Showing posts with label Premier League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Premier League. Show all posts

Monday, 31 March 2014

Liverpool 4-0 Tottenham - Match report

Raheem Sterling: Top, top top player! 
Liverpool returned to top spot in the Premiership in style yesterday with a convincing win over a distinctly unconvincing Tottenham side at Anfield. From the first whistle to the last, the home side was in total control of the fixture and brushed the visitors aside with some mesmerising football. Goals from Luis Suarez, Philippe Coutinho and Jordan Henderson added to an opening own goal from Younes Kaboul were too much for Tim Sherwood's side to cope with. 

The Merseysiders took the lead after only two minutes when Man of the Match Raheem Sterling attacked the Tottenham left side and slid a simple pass to Glen Johnson who's overlapping run went initially unnoticed by the visiting defence. Daniel Sturridge was waiting for the inevitable centre in front of goal but needn't have bothered as Kaboul helped the ball into the net with the kind of back-heel John Barnes would have been proud of. One would have expected the vengeance-minded to have sought immediate retribution but alas, nothing. 

On 25 minutes the second goal came. An awful back pass from Michael Dawson with his first touch of the ball after coming on for the injured Jan Vertonghen was pounced on by live wire Suarez whose strength and pace as he ran toward goal signaled the inevitable before he duly slid the ball across a helpless Hugo Lloris to notch up his 29th goal of the season. 

The second half started in much the same manner as the first in so far as the visitors showing a complete inability to handle the attacking flair of the hosts. Time after time, Liverpool passed around the Tottenham side as if they simply weren't there. On 55 minutes a rare offensive forray into the Liverpool area was cleared left to Jon Flanaghan who sold the most audacious dummy to his assailant and passed to Coutinho completely free in the middle of the pitch. Unchallenged, he headed toward the opposing penalty area and unleashed a text-book drive low into the left corner of the goal and past the outstretched arm of Lloris. 

This, to all intents and purposes was game over. There was no sign of the heroics from last week that saw Spurs come back from 2-0 down to win and it was clear in their body language that there wasn't going to be anytime soon. At least not today. The mauling was complete on 75 minutes when Jirdan Henderson's free kick from the left bypassed a packed penalty area and into the net. There was a spell of pressure from the visitors for the last 10 minutes but this was in vain. The Liverpool defence stood firm although in all honesty is wasn't exactly an onslaught that Tottenham subjected their hosts to. Merely, it seemed, to demonstrate that they hadn't turned up just to stand still.

Considering Tottenham, in the build up to the match, used the word "revenge", to describe their imminent mission, they didn't seem to be a unit with revenge a forethought. To say they were outclassed would be an understatement. Full credit must go Brendan Rodgers for sending the side out with an aggressive and brutal approach to this game. On the other hand, one has to wonder what happened to their opponents. At times it was almost embarrassing to watch. There was a total lack of desire from the North Londoners. Tim Sherwood has really got his work cut out with this lot. 

Liverpool now sit three points clear atop the Premiership and they actually look good value for it on recent performances. The next game away at West Ham won't by any means, be an easy one at their notoriously difficult venue. The Reds have the momentum now and on this showing, it will take one hell of a performance from West Ham to put a dent in that. However Sam Alladyce being the wily technician that he is will not make it an easy ride for their visitors and I've no doubt it'll be a sterner test than yesterday. 

There is a real sense of purpose in this Liverpool side now and it's easy to see why the fans are singing "We're gonna win the league...". Yesterday, they played without any inhibitions and yes, for the first time in the last two or three games, as if they were enjoying themselves. I have to say, this is the best football I've seen the team play for 25 years and on this form, I'm finally beginning to accept this song being sung. Next stop, Upton Park. 

Follow me on Twitter @Mrbengreen

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Liverpool 2-1 Sunderland Reds battle back to 2nd

Liverpool put in a gritty performance at Anfield last night against a resolute Sunderland side to return to second place in the Premiership. The Reds withstood heavy pressure late on from Gus Poyet's men and despite some nervous moments on the pitch, the team hung in to claim the three points.
Daniel Sturridge (right): I ain't doin no Studge!

