Tuesday 25 August 2009

Time to worry - or not?


While I am the first to admit that 1 player does not make a team, there is a Strong argument that Alonzo is missed, clearly based upon the first 3 games of this season, we have looked light on in midfield.
Is this man going to make the difference, the problem is we won't know for another 6-8 weeks. I hate to say this but it will be all over by then, certainly based upon last nights performance. Have to be honest, we looked pretty ordinary against a team, we should have beaten easily.
For a large amount of time last night, we ran around in circles, or kept passing the ball sideways as we appeared unsure on how to break down the Villa defence, which I have to add included a 5 man midfield, coupled with the fact that our ex goalkeeper pulled off some good saves.
I watch with baited breath to our next game - away to Bolton, clearly a team we should beat easily - however things are not quite the same anymore!

Monday 4 May 2009

Fighting on


Whatever happens at least we're keeping up our end of the bargain and beating everyone that's put in front of us in the faint hope that Manchester United will lose two of their final four games and, provided we win our final three, we take the Premier League crown this season.

And that's not a line you will have heard said in realistic terms at any point over the last 19 years since we were last champions of all England. To be able to say it is in itself an achievement despite the ethos of this club dictating that if you are second you are nowhere.

To still mathematically have a chance with three games to go is a massive step under Rafa Benitez. And given the series of setbacks we've suffered this season with injuries to Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard as well as countless silly draws, that is progress.

I don't think we'll do it being brutally honest. With the form United are in it is incredibly hard to see them capitulating now given they have made a habit of doing the business when it really matters.

Still, their run in isn't easy. Rivals Arsenal and Man City at home, tough away games at always difficult Wigan (although who would be surprised if Steve Bruce, United to the core, let his side roll over and be beaten) and relegation battling Hull City on the last day.

It would be an achievement to take it to the last day and that is a realistic goal. Of course it is all dependent on us maintaining our winning run. Not an easy task when we face Europe chasing West Ham at Upton Park next weekend, never an easy place to go.

But despite the odds being stacked firmly against us we are playing well, scoring goals and winning and that is the form of title contenders, which we have been and still are, no doubt about it.

Thursday 23 April 2009

The fat lady hasn't started yet!


Long may she stay quite!
With Manure winning 2-0 overnight and moving 3 points clear of Liverpool and still with a game in hand, the odds on winning the League are moving more towards them and away from Anfield.
However I actually don't feel that bad about it, this season and I acknowledge that there are still 5 games to go has been a success.
A lot depends upon how you measure success, if it is measured in silverware that I agree it doesn't look that good. However if you measure in terms of improvement, then I believe it has been an outstanding success.
I am suggesting that we will finish second (unless my prayers are answered and Manure fail in the last few games) a great improvement and a big step forward. We beat Manure twice and in the process we gave them a real pasting at Old Trafford - that really must have hurt Old Fergie - beat Chelsea twice and broke their long standing home (without losing a game) record - drew twice with Arsenal. Featured in one of the best ever Champions League matches when we drew 4-4 at Chelsea, a game that most people except Liverpool fans thought we had no chance. Oh how close we came to pulling off what seemed the impossible and without our captain!
Lets not forget, we beat the great Real Madrid both home and away and they never scored against us in a overall 5-0 demolition of this very good side.
There are just too many positives for me to feel downhearted about this season. The problem is that Liverpool Football Club and its fans set and expect such a high level of achievement that even coming second in the best league in the world can appear to be a disappointment.
Well for me who has supported this great club for nearly 50 years -
I CAN LIVE WITH THAT!

Wednesday 22 April 2009

A reminder of 20 years ago but hope remains


As some of you will recall, 20 years ago it was late drama at Anfield in a game between Liverpool and Arsenal that ended the Reds title hopes.

Back then it couldn't have been more dramatic. With the title destined for Kenny Dalglish's side yet again, Michael Thomas raced through the Reds backline and with the very last kick of the Football League season scored the goal that gave Arsenal the title instead. It was a dark moment in the history of Liverpool Football Club coming just a matter of weeks after the darkest of moments at Hillsborough.

Fast forward almost 20 years later and to last night where Andrei Arshavin raced through on goal in the 90th minute to score his fourth of the game and put Arsenal in front, looking to have ended all hopes of Liverpool winning the league they have won just once since that fateful night in late May 1989.

At the end, it was by no means as dramatic as that night. Furthermore Yossi Benayoun's 93 minute close range finish earned a point that put us back on top and could prove crucial as our captain sagely observed.

