Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts

Thursday, April 7, 2011

LeBron Takes His Talents to Anfield;
Acquires Minority Share of Liverpool

LeBron's New Team.
So LeBron James is a minority owner of Liverpool FC this morning. Well yippe-kai-yay. Hey LeBron, can you find Liverpool on a map? (Hint: It's in England--over there, no higher. North. No, that's south).

The nuts and bolts of the deal are that Fenway Sports Group, i.e., the Boston Red Sox, and LeBron's marketing firm LRMR negotiated a deal where Fenway will rep LeBron. In exchange, this expands the King James brand into Europe and aligns the Red Sox, Liverpool and LeBron whenever convenient. Ho-hum.

This is clearly a marriage of convenience. LeBron's brand is probably stronger overseas than it is here. He's still stinging from "The Decision" and his choice to create some sort of superteam with the Miami Heat, manipulating the arrival of Chris Bosh, as well as his own, to join Dwayne Wade. Remains to be seen if the experiment is going to pay off for the Heat, but LeBron is definitely not regarded as the game's ambassador here. He's made some awkward, questionable decisions and most importantly--has yet to win ANYTHING.

I think this one is all splash and no substance. You'll see LeBron at Anfield for sure in the near future and peddling swag worldwide. Maybe he can convince King Kenny to build a superteam at Liverpool! Ronaldo, Messi and Iniesta! Sure. Why not?

He's King James.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Starting Eleven European, World Soccer Blog Random Thoughts:

Temryss Lane
Regular readers know--and love--the semi-regular Starting Eleven Football Blog Roundup. That's a collection of bits and pieces collected from football blogs around the world. Today I'm introducing a new feature called Random Thoughts. It's a collection of bits and pieces of football thoughts collected from my cavernous brain. Basically, it's a crutch I'll lean on when I have nothing else to write about. Enjoy.

  • Wait! What? Didier Drogba has malaria? Seriously? Is this stuff contagious? I guess not since you catch if from mosquitoes. May I suggest one of those propane-powered mosquito killers? Or a net? Or some Off? Sheesh.
  • Liverpool beats Chelsea, wins four in a row, I write a post somewhat sarcastically suggesting that Liverpool might just be on its way back, considering a cupcake schedule coming up. And what do I get? Grief. 
  • And yeah, I screwed up: Liverpool is NOT undefeated since the Red Sox took ownership of the club and Anfield. They lost the Mercyside Derby a couple of days after the acquisition was announced. Mea Culpa. Grief, part 2. Jackasses.
  • Speaking of Liverpool, I put forward that Sporting Lisbon is the Liverpool of Portugal--minus of course all those European Cups. Only Sporting can puke all over its own shoes when it has a chance to take possession of second place after starting the season near the relegation zone. Only Sporting can piss away a 2-0 lead in such game and lose 3-2. Only Sporting is this maddening. Oh yeah, don't forget to stomp all over Lille again in your next Europa League game.
  • Keeping it in Portugal, I'm taking great simultaneous joy and restraint in Porto's unbelievable 5-0 win over Benfica in the Portuguese classico last weekend. So typical of Portuguese football; Benfica, so brilliant a year ago, couldn't wait to sell off its best players and now they're a shell of their 2009 championship team. Sad really, sad.
  • Derbies or Classicos: Aside from Sporting-Benfica, I'll take the classicos every time. No need to go further than Real Madrid-Barcelona.
  • Anyone notice that Real Madrid has yet to lose in LaLiga, has a goal differential of 22 and is running away with a difficult Champions League group. Tell me again how Jose Mourinho isn't the best manager in the world? 
  • Speaking of Derbies, I'll take City this weekend. Just sayin...
  • Who's in the MLS playoffs again? LA, Dallas, Colorado and San Jose? Who again is in the Eastern Conference? 
  • Gotta love ESPN's overly dramatic Outside the Lines piece yesterday on the U.S. Women's team's do-or-die game last night against Costa Rica.A U.S. loss would have eliminated them from World Cup qualification. The U.S. wins 3-0 and heads to a two-game playoff against Italy where chances are it will stomp all over Italy and waltz into the World Cup. Someone wake Brandi Chastain.
  • David Beckham might be hosting Saturday Night Live soon? Yay. Maybe Posh will float on her big inflated boobs over the audience like the Goodyear blimp providing aerial views.
  • Anyone subscribe to the World Football Daily podcast? I miss the free one. Haven't heard it since they went to the pay model. Would love some feedback whether you think it's worth it.
  • Anyone notice that Fox Soccer Channel nuked their Monday night talk show? Probably not since no one watched it to begin with. Trust me, I sat through one episode and it was embarrassing. The host doesn't know football from throwball and the conversation was inane. Aside from the lovely Temryss Lane, the thing was unwatchable. Bring back Steven Cohen and anyone else--besides Wynalda.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Liverpool Climbs From Relegation Depths, Beats Chelsea

Liverpool Lady
Relegation? Hogwash! Look who's back baby, it's Liverpool.