Sunderland arrived for this fixture determined to stifle this rampant attacking Liverpool side with three central defenders deployed across their back line. The plan worked for a large portion of the first half as the home side struggled to find a way past the crowded defence in front of them. The visitors brought with them a huge slice of luck when Santiago Vergini avoided a red card after cynically bringing down Luis Suarez when the Uruguayan appeared to be through on goal with a scoring opportunity. Referee Kevin Friend however, disagreed and chose the lesser sanction of a yellow card. 

The anxiety in the fans was clearly felt and the usually vocal Kop was somewhat muted and, like their team struggled to find their best form. The tension was etched on the home fans' faces as the half wore on. The expectation of Liverpool's now customary sprint to an early two or three goal lead evaporated and turned into the jitters. The crowded Sunderland defence thwarted Liverpool's free-flowing, attacking style and the frustration started to show in Brendan Rodgers' men. Just as they could bear it no longer, up stepped captain Steven Gerrard to convert the free kick awarded as a result of Vergini's infringement on 39 minutes. In the process showing Luis Suarez how to take a free kick against stubborn opposition. 

As the second half began, Sunderland's intent to stick to their gameplay was evident but the home side had other ideas. Liverpool pressed forward and applied a certain patience to their game that was wanting in the first half. The ball was pushed forward at every opportunity and then passed round the opposition box as they probed an opening. 

The midfield diamond of Gerrard at the back, the industrious Jordan Henderson and Joe Allen in the middle and Philippe Coutinho behind the front pair kept the pressure on and the reward came after 48 minutes. Another pass across the visitors' back line from Coutinho found Henderson on the edge of the box. Daniel Sturridge only had one thing on his mind with the squared pass, shimmying to the left to unleash a deftly placed shot toward goal. The slight deflection off Wes Brown wrong-footed Vito Mannone and he watched helplessly as the net bulged for number two. 

The celebration from Sturridge hinted more of pressure relieved than joy and one has to wonder if that underpinned his performance yesterday. It was definitely apparent that both he and Suarez were being particularly single minded yesterday and I have to say that it was to the detriment of the team on occasion. The Kop found it's voice and jubilation reigned. The smell of a title tilt was evidently in the air as they sang "we're going to win the league". Will they? We'll have to wait and see. Sunderland though, had other ideas. 

The introduction of Adam Johnson and Ki Sung-Yeung on 61 minutes for Conor Whickham and Emanuele Giacherini showed Poyet was not here simply to spectate. The visitors began to apply some pressure of their own and the hosts were clearly rattled by this show of audacious defiance of the rules of their manor. The home defence, largely untroubled until now came under constant pressure as Sunderland pushed forward. They showed belief. They showed intent. The Kop showed angst and this seemed to transmit to the erratic unit that is the Liverpool back line who looked on as Lee Cattermole sent a rasping shot cannoning off Simon Mignolet's bar. 

Poyet's courage bore fruit after 76 minutes. A corner from the Liverpool left caught the defence static. The delivery, just the right height for Jimmy Cranky, completely bypassed the six-foot defenders and landed for Ki to stoop and gratefully nod home to give the visitors a sniff of a share of the spoils. Liverpool were rattled and hung on for the remaining 15 minutes of the game. The fourth official's signalling of three minutes added time was greeted by the home team and fans alike as if it was 30 and those last few minutes felt like exactly that. The Kop must have been awash with fingernails after the game, nervously chewed off in those dying minutes. 

Hang on they did and the three points were in the bag. Brendan Rodgers' men return to second place and keep the pressure on Chelsea at the top. All attention now turns to the visit of Tottenham on Sunday who, themselves will be feeling rejuvenated after overturning a two-goal deficit against Southampton at the weekend to win 3-2 and rekindle their place in the hunt for European football qualification. If Liverpool want to keep their hopes alive there really needs to be no room for the kind of nerves that were evident against Sunderland yesterday and for me, if they don't succeed in bringing the title home this season it will be for this reason. 

I believe Liverpool can win it, but the team has to be brave. The fans must be brave. We all have to believe because belief is the difference between winners and losers. The team needs to feel the belief in the fans - in the moment and not just acting so on the way to the ground. As Muhammad Ali said "Champions aren't made in gyms... They have to have the skill and the will. But the will must be greater than the skill". 

