Sunday, 29 September 2013

(S.A.S.) Sturridge and Suarez prove the difference: Sunderland 1 Liverpool 3

After back to back losses in the League and the Capital One Cup, Rodgers picked an unchanged line-up with Suarez (his first league match since 21 April) and Sturridge leading the line and Toure, Sakho and Skrtel the three centre-halfs in attendance, with Jordan Enrique and Henderson looking to provide width.

Both teams started brightly, with Sunderland dominating possession.  Suarez, with a trade mark run and shot across the goal looked decidedly sharp moving easily across the frontline.  Steven Gerrard, after Sturridge had been brought down just outside the area, had his free-kick saved smartly low-down by Westwood with Skrtel sweeping in the rebound, but the Slovakian captain had encroached into an off-side area.

Liverpool struggled to live with the expected frenzied start following DiCanio’s dismissal and we were fortunate not to go behind to Larsson’s stunning free-kick which beat Mignolet all-ends up before thudding against the bar.

Daniel Sturridge, lucky though he may have been with the ball coming off his arm, showed how priceless it is to have a natural poacher in the ranks.    Sunderland dominating possession committed the cardinal sin of leaving the league’s hottest striker alone to appear to nod home to give his team the lead.

The second goal, when it arrived, was magnificent in its simplicity and pure class, manufactured by Liverpool’s three creative architects.  Pouncing from the break-down of another Sunderland attack, Steven Gerrard with a stunning 70 yard cross-field diagonal pass to the feet of Daniel Sturridge, who controlled beautifully with the touch concert pianist, left Carlos Cuellar trailing with a turn of pace to get to the by-line and delivered a tailored cross with the outside of his left foot for Luis Suarez to tap home, his sixth goal in six appearances against Sunderland in the Premiership.
 
Luis Suarez celebrates his second and Liverpool's third
Mignolet after some decidedly shaky moments under the high ball produced a superb save with his feet to keep Craig Gardner’s shot out, after Lee Cattermole subtle dink over the top.

The second-half started as much of the first-half had been with Sunderland, looking lively, but against the run of play from a Gerrard corner, the ball fell to Suarez who inexplicably volleyed wide.

With Liverpool sitting back and Sunderland looking to get back into the game, Adam Johnson shot just wide from long range.   Warning not heeded, we allowed Ki sung-Yeung time and space to fire off a shot, which Mignolet disappointingly palmed into the path of Giaccherini to coolly dispatch home.

Not for the first time this season the midfield failed to control the game in the second-half allowing the game to become far to open.  Liverpool’s attempted to impose their passing game on the home side to alleviate the pressure and take the sting out of the game.  A stinging drive from Moses which Westwood tipped over and Suarez coming within inches of getting on to a whipped Enrique cross was the result of our attempt to retain possession.

Sunderland gathered themselves for a last ditch effort with Jozy Altidore’s attempt the pick tested Simon Mignolet, but that was to be the nearest Sunderland would get.

Mignolet set up a quick counter-attack with a throw out to Suarez, the Uruguayan found Sturridge with a pass which took the striker in the area and for the second time in the match he fed the ball into Suarez to seal the points and move Liverpool second in the table.

Man of the Match: Daniel Sturridge – No surprise he went down with cramp towards the end of the game as the striker led the line manfully, running the channels and holding the ball up for the midfield to join up with the attack.

His link up play with Suarez was devastating and he was the creative force behind both of Suarez goals, showing an innate sense of his partner’s movements in the last third.

Critical Eye:  Liverpool overcame the obvious threat from Sunderland looking to use the bounce factor from caretaker manager Kevin Ball.

Brendan Rodger’s team are playing more of counter-attacking game which is probably due to injuries and the lack of real strength in depth in the midfield area.  The positive aspect is that we continue to pound out results away from home even when patently not playing well, showing grit, resilience and determination to see the job through.

One has to agree with manager’s team picks, as his selections are getting the best out of what he has available, whether what he has available is down to his lack of foresight in the transfer market is a conversation for another day.  We have top quality forwards and it is that which is our enabler at the moment in tandem with the defensive unit.

Right now, we are second in the league and could so easily have been top, but its early days and as Sturridge says, we have to take it one game at a time… the old Liverpool mantra.