Undefeated in five matches, including wins in their last four, the Reds have pulled themselves from the relegation zone to the middle of the table with two patsies for fixtures in the next two weeks. Can we start talking about Liverpool launching itself back into the top four and next year's Champions League?

Sure beating Bolton, Blackburn and Napoli are nice, but when you peg a brace of goals on league leaders and Europe's best bunch Chelsea 2-0, then it's time to stand and take notice. Call the Kops; Liverpool is back.

Must be the Fenway Faithful urging Liverpool to the heights of the Premiership. Liverpool hasn't lost since John Henry's Red Sox ownership group took hold of the staff to guide the Anfield Army. Fear not when you see a 37-foot wall being erected at Anfield--it's part of the mystique. Plus the seats atop the wall will provide a killer view of a match. And the advertising revenue from all that space will buy players without creating more debt. Just call it American ingenuity.

In the meantime, how about a pat on the back for Liverpool's Spanish studs, Pepe Reina in goal and Fernando Torres scoring goals. Reina was absolutely larcenous against Chelsea, which did not have Didier Drogba in its Starting Eleven. Apparently, Drogba had a fever. A couple of baby aspirin at halftime enabled Drogba to play some in the second half, but by then, two brilliant Torres goals and a handful of world-class keeping by Reina put this one away.

Next up is Wigan and Stoke, currently 18th and 17th in the Premier League table. The giants, meanwhile, will continue to knock each other off. This weekend, we've got the Manchester derby and Chelsea taking on Clint Dempsey's Fulham team. Surely Liverpool will gain more ground, especially as Chelsea next faces upstart Sunderland and United heads to Villa. I smell six more points and a few more baby steps toward the top of the table.

The Red Sox and Liverpool--the stuff memories, and championships, are made of.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Relax Liverpool Fans; Red Sox Ownership isn't What You're Expecting


OK, so this one is for you Liverpool fan. I'm here to tell you all about the Boston Red Sox and what life is going to be like for you and for your Anfield experience in the coming years. Buckle in boys, it'll be interesting.
First, a little about the Red Sox. Not quite America's team, but nonetheless, very popular throughout the game's history, especially since 1967 when the team went from last place in 1966 to Game 7 of the 1967 World Series. They lost. They lost four Game 7s as a matter of fact (1946, 1967, 1975 and 1986), all the while, their rivals the New York Yankees won a crapload of championships (28 and counting). Think Manchester United of late.

The Red Sox, like Liverpool, were plagued with, let's say awkward ownership and management from the 1940s to the late 1990s, early 2000s. Thomas Yawkey, for whom a street is named in Boston, was a racist. Pretty common knowledge. The Sox were the last baseball team to sign a black player and Yawkey notoriously made it a point that this was the way it was going to be. The Yawkeys and the Yawkey Foundation were in charge until 2002 when current owner John Henry bought the team.

This signaled a rebirth of the Red Sox for sure. Gone were the Yawkeys, taking with them a stale product, an outdated ballpark and a philosophy of profit first over championships. OK if you're running a business, not so much if you're a fan.

Henry and his partners quickly ousted management, brought in a young general manager to oversee player development and signings. Theo Epstein had a fresh approach to baseball and it worked. In 2003, the Sox should have gone--and won the World Series--but were undone by an incompetent field manager in the ALCS (think semifinals). They did win it all the next year, ending 86 years of frustration without a championship. The Sox won again in 2007.

This is great news for Liverpool fans. Granted now, Henry et al didn't come in having to erase the same debt  they will encounter with Liverpool, but they did have to erase years of bad charma and bad blood and infighting between players, management and fans. They invested in good on-field and off-field management, revamped player development and put a good team on the field.

