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  • Liverpool masters of the new order

    Liverpool masters of the new order

    Wed Mar 11 08:27AM

    After that, who could argue against Premier League domination of Europe once more? That wasn't FC Cluj lying eviscerated on the Anfield turf on Tuesday night. That wasn't some part-timer from Belarus being nut-megged by Steven Gerrard. That wasn't some ingenue centre forward marooned and alone up front, reduced to one feeble effort all night.

    That was Real Madrid, the most storied club on the continent. That, his head hanging in embarrassment at his total failure, was Fabio Cannavaro, World Cup-winning captain and, if not the tallest centre back in world football, possibly the hardest. And that, so lacking in mobility in comparison to his direct rival he resembled a stalled articulated lorry on the starting grid of a grand prix, was Raul, the leading scorer in Champions League history.

    Liverpool were simply brilliant in their destruction of Madrid. Before this game their manager Rafael Benitez had suggested his side's recent European achievements had not been sufficiently eulogised. Due credit, he insisted, had been lacking. After a performance of verve, aggression and non-stop commitment, after making the visiting keeper Iker Casillas at times resemble the last man standing at the Alamo, no-one would deny Liverpool the praise they deserve. More to the point, only a fool would deny the manager the clauses he requires in that famously unsigned contract. Unfortunately for Benitez, the directors' box at Anfield is largely populated by fools.

    It was, more to the point, a victory made in the English game. Benitez, whatever his critics in the Anfield corridors might imply, is the shrewdest observer around. From beneath that inscrutable brow, he watches and learns. What he has learned most of all is how to marry the qualities of the English league game with the techniques of the continent. Liverpool tore at a Madrid side who smugly predicted they would sit back and defend their lead. That was what everyone in Spain expected of a team managed by Benitez. But he has changed. Going against type, perhaps going against instinct, he ordered his players to assault from the off. The result was never in doubt.

    From the start it was something magnificent, something to take the collective mind off domestic insecurities, to forget momentarily the remorseless march of the Mancs on that cherished record of title wins. Like its team, Anfield comes alive on European nights like this. A stadium that was so quiet for the recent Premier League fixture with Sunderland it was as if the local undertakers had been headquartered in the Kop, rocked with its praise to Steven Gerrard, Fernando Torres and Benitez himself.

    The singing of the Scouse national anthem before the game was so impressive, even the visiting Madrid fans clapped it to the rafters. It was, though, the last time they had cause to applause. "Liverpool were just too good," admitted Madrid's manager Juande Ramos after the game. Though, in truth, his side were so unimpressive and lacking in oomph it was like he was still in charge of Spurs. Was that really Arjen Robben on his right wing? It looked more like David Bentley. As for Raul, Darren Bent is a more impressive front man.

    Indeed, the contrast between the sides was nowhere better demonstrated than in the performance of their talismen. Raul, Madrid's lucky charm, was a man about as agile as a beached walrus. His one contribution was a feeble shot that spun yards wide. Fernando Torres, on the other hand, was electric heeled, dynamic, endlessly involved. After killing the tie with an early goal, he proceeded to give a masterclass in defending from the front, tackling back with ferocity. At times he was so quick he could give a loaded Dwain Chambers a start in a 60-metre dash and still beat him.

    That was the difference between the sides: pace. What was once the English disease, the kick and rush mentality, has been cured by refinement. It has been taken and adapted to the point where the game is now played so quickly and so efficiently here, others look ponderous in comparison. What we were watching on Tuesday was old Europe against new. And the new order was in such ascendancy Gerrard and Torres could both be replaced with a full ten minutes remaining, the better to preserve their zest for encounters ahead.

    "Maybe to play like this is the best way to approach the game on Saturday," said Benitez, his powers of under-statement as ever in full working order, of the forthcoming league encounter with Manchester United. And this remains his most pressing challenge: to get his team to perform against a rampant United as they did against a battered Madrid. These days the more serious challenge is the one that lies down the road.
    Last edited by Karl; March 12, 2009, 10:22 AM.
    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
    Here we go..............again...........~sigh~
    Hey .. look at the bright side .... at least you're not a Liverpool fan! - Lazie 2/24/10 Paul Marin -19 is one thing, 20 is a whole other matter. It gets even worse if they win the UCL. *groan*. 05/18/2011.MU fans naah cough, but all a unuh a vomit?-Lazie 1/11/2015

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Jangle View Post
      Here we go..............again...........~sigh~
      I am on X's side this time.
      You never played half as well as did Liverpool. You made so many mistakes and were too often promptly handed back the ball. I do not think Liverpool shall be so kind if you bring that carelessness to the game.

