Tuesday 25 September 2012

John Terry Retires from International Football, but doesn't Retire from making the Front Pages

Good old JT has no problem making everything all about him. He plays the card of victim time and time again, when in reality it is often he who has instigated the circumstances for which he is spinning a line of 'poor old me'. His PR team and personal agenda has seen him retire from international football this week after he claimed the FA made his career for the national side 'untenable'. Although the FA are never really entirely blameless JT bought this one on all by himself. Firstly, 'retiring' from international football is a cop out. He just doesn't fancy flying all over Europe during the next two years to help his country try and quality for a tournament he probably won't play in (Terry will be 34 and a bit by the time Brazil rolls 
around) and instead would rather sit at home in west London and distance himself from a team and country that's supported him time and time again. The fact the FA have only just got round to hearing the racism case where Terry is accused of racially abusing Anton Ferdinand is incredible (Suarez was tried and found guilty over the Evra affair within 2 months). Over 11 months and an international tournament later he is finally being investigated by the English governing body after being acquitted by the Crown Prosecution Service on July 13th of this year.  Although he did use the words "fucking black cunt" and "fucking knob head" towards Anton Ferdinand he was not proven guilty as no one could tell if his angry words were a question or statement of intent according to Justice Riddle. Terry was rightly stripped of the captaincy and some have argued it actually cost Fabio Capello his job as England coach, although many would have been pleased to see the back of the Italian, Terry was again at the heart of the action and a stimulus for the sacking.  The case against Terry also saw Rio Ferdinand missing out on the Euro's as Terry had made the camp very uneasy and the 'footballing reasons' Roy Hodgson stated for leaving out Ferdinand  probably had more to do with keeping a happier dressing room than anything the Manchester United man was doing on the pitch.  Now Terry is gone, Ferdinand has tried to throw his hat back in the ring, but bringing him back would be an opportunity missed by Hodgson and England, and would also mean a real loss of respect for the manager who will have gone back on his previous word and will suffer from the players if he does indeed choose to give Rio another shot.  With Phil Jagielka, Joleon Lescott, Gary Cahill, Chris Smalling, Phil Jones, Ryan Shawcross these younger England prospects have a chance of emerging as a new, younger group of center backs where there is decent strength in depth, competition and hunger for the starting positions to push England through the qualifying campaign, gain experience and play at the World Cup in 2014.  Bringing back Rio is just more of the same, and now he is past his best and injury prone, it's not worth the risk of bringing him in.  A new dressing room minus the personality of Terry could be just what England need to push on, and by 'retiring' JT has done Hodgson a favor, and getting himself out the picture before Roy had to.  

The dressing room without Terry will surely make it a more pleasant place to be around, and with Steven Gerrard captain, the players look more united as a group without the presence of one prominent character accused of racism, womanizing and upsetting fellow players in the squad means one less of this type of character England must deal with, although I'm sure they'll still have more than their fair share!

So it's goodbye to John Terry for a career well done internationally (for the most part) as a footballer, but good riddance to the personality and man that seems to cause more unrest than he solves, even when he was leading his country as a captain. 

Friday 21 September 2012

Using hands for what they were made for in Football - Goalkeeping


A lot has been made this week about whether or not players should or indeed should not shake hands before games in the Barclay's Premier League. This followed Anton Ferdinand unsurprisingly refusing to shake John Terry's hand after the former accused the once England Captain or racially abusing him in this corresponding fixture last season. John Terry, found not guilty by the Crown Prosecution Service-but still facing FA charges, isn't the most popular man in football and has been snubbed previously some seasons ago in the hand shaking line by former friend and teammate Wayne Bridge after a story broke about JT sleeping with his girlfriend. People say that the handshake is about 'respect' but clearly a lot of pro's have no respect for each other on, or off the field, so let them make their mind up and shake or not shake as the case may be. One use for the handshake line that many people don't realise is that it gets both teams to the pitch on time, so there is no ploys of making the other team wait for you before kick off, but again, if the players and managers to react to the referee's pre game warning buzzer where is the respect? The Liverpool vs. Manchester United game this weekend will be poignant, and hopefully not too much is made of Suarez and Evra's decision to shake or not to shake after the Hillsborough report finally surfaced last week and spread light on the tragic deaths and following cover up of 96 Liverpool fans. The real respect for this game should be shown in the stands and around the ground with no chanting of offensive nature, and instead mutual respect for the people lost on that terrible day.