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Liverpool v Sunderland - Match Preview

Liverpool make a welcomed return to the hallowed turf of Anfield tonight for the first time in over a month and play host to Gus Poyet's Sunderland side who are looking for their first win since their 0-3 win away at Newcastle Utd. Poyet's men have it all to do, although given Liverpool's well-documented defensive frailties, I'm sure they'll fancy their chances of nicking the odd goal or possibly even two. The problem is, as many a team have found to their cost this season is should that happen, Brendan Rodger's men will probably get three or four.

It's certainly a big ask for Sunderland and you'd expect Liverpool's recent momentum to carry them through for a comfortable three points. It's nice to see that Rodgers has recaptured the fortress mentality and reality at Anfield and one would have to go back to the 0-1 reversal against Southampton in September for Liverpool's last Premiership defeat at home. Very consistent from Liverpool and one only hopes that the team can keep a clean sheet in order to restore some defensive pride ahead of a crucial fixture against Tottenham on Sunday.I don't think this will decide the Reds' season but it will surely go some way to shaping it.

Obviously Fabio Borini won't be included in the Sunderland squad, and from the perspective that he's their star man this season it's a match made for confidence. The visitors' top scorer Adam Johnson isn't in the squad due to injury so there doesn't seem to be much firepower available for them. Having said that, Look what happened against Cardiff City last weekend. I sure as hell didn't see that coming. The team sheet shows a trio of central defenders so I think the words damage and limitation are Poyet's intentions tonight.

The starting eleven shows no place for Raheem Sterling but considering the next opposition at the weekend, I agree that Rodgers would use him sparingly as the Premiership jockey's get the whip out and start hacking it for the finish line. So, same again for Liverpool tonight. I expect the team to deal with the opposition formation a lot better than they did at the weekend but credit goes to the way the players managed to adapt.

Without further ado, let the games begin. I'm not making any predictions as per usual but I'd suggest another three points for Liverpool such is their confidence and attacking prowess these days. And, long may it continue.

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen

Sunday, 23 March 2014

Nine Goal Thriller Keeps Liverpool In The Chase


Suarez and Sturridge - The REAL SAS
Sloppy defending coupled with exquisite finishing was the order of the day as Liverpool and Cardiff City served up a nine goal treat to keep the fans on the edge of their seats and make problems for those with coronary complaints. Two goals a piece for Jordon Mutch and Martin Skrtel, a Luis Suarez hat-trick and a goal each for Daniel Sturridge and Frazier Campbell provided the entertainment in a thrilling match.

As with most a Liverpool fans, I was confident of a win and didn't really expect to see Cardiff register one goal, let alone three. The first from Mutch was equally down to poor defending - yet again from Liverpool, as it was the quality finishing from Mutch. Following a suicide back pass from Joe Allen that allowed Frazier to play the ball into the path of the scorer. The amount of space allowed by the Liverpool defence, and the apparent reluctance to press on the edge of the box was again Liverpool's failing. However less than ten minutes later, Liverpool were level. Jordan Henderson's ball into space for the overlapping Glen Johnson who's centre was tapped in easily by Suarez at the near post. 1-1. 

On 25 minutes Liverpool were again guilty of leaving gaps in the defence large enough fir a No. 36 bus to breach. Campbell done exactly that and latched onto the pass from the impressive Mutch to cut across the visitors' shambolic defence to slide home his sixth Premiership goal of the season and the hosts' second. 2-1. Liverpool responded by trying to get balls in behind the Cardiff defence and thus began to turn the tide of the game. As half time approached one sensed Brendan Rodgers' men would recover and, recover they did as Skrtel poked home to level on 41 minutes from Philippe Coutinho's dangerous ball into the home team's penalty box. 2-2. 

The break gave the visitors a chance to regroup, regain focus and play in a manner more befitting of a team challenging for the league title. Through similar fashion to the equaliser, and again through Skrtel with his second of the game, heading home from Coutinho corner. 2-3. After that, it was the Suarez and Sturridge show. The SAS as they've now come to be known, swept aside the home side with some devastating link-up play between them. As clinical as the formidable, stealth-like unit after which they've been nick-named. And, I'd like to add, far more so than any previous impostors with the same name!

