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  • Brendan Rodgers is the Boss

    Brendan Rodgers is Boss




    • Featured, Free

      Posted on May 30th, 2012
      Posted by by Paul Tomkins
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      So, it seems that Brendan Rodgers will be the next Liverpool boss.
      Like many, I was sceptical about Rodgers and the overhyping of Swansea last season. Teams get promoted, do well for half a season, then fall away. But Rodgers is different. His team completed 10,500 more passes than Stoke, and finished above the best long-ball merchants around. Unlike other promoted sides, like Hull and Blackpool, Swansea never fell away after a good five months. They finished a goal away from 10th, which in the modern age, is remarkable for a low-budget side fresh from the Championship.
      They managed to keep 13 clean sheets (on top of 23 last season), and did so with a goalkeeper considered by the manager to be the 11th outfield player. They kept 14 Premier League clean sheets [edit: two more than Liverpool] despite passing from the back; none of that percentage nonsense.
      Rodgers is fairly unique because he went to Spain and Holland to study football. This is not something many Brits ever do. From a young age he hated the way football was played in Britain, and sought to emulate the Spaniards.
      “Whenever I was playing as a youth international with Northern Ireland we would play Spain, France, Switzerland and the like. And we were always chasing the ball. In my mind, even at that young age, I remember thinking ‘I’d rather play in that team than this team’.”
      Roy Hodgson was seen as different as he too went abroad, but mostly to Sweden, Denmark and Norway. And rather than going abroad to learn their ways to bring back something better, he was exporting the British model. So in the end, he just brought that back with him.
      Contrast these statements from Rodgers with what we saw under Hodgson:
      “My philosophy is to play creative attacking football with tactical discipline, but you have to validate that with success.”
      “I like to control games. I like to be responsible for our own destiny. If you are better than your opponent with the ball you have a 79 per cent chance of winning the game. For me it is quite logical. It doesn’t matter how big or small you are, if you don’t have the ball you can’t score.”
      At first I was concerned that John Henry, who’d spent the week leading up to Swansea visiting Anfield last October in and around Melwood, was swayed by what he saw; he was clearly impressed by Liverpool’s preparations, and yet Swansea played the game in the way Liverpool had intended – but were just unable to. Swansea controlled the game. However, the more I learn about Rodgers, the more I’m convinced that his relative Swansea success is no fluke, and that he was not given the job on that basis.
      Presumably, reading between the lines, Steve Clarke stayed on in Boston after Dalglish’s dismissal to discuss Rodgers, the man he’d worked with at Chelsea under Jose Mourinho.
      More than the incredible passing stats, it is Rodgers’ strict adherence to high, hard-pressing that I find most encouraging. Liverpool kept the ball well themselves last season, but there was a deep defensive line and no aggression to the pressing. Rodgers speaks very highly of Clarke, but the Scottish coach will need to refine his approach under the Ulsterman.
      One major tactical problem Liverpool had was defending too deep for Pepe Reina; he could no longer sweep up, and it made it harder for him to command his box (because the deeper the defence was, the closer to goal big strikers could be, and Reina isn’t the tallest). Rodgers has been happy to use smaller, footballing goalkeepers. Reina should be excited. He should have more space to play in. Rodgers has been doing it this way for almost a decade:
      “The example of the Barcelona model was a great influence and inspiration to me. When I was at the Chelsea academy, that was how my players would play, with that high, aggressive press, combined with the ability to keep the ball.”
      Rodgers may have learned many things from Jose Mourinho – the ability to keep players on their toes but also on side, and the need for relentless hard work in training – but his teams aim to press and pass more like Barcelona. All of this suggests that his approach is entirely up-scalable.
      “People don’t notice it with us because they always talk about our possession but the intensity of our pressure off the ball is great. If we have one moment of not pressing in the right way at the right time we are dead because we don’t have the best players. What we have is one of the best teams.”
      In the Championship, Swansea made their way out of a division where, received wisdom tells us, playing football is tough.
      “My idea coming into this club [Swansea] was to play very attractive attacking football but always with tactical discipline,” he said. “People see the possession and they see the penetration, the imagination and the creativity, but we’ve had 23 clean sheets this year. So in nearly 50 per cent of our games we haven’t conceded a goal.”
      While I’d have loved to see Benitez get the job, Rodgers is reminiscent of Rafa at the stage when he joined Valencia: no big-club success, with the major achievement no more than promotion to the top flight; but future success determined by a desire to learn from the best, with a willingness to travel and study. Instead of RB, we got BR. (Indeed, Rafa brought Valencia to Anfield and controlled a game, just like Rodgers did with Swansea.)
      As well as examining Barcelona, Rodgers went to study Valencia (although before Rafa’s time), and he speaks Spanish – again, also pretty rare for the modern British manager, and handy given all the Spanish-speakers at Liverpool.
      While I have always hated the notion of unproven British managers getting the biggest jobs based on overachieving in relative backwaters – the way the press touted Curbishley, Hughes, Hodgson and Bruce – I do think that Rodgers (like Martinez) has taken a unique and thrilling approach to small-club management.
      Both of these managers had to endure firestorms of criticism for having their centre-backs pass, pass, pass; by contrast, Hodgson even wanted Daniel Agger – the best technical centre-back in England – to “get ********ing rid”, and omitted ball-playing Rio Ferdinand from his England squad.
      Hodgson was recently overheard in England training sessions encouraging defenders to hit long balls. Where Rodgers and Martinez personally accepted the risks of playing from the back with mediocre players if things went wrong, in the knowledge that it’s the best way to succeed long-term, Hodgson is less keen to risk it, even with the elite. That, I feel, is the big difference. Hodgson’s style has a glass ceiling (although he may muddle through four or five games in the Euros); Rodgers’ and Martinez’s do not. The fact that both these managers were in the frame shows that FSG were looking for a specific type of manager.
      If you can get a promoted side to make more passes than anyone but the eventual champions, you’re doing something right. If you do it without even having a god-damned training ground, having to rely on a local sports centre where the public mingle, you have worked some kind of minor miracle.
      It’s a risk, of course, but Rodgers is the kind of manager FSG were always after; fresh ideas, cutting edge, analytical approach, able to man-manage (but not coddle) players, and with the scope to grow and develop.
      My fear with Rodgers had been how the style of possession football he used at would fare, given that much of it was held in deep areas, designed to draw out the opposition, and also used as a kind of defence (in that your opponents need the ball to score, and that the easiest place to keep the ball is in deep areas).
      For Liverpool, keeping possession in deep areas leads to the opposition saying “well, you have it then”. But Barcelona, whose style Rodgers has closely studied, have farbetter players, and that allows them to move their way up the field with the ball; right now, Liverpool are somewhere in between, with much better players than Swansea, but nowhere near the standard of Barca’s.
      Results somewhere between Swansea’s control and Barcelona’s devastating über-possession would presumably be possible.
      We don’t know if he can handle the extra pressure, but he seems well grounded and balanced, and has experience of a club expected to challenge for major honours, and dealing with star names, during his time at Chelsea. His judgement in buying players will be questioned with bigger cheques to write, but the idea, as I understood it, was that the there’d be others to help with that side of things, as a technical management team was put in place. A lot may depend on how good those other people prove to be, but Rodgers has the potential to succeed.


