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Can Rafael Benitez end Liverpool's pain?Jonathan Northcroft

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  • Can Rafael Benitez end Liverpool's pain?Jonathan Northcroft

    Can Rafael Benitez end Liverpool's pain?



    Jonathan Northcroft


    div#related-article-links p a, div#related-article-links p a:visited {color:#06c;}Sir Alex Ferguson’s first competitive game against Liverpool as a manager was in 1980, when in charge of Aberdeen. He went to Anfield to scout his opponents and met Bill Shankly there. “So you’re down to have a look at our great team?” Shankly growled. “Aye, they all try that.” Now it is Ferguson who is the great Scottish guru of football management and others — especially, reluctantly, wincingly, Liverpool — must bow to him.
    He famously remarked in an interview that when he arrived at Manchester United “my greatest challenge was knocking Liverpool off their f****** perch. And you can print that”. He has met the challenge, and how — racking up 10 league titles in 16 seasons to leave United on 17, one championship away from Liverpool’s once untouchable record of 18.
    Forget LFC, a United title No 18 could send the Liver Birds tumbling from their perches down at the Albert Dock, the event which, in myth, heralds the doom of Merseyside and its people. Ferguson shrugged when asked about the 18th title and another Anfield record within his grasp, that of Bob Paisley being the only manager (from any country) to win three European Cups. “Ah’m no thinking about that,” Ferguson said. They are, big time, along the M62.
    Liverpool have had six managers since Ferguson swept into Old Trafford in 1986. Chelsea are on their 12th and Arsenal six, and Ferguson’s success has Arsène Wenger and, before he has even filled a Premier League dugout, Big Phil Scolari under pressure.
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    It is, however, Rafael Benitez feeling the greatest heat. Entering his fifth season with Liverpool, he is at the point in the cycle where goodwill and prior achievement evaporated for Gerard Houllier to leave the Frenchman vulnerable to a sacking when targets were not delivered. Those, for the Kop, are: 1. the league title, 2. the league title, 3. the league title, just as has been the case since 1990, the last time Liverpool were champions. “This season it [the barren run] will stop,” reads one blog on a well-known fansite. “I’ve never been more confident of anything in my life.”
    Could this be Liverpool’s year? Benitez has fanned hopes by announcing he has his best squad and best chance in the league since coming to Anfield. “I think we’re better than last season. Every year the expectations are similar. You want to improve, you want to be contenders, you want to be closer to winning the title. I think we have the quality to do that but you never know because the others are strong. United and Chelsea are the best teams in Europe, so it will be difficult, but we will try,” he said.
    Kick-off was delayed in Liverpool’s friendly versus Lazio on Friday because of pressure on Anfield’s turnstiles. Supporters were drawn by the first home outing of a partnership that makes them think this time it will be different, that between Fernando Torres and Robbie Keane. There are other reasons for imagining Liverpool are about to improve. Daniel Agger is back from injury, Ryan Babel, who grew sharply in potency during his first season, is a youngster ready to advance and Andrea Dossena, Benitez’s new £7m left-back, looks capable of proving penetration on the flanks which was previously lacking.
    It is Keane that catches imaginations, though. The Kop have seen vaunted strikers arrive, but none with such serious Premier League pedigree. During the calendar year of 2007 no player, not even Cristiano Ronaldo, scored more goals in the competition than Keane. “When we signed, for example, Fernando Morientes, we thought he was the striker we needed because he was good in the air and had quality but he couldn't cope with the physical demands of the Premier League. Keane has more experience and knows what to do here,” Benitez said.
    Against Lazio, Keane and Torres brought Anfield to its feet with an interchange where the ball moved from one player to another like electricity sparking between two points. Supporters had what they came for. “£20m is a lot but we’ve bought real quality,” said Jamie Carragher. “I’m probably more delighted than the rest of the lads because Robbie is one of the opponents who has caused me all kinds of problems down the years.
    “He’ll always weigh in with 15-20 goals, but he is a goal creator as well as a goalscorer. I don’t like putting pressure on other players, but Robbie’s in the same mould as Keegan, Dalglish and Beardsley. For me, he is the perfect Liverpool No 7. The comparison between Keane’s partnership with Torres and the one that Dalglish had with Rush a few years ago could be a valid one.”
    Keane’s purchase took Benitez’s gross spending to above £200m since 2004 and his net to around £120m. He likes to portray Liverpool as “a little club” but in the same period Manchester United’s gross spend is £134m and their net, £72m. Benitez believes he still needs another signing to make Liverpool contenders, Gareth Barry, but the club’s American owners and Benitez’s nemesis, chief executive Rick Parry, are disinclined to meet Aston Villa’s £18m asking price — despite briefings to the contrary.
    To finance the deal, Benitez proposes selling Xabi Alonso but the Kop chanted Alonso’s name versus Lazio and invited the manager to “stick your Gareth Barry up your arse”. The infighting that has hampered past title challenges is not going away. “It’s not just about progressing on the pitch, you need to progress in all the other areas — and then maybe we can improve,” said Benitez, cryptically.
    Ferguson, more interested in talking about Chelsea and Arsenal, could not raise much enthusiasm when Liverpool’s name was broached in a discussion about the title. Liverpool have not even scored against United in the league since September 2004, and lost seven out of eight games in Benitez’s reign. They have finished an average of 19 points off first position during those four seasons and Ferguson’s view, formed by the agonies of running Leeds United so close in 1991-92, before eventually making United champions a year later, might be that before winning a major you have to contend for one first — to borrow a golfing analogy.
    Chelsea were second in 2003-04 before claiming a first Premier League crown in 2004-05 and Arsenal (they were third on goal difference) level with second-placed Newcastle in 1996-97 before breaking their duck in 1997-98. Liverpool are trying to leap to the summit from the depths of fourth last season, and never having been higher than third under Benitez.
    They need to turn some of the draws of recent seasons into wins and avoid their customary autumn wobble to stand any chance. Benitez might wish to look at the risk-taking of Ferguson to see how positive managers are rewarded in England. Liverpool could study how United regenerated after an even longer title drought. “Aye,” Ferguson would be entitled to growl, however. “They all try that.”