Sturridge picking up the effervescent Johnson's centre and playing an audacious back-heel pass in to the stride of Suarez... 2-4. Following another 15 minutes of continued pressure, the deadly duo struck again. Johnson's 40-yard pass on 75 minutes turned defence into attack and found Suarez moving into the vacant left side flank. His neat control and strength was too much for the marking City defender and as he raced through, Sturridge was on hand to meet his partner's centre and tap in. 2-5.  If there was any doubting the outcome of this encounter, surely it was erased now. The visitors were out of site.

Mutch grabbed what can only be considered a consolation in the 88th minute, heading in Kenwyn Jones headed lay off but by now, the damage was done and there was no way back for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's side from here. 3-5. No sooner had the home side clawed back a modicum of respect, the SAS struck again on 90 minutes to close the proceedings in style. A long punt upfield from Skrtel found Suarez again in acres of space on the left flank. As he dribbled toward goal with only the keeper to beat, the following was inevitable. A little shimmy and a drop of the shoulder. 3-6.

There's no doubting that Liverpool made this unnecessarily difficult for themselves in the opening stages. The amount of space afforded to the home side was unforgivable and deserving of being punished twice. Young Jon Flanagan will surely learn from that as both errors came from his eagerness to get forward. There also appears to be a reluctance, on occasion for Liverpool to close opposition players down on the edge of their own box. For what, the good Lord only knows. What we all know though, is that this has to stop if and more likely when, they are facing the quality opposition that will inevitably arrive with playing in the Champions League.

For now, Liverpool remain in the mix and a 19th title is certainly not beyond them. As Brendan Rodgers said after the game when asked if he's "Got to say now you can win the league?", his response was, quite rightly "No, we've got to say we've gotta win the next game, and that's our focus". Never a truer word said. The focus in now on Wednesday night at 8pm when Sunderland come to Anfield. Let's see where we are after that.

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen

Sunday, 16 March 2014

Manchester United 0-3 Liverpool - LFC put United to the sword to retain 2nd

Steve Gerrard: Penalty double for LFC
Liverpool visited Old Trafford this afternoon and left with all three points and gave the old foe a footballing lesson in the process. Brendan Rodgers' men simply had too much for the home side who looked a sorry shadow of the side that ruled the Premiership less than a year ago. So alarming has been the regression from the current, and soon to be replaced Champions. The visitors opened the game brightly and never really looked like losing. The home side failed to turn up until after they went 0-1 down to a Steven Gerrard penalty. And then promptly left again after that. 

Rogers named an unchanged side to the one that triumphed over Southampton a fortnight earlier and it looked as if they meant to carry on where they left off. Liverpool harried and pressed their hosts in the early stages to assert their dominance. The breakthrough came on 33 minutes after good work from Daniel Sturridge on the right flank to find his strike partner Luis Suarez in the home side penalty area with an inch perfect cross-field pass. Suarez controlled perfectly before the hapless Rafael needlessly handled the ball to give referee Mark Clattenburg no choice but to point to the spot. The United defender had already earned himself a yellow card for an earlier infringement, but for some reason, Mr. Clattenburg chose not to send him off. 

United had it all to do and for the remainder of the first half, showed glimpses of the pressure they're so used to exerting on visiting sides. The home side had arrived at last. This period brought about their only shot on target up until then, and indeed, for the remainder of the match. Their sole threat Wayne Rooney forcing a brilliant save from Simon Mignolet, pushing the ball away to his right to avoid a certain equaliser. Liverpool held firm as the United front line pushed forward and to bombard crosses into the Liverpool penalty area for the out of sorts Robin Van Persie. The home sides efforts were easily thwarted by stout defending from the LFC back line. 

As far as any resistance from the home side went, that was it. David Moyes looked like a rabbit caught in the headlights of a marauding red juggernaut, and the expectation was that he would change things at half time as any beleaguered manager would do in the face of such a compelling onslaught. Clearly he felt his team would continue the second half as they ended the first and that an equaliser would come. They didn't, and neither did an equaliser. Within two minutes of the restart, Liverpool extended their advantage in similar style to how they got it. The tireless Suarez found Jordan Henderson on the edge of the box. His weighted pass found the run of Joe Allen who was bundled over in spectacular fashion by Phil Jones. Again, Mr. Clattenburg pointed to the spot. Again, Gerrard converted coolly to send the visiting fans and players into raptures. Liverpool were now 0-2 up. 

