B20
HEY EVERYONE I IGNORE SOMEONE LOOK AT ME
I think Hodgson is a pretty cool guy. eh destroys our club and doesnt afraid of anything.
Who is worse? Insua or Konchesky? Has Insua been sold or is he on loan?
In fairness there, as I pointed out in another thread, in terms of trophies and sucess Roys record isnt that good.
Afterall Rafa got them to two champions league finals....
Who is worse? Insua or Konchesky? Has Insua been sold or is he on loan?
I thought Insua was a decent little player, he is on a loan with option to buy I believe...
To me, they look exactly the same as they did last year. But you cant mention that around a scouser before they launch a pathetic defence of Rafa.
Apparently, he is coming back from loan in january.
I'd take him any day of the week over PFK. Both are terrible defensively, but Insua is at least good going forwards, is young enough to improve and actually counts as homegrown talent.
Does he? Won't this loan stop that being the case or has he been there 3 uninterrupted years?
Apparently, he is coming back from loan in january.
I'd take him any day of the week over PFK. Both are terrible defensively, but Insua is at least good going forwards, is young enough to improve and actually counts as homegrown talent.
Roy will no doubt become the fall guy for this fiasco, and i am sure the next man in charge will come with bags packed full of nostalgia, History and promise. He will deliver a speech about past era's and Liverpool's once great position, names like Paisly, Daglish, Hanson, and Rush will be mentioned, they will all sing that bloody awful song...
And the cycle of disappointment and bitterness will continue.
Truth is the club is an internal mess, stadium development, youth development, wage structure, squad, unrealistic fan ambition.
Times have changed, and Liverpool have not adapted very well.
Bring in O'Neil, and give him five years to restructure the club.
I'm sorry but I can't believe anyone looks at the starting lineup last night and thinks they are drastically underachieving. Reina, gerrard and Torres are the only ones that would get anywhere near the top five sides. They have a couple of capable players in skrtel and meireles and the rest in horrendous mid table dross.
I have to agree with this. While Roy has disappointed me (in terms that I thought he was going to do good), I think the blame should still go to Rafa and his signings.
Every single man that has worked for Liverpool in the past 7 years (bar some of the players) has put his own grain of sand to take the club to where it is today, and struggling.
When Paul Konchesky joined Liverpool this summer a rival Premier League manager invoked the ghost of Julian Dicks, another bald English left-back from central casting. "He's not a Liverpool player," the manager remarked of Konchesky, who was jeered from the pitch in last night's 1-0 defeat at home to Wolves, days after his mother had allegedly called the club's fans "Scouse scum" in a hastily erased Facebook post.
"A Liverpool player" is an instantly evocative title that evokes Dalglish, Keegan, Souness, Lawrenson and Rush. The question of who is – and who demonstrably is not – a candidate for this deification has exercised the minds of Liverpool supporters since Graeme Souness handed the shirts of living saints to several comparative journeymen in his three-year reign from 1991-94.
Konchesky's acquisition from Fulham by Roy Hodgson was a rational attempt to solve a positional shortcoming and is cited here only because Liverpool's deep structural weakness is easy to identify. In the 20 years since they last won the league title, an ocean liner of substandard or under-achieving footballers has disgorged its human cargo at the Mersey docks and sent it up to Anfield, where the team now sit in 12th place in the Premier League, three points above the relegation zone.
On his own journey from the Thames to the Mersey, Hodgson saw straightaway that Liverpool's first- and reserve-team squads were suffocating under the weight of mediocre and unused personnel. A reader of highbrow fiction, the former Fulham manager used a fine phrase to describe the surfeit of drifters he came across while Steven Gerrard, Jamie Carragher and Dirk Kuyt did most of the hard work. Hodgson called them "purposeless".
