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  • khan07958
    Top Poster
    • Dec 2008
    • 188

    #11341
    Even better, from Henry Winter of all people.


    Liverpool dreaming again after thrashing of Arsenal and it's thanks to Brendan Rodgers's impact

    Brendan Rodgers's revolution at Anfield continues as the Kop revels in Liverpool's 5-1 destruction of Arsenal - the club is heading in the right direction

    Brendan Rodgers: Brendan Rodgers's impact leaves Liverpool dreaming again after their victory over Arsenal

    Kop that: Brendan Rodgers salutes the Liverpool fans after their demolition of Arsenal Photo: REX

    By Henry Winter
    6:19PM GMT 08 Feb 2014


    At the end of the most memorable performance of his Liverpool tenure, Brendan Rodgers swivelled 360 degrees, waving to the supporters as he turned, and then walked briskly across to shake the hand of a numbed Ars?ne Wenger. In the background, the scoreline glowed: Liverpool 5 Arsenal 1. All around, Rodgers’ name resounded.

    Here was confirmation, if any were required, that John W Henry appointed brilliantly in deciding to bring Rodgers from Swansea City in June 2012. To misquote Henry, what are they smoking at Anfield? Probably large cigars after this win over Arsenal. Henry, who had famously questioned Arsenal’s choice of tobacco after an insulting bid for Luis Su?rez, was not present but the co-owner, Tom Werner, was here to admire Rodgers’ impact on the team.

    Having acknowledged Wenger, Rodgers disappeared down the tunnel, off to the dressing-room which was soon shaking to loud music. Like the reverberating speakers, joy was unconstrained. The players did not know that the last time Liverpool put five past Arsenal, on April 18, 1964, they won the league, the first title under Bill Shankly. Rodgers’s players were simply revelling in the quality of the performance, having carried out the manager’s game-plan of pressing and pacy counter-attacking with real exuberance.

    Along from the tunnel, Rodgers was soon eulogising individual performances and also attempting to suppress the incipient belief that Liverpool could push for the title, having just pulverised the leaders. Rodgers, a voice of calm amid the clamour, knows it will still take time, that the team remain a work in progress, however breathlessly exciting a work at times.

    Liverpool have not won the league since 1990, and Arsenal’s visit will always stir painful memories of a lost trophy, when Michael Thomas strode through to score in 1989. It’s up for grabs now, the more ardent fans might think of the trophy. Not Rodgers. He’s still building and Chelsea and Manchester City remain a cut above.


    But the fact remains that Liverpool are clearly heading in the right direction under Rodgers, looking a more fluid, intelligent and cohesive unit, and climbing up the table. As countless ears listened to Rodgers after the match, the eyes were surely drawn to the walls around him. These were adorned with black-and-white stills of past managerial masters, of men who set the tone for the club, who provided the benchmark that all successors must aspire to.

    There were pictures of Shankly talking at Melwood as the players stretched on the grass, of Shankly addressing Kevin Keegan and company in the dressing-room at Anfield and Shankly in front of the Kop, arms outstretched, the Messiah of the Mersey.

    Another sepia print captured Bob Paisley running, fully suited, in front of the Kop and another of Paisley standing at the top of the stairs by the “This Is Anfield” sign, holding the league trophy. Paisley was also depicted drinking tea with Kenny Dalglish, Ronnie Moran and Roy Evans in the boot room. There was Joe Fagan standing in a bus-shelter dug-out, Gerard Houllier with the Uefa Cup while nearby was Rafa Ben?tez with the Champions League.

    It is this history that ensures Rodgers will never get carried away, why he will keep drilling them hard at Melwood. But his post-match words will have lifted his players further, making them even more of a force. Rodgers spoke of their “wonderful appetite”, praising all of them, lingering on how Philippe Coutinho has enhanced his game, “intercepting and blocking”, and of his belief that “I don’t think there’s a better winger in England than Raheem Sterling”. He enthused about the “selfless” contribution of Su?rez, playing wide so Daniel Sturridge’s pace could be inflicted on Per Mertesacker.