Team: 22 Mignolet, 4 Toure, 17 Sakho, 37 Skrtel, 3 Jose Enrique, 8 Gerrard, 14 Henderson, 21 Lucas, 7 Suarez, 12 Moses (Sterling – 75 min), 15 Sturridge

Substitutes: 1 Jones, 5 Agger, 25 Ilori, 47 Wisdom, 31 Sterling, 33 Ibe, 9 Abe

Referee: Howard Webb

Attendance: 41, 415

Major Plaudits:  To the Liverpool Ladies who beat Bristol with goals from Louise Fors (penalty) and Katrin Omarsdottir to win the first Women’s Super League title.

With only two losses in 14 games we have taken on the mantle from Arsenal as the top team in the country.  Matt Beard deserves huge praise for managing his team to success going into the match knowing that a Bristol win would have seen the South West team usurp Liverpool to become champions.

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Sorcerer Suarez returns to cup defeat - Man Utd 1 Liverpool 0

The big decision prior to the game was would Suarez be picked by Rodgers - the positive answer to that question was Yes!

He returned to the team after a ten game ban for biting and at times played like he was never away he also showed a little bit of rustiness which was to have been expected.

The game started with us struggling to adjust to playing with three centre backs and Man Utd forcing us back but after about 15 minutes we started to get to grips with the game and started to have more control in our game.

Despite all our possession we still seemed to be missing that incisive creative spark that Coutinho gives us.

Moses playing in the role that Coutinho would normally play in tried his best to get the link up play working with Suarez and Sturridge but it was not quite there on many occasions with the killer pass failing causing attacks to break down.

At half time we were quite pleased with our performance and then we threw it all away by conceding another goal from a corner with this time Enrique to blame for letting Hernandez get away from him in the six yard box to instinctively stab home the winning goal.

We then produced a concerted effort to come back for the first time this season in the second half and  with a Suarez free kick hit the top of the bar, Moses diving header straight at the keeper and Henderson placed shot went just wide of the United goal.

All this was in vain with Utd seeing out the game and our adventure in the Capital One Cup coming to an early end.

Positives
Suarez coming back and getting a full 90 minutes under his belt, his link up play with Sturridge looked very promising, some of his movement despite not being up to full match fitness was outstanding.

Negatives
We are out of the cup at an early stage, without European football, a lack of concentration costing us one route back into European football next season.
1 win out of the last 4 games we now need a response from our team against Sunderland on Sunday afternoon, no excuses we need to get back on the winning track as two losses in a row becoming three losses in a row is just not acceptable for a club that just focuses on the league.

Man of the match - Luis Suarez - Played like he hadn't been away and once fully match fit will cause teams all sorts of problems with his dazzling skills and unpredictability.


MANCHESTER UNITED: De Gea, Rafael Da Silva, Smalling, Evans, Buttner,
Jones, Giggs, Nani (Welbeck 90), Rooney, Kagawa (Januzaj 73), Hernandez (Carrick 74). 


Subs not used: Anderson, Fabio Da Silva, Zaha, Amos.

Goals: Hernandez 46

Booked: Jones, Giggs


LIVERPOOL
: Mignolet, Toure, Skrtel, Sakho, Jose Enrique, Gerrard, Lucas (Kelly 67), Henderson, Suarez, Moses (Sterling 82), Sturridge. 

Subs not used: Brad Jones, Alberto, Aspas, Ibe, Wisdom.

Booked: Toure, Lucas, Henderson

Referee: Mark Clattenburg







Sunday, 22 September 2013

Back To Life, Back To Reality: Liverpool 0 Southampton 1

Selecting four central defenders said it all.  This is a Liverpool team which thrives on its full backs getting forward offering support, overlapping and creating chances.  That this was sawn off from the beginning was hard to fathom with Martin Kelly languishing on the bench, it was if we were lining up to play Wimbledon’s Crazy Gang.

Most disappointing of all was the ineffectual nature of Rodgers team to compete against a Southampton team pressing to such an extent that Mignolet was forced to kick long and eventually being thoroughly outplayed at home. 

Liverpool’s game built on passing and possession was found wanting and whereas hitherto Gerrard was the calming figure, as against Swansea in the second-half and for most of this game he was unable to have any undue influential and was often caught napping on the ball.

