Pages

Thursday, September 27, 2012

At what point does the result become more important than the performance?






Liverpool are currently in the middle of their worst start to a league season for 10,000 years.... or something, maybe its not that long but its BAD, Sky Sports told me so! We opened the season with a poor 3-0 defeat away to West Brom, got a battling draw at home to the defending Champions, suffered defeat to an impressive Arsenal and had another battling draw at Sunderland. These results were poor but worse was to come with a home defeat to fierce rivals Man Utd. This run of league form has left us with a points haul which is paltry in any man’s language, except a German man, in his language its “dΓΌrftig”. The total is 2 points from a possible 15. I can hear you say it, “this is Liverpool?”. Surely the fans have had enough of this manager already. Surely they are booing the team off the park and a baying mob is gathering outside Anfield every night with pitch forks and flaming sticks demanding the player’s head on a plate? Well the thing is, they are not..... and dont call me Shirley! The reason they are not is because, through this haze of poor results, there has been a level of improvement. There have been bumps of course, its not been a complete incline. Against City we looked strong, but we lost a little something going into the Arsenal game. We battled at Sunderland but didn’t set the world alight. 
           Then came the international break, which was immediately followed by our first “proper” Europa League game against Young Boys of Berne. Going into this game I had passed comment that I had yet to see a proper show of Rodger’s influence. There had been glimpses but nothing tangible enough to convince me that we were on a steady path. Then Rodger’s made the decision which most fans agreed with by throwing our Young Boys into the game against Berne’s Young... (yeah you’ve all heard the joke by now, I’ll spare you). What followed was an exhibition. Again it wasn’t infallible, we conceded 3 goals, but we came back twice to win a game away from home and we dominated the game for the most part. Its a competition few care about (I do, but we’ll speak about that again) and we put out a junior team, not even a reserve team, this was a team of mostly youth players. With that in mind, it shouldn’t have bothered most fans what we managed to do. The win and performance by a team far removed from our first 11 in a devalued competition shouldn’t have meant anything. It did though. It struck a chord. It showed us what was possible. It showed us this manager has a plan, and when its followed, this is what can happen.
The main men returned for the next game, the big one, the home tie versus ManU. From the first minute, Liverpool looked up for this one. The immediate effort and commitment maybe owes some credit to the magnitude of the game following the Truth about the 96 deaths at Hillsborough finally being released to the wider public, but the quality of the performance does not. The quality could only have come from the mentality preached by the manager and the talent of the players. We even went down to 10 men after 20 minutes or so but still the performance levels remained and we held control of the game for the most part, even taking the lead at the start of the second half. Unfortunately it wasn’t to be in the end, the numerical advantage took its toll in the long run and a more than dubious penalty decision offered the 3 points to ManU and they took them without a question. At the end of the game, fans were understandably disappointed but few were downhearted. The only frustrations which were spoken were those against the referee.
The kids returned, along with a significant new face to beat a strong West Brom side at the Hawthorns in the Carling Cup. The significant new face is another reason for the optimism of the fans as Jerome Sinclair became the new holder of the record for youngest ever Liverpool player in a competitive game, in a funny twist of fate Sinclair was on the pitch at the same time as the previous record holder Jack Robinson. This was another strong performance and another new face Nuri Sahin managed to score his first goals for the club.
From what I have written above I think its pretty clear to see why Liverpool fans are keeping their chins up right now and why optimism is trumping pessimism at the moment. But that is exactly what brings us up to here and the question which opened this article, at what point does the result become more important than the performance? Up to now we’ve been able to acknowledge the fact that our opening to the season was particularly difficult in itself, when you put on top of that the new manager and the forming of a new team plus implementation of a new mentality certain allowances were always going to be made. The way the team has been improving over that difficult start has made the allowances last a little longer, but that difficult start is past us now. What we are facing into is a run of 3 very winnable games. First up comes Norwich away and while we have been able to take good performances up to now, and we will expect a good performance on Saturday too, will that be enough or would the fans forgo a performance at this point for the sake of 3 points? I mean, of course, in an ideal world we would have both but as we have learned over the last few season, just because we should, or could, win doesn’t mean we will. If that turns out to that we do not win but keep our performance levels will the patience of the fans be extended or will the pressure suddenly be heaped upon the manager? I’d be interested to see people post their own opinions in the comments section below to know what people think. Lets hope this is a question which doesn’t have to be answered just yet. There is plenty to be optimistic about, if we can get our first league win under Rodgers on Saturday the fans will have something tangible to hang their belief on and will help him prove himself to the players and encourage them to keep working with them. If not..... well, we’ll have to look at that next week.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The Truth.... Finally





THE TRUTH..... Finally. The survivors, the families of the 96 who lost their lives, the loved ones, the friends, the people of the city of Liverpool and all supporters of Liverpool FC saw the Truth finally made public to the rest of the world. Finally there has been acknowledgment from the government of the cover up and finally the names of the 96 victims as well as all Liverpool supporters who attended Hillsborough on April 15th 1989 have been cleared of ANY wrong doing whatsoever. David Cameron said “On behalf of the Government – and indeed our country – I am profoundly sorry for this double injustice that has been left uncorrected for so long.” It is a travesty that it has taken this long for the truth to come out, but finally, FINALLY, it has come out. 

