I turned up
to the Hawthorns expecting to see a revitalised Liverpool champing at the bit,
hoping to erase the bitter memory of being so readily out played and dismissed
by a dominant Villa side.
The
Hawthorns reverberated before kick-off to the sound of Carl Orff’s stirring Carmina
Burana. It’s a piece of music that
stokes the fires of ambition and looking across at the big screen in the corner
showing the players in the tunnel the players looked buoyed behind Gerrard who
seemed transfixed steering ahead as if ready to grab an expectant three points.
The
expectant further disappeared after kick-off just as fast as it had at
Wembley. Unable to gain a foothold in
the game with Gerrard playing so deep it was difficult to decipher whether he
had started at centre-half or in the defensive midfield position, marshalled so
superbly on our winning run by the injured Lucas Leiva.
Emre Can
given licence to roam from his position as the right-centre back into midfield
was energetic, but failed to find the quality ball to release Ibe, Coutinho and
Sterling and the much criticised Mario Balotelli. If ever a match proved that Mario Balotelli’s
shelf-life had finally reached its sell by date this was it. Unfortunately for the player, he is incapable
of leading the front-line, often finding himself in less attacking areas and
not in the key area when the ball arrives in the box.
Liverpool
had two decent chances with Jordon Ibe coming close drifting in from the left, to
play a one two with Balotelli before seeing his left-foot shot smash against
the bar while Philippe Coutinho drew an
excellent diving save from Boaz Myhill which was as good as it got for us.
Rodgers is
correct is his insertion that the injuries to Daniel Sturridge have certainly
hindered Liverpool’s challenge for a Champions League place, but in the cold
light of day what has really killed us is his lack of success in the transfer
market. When it became apparent that
Suarez would leave in the summer there was enough time to get a quality replacement,
but we failed ignominiously in our pursuit of Sanchez and in the end we were
left with the not so hot ‘Super Mario’.
Brendan states
that the club has to find a way of luring top class talent to Anfield, but the
question is should FSG trust him with anymore funds? In essence, of the 24 players brought in by
Brendan during his time at the club only Coutinho and Sturridge can considered
anything like a success.
The club’s
top goal scorer in the Premiership is not one of the four strikers brought in
by the manager which is some indictment
He seems to
be possess a retrograde memory in not mentioning that fact as if no blame
should be attributed to him. Daniel
Sturridge was injured twice last season, but with Suarez having an all-star
season it tended to be glossed over, but his injury record and Rodgers
preference to play his free-flowing style of football has basically relegated
Rickie Lambert to a bit part player.
On the way
home on the train , I read out to my fellow Reds Karl (Livi), David (dedlfc)
and Billy (TrueRed01), the full list of the LFC Transfer Committee: Ian Ayre,
Barry Hunter (Chief Scout), Dave Fallows (Head of Recruitment), Michael Edwards
(Director of Technical Performance) and Mike Gordon(FSG Investor). Almost in unison, as I announced each individual
outside of Ian Ayre and almost in unison they said “who the f**k is he!?!”It’s an interesting point because at West Brom we lacked fire power and had the exposed Glen Johnson replacing Moreno at left-wing back. Just how can Liverpool be lacking in the areas of full-back, central midfield and upfront after bringing in no fewer than 9 players in the summer transfer window.
A year ago
in an interview with Sports Illustrated, Ian Ayre stated that the Transfer
Committee’s role was to bring together individuals from different areas (the
manager, Chief Scout and the Head of Recruitment), which combined would be make-up
the role of Director of Football which meant that Brendan Rodgers would not be
the sole decision-maker, although he would have a big say.
Ayre said,
“We have a head of analysis, a head of recruitment, a first-team manager,
myself. All of those people are all inputting into a process that delivers what
a director of football would deliver.
“What we
believe, and we continue to follow, is you need many people involved in the
process. That doesn’t mean somebody else is picking the team for Brendan but
Brendan needs to set out with his team of people which positions we want to
fill and what the key targets would be for that.