And they didn't ignore the fans, unlike previous ownership, who insisted it was OK that men piss community style in the men's room into what was essentially a massive bathtub with continuously running water that, yes, you guessed it, would overflow whenever it felt like it. Fenway was a dump and its charm as America's best little ballpark wasn't holding much water either.

Henry and company invested in Fenway Park, resisting temptation to build a new park. They closed off the streets surrounding the ballpark, and basically, made it festive out there. Lots of interactivity between fans and the club with booths, food, clowns. You could watch the team's local television show being done live on a stage at the end of one street. Bars and eateries popped up, ironically, all along Yawkey Way and Landsdowne Street. Inside the park changed too. Better food and conveniences were added. More seating in different places too; atop the Green Monster and on the right field roof (an exclusive bar, and seating area, nice take in the summer). Fenway, in many ways, is still a dump. It's almost 100 years old, but at least it doesn't smell like piss and you don't have to stand in it in the men's room.

There are black guys on the team and good food and drink (yes, it's expensive) to consume. It's a good time, albeit a costly day out.

Having never been to Anfield, I can't say if the current experience there is similar to old Fenway. But I can say that Henry and company are A) master marketers and B) want to win. I would guess that when they're able, they'll bring in top-flight management first, scout out the best football players, focus on player development many levels below the senior club and bring back a taste of Premiership and Champions League glory.

It may not be easy and a quick road to the top--and heaven forbid Liverpool is relegated. But  you can be sure that Henry and company won't behave as Hicks and Gillet did, nor will they be the Glazers. Your protests are understandable; you're certainly shell-shocked Liverpool fan by what the Texas twosome did to your beloved club. But rest easier, these aren't the same types of blokes. You might not get a new Anfield right away, but they'll pretty up the one you have, and they'll pretty up the boys on the pitch. Talk to me in 2-3 years when you have some silverware and just gimme a nod and a wink that I was right. That's all I ask.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Debt, Doubt Surround Liverpool's Future

Those of you Liverpool fans who wanted American owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks out of the way may get your wish after all.

Following months of speculation about whether either Gillett, Hicks or both would sell their shares of Liverpool, it turns out the recession may get the both in the end. Reports are flying fast out of England that there may not be a bank who will pick up a refinancing on the loans the Americans took out to buy the club. Gillett and Hicks have until January to pay back 350 million pounds in debt; their loans run out in January and the credit crunch is making a refinance unlikely.

In fact, Keith Harris, chairman of Seymour Pierce investment bank and a former Football League chairman, said Liverpool could be headed for a financial meltdown and that star players such as Fernando Torres and Ryan Babel may have to be sold to pare down the club's debt. And forget about beefing up the side for a title run during the January transfer window; that's been slammed shut and it's not even December 1 yet.

Stunning news. One has to wonder whether DIC or some other oil-rich investor will take a shot at buying the club now. Harris, meanwhile, says Liverpool is not alone. He's trying to find takers for Newcastle and Everton, without much luck. Harris is the man who brokered Roman Abramovich's purchase of Chelsea, and Manchester City's recent sale. The man is connected.

Starting Eleven is now on Twitter. Follow us there as well.

Subscribe to Starting Eleven



Sunday, November 2, 2008

Magical Harry, Spurs Upset Liverpool

Move over Houdini and Potter, there's a new magical Harry in town. The town is London, the club is Tottenham and the Harry is Redknapp.

Harry Redknapp's Spurs knocked off the top dog in the Premier League yesterday, beating Liverpool 2-1 with a stunning injury-time strike to win it. Roman Pavlyuchenko's redirected game-winner two minutes into extra time provided Tottenham with its seventh point in Redknapp's three-game reign. Still in the relegation zone, Spurs are certainly looking up in more ways than one.

It's hard to dispute that Spurs needed a change. Since Juande Ramos was sacked, the club has won twice and has a moral victory ina 4-4 draw with Arsenal midweek--a true classic. Is it all Redknapp, probably not, but it certianly isn't hurting.

Redknapp's pushing all the right buttons. Yesterday, he brought on Pavlyuchenko at the half, and he connected on the game-winner. Aaron Lennon came on at 75, and he was a spark for the Tottenham attack. He also had some help from spotty Liverpool defending on the game-winner. David Bentley architected a blistering shot on goal that Pepe Reina stretched himself to make a fingertip save. The rebound deflected to Darren Bent; shockingly Andrea Dosseana initially challenged Bent the stopped and allowed the cross through. Pavlyuchenko rushed the goal and Daniel Agger failed to intercept him or the ball and the Russian chipped the ball over Reina.