But if we're being honest it wasn't enough when we had said beforehand that six wins from the last six was a must. Assuming Manchester United win their two games in hand they go six points clear at the summit and with five games left there may not be enough time for us to claw it back and end the title famine.

But then who could have predicted two 4-4 draws in our last two games, or a 4-1 win at Old Trafford or any of the remarkable late comebacks or wins we have witnessed at Anfield and on the road throughout this season?

It's been an unpredictable campaign, full of ups and downs and late drama. Whose to say that with five games left that there can't be a bit more?

It's not over yet, not till it's mathematically impossible.

Wednesday 15 April 2009

Last night and the next six


I haven't got too much to say about last night except everyone on that pitch did Liverpool Football Club and the memory of the 96 very proud indeed.

We could not have asked for more and it was only the cruel nature of Chelsea's first goal that swung the tie in their favour and gave them the confidence to finish off the tie even after a late scare.

We remain an excellent side and one capable of winning the Premier League title this season, we are certainly closer than at any point during the last 19 title-less years and that is an excellent achievement in itself given we have had to cope for a large portion of the season without our talisman, Fernando Torres.

We are reliant on others to help us out but more than a few people have said to me that if we win our final six games, and this is a big if then we will be champions. And to be champions this season would mean so much.

Six games to go, let's go!

Wednesday 8 April 2009

Crashing down to earth but with hope in our hearts


The euphoria of the past few weeks had to end at some point. We hoped it would be in May with a league and European Cup to our name alas the latter looks unlikely after tonight but far from impossible.

After a month where we've seen the Reds stick four past Real and Man U (Andrea Dossena scoring in both games!), obliterate a strong Aston Villa and summon the latest of late goals at Fulham to cap yet another improbable stoppage time win you've got to believe that we can go to Stamford Bridge and score three without reply, afterall we scored four at Old Trafford...

The point is don't give up yet but this wasn't good tonight for sure. The awesome start that smashed Real Madrid looked on the cards when Torres put us in front but Chelsea's comeback was impressive. Didier Drogba should have levelled on two occasions. Ivanovic's equaliser was preventable but inevitable as was his second goal, the flaws of zonal marking rearing their ugly head again but what odds a full back scoring two goals in a Champions League quarter final?

Drogba's third was deserved and a fine finish to a fine move. We had no reply. Our heads dropped from the moment Chelsea equalised and we just couldn't break them down. Lucas and Dossena, two players who have played out of their skins in recent weeks suddenly returned to their average selves, losing the ball, messing up the easy things. It was Middlesbrough away all over again but at a higher level and far more costly.

Quite simply, Rafa Benitez was tactically outclassed in Europe and there's a line you've probably never read in the five years he's been at Liverpool. He won't like that and that's all we can hope for when it comes to Stamford Bridge next Tuesday night, that he is so riled by tonight that he sends his players out to achieve the unlikely and they've been doing it all season.

And let us not forget that next week we play for the 96 Reds who should be here today. There is no greater incentive than that. Do them proud redmen. Believe.

Sunday 22 March 2009

Momentum gives us a real shot at greatness


Momentum. A word we're used to hearing in football terms. Momentum helps a striker maintain a hot goal-scoring streak. Momentum wins football games. Momentum wins titles. At the moment Liverpool have momentum and they have it in abundance.

It has allowed the Reds to put 13 goals past three previous European Cup winners, one of them the current holders, in the last few weeks, to catapult themselves back into the title race and has underlined their extraordinary European credentials.

No one, and I mean no one, is capable of dealing with us on this form. Not Real Madrid who had been in stunning form under Juande Ramos prior to their tie with us, not a quintuple chasing Manchester United, not an Aston Villa who have been solid all season and never capitulated in the manner that they did this afternoon.

When we're good, we're very very good.

And yet it makes it all the more frustrating that we weren't this good when Stoke City, Fulham, West Ham and a few other teams turned up at Anfield and stifled us into playing the type of football that makes us look poor. And when we're poor, we're very very poor.

We can only hope those days are behind us now. We have eight games to make our mark on this title race. Eight winnable games that must all be won in the hope that United's capitulation last week and yesterday at Craven Cottage can be repeated in their remaining nine encounters.

There is no greater motivation then the desire of players like Steven Gerrard to attain the one medal that has so far eluded him in club football. No greater motivation for the fans and the club on whole than to deny Manchester United a chance to equal our proud and at one point, widely thought, unmatchable record of 18 league titles.