"He has
a team of people that go out and do an inordinate amount of analysis work to
establish who are the best players in that position.
If we are to
raise are game in the transfer market the bar will have to be elevated in
spectacular fashion in terms of their willingness to pay top fees. Brendan doesn’t possess the cache of a Louis
van Gaal, Jose Marinho or Arsene Wenger and we look certain to be without
Champions League football, thus it’s either a willingness to pay larger
transfer fees or to continue with the long-term plan and hope that we can get
success by bucking the trend.
The problem
with that philosophy is that the four teams above us at the moment are not
about to stand still and if proof were required of just how much money talks,
Man United’s outlay in the summer in spending £150 million has brought instant
rewards in almost certainly returning the club to the Champions League fold
after only a seasons absence.
Brendan
built an almost guru like perception around himself with his assertion that he cajoled
and drove Suarez to reach his sublime heights, hence the positivity around the
acquisition of Mario Balotelli. What he
did do was provide the atmosphere around Suarez and his team to free-wheel with
an attacking verve unhindered by any thought of defence which arguably may have
cost us when it mattered most once injuries and suspensions began to set in.
In his three
years he is correct that Liverpool have moved on under his stewardship, but any
Liverpool manager given three years in his position would expect to move
forward or he’d be looking for new employment.
Coutinho, Sterling and the injury hit Sturridge have certainly been
successes under his tenure, but there have certainly been glaring misses this
season from the formation changes against Villa to the resounding failures
against the ‘Big Four’ which include losing twice to Man Utd and being
demolished by Arsenal.
A good
middle of the season doesn’t equate to a great season and for me Liverpool have
fallen short of the required standard and at the Hawthorns resembled no more
than an average side hoping that the exceptional talents of Ibe, Coutinho or
Sterling would pull us out from under.
With Man
United’s loss at Goodison Park we may just live to regret the failure to grab
three points. The aim must be for us to
us to finish as strongly as we can to at least put pressure on Man Utd and to
bolster confidence going forward.
Man of the match: Philipe Coutinho looked to probe at
every opportunity and almost provided the break through.
Steven
Gerrard in his 500th League game asserted even less influence than
he had at Wembley with only Jordon Ibe aside from Coutinho looking likely.
Critcal eye:
Brendan Rodgers comments suggest he is not seeing the failures, not just
in his transfers, particularly his strikers, but in his side falling away since
the Man United defeat. Blackburn
provided the initial template to breakdown the Rodgers winning formula in the
FA Cup tie at Anfield, Swansea made it work before for a half, before Man Utd
applied the breaks.
It sounds
almost pathetic when he keeps stating how much the team misses Suarez and how
unlucky we have been with injuries particularly with Sturridge. He’s had two windows to plug holes in his
squad and they made the decision not to buy anyone in January, so the blame
lays firmly at his feet, but he will be given time and he and the Transfer Committee
must buy well in the next transfer window for Liverpool’s immediate future or
we could be away from the Champions League for another five years and that
would be unfathomable.
Manager’s comments:
It’s going
to be very difficult now to make the Champions League.
“With five
games remaining, we certainly need to win four at least. That’s what we must
aim to do to give ourselves a chance.
“You never
know what might happen above us though. What we have to do right now is make
sure that we keep the pressure on.
“We have our
game in hand this week and the important thing is that we win that one.”
“If you take
52 goals out of our team, then it doesn’t help you.”
“We just
don’t score as many goals, it’s as simple as that. In every other way we have
played well, but we just lacked that bit of luck and bit of quality in the
final third.
“That is
something that we will have to look at in the summer, for sure.
“Our intent
was to win the game, but you have to give credit to West Brom, they defended
very well, as you’d expect of Tony Pulis’ team.
“In the
first half, the idea was very good, but we were a bit slow. Second half was
much better, but we just couldn’t find the final pass, the final touch which
makes the difference.”
“The feeling
of disappointment was there early on in the week, of course, but in top level
sport, you’ve got to move on from it.”
“We deserved
the result last weekend after our performance, so today it was important to at
least perform well and I felt that we did that. The attitude and the effort was
there, the creativity too.”
