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Monday, December 21, 2015

Build Klopp's Liverpool


As with most Liverpool fans this has not been a particularly enjoyable couple of weeks for me. One point earned from an available 9 against what we would usually term beatable opposition leaves a bad taste in the mouth and brings all that pessimism that built up in us over the last few years back to the surface. The fact that we thought we were past all this seems to make things even harder but it’s important to remember that far from being in the same situation, going through the motions like we had been for the previous few months/ years, we are actually only at the beginning of what is sure to become a bright new future under a young world class manager who would pretty much walk into any other job in world football if he were so inclined. Jürgen Klopp was confirmed as Liverpool FC’s manager back in early October, he is in the third month of his tenure having had very little opportunity to properly stamp his authority on the squad. No pre-season, no transfer window and not a lot of time to make judgements on who does or does not fit into his style of play. In the finite amount of time available so far there is actually only one thing that he could have truly learned and that is that when it comes to getting Liverpool back to where we belong there is no quick fix available that can solve all our ills. This is going to be a long term project so thankfully we have a manager in-situ who has proven in his previous 2 roles that if you give him time and support he can absolutely turn that into solid achievement.

What we have seen so far has been understandably inconsistent, yes there have been some very disappointing displays coupled with some very poor results but there have also been hugely encouraging performances alongside impressive results, 3-1 against Chelsea, 4-1 against City as well as a 6-1 demolition of Southampton should act as a candle which lights the current darkness and reminds us that when it clicks things can be good, but until the manager has been able to build his own team and implement his own ideas we will struggle to reach such levels on a consistent basis.

Given that there have been so many strange results throughout the league this season and very few of the usual top performers (in other words the richest clubs) have managed to maintain a level of consistency I think it is understandable that after some encouraging early performances Liverpool supporters started to look up the table and say “what if…” however the performance levels since then have been a stark reminder of how difficult things really are.


This is a crazy season and this is highlighted by the fact that even now we are only 5 points off the top 4. But even with that reality in mind I truly believe that our focus for the remainder of this season must be on building Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool. Our new manager needs time to try some different things, test out players and situations to find out what works, what is needed, what we have already that is useful, what needs to removed and what needs to be added. I think that if, as supporters, we can accept this we can enjoy the high’s and lows of the season as it plays out and know that once we are through this difficult period we will be much better off for having gone through it. Its not to say we should write off the season, we should still take every game as it comes and if we can string together a few results who knows where it may lead us. We are still in every cup competition as well so the chance for some glory still exists but our focus needs to shift from winning at all costs to building at all costs. If a little bit of experimentation costs us a result or two we might need to live with that. No matter what happens from here through to the end of the campaign, lets be re-assured that we have the right man at the helm leading this club. Lets support the team and take confidence from the fact that every lesson learned this season will lead to a brighter future. Lets let the man do his job, maybe some of the players are not good enough, lets give the manager time to be confident in deciding that and to identify who needs to be replaced. Lets not allow that in-fighting and bickering to take hold again. Lets stay together behind a proven winner. Lets understand that sometimes its better to forego the quick fix in order to achieve even greater rewards in the future.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

The Europa League, Why Bother?



On Thursday night Liverpool FC welcomes FC Sion of Switzerland to Anfield. A team who qualified for the competition having won their domestic cup competition in a season in which they finished 7th in a 10 team league. Following our draw against Bordeaux in our opening fixture Liverpool will be hoping for a straightforward win against the Swiss minnows before our game against what should be slightly tougher opponents Rubin Kazan next time out.

Having just named all of the teams in our group it’s clear to see why a lot of people feel the Europa League has lost even the small amount of lustre that remained in its previous incarnation as the UEFA Cup. Certainly in these early stages the romance is all but gone. The long distances for some away games to face a side you may not have heard of before is not exactly the stuff of dreams for players or fans alike. And with clubs becoming more and more obsessed with money, although its justified, the relatively meagre financial rewards of the lesser European competition hold little appeal.