    The article doesn't say that Shankley was Liverpool manager. Shanks was a frequent presence at training long after he retired.

    Ben, Chicago,

    Reluctant, grudging, choking respect to AF. He will never be a Shanks, but on his own merits he has the right to say and think the way he does.
    As for us winning the title this year?
    Yes, maybe.
    If RB doesnt screw about with rotation...?
    Yes, we really DO have a chance.


    Phil J N, Liverpool,

    Interesting claim re Shankly/Ferguson meeting and quote. Bill Shankly had retired 6 years earlier and Bob Paisley was the Liverpool manager in 1980 (and had been since taking over from Shanks).




    Marc , Liverpool, UK
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    PAUL TOMKINS ON OUR TITLE CHANCES
    Paul Tomkins 11 August 2008 It's become something of a Kop cliché to say 'this is our year'. Equally, the final pieces of too many Liverpool jigsaws have turned out to instead belong to Sunset At Sea or Midnight In Manhattan. For starters, a missing jigsaw piece suggests a vacant hole – but no football team plays a season with ten men. As soon as you add a new piece to the jigsaw it has to replace one that was already in situ. We saw with Paul Ince's arrival in 1997 that the extra grit he brought to the side came at the expense of John Barnes' calm, composed passing.

    All you can hope for from the manager is that, year on year, he strengthens the team and the squad, making it more competitive. There are no final pieces to football jigsaws, but there are players who can improve the team. And in Keane and Dossena, I feel there are two players who immediately do that.

    As pre-season has gone on, the Italian left-back has impressed me more and more. He looks outstanding going forward: quick, skilful, strong, and with good delivery into the box.