    His tactics worked. Four goals up within 19 minutes, Liverpool fans were chanting “there’s only one Brendan Rodgers”. He has transformed the team, individually and collectively. The work that Rodgers has done with players on set-pieces at Melwood was heralded here, bringing the first two goals: Steven Gerrard’s free-kick and then corner were both met by Martin Skrtel.

    It is the tactical intelligence, the hunting of the ball in packs, the pace on the counter, the numbers in the middle and the relentless working for the cause, particularly the wide players like Su?rez and Sterling tracking back, that is the Rodgers’s way. They forced mistakes, Jordan Henderson pressing Mesut ?zil to win the ball for Liverpool’s third and then Coutinho picking off the German’s casual pass for the fourth.

    Rodgers has revitalised Gerrard, fielding him in front of the back-four, sweeping skillfully, nicking the ball off Olivier Giroud after 32 minutes and Santi Cazorla after 38 minutes, also collecting possession from his defenders, dictating some of the moves. It suits the 33-year-old Gerrard, allowing him to unleash attacks with those 50-yard passes.

    There is plenty of energy around Gerrard, youngsters like the tireless Henderson. Rodgers has shown faith in Henderson, calling the young Englishman into his office, offering him the opportunity of going to Fulham but promising him a chance if he shone in training. Henderson listened, learned, improved and is now established in Liverpool’s first team, utterly eclipsing Jack Wilshere in front of the assistant England coach, Ray Lewington.

    Liverpool’s manager has drafted good players in, Coutinho delivering some sumptuous passes. Coutinho is light of frame but now relishing the physical, including a brief bout with Wilshere. Rodgers certainly recruited astutely with Sturridge, coaxing consistent performances from a striker who lost his way at Manchester City and Chelsea. Sturridge took his goal with real poise, outpacing Laurent Koscielny as he ran on to Coutinho’s pass, and shooting unerringly past Wojciech Szczesny for his 15 league goal this season, his best return in a Premier League season.

    The Northern Irishman has encouraged fearlessness in his players, seen in Sturridge’s form and in the way John Flanagan closed down ?zil, ignoring the vaunted reputation, the price-tag, simply wanting the ball more than the lazy German. Flanagan is young, occasionally raw, but benefiting from Rodgers’s man-management, showing the confidence to play a wonderful first-time pass to Gerrard after 50 minutes, and then again to Sterling after 63.

    Rodgers has made Sterling more effective, improving his delivery and finishing. He seems to have made the winger accept responsibility on and off the pitch. His two goals were superb, credit to his composure and acceleration, but it was arguably a back-heel to Coutinho after 64 minutes that really drew most applause.

    Rodgers kept wanting more, throwing his hands down in frustration as a move broke down just before the break when Flanagan failed to keep the ball in. He stood at the edge of his technical area, encouraging, instructing, occasionally waving to the Kop when they sang his name.

    When removing a player from the fray, such as Sturridge, Rodgers embraced him, shook his hand and had a quiet word in his ear. It was almost paternal. Rodgers kept communicating while Wenger was even more silent than Stan Kroenke, the Arsenal owner making a rare visit to an away game.

    While Wenger sat stunned, Rodgers was beckoning players over during breaks in play, continuing to coach and coax, such as when Henderson sprinted across for some new commands after 75 minutes. He listened, nodded, took a slug of water and got on with the game, with fulfilling his manager’s master-plan, a plan that has given Liverpool a future of genuine excitement and substance.


    Great praise for BR, and I agree. He's moulding the team visibly and vibrantly.
    YNWA

    Comment

    • mtv1
      The Stig PT
      • Apr 2008
      • 4413

      #11342




      >>>>>>>>>>Dreambox Tools<<<<<<<<<<

      Comment

      • koppit
        DK Veteran
        • Dec 2008
        • 587

        #11343
        Can't believe how one sided the game was. For a team at the top of the league arsenal were completely blown away. Got to give credit to br and the team

        Comment

        • zee24
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2011
          • 3342

          #11344




          Hillsborough 15th of April 1989
          96
          Never Forgotten
          You'll Never Walk Alone
          JFT96 - !!DONT BUY THE S*N!!