People make a lot of claims to support the idea of the Europa League as being nothing but a burden but a lot of these claims are questionable. The old chesnut of there being too many games in the competition is simply incorrect.  In reality you only have to play 2 extra games to go all the way in the Europa League compared to the Champions League. Of course if you qualify for the Champions League by finishing 4th you have to go through a 2-legged qualifier, so that makes it exactly the same amount of games. The other claim that always baffled me is that it’s somehow harder to compete in the domestic league if you are in the Europa. Maybe this is true versus a team with no European football who have those extra midweek rests (like we did in 13/14) but compared against teams in the Champions League I can see no clear advantage. Quite why playing Thursday & Sunday is supposed to be a huge amount harder than playing Wednesday & Saturday is utterly beyond me.  Its not that so many games should be easy, but why not let this competition serve to prepare us for when we return to where we want to be. The competition itself does not offer incredible financial reward, of that there is no doubt.  Neither the prize money, nor TV money on offer is even comparable to that of its big brother, but for me, to focus on that is to completely miss out on the potential long term benefits. I hope the hierarchy at the club have recognised that this competition has many aspects which although they might not make it a priority, certainly make it worthy of serious participation.

Right now, we have a very young and very inexperienced squad. We also have a very young and inexperienced manager. The experience we could pick up in this competition would be absolutely invaluable to all at the club. You only need to look back to how the players who won Old Big Ears in Istanbul credited the experience they had gained when winning this competition in 2001 as playing a vital supporting role. There are also many managers who used their experience in this competition to springboard them onto greater success, Rafa Benitez and Jose Mourinho to name but two. Even our owners have no experience of the joy a run in Europe can bring.


I want to be absolutely clear, this is not me calling for our manager to go all in at the expense of our league form. His quotes yesterday with regard to protecting Daniel Sturridge and leaving him out of the squad are entirely agreeable to me. I think that’s the beauty of this competition, in these early stages there is no reason why, with some good tactical work from our manager, we cannot select what would be recognised as a “weakened team” and still hold a realistic chance of progressing.  All the while the squad, and manager, are picking up experience.  If we do progress through the group stage we will be joined after Christmas by the teams who finished 3rd in their Champions’ League group and at this point the standard of the competition rises. Hopefully at the point we will have a more realistic idea of how our league season is panning out. I would argue that if at that point it seems our chances of achieving top 4 seem unlikely, it may even be worth moving this competition up the priorities list. Let’s not forget that the Europa League now offers the coveted Automatic Champions League place to the winner. At this stage of the competition there are 32 teams remaining so depending on the opposition we could start to enter stronger teams dependent on the opposition.  


In a less tangible sense I would like to see some European pride restored to the team. Liverpool in Europe has always been a romance. From the incredible nights under the floodlights at Anfield to the many legendary players who have reminisced about the beauty of hearing “You’ll Never Walk Alone”. Our last forays in Europe have been nothing short of depressing. I would like to see us make an impact once more. Of course I would rather that be in the Champions League but that is not on offer at the moment. It will be hard to qualify for the Champions League even next year, so why should we close one possible route without giving it a good shot? 

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Brendan Rodgers: Lets Not Make This Personal


Firstly, as I’m writing this after another poor result for Liverpool I know that not as many people as usual will read it. I’m not sure if everybody is aware of this but there is a visible drop off in the number of hits an article receives after Liverpool lose, we are not talking tens and twenties here we are talking hundreds. Where a loss will lose me a few hundred, even a big important win rarely sees a jump of more than one hundred or so from article to article. This is true of most websites which are dedicated to one club in particular. And to me it explains why it sometimes feels like everyone is against the manager, because of all the critical articles. It should be remembered though that regardless of how the writer may feel they guarantee hits by sticking another nail in the coffin. I’ve thought about this a lot and although I don’t make any money from my articles (and I don’t really have any ambition too) it certainly makes the time and effort that goes into each article more worthwhile if I know people around the world are interested to read it. I’ve thought long and hard about how to combat this and I’m pretty sure I’ve found the solution. All I really need to do is follow public opinion and write plenty of articles slagging off Brendan Rodgers. That’s what’s in vogue right now and it’s easy. The opinions are already out there spreading among Liverpool fans desperate for somewhere to place blame I wouldn’t even have to come up with anything original. I could just regurgitate what’s out there and I'm pretty sure it would be click, click, click with no decrease in hits.