Sensational finish and something special happening for Spurs. Redknapp is inspiring a lot of this right now with his experience and attitude.

Subscribe to Starting Eleven


Wednesday, October 22, 2008

UEFA's Tacit Compliance
with Racism a Sad Story

It's a pretty safe bet Madrid's Vincente Calderon Stadium will be at capacity today when Liverpool visits for its Champions League Group D match against Atletico Madrid. Shame.

You never get a second chance to make a first impression, and UEFA will never get a second chance to make its first major stance against racism in Champions League football.

By now the chain of events leading up to today's match is well chronicled: At Atletico's last Champions League match against Marseille, police inside Calderon were accused of being "heavy-handed" with Marseille supporters in the stands; it was said the club failed to adequately secure the grounds, Marseille's journey to the stadium or the press area. In the meantime, Atletico supporters are accused of levying monkey chants against toward the field, Marseille supporters and two black journalists.

Initially, Atletico was facing a two-match Champions League ban at its ground and a requirement to play those matches at least 300 kilometers from Madrid, but UEFA wasn't punishing them for the racism charges. No, it was for the lax security and general unruliness at the ground and outside. Ultimately, UEFA conceded to pressure from Atletico and Liverpool and only fined Atletico. UEFA said it wouldn't be fair to the Liverpool supporters who had made travel arrangements to Madrid to reschedule their itineraries.

UEFA cleverly tried to disguise the fine (punishment?) as a statement against racism, but don't kid yourself. It's kinda like the American Congress when it stuffs unrelated budget cuts, taxes and mandates into major laws as concessions to the other party in order to get the bigger initiative through the legislative process. It's a joke, and accepted with a wink and a nod. UEFA punished Atletico, but it said nothing against racism here, even in the statement on its decision. It's kinda like putting a rapist in jail on a parking violation, and justifying it by saying "Well, at least he's off the street!"

What happens if today the monkey chants start again in force? Spain and England don't have the best football relationship; for example, England won't play an international friendly at the Barnebeau. What if the Spanish hooligans--an no we're not indicting the whole population of Spanish fans; we understand it's the actions of a few that sully the whole--use the spotlight of a major international competition and a worldwide TV audience to really spread their poison?

Well UEFA has an answer! It's put it all on referee Claus Bo Larsen who has been told he can put a stop to the match if the racial taunts begin. Sad. Imagine a testy atmosphere, and the referee sends everyone home before the show is over? The consequences might be too horrid to imagine.

There is no right answer here, well not today any way. UEFA missed its opportunity two weeks ago to enforce the stadium ban, or at a minimum, play it in front of an empty house--granted that doesn't look good on television.

One thing in favor of things being tranquil today is the heavy Spanish flavor to the Liverpool team, from manager Rafa Benitez to Fernando Torres, who unfortunately for him won't play today due to injury. That could keep things in check. And hopefully, the club responds with heavy security and heavy marketing to fans, stressing that it's a good idea they behave today.

Sad. We haven't said a word yet about how interesting a matchup this is. Not only is there the Spanish connection at Liverpool, but Atletico has been a dangerous side so far. It started the LaLiga campaign strongly and is 2-0 in the Champions League with convincing wins over Marseille and PSV Eindhoven.

Sad. Football continues to be a political platform. Football has also become a stage for hate. Football is under seige, and when powerful organizations such as UEFA tacitly captitulate as it has in this case, problems are far from resolved.

This post originally appeared at Champions League Talk.

Subscribe to Starting Eleven


Friday, September 12, 2008

Gerrard, Torres Ready to Return for
Liverpool against Manchester United

Yes Manchester United fans, you will have Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres to kick around tomorrow when Liverpool hosts United at Anfield.

Gerrard, fresh off of groin surgery, and Torres, recovering from a hamstring ding, have been cleared in anticipation of tomorrow's derby. That clamor you hear are the Mercysiders jigging themselves silly.

Gerrard's return is an eye-opener. He was expected to miss this game and the Reds' Champions League opener this week. It will be interesting to see how much he plays against United. Expect him to start; whether he finishes is another story.

Rafa Benitez will have a full side against United with the Reds atop the table with Chelsea.