There will be no joy around these parts if United hold aloft another league title in May, Fergie taking yet another step towards knocking us off our "fucking perch" as he so eloquently put it a few years ago.

Our only repreive in that case may be European glory in Rome in late May. Manchester United could also stand in our way there following the outcome of Friday's quarter, semi and final draw.

No one is relishing playing Chelsea again given the fact we've met them in the last four Champions League campaigns. Our record against them in Europe is favourable but their win in last season's semi final will give them confidence as will the knowledge that they have the second leg at Stamford Bridge.

But we have momentum, we have confidence and above we have genuine quality.

Now more than ever is the chance to cast aside all those silly draws with Stoke, Fulham, West Ham, Hull, Manchester City etc and to show our true potential under Rafael Benitez. We have shown the excellence we are capable of in our last three games. Time to show it time and again over the next two months.

Monday 16 March 2009

WHAT A WEEK!


Not satisfied with giving Real Madrid a hammering during the week in the Champions League, Liverpool travelled to Old Trafford on Saturday and gave Utd a lesson on how to play attacking football putting 4 goals past them.
In both games the combination of Gerrard and Torres has been the key, Torres in particular who quite clearly on Saturday was not 100% fit - just imagine what would have happened had he been?
After all the hype about Utd going 10 points clear after they beat us disappeared when Torres broke clear and scored the first of the 4 goal humiliation.
While most fans were still on cloud 9 after putting 4 past one of Europe's best team and in all honesty it could have been a lot more, the thought of facing Utd at Old Trafford was daunting to say the least.
While Utd went ahead first, apart from the 5 minutes or so they were not really in the game, it was therefore with interest I read the Fergie has stated that Utd were the better team, this was quite unbelievable and I just wonder what game he was watching?
Our win was outstanding not only for the score line and the 3 points but we did not field our strongest team, Alonzo was missing and at the very last moment we had to draft Sammie into a central defence position and move Jamie to fullback. What a game our defence had, I don't think Sammie even broke into a sweat, so good was the midfield in front of him. I know that Raffa really likes this 2 lines of 4 - midfield and defence and in the last two games it has really worked. Last week against Madrid, time and time again the midfield broke up any attack and when they did break through the defence soaked up anything that came their way.
With only 9 games to go and with Utd having a game in hand, we all know that they still remain favourites to win the title, the challenge for Liverpool is not to let this great result be wasted by dropping points against lower placed teams, we all acknowledge that this result and this season have again been an improvement however we have dropped far too many points at Anfield with stupid draws. I mean look at Stoke, almost certain to be relegated and over 2 games we never even scored a goal against them.
Now this Friday will see the draw for the Champions League quarter finals and no seeding which means the chance of a Liverpool vs. Utd game is now a chance, as is against Chelsea.
On last weeks showing - we can match it with anybody!

Wednesday 18 February 2009

Close encounters of the Parry kind


First of all another apology for the lack of blogging recently. I always write a recap blog after weeks of inactivity with the grand intentions of making sure I update this more regularly but I inevitably don't. Mostly because of laziness, but also I tend to forgot the thing even exists which is an awful shame.

I often wonder though if anyone is actually reading what I'm writing and if anyone is even interested. Perhaps if your reading this you might leave a comment just to acknowledge your presence on this blog, your avid readership and your disappointment that it's not updated more regularly....go on!

Anyway I felt compelled to update it now because the other night I happened to be walking back from football, up Myrtle Street, just past the Philharmonic Hall and across the street from Liverpool Community College when who do I see only Rick Parry, our esteemed chief executive, complete with suit and silly tie along with about half a dozen other suited middle aged men.

They were walking and talking and looking business like. I was in my football gear, Liverpool top included, I caught his eye, gave him a nod as I passed but all he could muster was a quick stare and then back to looking at his feet. Shame? Fear? (I'm 6ft 5 and rather scary looking or so I've been told) Who knows...

In any case it was all a bit surreal. When I told my Liverpool supporting friend later he wondered why I hadn't called him a twat to his face.

I wonder what our esteemed chief executive was up to? I didn't recognise anyone else in his posse so I can't report any secret meetings with Jurgen Klinsmann or whoever. Nor did they look foreign, of the Arab variety, so no new developments on our protracted Far Eastern takeover.

Since my last blog a fair bit has happened. Our FA Cup exit at Everton was no surprise given the way the night panned out. Our captain off early in the first half, our star striker clearly not fit and our much maligned Brazilian midfielder getting himself sent off.