Critics will say he has added to the ranks of the purposeless by taking delivery of Konchesky, Christian Poulsen and Milan Jovanovic (Joe Cole and Raul Meireles are of a higher calibre and still have time to assert their talents). But equally Hodgson could point to his excellent rebuilding work at Fulham and his shrewd eye for a hidden jewel. He could also say Liverpool are deluded by old glories (Carol Konchesky said that, too) if they think the budget exists to spend like Manchester City after so many expensive blow-outs in the transfer market.
Simply: Liverpool have recruited dozens of duds over the last 10 seasons while Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea have signed very few. The Kop, the team's best players and Hodgson himself are toiling against this debilitating imbalance, which has become manageable only in bursts: first when Rafael Benítez's team won the 2005 Champions League and then when Gerrard, Carragher, Pepe Reina, Xabi Alonso, Fernando Torres and Javier Mascherano gelled to propel the 2008-09 side to second place in the Premier League with 86 points.
Any professional footballer will tell you a trophy-winning team needs a decisive ratio of gifted players and committed winners. Benítez's best side possessed that magical half-dozen. But when Alonso and Mascherano left, Torres lost interest and Gerrard and Carragher were hampered increasingly by injuries, the mediocrity all around them again became Liverpool's defining characteristic.
There is no memory game on red Merseyside quite like the recitation of nearly-men and no-names – starting with the forwards. Sean Dundee, Erik Meijer, Florent Sinama-Pongolle, Fernando Morientes, Titi Camara, Ryan Babel, David Ngog and Andriy Voronin demand inclusion. In other wide or attacking midfield positions room would be found for Anthony Le Tallec, Albert Riera, Mark González, Jermaine Pennant and Bruno Cheyrou. Defenders worth a mention are Philipp Degen, Sotirios Kyrgiakos and Andrea Dossena. This random selection from a lengthy list leaves out many obscure French or Spanish purchases who barely sniffed first-team action. The vast scale of waste is a huge rolling problem for a club once renowned for precision in the scouting department. Each wave of mistakes creates a new challenge of culling and dispersal, restricts budgets and overloads those players capable of vying for titles with the responsibility of carrying passengers.
The homegrown Liverpool contingent have complained privately for years about this annual influx of substandard punts. A scattergun transfer policy has conspired with the failure of the academy system to produce heirs to Gerrard, Carragher, Michael Owen and Robbie Fowler. Under extreme pressure to correct the slide of Benítez's last campaign, Hodgson tries to perform major surgery on a bloated workforce while bad results whip up a wrecking gale.
The emotional disengagement of Torres bites at the hopes of supporters because he is the one world-class foreign import still wearing the Liver bird, unless Reina creeps in. Called to the stand, Gérard Houllier and Benítez would defend themselves with weighty evidence. Houllier won a domestic and European cup treble in 2001 and Benítez took them to two Champions League finals (winning one) from 2005-07. Neither, though, could bounce the team any higher than second in the Premier League.
Both surrendered that momentum straight after building it. Houllier spent £20m on Salif Diao, Cheyrou and El Hadji Diouf in the summer before Liverpool fell back to fifth (2002) and Benítez went from second in 2009 to seventh 12 months later. The reason, in both cases, was a dilution rather than a deepening of the talent pool.
So an exasperated Anfield crowd mock the manager ("Hodgson for England" they sing) while Liverpool arrive in a new year with their worst points total since Don Welsh's team were relegated in 1953-54. The club's new American owners, who have no experience of making football decisions, must calculate whether to back Hodgson's cull or simply transfer a chronic structural problem to another manager.
In the past 10 years major transfer miscalculations by Arsenal, Chelsea and United can be counted on the fingers of two hands. At Liverpool they cram the picture. The Noughties were an age of mass auditions and experimentation, and culpability extends to owners and directors.
Unveiling Ron Yeats, Bill Shankly invited journalists "to walk around" the "colossus" he had signed. Yeats was "a Liverpool player" in the intended sense. Not just good, but special. There are too few now.
7 of the 11 players who played last night were in the Liverpool side that won 4-1 at OT in March of last year. Riera, Hyppia, Mascherano, & Carragher being the notable exceptions. Most of them also played a few days earlier in the 4-0 thrashing of Real Madrid in the CL.