    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
    I'm joining a dynasty! Rodgers says it was impossible to turn down Liverpool... but can't buy any Swansea players for a year

    By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER
    PUBLISHED: 03:46 EST, 1 June 2012 | UPDATED: 05:34 EST, 1 June 2012

    Brendan Rodgers has admitted the chance to manage a footballing 'dynasty' like Liverpool was too good to turn down.
    The Northern Irishman was officially presented as new Reds boss on Friday after a compensation package was agreed with Swansea.
    But Swans chairman Huw Jenkins confirmed Rodgers will not be allowed to take any of Swansea's players with him.
    YNWA: Brendan Rodgers has been unveiled as the new Liverpool boss







    He told the South Wales Evening Post: 'For me, the only way I was going to leave Swansea was for a big club, and I mean a big club.

    'It was an extremely, extremely difficult decision because my plan was always to stay here at Swansea for a number of years.
    'I have always been up front and honest. I have always said that I wouldn't be here forever and that one day I would go, but I honestly never thought the opportunity would come round now.
    'In my life and in my football, I have been very happy in Swansea.
    'But when an opportunity to work at a club which is more than a club comes round, it's a professional challenge which is too good to turn down.
    Next in line: Rodgers succeeds Dalglish at the Anfield throne


    Big hitters: Rodgers with Liverpool's managing director Ian Ayre (left) and chairman Tom Werner (right)

    'Liverpool are one of the dynasties of the game. They have won five European Cups and their status is up there with AC Milan, Inter Milan, Barcelona, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich.'
    At his unveiling Rodgers said: 'I'm very proud, it's a club with wonderful tradition and I feel very blessed with the opportunity to manage the club.

    'Once I had found out I was the number one target from the important people at Liverpool it was quite an easy decision,' he said.


    Dynasty: Rodgers is joining a club which is steeped in history







    Liverpool is a step up for Rodgers from his previous jobs at Watford, Reading and Swansea.
    He also worked under Jose Mourinho at Chelsea and insisted claims he was too inexperienced for the role were unfair.

    'My pathway as a young coach has been different to most managers,' he said.
    'I have actually been coaching and working in football for 20 years. At Chelsea I had experience of working with big players.
    'I look at Kenny Dalglish, he was the manager (of Liverpool in 1985) at 34 and resigned at 39. I arrive here at 39.'
    But it seems he will not be allowed to boost his Anfield ambitions by taking players with him.

    Big task: Liverpool's terrible league performance needs attending to

    Swansea chairman Huw Jenkins told Wales Online: 'I have a good relationship with Brendan and we've got some protection with him coming back in for our players in the short term.
    'We've got that agreement and a 12 month respite. The most important thing is our relationship is intact.
    'We have to look after our own interests and look to continue in the right manner.'

    Rodgers hailed the Anfield side as one of the games giants as he made an emotional exit from Swansea.


    Task: Can Rodgers get the best out of Andy Carroll, Jordan Henderson and Stuart Downing?