Lacking the creative services of the uber-talented Philippe Coutinho, Liverpool finally came to life when Steven Gerrard stinging free-kick from 25 yards was brilliantly turned away by Southampton keeper Artur Boruc.  Daniel Sturridge was then upended by centre-back Dejan Lovren inside the area which Neil Swarbrick unceremoniously waving away penalty appeals.  Moses had Liverpool’s best chance going close having nutmegged Jose Fonte, before seeing his shot saved by the excellent Boruc.

Iago Aspas struggling to impose himself on the game made way for Raheem Sterling at half-time.  With Daniel Sturridge missing the link of Coutinho, the better bet may have been to free Gerrard of the shackles and allow him move into a position of yesteryear (playing behind Torres).  Moving Jordan Henderson back into a central berth and bringing Martin Kelly on at right back could just have ignited Liverpool into using Gerrard as the focal point to instigate our attacks.

Yet, as has happened in most of our second half performances, it transgressed to a level where we hardly had a shot in the second-half.  Southampton were excellent in controlling possession, pressing high up the field and counting attacking at speed with potency.   It came as no surprise to see them take the lead given their control, but Rodgers will be disappointed with the concentration levels and poor defending which led up to the goal.

A corner was unnecessarily given away by Skrtel.  Lovren powered past the struggling Agger heading in from close range.  It was no more than Southampton deserved and barely two minutes later Shaw sluiced through the Liverpool defence where he found the impressive Mignolet in outstanding form, producing a stunning save.  Mignolet also pulled off a last ditch save when he punch away a loose ball as Steven Davis closed in as goal a goal looked imminent.

Lovren wheels away ending Liverpool unbeaten run
The galling fact was that Southampton coasted to victory in the second-half, with Liverpool barely threatening and Brendan Rodgers patently out manoeuvred by Southampton manager Mauricio Pochetti who came and executed a plan which had Rodgers team stalling in neutral for most of the afternoon.

Man of the Match: Simon Mignolet – Kept Liverpool in the game with some tremendous saves and as a shot stopper is second to none.

Critical Eye:  Without Philippe Coutinho we looked one dimensional with no real creativity and with the most in form striker in the league living on scraps, Rodgers couldn’t fathom out a way to change a game drifting inextricably away from us.

Iago Aspas and Luis Alberto are still adapting to the pace and strength need to cope with the English game and as such Rodgers has very little leeway to cover the injuries to Coutinho and Allen – he has obviously miscalculated in terms of their speed of adapting, thinking their technical class would be enough. 

 As I mentioned on a previously blog, it makes very little sense to see a Liverpool squad swarming with five centre-half’s not to mention Wisdom and Kelly who both can play there at a pinch, yet, we cannot provide substantial cover in the centre-midfield area, which is bordering on the criminal.  Liverpool require urgently a robust midfielder capable of dominating and Steven Gerrard’s appearances should be managed in similar vain to those of Frank Lampard, then we could see a more dynamic captain rather than as here, a subdued version.

Really disappointing that the run should end with a damp squib of a performance and Luis Suarez can’t come back quick enough to provide some undoubted class.

Manager’s comments: "We were very subdued. Technically we were not very good and gave away a poor goal. It is one of the few poor days we have had.

 "We just need to recover. We were not so good with the ball and technically nowhere near the level we have been at.

 "Luis Suarez being available is a positive as he has now served his ban and we can bring someone as good as him back."

Team: 22 Mignolet, 4 Toure, 5 Agger (Jose Enrique – 57 min), 17 Sakho, 37 Skrtel (Alberto – 72 min), 8 Gerrard, 9 Aspas (Sterling – 46 min), 12 Moses, 14 Henderson, 21 Lucas, 15 Sturridge

Substitutes: 1 Brad Jones, 3 Jose Enrique, 34 Martin Kelly, 47 Andre Wisdom, 6 Luis Alberto, 31 Raheem Sterling, 33 Jordan Ibe

Referee: Neil Swarbrick

Attendance: 44, 755

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

The Shelvey show halts winning run Swansea 2 Liverpool 2

With us needing a win to return to the top of the table we went to the Liberty stadium full of confidence.