Hardly the form of the relegation style of football we get served up by Uncle Roy week after week.
So what? You just picked out three games and that's supposed to be a decent comparison of what's happened over seasons? It's selective picking of stats and results that lowers the discussion to absurd levels.
Why not pick a few of the horrible results Rafa served up with the same players? It's as valid.
Liverpool have three top notch players. Gerard, Torres and Reina. One is getting old and it's shows. One appears to be a pouty child. And there's Reina.
The fact that Carragher is still starting says it all. He has looked old and out of his depth for quite some time. Even Arsenal got rid of Sol Cambell when the time came.
We also wondered about all those young players Rafa was buying during his reign. He seemed to snatch up every teenager in Europe for a while. Now it appears he was just throwing shit against the wall and hoping something stuck.
Liverpool are overburdened with expensive mediocrity and that's the problem.
Torres and Pool look set for an amicable divorce in the summer. The relationship is no longer benefitting either party. They may not get that much for him and may not be in a strong position to decide who they sell him to. Any top club is a possible destination, even United, Arsenal or Real.
A Berba Torres partnership would be lethal
Carragher and (from the looks of things) Gerrard are past it and they haven't been replaced either as players or as leaders.
These comments make me wonder how many people just throw random opinions that seem to look nice out there.
Gerrard has been our best player whenever he's been fit to play this season. Just about the only outfield player exempt from criticism this season based on performance.
Well actually I'd say your standout player by a long long way (and many of your own fans agree it seems) has been Lucas.
I know you're a bit too young Dave but you lot weren't saddened to see us floundering the early 70s- funny that eh?
how much money did Benitez piss down the grid? Even if they had any more to give him, he'd've just continued with his masterplan of destroying the club - they've had as much, if not more than we, Chav$ or the Bummers have since they took over
It saddens me in a way to see Liverpool floundering. A weak liverpool is bad for the premier league and for English football. I don't like the fact two yanks have totally ruined the club and sucked so much money out of them. You can blame Rafa or blame Roy but all the problems started with the introduction of Hicks And Gillet
Unless Liverpool get rescued by a sugar daddy then I don't see much hope of them being able to compete for a long while
7 of the 11 players who played last night were in the Liverpool side that won 4-1 at OT in March of last year. Riera, Hyppia, Mascherano, & Carragher being the notable exceptions. Most of them also played a few days earlier in the 4-0 thrashing of Real Madrid in the CL.
Hardly the form of the relegation style of football we get served up by Uncle Roy week after week.
So what? You just picked out three games and that's supposed to be a decent comparison of what's happened over seasons? It's selective picking of stats and results that lowers the discussion to absurd levels.
Why not pick a few of the horrible results Rafa served up with the same players? It's as valid.
Liverpool have three top notch players. Gerard, Torres and Reina. One is getting old and it's shows. One appears to be a pouty child. And there's Reina.
The fact that Carragher is still starting says it all. He has looked old and out of his depth for quite some time. Even Arsenal got rid of Sol Cambell when the time came.
We also wondered about all those young players Rafa was buying during his reign. He seemed to snatch up every teenager in Europe for a while. Now it appears he was just throwing shit against the wall and hoping something stuck.
Liverpool are overburdened with expensive mediocrity and that's the problem.
Exactly. Liverpool were great against 10 men that season, something which seemed to benefit them an extraordinary amount of times.
11 vs. 11 they were getting beat by the likes of Middlesborough and suffering embarrassing draws to relegation fodder.
And then in 09/10, they were regularly getting embarrassed by everyone. Roy's continued that trend.
Not that it's likely, but I will laugh my nuts off if they do install Dalglish as their manager again. He's rubbish.
Not that it's likely, but I will laugh my nuts off if they do install Dalglish as their manager again. He's rubbish.
Sack Hodgson and start again.
'tis the only way.