People who have watched any decent documentary, the TV dramatization by Jimmy McGovern or read any of the true stories of what happened that day will have already been fully aware that there was injustice to fight against. Those who asked the question of "why will they not just let it go" will hopefully have finally received their answer today too. I can only hope that small minded idiots who let petty club, city or personal rivalries make excuses for their disgusting chants of "Murderers" or "You killed your own fans" will take a long, hard look at themselves today. I am aware that this is only a minority in any club but I wont need to remind Liverpool fans that it was only this year that fans of a certain blue London club interrupted the anniversary's minute silence with their disgusting chants. The mind-set for people outside of Liverpool to believe the un-true version events was orchestrated by the Police Service and facilitated by the media in particular The S*n. The report has shown that there was a conscious police effort “to develop and publicise a version of events that focused on…allegations of drunkenness, ticketlessness and violence.” This clearly shows exactly what has lead to the widely accepted myth that it was the Liverpool supporters themselves to blame. Many media outlets reported the lies, however, The S*n (which was the most read newspaper in England at the time sensationalized this further with a banner headline "The Truth" which lead a story containing nothing but lies. It is known that this headline was written by Kelvin McKenzie, the rag's editor at the time. McKenzie today issued an apology which was described by leader of the HFSG as "too little too late". Hopefully, the fact that the report has proven and the Prime minister himself has stated that these stories are complete lies will force people to forget the lies they were fed back then and adjust their minds to the actual truth. 

This report is of course only the start. The reports findings have proven that the verdict of Accidental Death in all cases is a farce and a thundering disgrace. The 3.15 cut off point robbed a number of the families of justice and meant that any evidence after this time has never been considered by any court. Speaking at the vigil this evening, Anne Williams made clear that she will now be submitting the evidence she has collected to the Attorney General, for the 6th time and the 6th Attorney General, in the hope that the verdict in relation to her own son will be reversed and a new inquest can begin.

The Truth has finally come out, but this is just the beginning. The fight for justice will continue...

I've put some of the reaction from some of the important people from today below as well as links to the full report and access to the fully disclosed documents.

Sheila Coleman, spokeswoman for the Hillsborough Justice Campaign: "Of course [the apology] is welcome, because it is an acknowledgement that Liverpool, the bereaved families and the fans have been telling the truth for years and yet have been considered liars. Without doubt the inquest verdicts have to be quashed. David Cameron batted this back to the attorney general. The attorney general needs to surely, with the evidence presented to him today and the evidence previously presented to him, must quash the inquest verdicts in all cases. With the clear evidence that fans could have been saved - and the evidence is there - he needs to give all of those 96 victims their right under law, the right to a fair hearing. It needs a full inquiry into how they died."
Margaret Aspinall, chairwoman of the Hillsborough Families Support Group, whose son James died, told the AP news agency: "This is what the families and the fans have been fighting for 23 years. Without the truth, you cannot grieve and where there is deceit, you get no justice."
Trevor Hicks, who lost two daughters in the disaster: "The truth is out today, justice starts tomorrow." He added that the families will pursue "any avenue" in their search for "accountability". Mr Hicks said that three people fainted when relatives saw the report. During a press conference with victims' relatives, he said the families "knew nothing about the incompetencies of the ambulance service until today", and that while they had been "staggered" by the level of incompetencies, he did not blame "the guys on the shop floor". Mr Hicks also rejected former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie's apology over the newspaper's coverage of the disaster as "too little, too late".

Anne Williams
 lost her son Kevin at Hillsborough. She has campaigned tirelessly for justice, forming the Hope for Hillsborough campaign. Previous requests for a second inquest into her son's death have been refused. Speaking at a vigil on Wednesday in Liverpool, Mrs Williams said that her lawyers would be submitting papers to the attorney general demanding a second inquest into the death of Kevin and insisted "they can't refuse me this time". She warned the establishment she "will never go away", adding: "I want justice for the 96."

The Right Reverend James Jones, the Bishop of Liverpool and chairman of the panel: "The documents disclosed to and analysed by the panel show that the tragedy should never have happened. There were clear operational failures in response to the disaster and in its aftermath their were strenuous attempts to deflect the blame on to the fans. The panel's detailed report shows how vulnerable victims, survivors and their families are when transparency and accountability are compromised. My colleagues and I were from the start of our work impressed by the dignified determination of the families."
Tom Werne, Liverpool FC chairman said: "On behalf of myself, John (Henry, club owner) and everyone at the club, I would like to extend our thoughts and prayers on this hugely significant and deeply emotional day to everyone affected by the Hillsborough disaster. Today, the world has heard the real truth about what happened at Hillsborough. As a football club, we will continue to remember those who died and support the families who lost loved ones on that terrible day. We hope that today's findings will give some comfort to the families and survivors, and go some way to addressing some of the key questions that have hung over the Hillsborough tragedy for the last 23 years."
Liverpool Football Club said in a statement: "Liverpool commends the Hillsborough Independent Panel report which acknowledges the avoidable catastrophic failures before, during and after the disaster. The club also welcomes the prime minister's apology to the families and survivors on behalf of the government and await the attorney general's pending review of the report. After 23 long and painful years, our fans have finally been fully exonerated of all blame. Today, the world knows what we have always known, that Liverpool fans were not just innocent on that terrible day, but that there was reprehensible and hurtful misrepresentation of the truth. Liverpool Football Club would like to thank the Hillsborough Independent Panel for its rigorous work over the past two-and-a-half years and for publishing a comprehensive report based on the in-depth research and analysis into hundreds of thousands of documents."

(to download a copy, right click and choose "Save As")