This Is The Bottom, Right?
As I said on Thursday, I wasn't going to get to see Saturday's match as I was out of town. Look like i get the better end of the deal.
Following the score in the car, my fellow passengers took quite the delight in my shocked facial expressions. While a win was never guaranteed, the shellacking from Bolton seemed like the most remote possibility. And yet, here we are .
i won't comment on the game, because that wouldn't be right and you wouldn't want to relive it again anyway. But where are Liverpool now? Well, it's pretty obvious that shorn of two of their world class players -- Suarez and Lucas -- they're a pretty average side. I guess most teams would be. I'm bending a fair amount of light to call both Suarez and Lucas world class. Suarez in a Liverpool shirt has been too wasteful of chances to automatically wear that label, and Lucas still had some ground to make up before gaining that title as well. But there was no doubt in my mind he would, and quickly, and we've seen what Suarez can do at least with his national team.
In only barely a half season, it seems a rush to call the transfer policy failed, but I don't know what other adjective to bring to it. I don't even include Andy Carroll in that, because the rushed circumstances of his acquisition left time to get anyone else. Darren Bent has moved to Villa only a few days earlier. Who else was there? But Adam, Downing, and Henderson were bought over the summer because they were British and they, at least we were told, would not have to adapt to the Premier League.
But that's shortsighted. Just because a player might be familiar with the league doesn't mean they're going to automatically adjust to a new team. There are new tactics, systems, players to get acclimated to, as well as the raised expectations of Liverpool FC. Every one of them came from a team where they were accentuated in how that team played. Do any of them look like Champions League players? I can see where Henderson will one day, but...
Another reason cited when over the summer for these players were the stats that suggested they created the most chances in the Premier League last season. I've already commented on this, but this is somewhat flawed if not totally. This isn't baseball, where everything stems from one contest on the field and that's so easily measured. You either got on base or you didn't. The chances created vortex has so many variables -- position played, opponent, tactics for that team, etc. -- that if the thinking was they'll just all be thrown together and create Barcelona North, someone's awfully, awfully wrong.
The tendency here is to call for heads. That's not the right approach. Dalglish won't be sacked and nor should he. A one-off bad performance from the defense doesn't negate the Alcatraz like gate-keeping Liverpool have had for most of the season. That's vital. From that defense, it's much easier to build up the attack then trying to do it the other way round.
A transfer or two is needed. Another holding midfielder looks to be vital. Perhaps a striker, but maybe that'll confuse things when Suarez returns, as it would force Liverpool to basically play a 4-2-2-2, and that might not be their best formation. I imagine Charlie Adam has a good chance of getting stapled to the bench again, as do others.
It's a big week, obviously. Two wins, and Liverpool will be in one Final. With United and City out of the FA Cup, Liverpool would be one of the favorites to be in that Final as well. But Cups aren't what this season is about. And yet, the higher places on the table are still there, but now you have to worry that the Reds missed the chance to capitalize on their foes' woes. Then again, I think Arsenal are what they've shown, and are the annual Van Persie injury away from being pretty useless. Chelsea? Murkier. If Torres never fires they're vulnerable too.
But neither look as vulnerable as Liverpool. Guess we'll find out what's in the sack this week, won't we?
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Disagree on your Carroll assessment
and it was my biggest issue with the signing at the time. His merits as a player are another discussion. But you ask who was there to be brought in at the time considering the rush of it all? Well, he wasn’t really there either considering an injury that wasn’t going to heal for a month after signing and ultimately never healed that season. We paid a panic price for a player that wasn’t even capable of subsiding the panic. If Carroll had played right away, I’d agree with you. But since he couldn’t, waiting to buy him in the summer, if he was ultimately who we wanted, makes a lot more sense.
http://sportsandgrits.com/
Agreed
I think that LFC put out the feelers before, but after word leaked that Nando was out the door to the toon (see what I did there) of £50M NUFC saw an opportunity.
I really think that AC did not want to leave toon. They forced him out and offered him to us: Damien and Kenny panicked but he also fit our mould: Young, English, and overpriced.
Young English and overpriced
Sounds like the kind of escorts I like ;)
"It's a joke. It's all a joke.
Watching that match on replay last night...
… well, if I wasn’t already sick, it would have made me sick. I don’t blame Kenny in the slightest for blasting the players like he did. That was the most gutless lack of effort and intensity that I’ve ever seen from a Liverpool side, I think.
Bullpen Banter
Fan: Seattle Mariners, Seattle Sounders FC, Liverpool
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