    I do find it funny when people accuse attacking full-backs of getting caught out of position; if he overlaps, as instructed, and the move breaks down, of course he'll be caught out. The key is that one of the holding midfielders is alive to it.

    You can't expect proactive runs into space but the same player to also be at the other end of the pitch at the same time. Phil Neal was always told by Bob Paisley that once he went forward, to stay with the attack; it was then someone else's job to fill in.

    There will inevitably be some negatives along the way this season, such as the irritating loss of three players to the Olympics, while of course, no-one can foretell problems and injuries that might arise. Even so, should there be no serious adverse luck – and all successful teams need good luck – I feel there are a number of reasons to believe that this can be the year when a serious challenge is made.



    Firstly, Sammy Lee is back. Losing Alex Miller this summer was a blow, but Mauricio Pellegrino, like Lee, can add some fresh ideas and a new perspective.

    Second, there's the return of Daniel Agger. At Anfield he often becomes an extra midfielder, and he will help break down all those teams that set up to defend. Above all, he's a quality ball-player. It is one cliché that is true: he is like a new signing, and a £20m one at that. Also, the presence of Martin Skrtel means Liverpool now have four excellent centre-backs, when for the first half of last season there were just two fit and available.

    Third, there's the confidence the quartet of Spanish lads will have gained from their summer exploits. Of course, Torres in particular will be a marked man, and possibly liable to fatigue after a monumental 12 months, but I feel he will actually get better this season, providing he stays fit and can be kept fresh (which may mean more debate on rotation, but he cannot play every single match). The potential for improvement also applies to other young 2007 first-team signings, like Babel and Lucas, and even older ones, like Benayoun.

    Fourth, the improvements hit upon in the second half of last season. We now know Gerrard, who developed an excellent understanding with Torres, can do the second-striker role to a high level if required, and that Kuyt can be very effective on the right of midfield. It all gives the manager more options.

    Fifth, there's the quality of the young reserves, and how, one year on, they should be closer to pushing for a place in the first team; at the very least, at this point in their careers, they add serious depth to the squad, rather than merely making up the numbers.

    And of course, finally, there's the new players signed this summer. As a result, the squad looks a lot stronger. Some good players have left, but on the whole even better ones –– and ones better-suited to the way Benítez wants to play –– have arrived. How quickly they settle will be important, but the blend now appears sweeter. Crouch's height will be missed at times, but Robbie Keane's contrasting style is more suited to partnering Torres.

    I've come to really appreciate Robbie Keane over recent seasons. While no player is ever a clone of another, he does have aspects of Peter Beardsley in the way he plays these days; cleverness in deeper areas, sharp thinking, excellent movement, quick feet and an ability to weigh in with a very handy amount of goals; it all makes him the perfect second striker.

    Once I stopped seeing Keane as an Owen-type 'out-and-out goalscorer' and more like Beardsley, his qualities made a lot more sense to me. He can create chances for himself and others, and regularly gets into the mid-teens for goals; he got 22 in total last season, but that included three penalties, and he may not take them at Liverpool. Even so, 19 from open play is a great tally for a second-striker.

    Excluding the Gerrard/Torres axis that shone for the last few months of the season, it's been a long time since Liverpool have had a brilliant established pairing up front, but Keane has shown himself to be a 'partnership player'. He gives those quick, clever passes that a sharp fellow striker can thrive on.

    It's not a cheap transfer for a 28-year-old, but sometimes you have to pay for a player who is especially suited to your style of play and meets your specific, hard-to-resolve needs. As with last summer and this winter just gone, Rafa, whilst given money to spend, has also raised funds by selling some of his earlier signings for good profits to keep improving the side.

    Crucially, I see Keane as someone who can help the team exceed the sum of its parts. There's also his leadership skills and infectious personality, which are always worth far more to a side than a more talented but disruptive type.