"[Gerrard and Torres] came through a full training session this morning. It wasn't a very hard session, but they will both be in the squad. It's important for us to have these two players of quality who can change a game. I'm not surprised they are available because the medical staff have done a good job and the players have been working really hard with the physios to get fit."

Not to fall into the trap of over-hyping games in September, but this is a big one (duh). United has four points from two matches, and dropping three more tomorrow won't be good for its overall title hopes, and may indeed rush Cristiano Ronaldo back from the sidelines. Sir Alex Ferguson says Ronaldo is fit and will return for this week's home Champions League match against Villareal at Old Trafford. Like Gerrard, Ronaldo's recovery is ahead of schedule.

Liverpool needs to win if it's going to snap its Premier League title drought. With Chelsea having beefed up, the Blues may be the bigger target this season. But there's something to be said for moral, emotional victories. United are a big hurdle for Liverpool, one that needs to be leapt at home.

With United certainly slumping out of the gate, this might be a likely outcome. The difference may rest on the bench, not where Gerrard and/or Torres may be sitting, but in Benitez. The Liverpool boss isn't the best game-day guy in the Premier League, and in a close match, how he moves the chess pieces may dictate the outcome.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Liverpool Sweats Champions League Second Leg v. Liege

Barcelona is through. Juventus and Panathinaikos too. Match Day 2 of third-round qualifying for the 2008-09 Champions League is upon us today. Just call it Drama Day.

While it was a lock for the aforementioned three European powers to get through following their first-leg performances, not so today for a host of clubs including Liverpool.

The Reds host Standard Liege today, and they're in a favorable position after having drawn 0-0 in Belgium last week. But one away goal from Standard, and Liverpool will be scrambling for two goals in front of a suddenly hostile home crowd. Liverpool has been in decent form through two weeks in the Premier League, winning both times, the latest on a late game-winner from Steven Gerrard.

Gerrard and Torres have the attention of Liege manager Laszlo Boloni, who is saying all the right things heading into today's match. Liverpool won't have Javier Mascherano and Lucas in the lineup; both have just returned from the Olympics. Sami Hyypia is injured, and that's a hole in the back line. Ryan Babel, Xabi Alonso and Jermaine Pennant should also be available despite also appearing in the Olympics (Babel) or the speculation of transfer rumors (Alonso and Pennant).

Liege, meanwhile, will ride Mbokani Bezua (four goals in two season-opening games) and Steven Defour and Oguchi Onyewu.

Also worth watching today:
  • Arsenal hosting Twente of Holland after winning a 2-0 opening leg.
  • Guimaraes in a huge battle on the road against Basel after a 0-0 opening leg. This would be Guimaraes' first time in the group stage; and remember, they would have automatically qualified for the group stage had Porto's suspension from the tournament not been upheld.
  • Fenerbhace hosts Partizan needing to hold after a 2-2 road match.
  • Atletico Madrid hosts Schalke, down a goal.
Remember, the group stage draw is tomorrow.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Champions League Draw: Arsenal-Liverpool Overload


Any major tournament draw is always met with the same levels of excitement and cynicism. Today, for instance, we have the quarterfinal and semifinal pairings for the Champions League, and with four English teams, there were bound to be eye-openers.

The spotlight pairing clearly is Arsenal-Liverpool, but shockingly, Manchester United and Roma were paired. ManU and Roma were in the same group, and this has to be disappointing to both sides and their respective fans; surely they're tired of each other. This matchup is worthy of a final; both teams are in top form and it will be interesting to see who survives this one and what the winner has left going forward.

The other two matchups feature Barcelona meeting Schalke and Chelsea taking on Fenerbahce. It would seem the two glamour sides here got the better of this deal. Barca won't have Leo Messi when it takes on the upstarts from Germany who handled Portuguese leaders Porto. Chelsea, meanwhile, are real sleepers in the Premiership, in spite of the pressure on their coach Avram Grant.

Back to Arsenal-Liverpool for a second, not only does the guarantee one English side in the semis, but it sets up three matches between these two teams in a week's span: April 2, 5 and 8. WOW. Rafa and Arsene will certainly earn their money that week, not only strategy wise, but in human capital. Who sits, who plays and how often? These are three high-pressure matches and this could be advantage Liverpool. Arsenal would likely need the Premiership match much more than Liverpool, which could take advantage of its fourth- or fifth-place standing and sit some players for the domestic match and focus on Europe.