Rodgers was forced to hand Mamadou Sakho his debut for us following injury to Daniel Agger – and the towering centre-half was handed a stern test against Swansea. Sakho, who is a towering 6ft 2 ins, didn’t disappoint when it came to dealing with crosses into Mignolet’s area, whilst he made a number of timely interceptions. Admittedly, at times, Sakho appeared cumbersome and wasn’t immune to a rush of blood to the head as it was evident works is needed in terms of his positional play. 

The Liverpool manager also dropped Iago Aspas in favour of on-loan forward Moses. It was I felt justified considering the Spaniard’s encouraging but at times lightweight start to life in the English top-flight. Moses started on the left wing, allowing Philippe Coutinho to move into a central role, and the on loan player from Chelsea impressed, particularly in the first half. The 22-year-old is powerful and quick, giving the Reds much-needed width down the left flank. He capped his debut with a first-half goal and Rodgers will hope to nurse the best out of Moses, as he has done with Sturridge.


Reds boss Brendan Rodgers took a massive gamble and allowed Shelvey to leave us after three inconsistent seasons, so it was clearly a sweet moment when he gave Swansea the lead with less than two minutes played.

After making a hash of an attempted volley from long-range, Shelvey recovered his composure and surged away from our new £18 million ($30 million) centre-back Mamadou Sakho before clipping a fine finish past Simon Mignolet after his first effort was blocked by Martin Skrtel.

It was the first goal we had conceded in the league this season and Shelvey celebrated wildly.
But within two minutes he was looking to the sky in dismay after his careless mistake gifted Liverpool their equaliser.
Picking up possession just outside his own penalty area, Shelvey flicked a woefully under-hit pass back to goalkeeper Michel Vorm without noticing the lurking Sturridge, who gleefully rifled home a cool left-foot finish.
Shame he hadn't done that sort of pass more in a Liverpool shirt or he would have still been there!

Sturridge's sixth goal in five matches this season allayed any fears he would be short of sharpness after missing England's World Cup qualifiers against Moldova and Ukraine with a thigh strain.
And Sturridge went close to his second of the night when Vorm brilliantly kept out his header after good work from Moses unhinged the Swansea defence.

We had made our best start to a campaign since 1994-95 and took the lead as Shelvey's match took another turn for the worse in the 36th minute.
Under no pressure, the midfielder played a dreadful pass straight to Moses and the punishment was instant.
Breaking from just inside his own half, Moses advanced at pace and, with Swansea's defenders backing off, he unleashed a powerful low shot that left the flat-footed Vorm rooted to the spot.

Swansea remained a threat and when Mignolet palmed Nathan Dyer's shot across the face of his unguarded goal, it seemed certain Wilfried Bony would turn in the loose ball, only for Skrtel to slide in with a superb last-ditch challenge. Fantastic defending!

We then suffered a blow when Philippe Coutinho was forced off after a bodycheck by Ashley Williams left the Brazilian playmaker visibly wincing in pain.

And our frustrations grew even greater in the 64th minute as Swansea drew level.

Remarkably, Shelvey played a major role yet again as he finally provided an assist for his own team, timing his run to meet a through ball with a clever flicked header into the path of Spanish forward Michu, who slotted past Mignolet for his first league goal of the season. This goal was caused by debutant Sakho rashly leaving his defensive spot to enable Shelvey to run behind him to create the set- up for Michu.

With the momentum totally with Swansea we spent the rest of the game trying to stop Swansea getting a winner. This thankfully was a task achieved by the lads.

The drawn game now means that after 4 games we are top of the league 
by remaining undefeated with 10 points. 



Swansea City: Vorm, Chico, Williams, Rangel, Davies, Britton, Shelvey, Michu, Dyer (De Guzman 46), Routledge, Bony (Pozuelo 66)
Subs not used: Tremmel, Amat, Tiendalli, Canas, Vazquez
Goals: Shelvey 2, Michu 64
Booked: Williams, Shelvey
Liverpool: Mignolet, Jose Enrique, Sakho, Skrtel, Wisdom (Toure 69), Gerrard, Coutinho (Aspas 55), Moses (Sterling 81), Henderson, Lucas, Sturridge
Subs not used: Jones, Kelly, Alberto, Ibe
Goals: Sturridge 4, Moses 36
Booked: Wisdom, Henderson, Lucas

Man of the match Sturridge 4 goals in 4 games brilliant goal return for the clinical striker.