So, who in the Premier League are using their hands for good? Brad Friedel is one man that 'springs' to mind. Yes he's old (41!) and bald, and doesn't look like a pure athlete but he can claw his 6ft 2" frame around the goal with the same verve and vigour as when he entered the Premiership back in 1997 for Liverpool. He would have come earlier to the Premiership but was denied work permits on more than a couple of occasions and now seems to be making up for lost time. Liverpool are surely regretting letting him go, after watching their current #1's (who wears #25) performances gradually deteriorate over the past 3 seasons. Hugo Lloris the French shot stopper was bought in by Spurs gaffer AVB during the summer, and with Brazilian Heurelho Gomes, and Italian Carlo Cudicini on their books Spurs have greater strength in depth than any other Premiership club. Brendan Rodgers Liverpool now have Brad Jones (bought in to fulfill the home-grown player rule quota) and Doni, and both are pretty useless and don't put any pressure on Reina's starting spot. Reina has a couple of excuses, no goalkeeping coach, lack of competition and a squad who don't score as much as they should adding pressure to him, but in comparison to Friedel he is miles away in quality on this seasons showing. Friedels record 308 consecutive Barclays Premier League games show he has the mental, physical and psychological discipline to play at the very top level, week in, week out. No other premiership keeper can even come close to that.

Asmir Begović the Bosnian #1 pulled off the save of the season last week against Champions Manchester City at the Brittania when he tipped a Javi Martinez header onto his post, and he's sure to keep his spot over Thomas Sørensen the Norwegian #1. This competition between the two keepers keeps them on their toes and on point at all times. Liverpool don't have that. Manchester United do as the flappy, but superb shot stopper David De Gea is splitting time with the commanding Anders Lindergaard as Sir Alex tries to figure out who is the best of the two with Ben Amos waiting in the wings. Arsenal would have beaten new boys Southampton 6-0 if it wasn't for a terrible mistake from their returning starting goalkeeper Wojciech Szczęsny. That lapse in concentration costing him and his stern Steve Bould drilled defense an easy clean sheet.


At the other end of the goalkeeping spectrum from Friedel is hapless Kelvin Davis, captain of Southampton. He's conceded 14 goals in 4 games, albeit against some of the better sides in the division but he clearly isn't Premiership quality and with him in goal the opposition will always fancy their chances of scoring. Ali Al Habsi is a keeper who jumps from sublime to shocking in moments. The Omani can make great saves and is decent facing penalties, but lets some of the simplest mistakes undo his work.

Everyone of these keepers, young and veteran, can take a leaf out of Friedel's book. He's stayed active, connected and in shape for years and years, and has improved with age and experience. His concentration, attitude and ability has seen him rise to be one of the top players in his position in England. Lloris may be a top international keeper, but as long as Friedel plays as he has been, the Frenchman won't be getting anywhere near the American's record appearances record.

Wednesday 12 September 2012

Monday 3 September 2012

Steven Gerrard. The End of a Golden Era at Liverpool?

Steven Gerrard has been 'Mr. Liverpool' since coming on the scene as a buzz headed 18 year old before becoming a regular in the first time by the time he was 20. What he's achieved at the club since then has been remarkable, not just for the awards themselves (see below) but the manner in which he captured them. His proudest and most iconic moment was his headed goal in Istanbul in 2005 and stating a historic turnaround. Seeing his side 3-0 down and completely outclassed in the opening half against AC Milan Gerrard scored a wonderful header and urged his team on to more. By the end of the enthralling match, Gerrard had helped lead his Liverpool team with a lion heart courage and determination to his 1st and the clubs 5th European Cup victory. What happened that night in Turkey will never be forgotten by any Liverpool, or real football fan that watched it. His dynamic play, technical power and driving will have made him the best English midfielder in the past decade. Praise from players such as Zinedine Zidane speaks for brilliance of Stevie G.

The generous quotes, personal and team awards, although plentiful do not include one important thing, a league winners medal.  Gerrard surely would have had at least a couple of these had he joined Chelsea when Jose Mourinho came calling in 2005.  It looks unlikely at this stage in his career to end with an elusive Premiership Winners medal in his trophy cabinet.  The club, and Gerrard has been looking to get back to winning ways in the domestic game every since the early 1990's.  Gerrard has enjoyed some great success in domestic cup competitons (includung the Gerrard FA final against West Ham in 2005/6) but he longs for the league title for his home town club as do the clubs new owners who have set about making that happen after taking over from the disasters reign of Hicks and Gillett. 