Cynical view: UEFA's out to get Arsene here (just kidding).

The semifinals, meanwhile, shake out this way:

Arsenal-Liverpool winner vs. Chelsea-Fenerbahce winner
ManU-Roma winner vs. Barca-Schalke winner

Spare us another Liverpool-Chelsea semi, but if that's the price to pay for a titanic ManU-Liverpool final, then so be it.

Oh You Beauty has more on the draw.
101 Great Goals has a brief reaction too.
Abeloa didn't get his wish; read Anfield Talk.
Champions League Talk has some early predictions.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Champions League Preview: Inter Milan vs. Liverpool


The Premiership may have failed to get one of the big four into the FA Cup semifinals for the first time since 1912, but that may be forgotten by tonight should Liverpool finish the job against Inter Milan in their second leg round-of-16 Champions League match at the San Siro (ESPN2, 3:30 p.m. ET).

A positive result for Liverpool today means that the entire big four of England are in the Champions League quarterfinals; and extraordinary achievement.

Of the four, Liverool was the least likely to make it this far considering its roller-coaster season domestically. But clearly, Rafa Benitez has built his team to win this tournament, and he's admitted that he's more suited for coaching life outside the EPL. Should Liverpool give up its 2-0 first-leg advantage and be bounced out, Rafa is likely to follow the Reds right out the door at Anfield.

This would only add to the anxiety surrounding the club, whose owners are at odds over selling their respective shares to a consortium from Dubai. This is truly an injustice to the fan. The front-office discord is unhealthy; the on-field inconsistency is maddening to watch and the tease that is a sixth European championship is seductive.

I've always been one to root for the good story, and clearly here, the better tale is Liverpool getting in and running the table. Not only would Liverpool fans get a title, but it would be near impossible to ditch Rafa.

All indications are that Liverpool should manage to get through. Behind the fabulous Fernando Torres, the Reds haven't lost in the Premiership since late January, and the only blemish on its record is its monumental 1-0 loss to Barnsley in the FA Cup. Liverpool has scored 15 goals in its last five matches and has won four in a row.

Oh You Beauty examines today's match from a technical viewpoint, concentrating on Rafa's 4-2-3-1 alignment.

EPL Talk, meanwhile, says Liverpool has a mountain to climb; we'll see.

Italian Soccer Serie A has the 19 Inter players called up for today's match.

101 Great Goals has a rundown from the English press
on the match.

Champions League The Offside has a preview as well.

Same goes for Great Red North.


Add to Technorati Favorites

Interesting Poll Results

Some of you who stop by regularly may notice that I regularly put up a poll. It's usually a fun thing for me, and I can pretty much guess how it's going to turn out.

The last one has me flummoxed, however. I asked where you think Jose Mourinho may end up, and while this is hardly scientific or even remotely close to a worthy sample, four of the nine who voted said Liverpool.

Honestly, I would have expected Barcelona to be the runaway winner, and if there was going to be an underdog winner, I would have pinned my hopes on the Portuguese national team; but Liverpool?

I'll repost the results here since the poll will eventually disappear:

Liverpool 4 votes (44%)
Barcelona 2 votes (22%)
Portugal 1 vote (11%)
Benfica 1 vote (11%)
Porto 1 vote (11%)
AC Milan 0 votes (0%)
Other 0 votes (0%)

9 TOTAL VOTES

I'll speculate here that I have some loyal readers who are Liverpool diehards and those folks voted with their hearts. My head still tells me Barcelona or even AC Milan, which got ZERO votes in my informal survey.

But it would be interesting to see him land at Anfield; perhaps from there he could carry out his "kill Chelsea" promise.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Gerrard Pained by Liverpool's Premier League Failures


The captain speaks. Steven Gerrard says not even a win in the Champions League will ease the pain of Liverpool's failure in the Premier League. Gerrard concedes the Reds are playing for fourth, and essentially blames the drama surrounding the team.

Consider this calendar of events that has plagued Liverpool this season--remember how Liverpool was running away with the league in the first few weeks; how is this team 17 points back of Arsenal?