To make matters worse, a further penalty was awarded to Liverpool after Nemanja Bidic brought Sturridge down in the box to earn himself a red card and reduce the home side to 10 men on 70 minutes. Gerrard was unable to convert on this occasion as his effort crashed against David de Gea's right post. There was no way back for United at this point, and it showed on the face of each and every man, woman and child in the stadium - from both sides and, not least that of Moyes. It took him another five minutes to reply, making a double substitution. Tom Cleverley and Danny Welbeck on for Marouane Fellaini and the ineffective Adnan Januzaj. The move only served to confirm what trouble the home team were in as Liverpool put the game beyond any doubt, had there been any at this point. 

Following a period of sustained possession without reply, Sturridge picked out Suarez with a through ball that couldn't have been better timed with the best Swiss watch. The Uruguayan gratefully controlled the pass and swept it past the helpless de Gea to complete the 0-3 score line. A result which must raise questions over Moyes ability to take the Red Devils forward. Perhaps shadows of Sir Alex Ferguson's early tenure in the job, but it's time for Moyes to crack the whip and knock his troops into shape. They simply weren't at the races today and the body language of Robin Van Persie makes one wonder where he'll be playing his football next season. 

Tactically, Brendan Rodgers called it absolutely spot on. Glen Johnson was restored to right back and Jon Flanagan moved over to the left. Henderson partnered Allen in the central roles with Raheem Sterling playing just being the front two. The movement between the front players and the industry of the two central midfielders won this game for Liverpool. It's equally fair to say that United were poor but credit must go to Brendan Rodgers men for the grit, akin to some excellent pressing and passing to boot. Liverpool have retained second place and are perfectly placed for a determined assault on the title. 

I think most people would have noticed there was a banner being held up from the travelling support, it read: "David Moyes is a tactical genius". Albeit that sarcasm is the lowest form of wit they say, sometimes, it's worth the descent.  

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen

Saturday, 15 March 2014

Manchester United v Liverpool - Match Preview

In around 24 hours from now, Liverpool FC arrive at Old Trafford with the intention of tightening their grip on fourth place and at the same time, inflicting more misery on David Moyes Manchester United side in a season that has seen the balance of power between the two clubs swing firmly toward the Reds of Merseyside. Brendan Rodgers' men will have to be at their very best in a game that ranks 
Lucas Leiva: Key man for LFC

alongside Barcelona - Real Madrid; Borussia Dortmund - Bayern Munich, and AC and Inter Milan teams in being some of the most hotly contested rivalries in world football. 

Liverpool have good news going into the match with Lucas Leiva and Mamadou Sakho returning from injury and available for selection, leaving Jose Enrique as the only player retaining the proverbial Sicknote. The choice of midfielders at Rodgers' disposal; Leiva, Steven Gerrard, Jordan Henderson, Philippe Coutinho and Joe Allen translates to a fully fit first choice midfield plus Victor Moses and Luis Alberto. In terms of formation, I'd like to see both Gerrard and Lucas playing in front of the back four - which should perhaps include Sakho in place of Daniel Agger - with Henderson or Allen in front of them and behind an attacking trio of Daniel Sturridge, Luis Suarez and Raheem Sterling. The benefit of Lucas' return is that it will give Gerrard some more freedom to advance in midfield and put through balls in to the runs of breaking attackers. In any case the choice of personnel  leaves the Gaffer with the nightmare many of his peers could only dream of having!

United will no doubt have Marouane Fellaini continue in midfield following his performances in the last two games for them. The absence of his physical presence, eye for a pass and undoubted skill has left the Red Devils wanting in the middle of the park for much of the season. Other than Fellaini, Michael Carrick, Juan Mata, Wayne Rooney and of course Robin Van Persie, don't give United have enough for Liverpool to fear. Having said that, this is still for the most part, the team that won the league last season. As such, Liverpool have a very tough afternoon's work ahead of them if they wish to come away from Old Trafford with anything, let alone three points. 