I’m not going to do that though. Not because of some holier than thou mindset or because I think that I’m better than anybody. I’m not going to do it because that’s not how I feel. The whole point of me writing in the first place was to express my own opinions so that’s what I’m laying out here. Feel free to disagree, feel free to comment to tell me so, but bear in mind it’s just an opinion.

At the moment we are all feeling down. We all come into supporting football for the joy it gives us, and it feels like for the last year or two the joy has been in scant supply. There is no doubting that performances have been terrible and results have been, at times, abysmal. This naturally, and completely correctly, leads to many questioning the manager. So far, so depressing.

That the manager wasn’t sacked in the summer was a shock to many and it was a dangerous gamble for the owners to take as they must have known that anything other than a perfect start this time around would lead to serious questions being asked. Well, the season started off far from perfectly and the inevitable and justifiable questions are being asked. What has accompanied these questions though is not, in my opinion, justifiable. The personal insults to Brendan Rodgers, the way he is portrayed in sections of the media, the reduction of any of his achievements to luck. It’s not right and I really don’t think it’s necessary. If you want the manager gone, there is a perfectly strong body of evidence to support your case without claiming that 13/14 was all down to Suarez or discussing his personal relationships outside of football. It seems to me that every article I read at the moment which discusses Liverpool is accompanied by a picture of Brendan with that crazy look on his face, as if to imply he is some crazy goof who has no clue what is going on. I'm sure there are plenty of normal pictures which could be used but they are discarded for some reason. It also seems like every article I read discussing Rodgers himself to reference his “Brentisms” as if he is the only football manager who uses management speak and buzzwords, just listen to LVG as an example but you will find many other examples too if you look for them.

At the moment things aren’t working, that is a fact. We are not playing anywhere near as well as we should and our results have been terrible most of the time. But we must not forget this is a hard job. Its been over 20 years since Liverpool last won the league title. He is far from the first manager who has been unsuccessful in delivering that trophy. This job breaks more managers than it makes, hell, Gerard Houllier almost died from managing this club. My own stance is that I do not actively want Brendan Rodgers out and I'm still willing to support his as the manager of Liverpool Football Club but at the same time I know that if I heard he was sacked in the morning I would probably feel a little bit relieved at not having to discuss this situation anymore… for a while anyway, until this job beats the next guy. If we get a Klopp or an Ancelloti I will be positive and optimistic, but lets not forget that is a big if.

What I find hard to take is how willing a lot of Liverpool fans are to join in the hatred towards the man. I’m sure he has done his best. It may prove to not be enough. If that’s the case, he goes and the next manager comes in. But remember all of this may end up being true of the next man as well as the cycle continues.

Friday, September 11, 2015

LFC build-up :Utd v Liverpool - The Perfect Remedy or a Poisoned Chalice




When Liverpool left the pitch having won a point away from home against Arsenal, in a performance which heralded the kind of optimism that had now been seen among the Liverpool faithful since January it seemed that this time we were finally going somewhere. The new signings who had so far been exposed to first team action were showing early promise and any supporter you listened to delighted in echoing the common refrain of “tell you what I would have taken 7 out of 9 points from these three games before the start of the season”.

Fast forward one week and that optimism had been usurped by despair yet again. If the Arsenal game was supposed to show us how far we have come well then the game against West Ham showed us just how much father there is to go on our road to redemption. The fact that a performance like this came at Anfield only added to the anguish and in the end it somehow left most of us feeling worse than what was previously believed to be this side’s darkest day back on the last day of last season. And with good reason too. All of a sudden we saw how Benteke could struggle to influence a game, we saw our that defense (which had previously kept 3 clean sheets) was far from being the impenetrable unit it had previously appeared to be with Dejan Lovren seeming to return to type and prove his many doubters right.