  • Rafa's falling out with American owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett
  • Gillett and Hicks' relationship explodes
  • Gillett considering selling his share of the club to Dubai International Capital
  • Continued uncertainty over the construction of the team's new stadium
  • Massive debt incurred because of the new stadium proposal
  • Break-ins at the homes of Liverpool players while the team is on the road
  • Betting scandal surfaces around the team's Champions League qualifier win over Besiktas
Soccerlens has more on Liverpool in crisis.
SportsGranola picks up on Gerrard's frustrations
CaughtOffside chimes in too.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Hicks Says He's Committed to Liverpool, Not Selling to DIC

Well, it didn’t take Liverpool owner Tom Hicks long to rebuff claims that he’s closing in on a deal with Dubai International Capital to sell the club.

Hicks issued a statement that included the following:

“'The reality is that I am personally, professionally and financially committed to the club and its supporters and that I will continue to honor that commitment to the best of my ability now and in the future.”

The cynic in me says that quote means it’s a lock Liverpool is all but sold. The club’s debt is no secret, neither is its unrest with coach Rafa Benitez. If it weren’t for Liverpool’s Champions League success (two finals, one title in three seasons), there’d be precious little to cheer at Anfield.

Liverpool is carrying 105 million pounds of debt after some refinancing a year ago, most of that going toward a replacement for Anfield; another chunk for transfers.

Soccernet has more, including this tidbit: “[Hicks and Gillett] are shortly going to have to go back to the banks to ask for a further £300million in loans to finance the rest of the new stadium at Stanley Park.”

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Liverpool Proposal: Co-Managers?

You know the old joke about having two girlfriends--one for Monday-Friday and one for the weekend? I can’t get past that feeling when it comes to Rafa Benitez and Liverpool. Perhaps the Reds need co-managers; one for the Premiership and Rafa for Europe.

The Times of London’s Oliver Kay writes a fascinating piece quoting Rafa in a shocking admission that he’s not built for the Premiership.

This is straight from the article:

“In Europe you can approach a game tactically in a different way,” the Liverpool manager said when asked to explain the contradiction between their domestic and Champions League form. “In England, it is a different style of football and more difficult for the manager to influence what goes on. It is not as simple to influence the game with tactics in England the way it is elsewhere in Europe.”

OK, my cynical side says Rafa is trying to talk his way out of Anfield, forcing the hand of his American owners. Who would tolerate such an admission?

The other side of me says Rafa is arrogant and living off his two Champions League final appearances--one win--the Premiership be damned. It’s doubtful Liverpool supporters are OK with this. The Reds haven’t won the title in England since 1989-90 and there’s no convincing me that situation is acceptable.

I’ve been back and forth of Rafa’s future, and today, I’m sure he’s out the second Liverpool is excused from the Champions League. Of course, watch him win the thing again and muck up the gears for another year.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Charmed Life of Liverpool and Rafa Benitez

So what are we to make of Liverpool's decisive 2-0 Champions League win over Inter Milan? To be honest, who knows.

Does it mean the Reds are built only for Europe, that Rafa Benitez's rotation system works only for the Champions League and not for the Premiership? Does it mean Liverpool had a great day? Inter had a bad day? Or does it mean that this club has a horseshoe wedged deeply in its backside?

Either way, this is a stunning results given the recent run of form from both sides.

Footie DB has more on the game.

Same goes for OhYouBeauty.

Champions League: Inter vs. Liverpool Starting Eleven

Liverpool
No. NAME POS
25Jose Reina (G)
23Jamie Carragher (D)
4Sami Hyypia (D)
3Steve Finnan (D)
12Fabio Aurelio (D)
8Steven Gerrard (M)
19Ryan Babel (M)
20Javier Mascherano (M)
21Lucas (M)
9Fernando Torres (F)
18Dirk Kuyt (F)
Inter Milan
No. NAME POS
12Julio César (G)
23Marco Materazzi (D)
26Cristian Chivu (D)
2Ivan Ramiro Cordoba (D)
13Maicon (D)
6Maxwell (D)
4Javier Zanetti (M)
5Dejan Stankovic (M)
19Esteban Cambiasso (M)
8Zlatan Ibrahimovic (F)
9Julio Cruz (F)

Rafa's Last Stand?

Bad karma haunts Rafa Benitez--has to. Teetering on unemployment already, not only has he basically coached Liverpool out of contention in the Premier League, and suffered this weekend's humiliating FA Cup ouster (Barnsley?!?!), but today he gets runaway Serie A leaders Inter Milan in the Champions League.

Don't buy a lottery ticket today Rafa, it's a loser for sure.