    Keane is yet another winner, another team player with great desire and dedication. It is no accident that the squad is filling up with such players, and the spine players –– Reina, Carragher, Agger, Skrtel, Hyypia, Mascherano, Lucas, Alonso, Gerrard, Torres, Kuyt and now Keane –– all possess such traits.

    Then there's the need to solve a problem immediately. The long-term future may involve the talents of Ngog, Nemeth and Pacheco, who are three very special teenagers, but that trio, who incidentally cost peanuts, will need time to become regulars. While everyone at the club will be patient with them, the manager cannot just wait around until they are ready. If they prove themselves sooner rather than later, that's great, but Rafa has to strengthen the first team now.

    From the clips I've seen and the pre-season games I've watched, Ngog, like Torres and Henry (both of whom started out slowly as goalscorers), has height, pace and skill, and it will hopefully be just be a matter of time before the scoring instincts that have helped him shine at youth level come to the fore. His pre-season goals could help him settle more quickly, and while raw, he looks a prospect.

    With pace and skill added to the wide areas in the form of both new full-backs, Babel maturing nicely on the wing as last season progressed, and two lively forwards added, there's every reason to be confident ahead of the new campaign. The main weaknesses in the squad appear to have been addressed, there's more pace in all areas, while Keane can add a new dimension to the Reds' attacking play.

    Quite where Gerrard will play once the lads are back from the Olympics I'm not sure. But his versatility will be crucial. If it's away from the centre, then the stronger the team is, the less isolated he will find himself. He did very well on the right in 2005/06, when he scored a lot of goals and the team bagged 82 points; with a better side this season, he could really thrive out there.

    After all, no-one moans about Cristiano Ronaldo being 'wasted' stuck out wide; he roams, just as Gerrard does. This is a fluid Liverpool system.

    Most importantly, the interchangeability and movement of the supporting front players –– Keane, Gerrard, Babel and Kuyt in particular –– will pose opposition defences innumerable problems.

    Add Torres, who won't stray too far from a central position but will still offer world-class movement to drag defenders around, as well as picking the ball up in the inside-right and left channels to run at defenders, and the attacking play could easily improve again on last season, when 117 goals were scored in all competitions. The aim has to be to get a higher percentage of goals in the league, and Keane's arrival will help.

    I'll admit that I'm still not a fan of Keane's various celebrations; call me old-fashioned, but I like to see a simple statement of pleasure and a beaming smile, as seen with Dalglish and Torres.

    Having said that, I'm more than willing to get used to them. Should his goals, or just his all-round play, help to land that 19th league title, I'll happily consign myself to a hospital ward for the summer by (very foolishly) attempting to replicate his famed tumbling somersaults...
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      "It is Keane that catches imaginations, though. The Kop have seen vaunted strikers arrive, but none with such serious Premier League pedigree. During the calendar year of 2007 no player, not even Cristiano Ronaldo, scored more goals in the competition than Keane"

      Really?
      "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

      Comment


      • #4
        Prove him wrong!I said last year we needed 3 players in winter break to make a good run.

        I see the wisdom of selling Alonso for Barry, Barry tri faceted , left back , midfield , striker.Alonso C.M , he really pushes up , but nothing beats his passing game , If we could have both I would be in heaven.
        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by X View Post
          Prove him wrong!
          These Livafool writers are jokers. The season run from August to May. Him gonna tek out only Jan to May fi mek the rest of the Liverpool jokers .. opps .. fans .. find comfort.


          Quick question, suh since between Jan and May Keane may have scored more goals than anyone else ... dat mean him better than El Nino?
          Last edited by Lazie; August 11, 2008, 11:27 AM.
          "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

          Comment


          • #6
            Well the 15 goals could be the difference we need .

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            THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

            "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


            "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

            Comment


            • #7
              Thats the stupidity right there .... how are you so certain he would have scored 15 goals for Liverpool? First thing, he was Spurs main penalty taker ... Gerrard is Liverpool's penalty taker.
              "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

              Comment

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