The most unwelcome international break which followed that game couldn’t have come at a worse time for miserable reds who were left with no escape for at least a fort night. The fact that this chance for redemption comes against United at Old Trafford does little to inspire confidence that our moods will be lifted much come Saturday evening. We were soundly beaten 3-0 here last season as United completed the double over us and our record at this ground over the years is far from impressive. You wont find many arguing with my description  that this is hardly the greatest Liverpool side ever created. The thing is though, this is far from a vintage United side either and if you spoke many of their fans I believe you would find that, currently our mindsets are not so dis-similar. They had ground out a couple of wins to start their Premier League season without ever looking truly convincing, they then had a stale draw against Newcastle before slipping to a damaging defeat away to Swansea. The only differences between our season is their lack of a truly promising performance such as ours versus Arsenal and also their lack of a home defeat like ours against West Ham. The point of my ramblings is not to convince anybody that we are certainly going to go there and return with all three points at 7:30 on Saturday, what I am trying to show is that this result is not a foregone conclusion for either side.

It is far too early to talk about six pointers or the likes, but this game definitely has more about it that simply the 3 points which are on offer. Both managers are currently experiencing some real internal pressure and although it seems outlandish to suggest that this single result could result in either being removed from their position, it is not in doubt that the pressure will be multiplied on either manager if they were to lose this game. It is of course possible that the need to not lose this game could result in something of a stale mate, certainly in the latter stages if the game is tied in a score draw (the only result which could realistically see both managers saving face). However the Old Trafford faithful will not accept a team sitting back, at home against such a hated rival. This is the reason why I think it is possible for Liverpool to get something from this game. We’ve shown our most promising signs against teams that are willing to play. Whilst there is no denying our struggles at times, I think it is clear to most that they are most clearly visible against opponents willing to give us the ball and repel our attacks, this is why our recent home record  has been so poor as teams are so willing to soak up pressure at Anfield. Away from home, away from the frustrated Anfield crown, with our ever excellent away fans providing the loudest support they can possibly muster egging us on could just prove to be exactly what is needed at the moment.


While in truth this game offers nothing more than 3 points to the victor, with plenty of season remaining for a loser to make up that difference, if one team does emerge victorious it will be the perfect remedy to their recent ills, whilst the loser will have to take another sip of the poisoned chalice as the pressure on their leader approaches breaking point.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Utd v Liverpool - The Perfect Remedy or a Poisoned Chalice




When Liverpool left the pitch having won a point away from home against Arsenal, in a performance which heralded the kind of optimism that had now been seen among the Liverpool faithful since January it seemed that this time we were finally going somewhere. The new signings who had so far been exposed to first team action were showing early promise and any supporter you listened to delighted in echoing the common refrain of “tell you what I would have taken 7 out of 9 points from these three games before the start of the season”.

Fast forward one week and that optimism had been usurped by despair yet again. If the Arsenal game was supposed to show us how far we have come well then the game against West Ham showed us just how much father there is to go on our road to redemption. The fact that a performance like this came at Anfield only added to the anguish and in the end it somehow left most of us feeling worse than what was previously believed to be this side’s darkest day back on the last day of last season. And with good reason too. All of a sudden we saw how Benteke could struggle to influence a game, we saw our that defense (which had previously kept 3 clean sheets) was far from being the impenetrable unit it had previously appeared to be with Dejan Lovren seeming to return to type and prove his many doubters right.