Ironically, these teams haven't clashed in Europe since 1965, and it was a classic. 101 Great Goals has an excellent recap of their European Champions Cup semifinal tie, featuring one of the great Liverpool collapses (or Inter comebacks, pick your poison) of all time. More bad karma?

We don't need to recap Liverpool's charmed European life of the past few years, and Rafa has proved himself a better coach in these two-game series' than over the long haul of a 38-game Premiership season.

OhYouBeauty previews today's match. This excerpt sums it up:

"It goes without saying that this has become the most important game of the season so far, with rumors flying that Benitez’s job is now (again?) linked to Champions League progress. I’ve no desire to rehash that debate again, but I still believe it's an unfair ask.

But it shows the disappointment that this season’s been. The squad may be better from top to bottom, but results haven’t been. An exit from Europe would mean that the fight for fourth is the only thing left this season. That’s unimaginable."


Check out the whole post, which includes a pretty good guess at Liverpool's Starting Eleven for today's match against Inter.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Champions League Draw: Knockout Round Analysis -- England


It’s Milan-squared for England’s group-stage runners-up in the Champions League knockout round. Inter opens the round-of-16 at Anfield, while Arsenal heads to AC Milan.

Inter is arguably the best team in Europe through Christmas and it will be interesting to see how much Champions League magic the Reds have in the bag for Inter. Of even more interest will be Liverpool’s form by then, and of course whether Rafa Benitez will still be behind the bench.

Liverpool sits fifth with 30 points and a game in hand. It has lost three straight to English sides, including 2-0 to Chelsea this week in the Carling Cup, 1-0 to Manchester United and 3-1 to Reading in the Premier League. The only saving grace of late has been Liverpool’s 4-0 win at Marseille putting it through to the Champions League knockout round, where it earned its date with Milan.

Rafa, meanwhile, is working Liverpool’s American owners for a new contract and wants them to loosen the pursestrings for the January transfer window. It’s been a bone of contention between the two sides and could ultimately lead to Rafa’s departure from Anfield at the end of the season if not sooner.

Arsenal, meanwhile, lead the Premiership by a point over United and may have lucked out drawing Milan, which has been miserable in Serie A, in particular at home. It’s the biggest mystery in football given that AC Milan is the only European time yet to win a home game; yes even Derby County has this season. Milan’s misery was compounded yesterday losing the first leg of its round-of-16 Coppa Italia match against Catania.

Chelsea won its group and was drawn with Olympiacos. Avram Grant can do no wrong, still having lost only once since taking over for Jose Mourinho, and now earning a fortunate draw with the Greek side. Chelsea hosts the second leg of the tie.

Manchester United takes on perennial French champions Lyon, and already is boasting about its chances. Club secretary Ken Ramsden was quoted on Soccernet: “[Lyon] won’t be pleased getting us.” He’s probably correct. United has not lost since Sept. 26 (2-0 to Coventry in the Carling Cup) It has lost only once in the Premiership to Manchester City 1-0 on Sept. 19. United’s recent form: seven wins, one draw since tying Arsenal 2-2 on Nov. 3.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Liverpool Stadium Plans Downsized; Reds Headed to Canada?

That screeching sound emanating from Liverpool are the brakes being slammed on the Reds' new stadium. Chief executive Rick Parry says the club will go on the cheap for its new ground, downscaling on the initial plans which called for a spectacular 70,000-seat venue that would include an 18,000-seat Kop as at Anfield.

Parry's spin is that the new plans are a "slight downgrade" but the park will still hold 70,000 and the Kop remains.

Wedged in between the lines of this belt-tightening is the budget freeze undoubtedly headed for Rafa Benitez's product on the field. Liverpool's financial woes have been documented and reportedly, Benitez has been told there isn't much in the coffers for potential signings come the January transfer window.

Benitez met with Liverpool's American owners Tom Hicks and George Gillet following the Reds' 1-0 loss to Manchester United at Anfield. The loss was Liverpool's second straight in the Premiership. Publicly, Liverpool is saying the meeting was "positive and wide-ranging." The proof will be in the coming weeks and whether Benitez makes any signings of substance.

In the meantime, it looks like Liverpool may be in North America next summer to take on the MLS All Stars in Toronto. WVHooligan reports there may also be a Liverpool-Juventus friendly in Montreal as well, testing the waters for an MLS franchise there?