      Soooo...Into the Valley of Death!
      Liverpool wins!
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Jangle View Post
        Here we go..............again...........~sigh~
        Easy Jangle, yuh can know when Liverpool win a game.
        "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


        • #5
          Liverpool would be making a massive mistake if they think that Madrid is anywhere near Manure in terms of talent or more importantly - form. I predict a draw but only because the refs won't call Vidic or Rio if they foul Torres in the box, otherwise, Liverpool would win or Manure gwine tief it.
          "H.L & Brick .....mi deh pan di wagon (Man City)" - X_____ http://www.reggaeboyzsc.com/forum1/showthread.php?p=378365&highlight=City+Liverpool#p ost378365

          X DESCRIBES HIMSELF - Stop masquerading as if you have the clubs interest at heart, you are a fraud, always was and always will be in any and every thing that you present...

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Paul Marin View Post
            Liverpool would be making a massive mistake if they think that Madrid is anywhere near Manure in terms of talent or more importantly - form. I predict a draw but only because the refs won't call Vidic or Rio if they foul Torres in the box, otherwise, Liverpool would win or Manure gwine tief it.
            here we go again ... somehow unuh ago get robbed.
            "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


            • #7
              Him start bawl arready........heheh!!
              Hey .. look at the bright side .... at least you're not a Liverpool fan! - Lazie 2/24/10 Paul Marin -19 is one thing, 20 is a whole other matter. It gets even worse if they win the UCL. *groan*. 05/18/2011.MU fans naah cough, but all a unuh a vomit?-Lazie 1/11/2015

              Comment


              • #8
                What you saw against Madrid was the Real DEAL ! Its a new liverpool and Rafa has awoken to it , its the type of confidence that dynasties are built on and Rafa had been building along time we are two players away from this and I believe we will win the CL or nip it at the last minute to win the prem to single our arrival.

                “Why can’t we do that in the League?” Written by Tetteh Otuteye on March 12th, 2009 You are here: Home » Comment and Opinion » “Why can’t we do that in the League?”</SPAN></B></B>