The team at Portsmouth ten days ago was a bit of a shock as was the scoreline heading into the last five minutes but thank the lord for Dirk Kuyt and El Nino, keeping our hopes alive...

United can go five points clear tonight with a win against Fulham at Old Trafford which is pretty much a given. Worse still they are at home to Blackburn on Saturday evening before we host Manchester City on Sunday afternoon. By which time Fergie's lot could be eight points clear, a major psychological boost to the quintuple (a new word to the footballing lexicon this week) chasing side.

Still all we have to do is keep grinding out wins like we did at Portsmouth the other week and look to take three points at Old Trafford which may prompt sighs of disbelief among many but it looks increasingly as if this will be the only way we can seriously pull off this league winning lark.

Wednesday 4 February 2009

Keane, Chelsea and another derby day


My issue is not with the selling of Robbie Keane.

Things just did not work out for the Irishman here. The situation was obviously so desperate, he obviously was not fitting in and the overriding feeling amongst all at the club was that Benitez (whether or not he bought him which is a whole different story) had to cut his losses. The stories I've been hearing about Keane's social exploits could hardly have done him any favours in the eyes of a man who expects a high standard of professionalism.

But to not find a replacement even something short term leaves the boss quite rightly open to criticism. Furthermore if we are not to land number 19 in May many, in fact everyone, in the media will most likely point to decision to sell Keane right at the end of the transfer window and not replace him as having led to our downfall.

David Ngog is no Fernando Torres, he's not even close although there is potential there. Dirk Kuyt's appearances up front have been few and far between since he switched to right wing last season whilst Ryan Babel has regressed so much that his Liverpool career may not last beyond the summer.

That said we saw the best of him towards the end of last season, the expectation being that he would progress further this term. That's not been the case and whilst we shouldn't write him off just yet we've got to be realistic, he really hasn't performed this season and it would take a remarkable turnaround form him to produce the form we expect and need from him.



The importance of Fernando Torres was underlined by his late double in Sunday's monumental win over Chelsea at Anfield. The Spaniard will now hopefully hit the goal trail which has been sorely missed even with our march towards the top of the table.

That is the one bonus perhaps, that we've survived for a large part of the season without his goals and now, with him back, things can only be better.

Better though is almost perfection from now until the end of the season. There can be no slip ups in the league and if there are we must hope Manchester United follow suit but they are wise old dogs in positions like this and they won't surrender many points between now and May, if any...

Keeping our confidence intact is important and that means getting a good result at Goodison in the cup tonight. I'm confident merely because our away form is better than that at home this season but it's a derby, it's the cup, it's a night game and they will be up for it. But if we're not then there's something seriously wrong.

Sunday was hopefully a turning point, let's kick on from here and show that even with a shortage up front we can do great things in the next three months.

Monday 26 January 2009

Derby double does little to inspire


Two unsatisfactory but probably fair derby results that does little to improve our league position, gives us another fixture headache and perhaps most tellingly confirms we've hit a slump.

Five draws in our last eight games is not the form of title contenders and three draws in our last three is a worrying predicament when all around us particularly Manchester United are grinding out wins.

Everton understandably and predictably shut up shop in both games and took their chances when they came. We on the other hand seemed to spent 180 minutes and particularly yesterday passing across the edge of their box unable to make any inroads and were saved only by the class of Steven Gerrard and of course Fernando Torres whose flick for the skipper's equaliser was a beautiful thing.

It's good to have Nando back and although he's not found the scoresheet in the last three he's shown flashes of his brilliance that indicate it won't be long before he's on the goal trail again.

That's in stark contrast to Robbie Keane who is rumoured to have walked out of Anfield yesterday after being told he wasn't in the squad. Benitez this morning confirmed that he'd not spoken to Keane since announcing he wasn't in the 18 for yesterday but shed no further light on the matter.

It does little to dampen the constant speculation that has surrounded the Irishman almost from the day he arrived at the club. He has not been an abject failure but he has failed to live up to the expectations we had of him and his perfomance in Monday's derby was anonymous and that's not the first time that's happened this season.

With a week left in the transfer window the rumours are unlikely to go away. Keane won't be sold, of that I reckon we can be pretty certain but if he continues to be in and out of the side and in and out of form then Benitez may look to cut his losses in the summer.

Of course it all depends where we are in the summer. We could be champions, we could be runners up, we could have scrapped the last Champions League place.