The most unwelcome international break which followed that game couldn’t have come at a worse time for miserable reds who were left with no escape for at least a fort night. The fact that this chance for redemption comes against United at Old Trafford does little to inspire confidence that our moods will be lifted much come Saturday evening. We were soundly beaten 3-0 here last season as United completed the double over us and our record at this ground over the years is far from impressive. You wont find many arguing with my description  that this is hardly the greatest Liverpool side ever created. The thing is though, this is far from a vintage United side either and if you spoke many of their fans I believe you would find that, currently our mindsets are not so dis-similar. They had ground out a couple of wins to start their Premier League season without ever looking truly convincing, they then had a stale draw against Newcastle before slipping to a damaging defeat away to Swansea. The only differences between our season is their lack of a truly promising performance such as ours versus Arsenal and also their lack of a home defeat like ours against West Ham. The point of my ramblings is not to convince anybody that we are certainly going to go there and return with all three points at 7:30 on Saturday, what I am trying to show is that this result is not a foregone conclusion for either side.

It is far too early to talk about six pointers or the likes, but this game definitely has more about it that simply the 3 points which are on offer. Both managers are currently experiencing some real internal pressure and although it seems outlandish to suggest that this single result could result in either being removed from their position, it is not in doubt that the pressure will be multiplied on either manager if they were to lose this game. It is of course possible that the need to not lose this game could result in something of a stale mate, certainly in the latter stages if the game is tied in a score draw (the only result which could realistically see both managers saving face). However the Old Trafford faithful will not accept a team sitting back, at home against such a hated rival. This is the reason why I think it is possible for Liverpool to get something from this game. We’ve shown our most promising signs against teams that are willing to play. Whilst there is no denying our struggles at times, I think it is clear to most that they are most clearly visible against opponents willing to give us the ball and repel our attacks, this is why our recent home record  has been so poor as teams are so willing to soak up pressure at Anfield. Away from home, away from the frustrated Anfield crown, with our ever excellent away fans providing the loudest support they can possibly muster egging us on could just prove to be exactly what is needed at the moment.


While in truth this game offers nothing more than 3 points to the victor, with plenty of season remaining for a loser to make up that difference, if one team does emerge victorious it will be the perfect remedy to their recent ills, whilst the loser will have to take another sip of the poisoned chalice as the pressure on their leader approaches breaking point.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Happy Birthday Bill Shankly



On this day (2nd September) in 1913 Bill Shankly was born in Glenbuck Scotland. He played for Cronberry Englington, Carlisle Utd and Preston North End and was manager at Carlisle Utd, Grimbsby, Workington and Huddersfield before arriving at his spiritual home Anfield in 1959.
When Bill Shankly arrived at Anfield in 1959, Liverpool were in the second division and going nowhere. The training ground, Melwood was a shambles and Anfield was not a pretty sight. With Roger Hunt and Ian St. John Scoring goals and Ron Yeats in defence Liverpool won promotion back to the old 1st division in the 61-62 season. In 63-64 Shankly delivered the League Title with a side which still contained the nucleus of the side which had gained promotion 2 years previously.

To summarise Bill Shankly's contribution to Liverpool I will use the words of Bob Paisley: "One man transformed Liverpool from a run-of-the-mill Second Division team into the greatest team in the world. That man, of course, was Bill Shankly. His philosophy was simple; If you are going to to play football, you play to win. While he was the making of Liverpool, there is no doubt that Anfield was the making of Bill Shankly. His character, his own enthusiasm, his will to win were so infectious."

This is just intended to be a short tribute to the great man.




MANAGERIAL RECORD:

League Matches: 609
Won: 319
Drawn: 152
Lost: 138

Best Placing:
1st in Division 1 1963/64, 1965/66 and 1972/73



HONOURS:

1961-62 - Division 2 champions

1963-64 - Division 1 champions

1964-65 - F.A. Cup Winners

1965-66 - Division 1 champions, European Cup-Winners-Cup finalists

1970-71 - F.A. Cup finalists

1972-73 - Division 1 champions, UEFA Cup winners

1973-74 - F.A. Cup winners


ANECDOTES:

IAN ST JOHN - Liverpool 1961-1971



I could confirm a thousand times the Shankly caricature. I was around, for example, one day when he took a bemused reporter into a toilet cubicle in the new dressing room at Anfield, pulled the chain and said: 'You know it refills in 15 seconds . . . it’s a world record.'"