          Comment

          • zee24
            Senior Member
            • Jan 2011
            • 3342

            #11345



            Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk




            Hillsborough 15th of April 1989
            96
            Never Forgotten
            You'll Never Walk Alone
            JFT96 - !!DONT BUY THE S*N!!

            Comment

            • Bulld0g
              V.I.P. Member
              • Apr 2008
              • 7158

              #11346
              Do not tell Brendan Rodgers but majestic Liverpool played like champions

              Liverpool manager Brendan Rogers is probably right when he says they cannot win the Premier League title this season but they played like champions against Arsenal.
              There was a moment an hour after the final whistle at Anfield when Brendan Rodgers resembled Per Mertesacker being confronted with another forward surge from Luis Su?rez and Daniel Sturridge.

              He knew what was coming, he was deeply uncomfortable about it, but he was powerless to prevent it.

              ?Can Liverpool win the title?? he was asked. Three times in three minutes: only marginally less frequent than a Liverpool goal at the start of their Arsenal annihilation.

              It has become less a question and more a weekly interrogation, Rodgers strapped to a chair in full resistance mode like Dustin Hoffman in Marathon Man. All that is missing is the slap across the brow and more forceful insistence. ?No Brendan you must confirm this team can do it. Say it. Say it right now.?

              We are now as preoccupied with managerial drivel about horses and jaguars than the performances themselves. Post-match hollow talk is irrelevant when the on-field display carries such gravitas

              Steven Gerrard declared this the greatest league performance of his Liverpool career, on a par with Champions League wins over Juventus and Real Madrid. ?As explosive as it gets,? he said. ?Definitely in the top three performances I have been involved in. I am trying to think back to a performance ? especially in the first half ? that I can remember in the last 15 years. We have absolutely demolished a top team from start to finish.?

              Gerrard is less inclined to agree that Liverpool will not win the title but, for what it is worth, Rodgers is right. Chelsea and Manchester City are too strong for now and Anfield sobriety is desirable, even on afternoons of intoxicating brilliance.

              Qualification into the Champions League, retaining Su?rez and building around the youthful verve of Raheem Sterling, Coutinho, Jordan Henderson and the rapidly improving Jon Flanagan will do for now.

              A flaw of Liverpool in the 24 years since their last league title has been the vast gulf between self-image and the perception of everyone else.

              Too often club employees have acclaimed Liverpool?s magnificence in one breath while emphasising how humble they are in the next.

              The fact that Liverpool?s stature was generally bequeathed by men who are now portraits on the stadium walls or diplomats in the Legends suite is of little consequence. Dozens of feeble individuals assumed greatness by simply touching the hem of titans; men not fit for the shirt or the office.

              Liverpool never had to say how marvellous they were in the past. They just were. Everyone else could pen the eulogies.

              One league game in the club?s history makes Kopites of a certain age swell with pride more than others ? a 5-0 flattening of Nottingham Forest in 1988.

              It was not just the inventiveness and precision of the football, but the glowing tribute afterwards of Sir Tom Finney, declaring it the best performance he had been privileged to witness. This glowing testimony of an esteemed elder statesman was embraced even more than if had it been Bill Shankly himself. What was thrilling about the obliteration of Arsenal on Saturday was it summoned memories of that Forest game 26 years ago: peerless, football perfection of the Anfield kind. It was incisive, destructive and relentless.

              No sooner were spectators recovering their perspective after one dumbfounding piece of skill, they were applauding the next.

              This was Arsenal being humiliated here, not some tinpot, raggle-taggle outfit. Arsenal, top of the league and with only one defeat in 13 against Liverpool; a team capable of repeating the hammering they dished out to Liverpool at the Emirates earlier in the season in the FA Cup next week; a team whose brand of football is admired more than any of Liverpool?s rivals.

              A minute before half-time, with Liverpool already 4-0 up courtesy of Martin Skrtel?s double, Sterling and Sturridge, spontaneous applause broke out. The standing ovation accompanied Liverpool?s players to the tunnel.

              Arsenal were hit by a tornado and had nothing left but to avoid further damage from the debris. The one consolation for Ars?ne Wenger, after conceding four in 20 minutes, was that they only suffered the indignity of a further effort from Sterling in the second half before Mikel Arteta stroked home a penalty. Sterling?s goals came in front of the watching England assistant manager Ray Lewington.