Teams:
West Brom: 13 Myhill, 25 Dawson, 23 McAuley, 6
Lescott, 11 Brunt, 8 Gardner, 5 Yacob, 24 Fletcher, 7 Morrison (Baird – 81
mins), 10 Anichebe (McManaman – 64 mins), 18 Berahino (Ideye – 75 mins)
Substitutes: 3 Olsson, 4 Baird, 9 Ideye, 16
Gamboa, 19 McManaman, 29 Sessegnon, 38 Rose
Liverpool: 22 Mignolet, 23 Can, 37 Skrtel, 6
Lovren, 2 Johnson, 14 Henderson, 8 Gerrard, 33 Ibe (Lallana – 75 mins), 10
Coutinho, 31 Sterling, 45 Balotelli (Borini – 75 mins)
Substitutes: 1 Jones, 4 K Toure, 19 Manquillo,
20 Lallana, 24 Allen, 29 Borini, 50 Markovic
Referee: Roger East
Attendance: 26,663
Just seen the post match chat with Rodgers. He contradicted himself. He mentioned not having the quality and then stated they showed quality in the performance. Does he know what he is talking about? So much for dispelling the misery of that Wembley result. One point is not taking us far is it?
ReplyDeleteExcellent blog summed it up to a tee - we have a massive decision to make this summer and I now believe taking the gamble and giving Rodgers another transfer window to throw away another £100m is not the right decision to make.
ReplyDeleteSanctioning a transfer such as bringing in a player such as James Milner as has been mooted to have gone ahead should only be made once we have decided one way or the other that Rodgers stays or goes.
I would like to now see Jurgen Klopp given a chance to impress our fans by being given the reins of power at Anfield as waiting until the middle of the next season for change is not counter-productive to getting in a potential world class manager. Klopp is now available so lets go all out and bring Klopp to the Kop and say thanks for the memories to the nearly man Rodgers.
I read somewhere that we are becoming a selling club.
DeleteAfter another lame performance by our team at the weekend I feel it is now time to question Rodgers position long term as LFC manager.
ReplyDeleteI do not want us having another transfer window where he throws away another substantial amount of money on players not able to produce the goods and get us back into the CL.
Do not want to wait until Nov or Dec for us to be out of contention for the title race and then have trouble finding a replacement halfway through the season because all the top level managers have jobs.
Now is the time to act bring in a top level manager such as Jurgen Klopp with the minimum demand every year of qualifying for the top 4.
With the demands of building an improvement to the stadium weighing heavily on the owners mind the minimum expectation of our manager is to produce a team capable of competing for a title and that's another disappointing aspect of this season we were never in a position to be a threat to the eventual winners of the title.
Our current occupant of the manager role is not capable of luring the top quality players simply because he is not a big enough name in world football the only way to establish yourself is to win titles or European trophies and sadly our manager has never won anything as a manager so no top level players are gonna be impressed by that.
It is all good and well our manager moaning that we will struggle to bring in the real top quality players because we do not have the golden carrot of CL to entice the players but last season when we did have the opportunity to bring in the top level players our manager squandered all the money on long term investment players such as Markovic rather than the finished article players such as Fabregas.
A manager such as Klopp should now be given the money to spend and get us back on track because he is a winner and knows how to get across the line to win big games and can get us to finals unlike nearly man Rodgers - who nearly won us the league last season by finishing 2nd, nearly got us to the Capital One final by losing the semi and nearly got us to the FA cup final by losing the semi final and to round off will nearly get us into the top 4 by finishing 5th place.
Speaking to Vic on the train back to London from the dross West Brom game he stated if we are not careful the English teams will lose the luxury of a 4th spot in the Champions League if they do not perform better in the competition next season.
If Rodgers stays he will then have another excuse for failure by finishing 4th and not qualfying through the English clubs losing their 4th spot.
Bring on the Klopp and lets not sit and wait- demand change and show more imagination and creativity in our thinking!
KLOPP FOR THE KOP!