With Brendan Rodgers now at the helm after taking over from King Kenny, Liverpool is in a rebuilding phase.  The squad has been overhauled to suit Rodgers preferred system and style of play (a possession based 4-3-3).  Rodgers demands great work rate, concentration and commitment to the greater good which has seen many comings and goings this summer.  The main ones being the loan move of Any Carroll to West Ham, the sale of Charlie Adam to Stoke, and the freezing out of Jordan Henderson (all players who didn't fit into Rodgers system or plans) and various new technical players arriving at Anfield, including Joe Allen, Nuri Sahin and Fabio Borini. As the new boys set in, there is a legacy of the old guard that Rodgers looks keen to shake off to show he is the man in control at the club although he was undermined by FSG on the final day of transfer action.  Rodgers, after getting rid of Carroll expected to get the American Clint Dempsey in from Fulham, the Liverpool owners wouldn't bid more than £4 million and instead watched their manager's prime target join cross town London rivals, Spurs, for a meager £6 million.  They also turned down the option of signing Chelsea's Daniel Sturridge on a permanent deal, all this frugal transfer business after FSG had previously let Damien Comolli and Kenny Dalglish splash the following...

PlayerSignedCostCame from
Andy Carroll
31 January 2011  
35,000,000  
Newcastle United  
Luis Suarez
31 January 2011  
22,700,000  
Ajax  
Stewart Downing
July 15 2011  
20,000,000  
Aston Villa  
Jordan Henderson
9 June 2011  
16,000,000  
Sunderland  
Charlie Adam
July 2011  
7,500,000  
Blackpool  
Sebastien Coates
30 August 2011  
7,000,000  
Nacional  
Source www.liverweb.org.uk

This reversal in transfer policy looks to mean the New Englander's don't want to splash anymore cash.  Rodgers has spent close to £30 million bringing in talent, but also made £10 million selling, loaning and cutting the wage bill.  What does this mean to Liverpool's captain...
Gerrard's spot in the team looks the most troubled it's been since his full debut.  Even during the summer sagas that previously played out with Gerrard and Chelsea his place in the Liverpool starting XI was never really in question.  Other than suspensions and injuries, Gerrard has been a constant starter from Liverpool, and his passion, ability and leadership has made him, rightly so, the face of Liverpool.  Liverpool's terrible start to the season (including an opening day defeat at Liverpool's old assistant Steve Clark's WBA, and a poor home defeat last time out at Anfield against Arsenal (who hadn't scored in their 2 previous games) has got some fans worried.  More worrying is the lack of cohesion between Gerrard and his teamates so far.  Liverpool's only goals coming from set-pieces against Manchester City (Srktel - from a corner, Suarez - from a free kick).  Gerrard has given the ball away too often and this has directly lead to a couple of goals (one against West Brom and one against Arsenal).  His movement is sporadic and often too direct and reckless for Rodgers system, leaving holes punctured throughout the midfield 3 (similar to what happens to England when Gerrard plays with Lampard).  His roaming, marauding style of play makes him a fans favourite and means he gets the opportunity to shoot plenty and arrive at the edge of the box to create or score.  Now there is a more rigid system based on standardized teamwork rather than individual players showcasing their talent and driving the rest of the team forward he looks lost at times.  Gerrard is a fantastic player, and I don't think Rodgers can drop him without losing the dressing room and the support of the crowd, but I think he would if he could, to suit his system better.  Sahin looked rather off the pace but comfortable in possession in his debut against Arsenal, Allen is the midfield lynchpin who keeps the ball moving, then there's Gerrard.  His long diagonal passes, drifting movement pulled the team out of shape, and although he likes to drive forward he was pretty ineffiecient at linking up with Suarez (misplacing a pass led to Podolski goal) Sterling, or Borini. With Lucas out injured and the Liverpool squad pretty thin Gerrards position is safe for now, but unless he gets to grips with the system quickly or Rodgers adjusts it to get more out of Gerrard (very unlikely) this could see the frustrating end to what has quite simply been a fantastic Liverpool career for Super Stevie G. The lack of quality throughout the squad -Downing looking impotent, Maxi Rodriguez gone, Henderson average, and no new blood to challenge the Captain's place means he's going to play.  Sadly for Stevie, and us Liverpool fans, we need him more than ever and in this system, he just doesn't look like half the player he can be.

Club

Individual

Source - Wikipedia