Tactically, I believe Liverpool will continue with their high pressing, counter-attacking approach and deny the home side any time on the ball. Interestingly, Liverpool have made the fewest crosses (410) in the Premiership of all the top ten teams with the exception of Everton (392). Manchester United on the other hand have made the most (692) and this is a very telling stat. It follows that David Moyes' tactics are perhaps outmoded given the season they've had. I for one, don't believe this is a coincidence. It's clear to me that playing a high pressure, counter-attacking game with through balls to fast attackers - allied to possession football, is an infinitely more effective approach than simply getting crosses in from the flanks. Liverpool have shown this to devastating effect against their neighbours Everton and Arsenal among others this season, so go figure. 

One cannot ignore the fact however, that this fixture is as good as a derby due to the relative close proximity of the sides and the unrivalled history between them. Arsenal - Tottenham Hotspurs; Newcastle United - Sunderland; Swansea and Cardiff Cities; Chelsea - Fulham. All great rivalries, great clubs in their own rights but no disrespect to them, meetings between these teams don't capture the imagination quite like Manchester United versus Liverpool. The two from North London perhaps, but there's still something missing. Some history, some achievement some thing that goes just a little further than bragging rights and this is what makes this match such a tough one to call. On paper and current form, you'd expect the Merseysiders to come out on top and quite rightly so but the games are always such tight, emotional affairs that anything can happen on the day. 

Liverpool haven't won at Old Trafford for about five years now. However like many a Liverpool fan, I have faith in Brendan Rodgers. He's the man to take the team forward and I've believed as much since he took over. I don't make predictions but I'm suggesting a win for Liverpool. The manager has taken the team to a new level. A higher, more modern and effective level. Above that being occupied by Moyes' men. It's my belief that Moyes needs to overhaul his thinking, his approach, his game plan if he wishes to follow in the massive footsteps of Sir Alex Ferguson. For me, I can wait for that. Take your time David. No rush!

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen


Sunday, 2 March 2014

Southampton 0-3 Liverpool - Resolute Reds move to 2nd

A resolute performance from Brendan Rodgers' men resulted in three points and a move up two places
Suarez - 100 up puts LFC 1 up
in the Premiership to occupy second behind leaders Chelsea. 


Many LFC supporters, myself included felt this was going to be a stern test of Liverpool's Premiership credentials at a ground which was beginning to become something of a hoodoo for the men from Anfield. The recent poor defensive performances, coupled with a decent Southampton side, the outlook was not great for Rodgers' side, and I, for one, was prepared to settle for a point. Perhaps a sign of expectations resulting from recent seasons. 

The first half began as expected. Southampton taking the game to Liverpool hoping to take advantage of potential defensive lapses. The Reds' back line however had other ideas and it was clear Liverpool were looking to play a distinct counter attacking game. True to current form, it had to be said that the visitors were pretty shaky in the opening 45 minutes. I think it's even fair to say they were lucky to go into the break one goal to the good, let off by the impressive Adam Lallana being denied an equaliser by the woodwork. All told, LFC rode their luck and Phillipe Coutinho particularly ineffectual on the day. 

Liverpool looked more assured in the second period and it's clear some words of confidence were given to them in the half-time team talk by Rodgers. It was also clear Coutinho was not having the best of games, however, and he was substituted on 57 minutes for Raheem Sterling who surprisingly was left on the bench in favor of Joe Allen. Within a minute of coming on, the teenager had put the visitors further ahead, latching on to a Suarez cross after he dispossessed the complacent Southampton defence to race clear. Suarez was celebrating his 100th game for the club and what a 100 games he's had! 

From this point on, Liverpool grew in confidence and, as clichéd as it may sound, should have had a couple more goals as Daniel Sturridge and Suarez both went close. Jordan Henderson also blazed over from close range. By now, the home side looked completely bereft of ideas and the visiting back line stood firm, held their nerve and avoided the individual errors that have blighted their performances this last few games. 