Positives: Top of the league after 4 games

Negatives: Defensively poor and the team again seemed to lose momentum after half time for the 4th game in a row that does not bode well long term.




Monday, 9 September 2013

Three From Three - Can Liverpool Mount A Credible Title Challenge



No Luis Suarez, no goals conceded and a win against one of the big four in our first three games.  Is it possible Liverpool can mount a sustained challenge for the Premiership or at the very least gain a Champions League position?

The flourish which Liverpool ended the transfer window bringing in Mamadou Sakho, Tiago Illori and Victor Moses to supplement the earlier transfers of Luis Alberto, Iago Aspas, Simon Mignolet and Kolo Toure has given Rodgers some of the depth he sort from the window and in Toure and Sakho the experience the team has been crying out for.


Victor Moses gives Rodgers the pace and specifically the power, that at this moment the promising Ibe and Sterling do not.  Anyone watching Sterling, manfully trying to cope with Antonio Valencia during the dying embers of the recent East Lancs derby, will know that as talented as he is, he needs to be brought along gradually and the loan signing of Moses may just buy Rodgers the time he needs to develop the two youngsters.

Liverpool now have unrivalled strength in depth in the centre-half department and cover for both full-back positions.  Rodgers has a world-class striker soon to be back at his disposal and a young English striker in Sturridge looking for all the world, as if the £12 million paid for him was an masterstroke from the Irishman.  The inclusion of Aspas, a workhorse from the Dirk Kuyt School of hard work, with a tad more technical ability, lends itself to a powerful forward line, but with no fourth striker with Fabio Borin’s season long loan to Sunderland, as with last year's Andy Carroll loan leaving the team bereft of a striking option, the decision seems to lack foresight particularly with Daniel Sturridge's injury record.

The missing ingredient is in midfield.  Steven Gerrard’s transformation from midfield dynamo to a holding midfielder who  chooses his moments to break forward means that Liverpool are missing that truly dominant, powerhouse in the ‘engine room’ to drive the team forward and control games, especially in the final 20 minutes of games.


Can he lead Liverpool back into Europe?

Our recent win against Notts County in the Capital One Cup was a case in point.  Jordan Henderson, replacing the injured Allen, provided the energy and vitality to kick-start Liverpool again, after an excellent start looked like being thrown away.  Of the Liverpool midfielders, Henderson and Gerrard look the only two capable of providing anywhere near the combativeness edge and the goals to support the strike force.

If instead of Allen read Fellaini or Dembele could that be the difference to bridge the gap or does Rodgers’ team just need time to mature into the finished article?  It’s an interesting question when one considers that we have the best record in the Premiership since our last loss against Man United in January of last season (winning 11, drawn 6 and lost 2) and many of those matches have been without the brilliant Suarez.

Victor Moses could be ‘that’ player.  The auxiliary player capable of not only playing in his natural position on both wings, but being the fourth striker and switching to centre-midfield at a pinch should the need arise which would fit in with Rodgers belief that talented players can play in a multitude of positions.
 
Can Liverpool win the title? I would suggest, injuries permitting, there is no reason why a top four position should be beyond this team, but the lack of real quality in depth in midfield leaves us short of goals, experience and physicality with the result that we might be short on enough quality assurance on a continual basis to mount a sustained challenge for the title. 