    Replaced: Rodgers takes over from Kenny Dalglish (left) with Liverpool in need of an overhaul
    He won praise for his attractive style of play at Swansea and initially turned down an approach from Liverpool before it became clear he was their preferred target.
    He added: 'I turned them down once out of respect, because I didn't want to go into a process and disrespect anything about Swansea.
    'When they come in a second time and make you their number one target, then you have to think.
    'We have seen over a number of years that the number of British coaches who get a chance at the big clubs is very few.

    Let's go: Rodgers will have to gee up the Anfield troops



    'When those opportunities come, and they may come only once, you have got to make a decision.'
    Liverpool chairman Tom Werner claimed Rodgers would bring 'attacking, relentless football' to the club.
    'In Brendan we have acquired a very exciting and talented and young manager,' the American said. 'He's a forward-thinking coach at the forefront of a generation of young managers and will bring to Liverpool attacking, relentless football.'
    Werner added: 'We did speak to a number of people in the last few weeks, but I want to say Brendan was the only person we made an offer to. He was our first choice and the right choice.'

    Mourinho has backed Rodgers to succeed as Liverpool's next manager.
    The Real Madrid boss gave a shining endorsement to the man taking the reins from Dalglish at Anfield.


    Thumbs up: Jose Mourinho supports the appointment of Rodgers




    'I am very happy with his appointment, especially because he did it as a consequence of all his amazing work at Swansea,' Mourinho told The Sun.
    He continued: 'Brendan is a good man, a family guy and a friend.
    'When he joined us at Chelsea he was a young coach with lots of desire to learn.
    'But he was also a coach with ideas, who was ready not just to listen but also to communicate and share.'



    Rodgers had agreed a three-year deal to succeed Dalglish, although negotiations looked set to be held up by a wrangle over compensation.

    However, the Carling Cup winners have agreed to pay the £5million that was in Rodgers’ contract.
    Rodgers is confident he will get time to introduce his methods at Anfield.
    New kit: Craig Bellamy shows off Liverpool's new strip


    'This is long-term, that was important to me, to come into a project over a number of years,' he said.
    'For me (the attraction), is to defend the principles of this great club, offensive football with tactical discipline, and to retain the values of the club. That was the attraction, the history of the club.
    'Also the frustration. It has been over 20 years since they won the title. We might not be ready for the title but the process begins today, it's a new cycle, and that is something that we will work towards in the years to come.'
    Liverpool's search for a new manager has been criticised in some quarters for being too wide-ranging, but managing director Ian Ayre was satisfied with how the club dealt with filling the vacancy.
    He said: 'There was a process and it was right to have a process. Brendan was at the forefront of that thinking, evidenced by the fact we asked Swansea very early on.
    'He was the only person we made an offer to. We got the person we wanted.'
    He added: 'The process is a private process (but) it's fair to say we considered many people because that's what you should do. You try to understand how any individual fits with the profile.'
    Wigan boss Roberto Martinez was another to have held talks with Liverpool before they plumped for Rodgers.
    Ready: Bellamy backed Rodgers' appointment

    Ayre said: 'Roberto was one of the people in that process. We went through that with a lot of people.
    'Some people decided to say they were in the process but they weren't. It was all about understanding individuals and matching their skill-sets with the profile.

    'Brenden was at the forefront of that and at the outcome of it and that was exactly what we wanted.'
    Ayre also explained there would be a new set-up on the football side.

    He said: 'The structure, and Brenden is aware of this, is a more continental director of football type structure, a collaborative group of people working around the football area.
    'We don't expect at this moment in time to have a director of football per se but a group of people working with Brendan to deliver the football side of it.'

    He has been told he can spend this summer and Sportsmail can reveal that, as well as attempting to hijack Swansea’s £6.8m move for Hoffenheim’s Icelandic midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson, Rodgers wanted his old club’s highly-rated Wales playmaker Allen, whom he sees as the type of player he needs to transfer his pass-and-move style of football to Anfield.



    But Jenkins' comments about the 12-month period means it is unlikely Allen will go be allowed to go to Liverpool.

    Rodgers is already taking three members of his backroom staff to Anfield.
    Wanted: Hoffenheim's Gylfi Sigurdsson (left) is being chased by Rodgers

    The 39-year-old has been given the go-ahead by Liverpool owners FSG to bring assistant manager Colin Pascoe, head of performance analysis Chris Davies and performance consultant Glen Driscoll to Anfield.



    Swansea confirmed that compensation had been agreed for all three and their appointments will be finalised. Dalglish’s assistant Steve Clarke has had one resignation offer rejected at Anfield but it is understood that he will now leave.
    Liverpool striker Craig Bellamy agreed with the choice of new manager.

    'I think they have made a very good appointment in Brendan Rodgers, I really do,' he said.
    'He is a very good guy as well, speaks well, knows his football, and he has proven himself.'


    Rodgers has been told there are no huge expectations for his debut season, while he has indicated to the owners that Liverpool are a club in need of major change and that will take time.






    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/foo...#ixzz1wXY8zxP3
    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
      A peep into his mind
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLFQODf8SpE
      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

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