Despite a few forward forrays from Southampton, Rodgers' men were in complete control. At times it wasn't pretty but effective. Is this the performance of champions. Will they be? It's too soon to say but they've put themselves in the mix and only deserve credit. The final nail in the home side's coffin came in the final minute of injury time as Suarez was brought down by a clumsy challenge from Jose Fonte as he stormed into the opponents' penalty box. Captain Steven Gerrard stepped up coolly to dispatch the resulting penalty to the goalkeepers left and put the score line abreast of the teams performance. 

Liverpool can now look forward to what will be a tasty visit to the fallen Champions Manchester United in a couple of weeks, comfortable in the knowledge that they have absolutely nothing to fear. It's true the defence is still not good enough and does need strengthening but there is no doubt the team has made huge strides this season. With a few additions in the right areas, notably left back - not taking anything away from Glen Johnson who had a good game today - centre back and a holding midfielder. Perhaps a quality attacker, then there's no reason why the Reds can't mount a serious challenge next season. That's assuming they don't lift the trophy this time.

Midway through the second half, chants of "There's only one Brendan Rodgers" echoed around the St. Mary's stadium and this was a deserving touch for the man who has dragged the team from perennial pretenders, finishing in seventh place last season to genuine contenders this time. Do we dare to dream? Well, as someone once said "It's a funny old game" so who knows. 

A special shout goes out to the Under 18 team who done Newcastle United's Under 18 side 4-1 at the Academy ground earlier in the day. Two goals from Harry Wilson and one apiece from Will Marsh and Daniel Trickett-Smith completed the scoring. Dan Cleary at centre back looks like a star of the future. Watch this space. 

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen


Saturday, 1 March 2014

Tough test awaits Liverpool at St. Mary's

Mamadou Sakho. No pressure...
Brendan Rodgers and his Champions League hopefuls travel to Southampton this evening for a tricky fixture against Southampton. The form guide would suggest Liverpool should come away with all three points as Rodgers' resilient Reds have remained unbeaten in their last six matches, taking 14 points and scoring 19 goals in the process.

Maruicio Pochettino's side have struggled lately and inconsistency reigns supreme. The Saints have won just two of their last six and scoring 11 in doing so. The interesting stat is that Southampton remain a hard team to beat at their place having not lost at home in that time, or indeed since losing to Chelsea on New Year's Day which is no embarrassment. 

The key for Liverpool is going to be in defence and seeing as the back line is nothing short of ropey right now, I can only see them struggling. Mamadou Sakho is back in training and I suspect Rodgers may prefer him to start ahead of Daniel Agger who was substituted against Swansea. Personally I think Agger and Sakho would be the better option. Word is that the departure of Agger in the summer has not been played down by the boss and if that happens, I'd like to see Martin Skrtel go with him. I'm not convinced by Sakho either because for all his 98% pass completion rate, or whatever it is, his positioning and first touch remains a concern. This match is waiting for Sakho to make his presence felt and cement his place in the side. We'll see. 

Lucas isn't quite ready yet so the midfield should remain as is. Southampton carry a real attacking threat in Rodriguez, Rickie Lambert and Adam Lallana so the Reds will need to be at their best and alert defensively. Call me pessimistic but I don't see it. Glen Johnson is not the force he was, Kolo Touré is... Well... Kolo Touré and Skrtel needs to buck his ideas up! The attack should remain unchanged on current form. Given the fact that Liverpool have had the full week to prepare, I feel they should be fresh and ready for this challenge. 

Overall confidence in the Reds' dressing room should be high and I hope this translates into a performance to match. The team cannot rely on just out-scoring the opposition. At a venue where the team hasn't won in four of their last five league visits, this would be a daft approach. That said, the defence gives them little choice to do otherwise. A good win for Rodgers' men today would make them firm favorites for a Champions League place and put them in a good frame of mind for their visit to Old Trafford next Sunday week. Let's hope we see some more robotics from Daniel Sturridge this evening. 

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen 

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Fulham v Liverpool - Preview

The Reds of Liverpool travel down to the Capital
Luis Suarez: A sign of things to come?
tonight to take on rock-bottom Fulham, fresh from the emphatic 5-1 mauling handed out to Arsenal at the weekend. The inevitable title winning talk that followed, continues to be wide of the mark. Needless to say, anything can happen, but suffice to say Liverpool aren't quite Champion material quite yet.