              Rodgers has often been accused of struggling with the Anfield contra*diction of balancing grandiose *expectations with expressions of what is really attainable. Now he is fighting a losing battle to stop others announcing Liverpool?s title credentials. So be it.

              Although Shankly is the Kop sage quoted more than others, it is the wise words of a former chairman, John Smith, that are too often overlooked. ?We don?t talk at Liverpool. We just win,? Smith once said with a nod to the annual proclamations from the club?s rivals. For too long, when a Liverpool player or manager sets a title target, there has been an uncomfortable pause and shuffling at the back of the room.

              The roles were reversed on Saturday. Others ? neutral observers ? left Anfield suggesting the Liverpool manager was deluded if he thinks his side cannot become champions. As a symbol of how rapidly Rodgers is shifting perceptions of his club beyond Merseyside, it does not get more telling than that.

              THE TRUTH
              The Hillsborough Independent Panel. 12/09/12

              Today's report is black and white.The Liverpool fans were not the cause of the disaster.
              The panel has quite simply found 'no evidence' in support of allegations of 'exceptional levels of drunkenness, ticketlessness or violence among Liverpool fans' and 'no evidence that fans had conspired to arrive late at the stadium' and 'no evidence that they stole from the dead and dying'.

              Comment

              • zee24
                Senior Member
                • Jan 2011
                • 3342

                #11347




                Hillsborough 15th of April 1989
                96
                Never Forgotten
                You'll Never Walk Alone
                JFT96 - !!DONT BUY THE S*N!!

                Comment

                • khan07958
                  Top Poster
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 188

                  #11348
                  Originally posted by zee24
                  Fergie looks p...d, with the choosen one.
                  How the mighty empire is crumbling.
                  Old boy Moyes, keep up the good work!
                  YNWA

                  Comment

                  • khan07958
                    Top Poster
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 188

                    #11349
                    YNWA

                    Comment

                    • maca
                      Mr. DK DJ
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 6310

                      #11350
                      Now look stop all this poking fun at man utd ffs we all sound like typical scousers who want them to **** up. not like everybody else in the world that loves them or so were told to believe

                      Comment

                      • zee24
                        Senior Member
                        • Jan 2011
                        • 3342

                        #11351
                        the game against Fulham on Wednesday looks in doubt because of the tube strikes, should know more by 3pm tomorrow.

                        Liverpool trip to Fulham in doubt due to London Underground strikes | Football News | ESPN.co.uk




                        Hillsborough 15th of April 1989
                        96
                        Never Forgotten
                        You'll Never Walk Alone
                        JFT96 - !!DONT BUY THE S*N!!

                        Comment

                        • Bulld0g
                          V.I.P. Member
                          • Apr 2008
                          • 7158

                          #11352
                          The strike has been suspended so the game is on.

                          THE TRUTH
                          The Hillsborough Independent Panel. 12/09/12

                          Today's report is black and white.The Liverpool fans were not the cause of the disaster.
                          The panel has quite simply found 'no evidence' in support of allegations of 'exceptional levels of drunkenness, ticketlessness or violence among Liverpool fans' and 'no evidence that fans had conspired to arrive late at the stadium' and 'no evidence that they stole from the dead and dying'.

                          Comment

                          • koppit
                            DK Veteran
                            • Dec 2008
                            • 587

                            #11353
                            Originally posted by zee24
                            With that money you'd think mick hucknel would own a mirror

                            Comment

                            • koppit
                              DK Veteran
                              • Dec 2008
                              • 587

                              #11354
                              Originally posted by maca
                              Now look stop all this poking fun at man utd ffs we all sound like typical scousers who want them to **** up. not like everybody else in the world that loves them or so were told to believe
                              Tbh the current predicament at faulty towers is making me Ill. I laughed so much watching them play Fulham I think I've given me self a hernia

                              Comment

                              • wongers
                                Senior Member
                                • Dec 2008
                                • 734

                                #11355
                                is mick hucknall charlie drakes love child th.jpg

                                Comment

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