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TOMMY SMITH



"I was trying to get fit and Shanks caught me in the medical room at Anfield with Joe Fagan shaving my leg preparatory to strapping it up. Shanks said, 'What the hell are you doing?' I said, 'I want to play, so Joe's strapping my leg.' He said, 'Don't be daft. You're not playing. Get off that table!' After a bit of an argument, I said, 'I am playing. It's my leg.' Straight away he answers back, 'It's not YOUR bloody leg. It's LIVERPOOL FC's leg. And you're bloody not playing!'"


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GEORGE BEST - Man Utd and Northern Ireland legend



"In 1967, we arrived at Anfield to play Liverpool and as I glanced out of the window of the coach I saw Bill Shankly standing at the main entrance. I was the first player to alight from the coach and when I reached the entrance Bill shook my hand warmly. 'Good to see you again, George,' he said. 'You're looking well, son.'


This was unusual for him, and knowing Shanks to be a wily old fox, I decided to hang around to try to find out what he was up to. As each of the United players entered Anfield, Shanks shook his hand, welcomed him and told him how good he looked. Eventually, Bobby Charlton, a born worrier, came up to Shanks.


'Bobby, son. Good to see you,' Shanks said, shaking his hand. 'But by God, if ever there was a man who looked ill, it's you, Bobby!'

Bobby's face went as colourless as an icicle. 'Ill? I look ill?' he repeated, running the fingers of his right hand over his forehead and down his right cheek. He was visibly shaken.

'Aye, Bobby, son. You look like you're sickening for something. If I were you I'd see a doctor as soon as you set foot back in Manchester.' Shanks patted Bobby on the back and took off down the corridor, leaving him trembling in the foyer.

In the dressing room, Bobby was conspicious by his absence and, ominously, there was a delay in announcing the team. We sat around kicking our heels, no one daring to get changed in case Matt Busby had a tactical plan which meant leaving one of us out. The thought of getting changed only to be told to put your clothes back on because you're not in the team is a player's nightmare.

Eventually Matt Busby entered the dressing room with Jimmy Murphy and told us they had reshuffled the team which had beaten West Ham the previous week. Bobby Charlton was unavailable. He'd suddenly been taken ill."

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PETER THOMPSON



One day Shanks called me into his office. As I walked in, he began swearing and saying how disappointed he was in me. I was shocked, because I had been doing exceptionally well and the team had been winning. He agreed that I was playing brilliantly and I was now more bemused, until he said, ‘I’ve just heard that you’ve got a blue car, bloody sell it!”


QUOTES:

The famous Chris Lawler story



"The only time Chris Lawler was injured was when Tommy Smith 'did' him in a five-a-side match at Melwood. We had just got the pitch levelled and Tommy, who was younger than Chris, caught him with the sole of his boot. Chris' ankle went up like a balloon, but he was only out of action for ten days.

It was around this time we were due to play Anderlecht and one day we were playing a five-a-side game and Chris, still injured was watching. The boys called Chris 'Silent Knight' because he had so little to say for himself. My team in the five-a-side was claiming a goal and I said, 'Just hold on. Chris, you were watching.' 'Yes', he said. 'Speak up, Chris,' I said, 'I can't hear you. Did you think that was a goal, Chris?' 'No, he said.' 'Good God, Chris,' I said, 'this is the first time I've heard you speak to me and you tell me a bloody lie!'"

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"Of course I didn't take my wife to see Rochdale as an anniversary present.It was her birthday. Would I have got married in the football season? Anyway,it was Rochdale reserves."
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"Some people believe football is a matter of life and death, I am very disappointed with that attitude. I can assure you it is much, much more important than that."


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"If a player is not interfering with play or seeking to gain an advantage, then he should be."


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"If Everton were playing at the bottom of the garden, I'd pull the curtains."