I think, it’s time to put the question forward, is BR the right Manager for LFC. I also don’t want another transfer window, wait till the next game, we missed opportunities, we did not play well, we need to fund more money, waiting till see what happens, and it’s not the professional way for a manager position to run LFC. The point is we don’t need to any more analysing each performance, it’s a bigger problem we face, afraid to say but an average team performance again.
DeleteI think we will see not change in keeping BR, same level of football, season now and ahead. We may get money but our decision of buying players, is like buying a Ford to a Merc. They both get you there, but its performance, power, and class and all the extras. Something we have lacked for past years.
Can we make top 4; we can only keep fighting, with all the pressure, disappointing displays, which only leave us now in the position to pick up maximum points in our remaining game.
How come we came second last year and now struggling to get in the top 4, it’s because the players we brought in are average, not saying all, but majority of them. It’s about keeping your team consistent through each season, regardless your best players leaves, strengthening the team, it’s about bringing in the right quality players, who perform, Arsenal, Chelsea, Man City, always seem to do this and in all competitions, you have to be in it to win it.
What has BR won, how is he going to attract top international players, his has no creditability as a big manager in the football market.
We probably would have another defeat if it was not for Lovren to intervene with a last-ditch clearance to stop Morrison's header going in.
If Rodgers stays he will only have more excuse for failure by not finishing 4th, this season and coming season, he actually said after the game we created enough opportunities, that’s lame, because we did not get the ball back of the net!
It is critical that we are wining more of our games, at this point in time of the season.
Bring on the Klopp, before another teams grabs him!
As good a manager as Klopp may be he’s not a miracle worker and I seriously doubt he would have done any better at Liverpool this season than BR.
DeleteWe’ve lost 52 goals from the team this season and even the most ingenious manager wasn’t going to get that goal output from Mario, Borini and Lambert. We all know about the transfer committee so why are the failures in the transfer market being laid at BR’s door?
When did Liverpool ever appoint a manager on the basis he would be a lure to bring top international players to the club? Even in recent times when we’ve bought in the likes of Alonso and Torres they weren’t considered the finished article and were deemed a risk at the time.
There is the beginning of a good nucleus of players at LFC, Migs, Sakho, Srktel, Hendo, Coutinho, Sterling, Sturridge and Ibe, with a defined playing style which has been bought together by BR. Undoubtedly we need a few more quality additions but we are not far off a top four place, as for competing for the league BR will need to be more pragmatic in the big games as sometimes its better to steal a point away from home rather than going all out for the win.
All in all changing the manager now would be another backward step among the many we’ve taken since Rafa left.
Probably because Klopp knows what it's like to actually win something. In the past we may not have appointed managers to as you say bring in top quality players, but different times call for different measures and while I'd still like to Brendan succeed he has to produce the goods next season (I'm being practical especially after King Kenny's comments about plenty of changes in the summer, but Brendan will not be one of them) or else it's good bye and it's debatable whether he'll see Christmas if we are not firing on all cylinders.
DeleteYes, you're right regarding covering last years 52 goal out put, but when none of your strike force has not even scored five League goals that's patently not good enough and remember he brought them all in. He's getting the blame because as Ian Ayre said last year there is a committee, but Brendan has the final say on whether we go ahead with a transfer, also it's his job to find a way out of tight corners. Why, as has happened more than once pick Borini and Lambert on the bench and not bring on either at all or one in the dying embers of the game? And season after season we are leaking goals. We may have lost 52 goals, but we are still leaking goals at the other end!
We might have a good nucleus, but not finishing in the top leaves us susceptible to losing the likes of Coutinho to a Champions League side and makes it even harder to get those players we want to improve the side. We lost Suarez when we were preparing to re-enter the Champions League, so with the likes of Man City, PSG and Chelsea looking for new blood (and wo betide us should Real Madrid not win the Champions League or La Liga), it'll be easier pickings without CPL football.
News coming in that Sturridge could miss rest of Liverpool's season, says Brendan Rodgers, another hip injury....
ReplyDeletei dont think he be back this season,