It's hard to know now where we are headed because we are in unknown territory. We set the standard and led the way since the beginning of December. Now, knocked off the top we face a challenge and it is a mighty one where every game counts starting with Wednesday's trip to Wigan where three points is an absolute must.

Friday 16 January 2009

Rafa's rejection is another headache

I don't think many of us were surprised that Rafa Benitez rejected the contract offered to him by the club given the stories that have been coming out ever since negotiations began that he wanted more control over transfers.

This simple yet important demand (it's not as if he's asking for a blank cheque book) isn't surprising given the time it takes for us to actually sign players and lord knows how many we've probably missed out on seeing as Rafa has to email Tom who has to talk to George who then both have to talk to Rick. This, I can only presume, is the standard procedure although it could be far more complicated.

Either the way the situation doesn't look good despite the rosy picture some are painting. Hicks latest media assault saw him give a "reassuring" interview to Sky Sports News insisting this was only a little bother and that it would all get sorted. Which is great, I mean it was a decent interview only for the fact that I and many others do not trust a single word that emanates from that man's mouth.

I trust Rafa who is just as keen to get things sorted as Tom insisted he was but it really is another unwelcome distraction as we head into a defining part of our season already disturbed by Steven Gerrard's antics in Southport at the end of last year.

Both sides have seemingly decided to put it on the back burner for football's sake which is good but all the while Rafa's contract runs down and he wouldn't be short of offers elsewhere. Of course he's dedicated to the club but he really is being tested by the antics of our American friends.

Sunday 11 January 2009

Benitez comments and bad weekend add more pressure

It was almost inevitable as soon as the words came out of Rafa Bentiez's mouth that they may come back to haunt us.

And so it transpired this weekend as we inexplicably dropped more points against a probably doomed Stoke City yesterday evening and United narrowed the gap by destroying Chelsea this afternoon.



Benitez today stood by his comments made in the above video. Which, by the way, I found very entertaining and very funny as someone finally told Fergie where to stick it and there was a certain sense of pride to be taken from a detailed and well thought out put down.

Yet I also knew that the media would make a massive deal out of it and now even more so given the way the weekend's panned out.

To drop four points to Stoke home and away and not score a single goal is not the form of title contenders. The form of title contenders is United's demolition of our hitherto closest challengers Chelsea at Old Trafford.

Fergie's complaints about fixture congestion which Rafa so eloquently addressed in Friday's press conference are, as the Spaniard pointed out, not really valid given the fantastic run in they now have. They face ourselves, Arsenal and Aston Villa at Old Trafford with the destination of this year's title very much in their hands.

Equally a win at Old Trafford coupled with identical results in the remaining 17 games puts the title in our hands but it's a bit too early to be talking like this.

The perceived wisdom is that points will be dropped by all sides chasing the league between now and May but there won't be many, certainly less than ten I would imagine.

It makes slip ups like yesterday's all the more damaging. Furthermore the comments of Benitez heaps further pressure on him and the team to maintain the form that has seen us lead the pack since early December.

Needless to say the derby on Monday week takes on even more importance now.

Wednesday 7 January 2009

Everton league game more important than cup showdown

The draw for the fourth round of the FA Cup rather fittingly pits us against Everton in this the 20th year of the Hillsborough disaster.

Coming six days after our league meeting on January 19th and two days after Steven Gerrard's appearance at Sefton magistrates, it is sure to be an eventful week on Merseyside.

How we emerge from it may determine the course of our season. I'll put my neck on the line now by saying I'm more concerned about the league game then the cup one.

Of course there is a lot of emotional involvement in the cup tie given the year that's in it. As well as this it's our first cup meeting the Blues since 1991, when an epic three game marathon included a 4-4 draw at Goodison that would ultimately lead to the resignation of Kenny Dalglish and the end of 20 years dominance of English football.

Ironically here we are, 18 years on, top of the league and on a run that many now feel could end the lengthy 19 year wait for a league title.

This is why I'll take three important league points at Anfield over progression to the fifth round of the FA Cup even if there's an added incentive to winning the competition this year as acknowledged by Jamie Carragher, a man who invests more emotion than most Scousers in a Merseyside derby having experienced both sides of the increasingly bitter divide.

Gerrard's court appeareance in between the two games will not help matters. Everton fans are already putting the finishing touches to vile chants about our captain to go alongside the awful vitriol they spew about his family.

It is two derbies that would be of high intensity in normal circumstances but the surrounding factors are likely to ensure an extra bite both on and off the pitch later this month.