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About the "This is Anfield" plaque:



"It's there to remind our lads who they're playing for, and to remind the opposition who they're playing against."

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To Alan Ball, who'd just signed for Everton:



"Don't worry, Alan. At least you'll be able to play close to a great team!"

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At Dixie Dean's funeral:

"I know this is a sad occasion but I think that Dixie would be amazed to know that even in death he could draw a bigger crowd than Everton can on a Saturday Afternoon."


This information has mostly been taken from the excellent http://www.shankly.com/ which contains a biography and basically anything you could wish to know about the great man, including many, many more excellent quotes, anecdotes and tributes

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Gomez - Youth is Pushing him Forwards


I’ve been kind of reluctant to put down in words something that’s been on my mind whilst watching Liverpool’s first three matches of the season. When players and the team are going through a good run of form it seems that anything you say which isn’t 100% positive is interpreted as a negative by some people. I really don’t want to be negative in this piece but I do want to bring some realism to discussions about this player.
During the first three matches of this season Liverpool have been defensively excellent, three clean sheets and we hadn’t really given away any clean cut chances until the Arsenal game when Simon Mignolet, who was being decreed as an imposter at this time last year, showed that he has truly left the poor form of them days behind him by proving equal to the gooners most dangerous efforts. Martin Skrtel has shown us that he just might be able to break from his form history of being good one year and poor the next. Nathanial Clyne has come into the side and immediately looked like he has been at the club for years. Dejan Lovren, whilst not yet looking the €20m powerful leader we were promised last summer has at looked like he might just have something to offer the first team. On top of all these players as the pick of the bunch is an 18 youngster signed from mid-table Championship side Charlton Athletic for a fee in the region of €3m – Joe Gomez.
It’s a wide held belief that, in spite of what the manager may claim now in hindsight, Gomez was signed with the intention of loaning him out to gain further first team experience. That he managed to do enough in training and pre-season friendlies to not only convince the manager to keep him within the club to develop, but also to put him in the starting line-up for the first league game of a season which saw the manager on the brink from the first whistle was an incredible testament to his character and ability.
Gomez has taken to this challenge better than I think even the most optimistic of supporters may have thought possible. He has looked assured in defence, comfortable in possession and he has looked dangerous going forward. It used to be that I could sound like an auld arse here and say “haven’t seen potential like that since….” But in fairness its only a couple of years since Raheem Sterling was showing incredible potential as an 18 year old at the club so I won’t go down that route. Sufficed to say Gomez has bags of potential.
However, as with any 18 year old the important bit when eulogising over their performances is to remember their age and inexperience. At the moment he is playing to an incredibly high level but as we have all experienced when watching young players trying to adapt to senior football it is perfectly natural for them to be inconsistent. Right now his form shows no sign of dissipating but that is often the case with developing players. Another truism for developing players is that inevitably their form hits a patch where they find it hard to perform at all. This period often turns out to be the acid test in that those who recover their form after this period go on to have careers in the higher echelons of the league whereas those who don’t tend to transfer downwards until they find their level
Gomez has a number of attributes, both developed and achieved, which are helping him to shine at this level. His height, strength and pace give him an immediate means to level the playing field against older more experienced players somewhat. His technique and tactical awareness ensure that he not only functions within the team he positively influences performance. I believe that, at this point, his lack of experience and youth are also contributing to his rich vein of form. He clearly has a lot of self-belief so his confidence is high from the get go. He has yet to receive a rinsing from any opponent thus far so he is unaware of the dangers which lie ahead from unforgiving opponents when they identify a weakness.  At some point in the future this will come and it is at this point we will find out if Gomez will go on to be truly world class or if he will simply become a good level defender.
At the moment I am thoroughly enjoying watching this guy play and I’m very much looking forward to seeing him develop but when I keep hearing people talking incredulously about his performances “In spite of his age” I can’t help but feel that we need to remember at this early stage perhaps his performance isn’t in spite of his age, maybe it’s because of it.

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