods was at his peak, you could be an eternal runner-up.
This is the bizarre life Benítez leads. Even his achievements (Istanbul 2005, or 86 points last season) are used to form criticism.

After 2005, people said that massive league improvement was the key to judging him a success: "It's easy to win a few cup games". Last season, we saw that improvement taken to a 20-year high, in terms of points. Then it was "Ah, but no trophy".

Few praised him for enabling his team to lose the lowest ever number of games by a team that failed to win the league; at a time when also managing the league's top scorers; so this was no defensive team.

paul tomkins

As soon as the two game losing mark was reached this season, last season was suddenly ammunition to attack him with; which all contributed towards a negativity around the campaign. Liverpool were decreed failures for losing two games, and the attacks started, even though last season's achievements were unique. None of that helped.

He is not praised for buying Torres and helping him improve to stellar standards; he is told, quite laughably, that Torres will leave if things don't improve.

He was not praised for buying Alonso, getting some great performances from him (especially, it has to be noted, after the Barry saga), and bringing in £30m; he is told that he never understood or appreciated the midfielder.

Now Benítez is being criticised for ‘failure' in Europe. Which, to me, is a bit like suggesting selling prime-years Ian Rush for going a few games without a goal.

Please note: only four men have more victories in the European Cup/Champions League than Rafa Benítez.

It just so happens that three of the four are at rival Big Four Premiership clubs. That makes his domestic job harder.

Carlo Ancelotti is in 4th place, Ottmar Hitzfeld 3rd, Arsene Wenger 2nd and Alex Ferguson 1st.

Of course, the top two have played far more games in the competition than Benítez, having been at qualifying clubs for a greater number of years, as befits men that much older than the Spaniard.

In terms of percentage of games won (minimum 20 wins), the top manager in European Cup/Champions League history – at the start of this season – was Josef Heynckes, former Bayern Munich and Real Madrid boss, with 66.7%. (Heynckes is currently managing Sami Hyypia at Bayer Leverkusen, and topping the Bundesliga in the process.)

But the clear star from the stats is one Bob Paisley, in second place, with 65.9%, just ahead of Luis van Gaal and Matt Busby. It's probably fair to say that the old European Cup was tougher to win in several ways, although you still needed to win only 50% of your games each year to reach the final: win the home leg 2-0, lose the away leg 1-0, and job done.

However, there is another familiar name in the top 10: Rafael Benítez Maudes. The Liverpool manager has a 57% win rate. (Incidentally, a figure that exactly matches his Premiership record.)

Quite a way back are Ferguson in 17th place (52%) and Wenger in 27th (46%).

(This season, the figures have altered to 56% Benítez, 53% Ferguson and 48% Wenger, but I don't have the full rankings to hand, hence using figures up to June 2009. Stats courtesy of Graeme Riley, author of the annual "Football in Europe" Soccerdata books, and member of The Tomkins Times)

As a season, this has been a bit of a nightmare. But two cups are still up for grabs, and history shows that a place in the top four is usually secured by either Arsenal or Liverpool, no matter how far off the pace at the halfway stage. Teams not used to being there are more likely to 'choke', and Liverpool's luck can surely only improve.

So there's no need to panic, even if the injury crisis needs to abate for a realistic chance of getting back on track.

We've also a lot to see from Aquilani, but I'm not sure the pitch last night was suitable, and the need was to win the game, that was all.

At a time when people with no understanding or experience of management put the boot into Benítez, Arsene Wenger continues to point out that Liverpool haven't got the results they've deserved at times this season. He knows the score; he's been there before. He's showing some real class.

He knows how an injury crisis can affect a team – the loss of Van Persie saw them draw their first blank of the season – and how going to places like Sunderland is not a doddle, even without alien objects scoring goals. He knows the difficulties in taking on the über-rich clubs.

But it all comes back to expectation. Rafa raised them for us in Europe; now he is being hounded because of it. And last year, he raised them for us in the league, to the point where people don't even see a crippling injury crisis as an extenuating factor for being off the pace.

Perhaps people expect Liverpool to be the equivalent of Tiger Woods, as the Reds were in the halcyon days.

But right now, we're more like ‘prime years' Colin Montgomerie: currently in the rough during this tournament, but always there or thereabouts, without quite landing the major prize.

However, if Woods had picked up a serious injury, Montgomerie, with no change in his ability, would probably now be hailed as an all-time master.

Maybe last season Benítez was just a penalty decision in the Man United vs Spurs match away from seeing the Reds' main rivals from collapse.

We'll never know, but all Liverpool could do was get United wobbling on the ropes, as the 4-1 victory at Old Trafford had proved so successfully; a few games later, with United looking dazed and confused, the referee intervened, and the rest is history.

Liverpool fans didn't ask for a replay (or after Sunderland), but that goal did the damage France inflicted on Ireland. Alas, that's sport; it happens. But that decision did not make Benítez a worse manager, did it? United changed from iffy to in control from that moment on.

When all is said and done, I'd still rather be the equivalent of a ‘Monty' – ups and downs, but generally challenging at most events – than some average golfer that never featured on the big occasions.

Every single season, Benítez has had the club contesting a trophy into May - quite incredible, considering what we were used to in the 15 years beforehand. (Okay, in 2008 it was almost midnight on the very last day of April, after extra-time at Stamford Bridge, but please allow me this one tiny tweak of the calendar.)

If anyone hasn't yet read the incredibly insightful book “Soccernomics/Why England Lose”, they really should, for their own good. It backs up Christian Purslow's belief that clubs “should not make managerial and strategical decisions around results in the short-term”.

Add in an injury crisis that no manager could hope to work around, and it becomes even more apposite.
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