Sunday, 1 September 2013

That win was for Shanks ! Liverpool 1 Man Utd 0


On a special afternoon at Anfield, as we remembered the legendary Bill Shankly the day before what would have been his 100th birthday (which was celebrated with a deserved minutes applause by the Kop), it took us just four minutes for our clinical striker Sturridge (celebrating his 24th birthday) to mark the occasion in style with a deft header.
In a typically fiery affair between two fierce rivals, United put us under pressure for long periods in the second half but could find no way past Simon Mignolet as David Moyes slipped to his first defeat since replacing Sir Alex Ferguson.
Liverpool's match-winner against Stoke and Aston Villa on our perfect opening to the season, Sturridge bagged another as we made a lightning start going for Utd's jugular.
The former Chelsea man had already given warning of his threat when he seized on the loose ball after the tireless Jordan Henderson had harassed Ashley Young into a mistake. Rio Ferdinand turned away his shot on that occasion.
But when Daniel Agger leapt highest at the corner, Sturridge was afforded far too much room inside the six-yard area to smartly head the ball home.
It was the kind of start Moyes must have dreaded, raising the decibel level of the Kop which was already at a pretty raucous occasion.
Robin van Persie was not far away with an overhead kick after Patrice Evra had knocked down a Ryan Giggs free-kick, but largely it was an opening period of unremitting frustration for the visitors.
Watching England manager Roy Hodgson, who knew prior to kick-off he would be without Wayne Rooney due to a head injury in training for the vital World Cup qualifiers with Moldova and Ukraine, then saw Phil Jones limp off after the defender landed awkwardly jumping for a routine header.
Van Persie was one of three United players cautioned and the half ended with an angry exchange of words between Steven Gerrard and Robin van Persie, whose focus appeared to have slipped somewhat after an earlier tangle with Agger.
It was not that we were creating lots of opportunities, David de Gea saved a decent curling free-kick from Gerrard after Glen Johnson's powerful burst had been halted unfairly and the quiet Philippe Coutinho curled a poor free-kick over the crossbar, but Liverpool's main advantage came through their control of the game, with Lucas outstanding alongside his captain in that crucial central midfield area.
United did return in the second half with a bit more purpose. Michael Carrick started to find his passing range, which allowed Young, and then his replacement Nani to threaten from wide positions.
Still, United's increased attacking threat came at the exposure of their defence, and the risk of a killer second.
Nemanja Vidic almost gifted it to Liverpool with an underhit back-pass that had De Gea rushing to clear as Johnson closed in.
Nani forced Mignolet into his best save of the match 15 minutes from time when he pushed away a thunderous drive, just before Johnson became the latest member of Hodgson's squad to depart, limping pretty badly after a crunching 50-50 clash with Patrice Evra.
Van Persie could not make the most of a late opportunity provided by Javier Hernandez when he surprisingly shot wide on his right foot when through on goal, and although five additional minutes of injury time brought a few nerves, in the end it us on the counter attack who came closest to scoring, De Gea brilliantly turning over Raheem Sterling's powerful drive.

Man of the Match - Martin Skrtel - Not played in the first team since Jan 2013 and showed why he is a top defender when his head is right. With Toure out injured, we are on the verge of securing two central defenders Tiago Ilori and Mamadou Sakho to increase the strength in depth of the team and it was especially pleasing that Skrtel showed today that he still has something to offer the team.

Positives
Shankly would have been proud of the work rate and fight of our boys to go into an international break as the top side that currently and proudly sits top of the league.

Another clean sheet for Mignolet against a top side will only breed further confidence for the keeper and another goal for the goal machine Sturridge, the continued improvement of Henderson who is a massive asset to us and long may that continue as well.

We have acquired a good habit of winning games either pretty or ugly, to get to where we want to get we need to win games when we are playing poorly and so far we have played well in the first half of all our games but poorly in the second half - if the results continue despite the second half form we are on track to have a very good season.

Negatives
Our second half form in games needs to improve to take the pressure off our defence.

The weak displays so far at set pieces - we look as though we are always going to struggle to clear the ball.

The form of Coutinho in the big games has been disappointing and to be a top player he needs to impose himself better - I feel that he needs to bulk up to gain more upper body strength so that he will be harder to shrug off the ball.


LIVERPOOL: Mignolet 7; Johnson 7 (Wisdom 78, 5), Agger 7, Skrtel 8, Enrique 6; Henderson 7, Lucas 6, Gerrard 7; Aspas 6 (Sterling 60, 6), Sturridge 7, Coutinho 5 (Alberto 84). 
Subs not used: Jones, Ibe, Kelly, Flanagan.
Scorer: Sturridge 4 mins
Booked: Aspas
MAN UNITED: De Gea 6; Jones 5 (Valencia 37, 6), Ferdinand 7, Vidic 6, Evra 6; Carrick 5, Cleverley 7; Young 5 (Nani 62, 6), Welbeck 6, Giggs 6 (Hernandez 75); Van Persie 5. 
Subs not used: Anderson, Smalling, Lindegaard, Buttner.
Booked: Cleverley, Van Persie, Carrick, Young
Managers:
Brendan Rodgers 7
David Moyes 5

Referee: Andre Marriner 7
Attendance: 44,411