                After the demolition of Real at Anfield on Tuesday night, the following exchange took place between two Liverpool fans:
                Fan #1: “I just want to see this type of performance more often.”
                Fan #2: “Therein lies the rub. Either the players aren’t able to get geed up for the league, or Rafa’s unable to get it out of them. Point being, we’re able to play like that when we want to, but seemingly choose not to do so. Why is that?”
                That’s a bloody good question, I thought to myself, and after giving it some thought, here’s my answer:
                I think some of it has to do with confidence and the absence of confidence. When our lads go out in Europe, they play like champions. they play like a team that knows they can beat anyone, they fear no one, they have very little pressure on them (even when the stakes are high and the match is dubbed a “crucial must win”). I think some of this stems from the miracle of Istanbul. The manner of our wins, the number of narrow victories, often coming from behind to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, and that final success in that epic and emotional battle - these things have become embedded in the culture of the club on the European stage. The amazing thing is that it has endured through a time of changing personnel.
                Gerrard, Carra and Xabi Alonso are the only players left on our team who won the CL in 2005. But the team has maintained that confidence and fighting spirit in Europe, perhaps because the other players didn’t leave and their replacements arrive overnight, and many of our current team joined the following year and were able to benefit from that same confidence and others arrived soon after and benefited greatly as the team renewed that spirit winning spirit en route to the final in Athens in 2007.
                We don’t always play the kind of football we played on Tuesday, but in Europe, for the last 3 seasons, we rarely look like losing. In 2007 we were only eliminated in the final. In 2008, we lost in the semi-final in the most painful of circumstances involving Riise’s calamitous own goal. That’s an unbelievable record to have, even aside from the wonders of 2005.
                So our lads go into European battle feeling like winners. Psychologically, they are in a much better position to take advantage of their chances. They aren’t as nervy in front of goal, and they don’t make as many silly mistakes as a result.
                But perhaps of even greater significance, because these are cup ties involving top teams whose fans expect to see their players attacking, our opponents HAVE TO attack. Teams cannot sit back and defend over 2 legs. It’s a very risky strategy to attempt to park the bus in European competition - especially away from home. So more often than not, particularly in the knockout rounds, teams come at us and try to play football. This gives our players space to play and, as we’ve proven on several occasions in both Europe and in the Premiership, when teams give our players space to play, we can be as lethal as any other team in the world (ask Chelsea, Newcastle, Besiktas, PSV and now Madrid).
                However against the likes of Stoke and Wigan, we face a totally different problem. These teams don’t try to play football. They are aware that if they give us space we’ll slaughter them. And they have nothing to lose from trying to stifle us for 90 minutes. They realise that if they try to play football, they are almost guaranteed to lose, whereas if they park the proverbial bus, they may come away with a point. Their fans put no pressure on them to attack, and the media hails them as heroes if they leave Anfield with a point.
                We struggle against these teams because it often requires a lot of individual brilliance to unlock such stubborn defences. This year, the difference between us and United has been how they have been able to turn 0-0s against teams that park the bus into narrow wins (often 1-0 wins), with the crucial first goal often coming from either a Ronaldo freekick, or a burst of pace and trickery from one of Ronaldo, Tevez, Rooney or Berbatov (more the trickery than the pace in the latter’s case). Three of those players are worth over £30m, and the other (the world player of the year) could perhaps fetch double that in today’s market.
                Whatever the reasons why we don’t have as many £30m players, regardless of whether you believe it is Rafa’s fault, the owners’ fault, Rick Parry’s fault or nobody’s fault, it is this lack of multiple £30m strikers that has resulted in so many stalemates against teams that park the bus.
                It isn’t that Fergie’s tactics are so much better than ours - his tactics are quite reliant on having £30m quality players on the field. It isn’t that Fergie is so much better of a coach than Rafa, and it isn’t that Rafa just can’t figure out the premiership. It’s that it often takes the sort of moment of brilliance that only the world’s top talents can produce, to unlock a well organized defense of 11 men behind the ball providing no space for the opposition to move in and out of.
                It’s actually a good problem to have because with a team that is doing well in Europe and consistently improving in England, and so getting the cash windfall of European competition year in year out, each year of stability and development means that most of our budget can be spent on acquiring the likes of Torres each summer. United can’t get much better than they are in terms of the quality of players they have on the field. Whereas with the addition of an Aguero, a David Villa, a Tevez, or any player of that callibre, our team can take several giant steps towards premiership success as we’ll have more tools to unlock stubborn defenses that park the bus.
                I said before the Madrid match that, a win wouldn’t prove that Rafa is a genius worthy of worship, as neither would a loss prove that he is incompetent and ought to be fired. I said that Rafa is the same coach today as he was 3 months ago; it’s the same coach that masterminded a win against Madrid that saw his team drawing twice to Stoke and against Wigan and Hull etc. So Tuesday’s result doesn’t suddenly turn Rafa into the Messiah. Whatever he is now, he has been all season. The only thing that changes as a result of a single result is fans’ perceptions of reality - not reality. A single result doesn’t prove much.
                But what I think the manner of our win against Madrid proved is that our team with Rafa Benitez in charge is capable of playing some of the best football on display in Europe. Although we had the record number of goals in the premiership last year, we are still thought of as a defensive team. I’ve argued that we have seen glimpses of what Rafa is trying to create in matches against Newcastle, Chelsea, Besiktas, and now Madrid. Our team tore Madrid apart much the way Rafa’s Valencia tore our team us apart at Anfield. The Madrid players were chasing shadows, and the score line was flattering to them - had they not had arguably the world’s best ‘keeper in goal, it could have been far worse than it was. And it wasn’t so much the result that excited me, it was the manner of the performance that proved that we really can play some breathtaking attacking football and that we are not merely a well organized defensive team as Rafa’s critics tend to suggest we are. A few years ago it was absolutely unimaginable that we would brush aside a team as great as Real Madrid with such consummate ease as if they were Newcastle! Anyone who can remember the nerves when Liverpool drew Juventus on the road to Istanbul will know I’m not exaggerating.
                With time and one or two personnel upgrades, we’ll have a team with enough cutting edge to open up teams that park the bus. And if we can do this early in a match, if we can score a single goal against a team like Stoke, it forces them to try to play football, and we’ve already showed what we can do when a team tries to play football. I think we’re one or two signings away from duplicating our European exploits in the premiership.
                I’ve said it numerous times this season and I’ll say it again: we are still a work in progress. However with each passing season, we’re getting nearer and nearer to completion. Prior to this season, we still lacked the experience of a title challenge and the crucial lessons such a title challenge teaches players, even when they finish on the losing side. We are gaining that this year. At the rate we’re moving along the learning curve of title winning teams, I’m confident with one or two shrewd signings this summer, we’ll be perfectly positioned to launch the sort of title winning campaign that will be the beginning of another rich era of success in our clubs great history.
                Written by Tetteh Otuteye
                Contact and read more articles by Tetteh Otuteye
                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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