Optimism has be the word for Liverpool fans and Brendan Rodgers' team going in to this match. Confidence is high and the team is playing with the freedom that this brings. Add to that the fact that Liverpool have not scored less than three goals against the bottom sides this season - 14 in total to be precise with only three against - and it would take a brave man to bet against Liverpool tonight. The players deserved the plaudits that came their way over the weekend after a result that few would have predicted. Few other than a friend and fellow Reds supporter who bagged a good few quid with a punt on... Liverpool to win 5-1!

The ease and efficiency with which the team dispatched with their visitors on Saturday left many a gasp but not everyone. When asked during the post-match interview if the plan was to score as many, and as early, as possible, Brendan Rodgers replied "Well we've been doing that all season, really..." and you have to say, he's correct. Against Manchester City and Chelsea however, that came back to haunt them, suffering 2-1 reversals on both occasions. Those two teams remain for me, the contenders for the title, and the only teams who can pose any threat to Liverpool. I wouldn't have counted Arsenal before the weekend and I certainly won't count them now. Despite that I think they'll give Manchester United a beating tonight as a result of Saturday.

Having said that, there are no easy games in the Premier League and Liverpool have been found wanting against the likes of West Bromwich Albion, Aston Villa and Swansea City. The only upside there is that they were all drawn and points gained nonetheless. Games they'd probably have lost in recent years. However, the performances against Hull City where the Reds were well and truly done over 3-1 and the feeble 1-0 loss to Southampton are the kinds of matches that simply cement my view that Liverpool are not quite there yet. There is a pattern there. three of the five results I've mentioned were away from home, and this is my only concern going into tonight's match at Craven Cottage.

In terms of the starting eleven, I don't see any change from Saturday's team. Jose Enrique and Lucas Leiva are still not back in training and whilst Daniel Agger is, I suspect tonight's match may be a tad too soon for him. Mamadou Sakho shall remain out for the next month or so. The Liverpool Bench is looking very thin and quite unconvincing at this point and I'm not sure the squad can stand many, if any more, injuries for the time being. The bench on Saturday's consisted of just one defender and this fuels my opinion that Rodgers must strengthen the back line in the next window.

On the balance of things, I think Liverpool should come away with the three points tonight, and with a margin of a couple of goals, despite the apparent inconsistency on their travels. As a tactic, I'm sure the team will attack the Fulham left because at 33, I don't believe John Arne Riise is going to be able to do much with Raheem Sterling. I don't think even Robert Frederick Chelsea Moore can help the cottagers tonight. The Tube strike is off, and the match is on.  My message for the players, as Francis Underwood would say "...Don't disappoint me!"

Follow me on Twitter: @Mrbengreen

Saturday, 8 February 2014

Liverpool 5-1 Arsenal - Match Report

I'm da man!!
In the words of an old commentator "It's becoming a rout...!" And so it came to pass. It did today, with Liverpool giving Arsenal a good hiding at Anfield this afternoon. For the first 20 minutes, Brendan Rodgers' men were simply unplayable as they stormed into a 3-0 lead to leave the Gunners shell-shocked.

Two goals from set pieces by Martin Skrtel in the first and tenth minutes put Liverpool on their way, and from then on the writing was on the wall. The Reds pressed and harried the visitors and allowed them no time to settle. It's fair to say for the first half hour, it looked as if Liverpool would score with every attack as the visitors succumbed to wave after wave of attack. On 16 minutes, industrious play by Jordan Henderson winning the ball from Jack Wilshere to find Luis Suarez in space. The latter's low centre was met gratefully at the far post by the irrepressible and unmarked Raheem Sterling who slotted home to deliver a mountain for Arsene Wenger's men to climb if they were to salvage anything from the game.

Four minutes later, eagle-eyed Philippe Coutinho had the vision to slot an absolute slide-rule pass into the stride of Daniel Sturridge who broke from midfield between the two dozing Arsenal centre backs and notched up his 15th Premier League goal of the season. Poor Wojciech Szczesny could only look on as the ball bulged the back of his net for a fourth time. This was surely game over now for Arsenal. Liverpool's energetic tempo in midfield gave the visitors no hope of getting back into the game. Wilshere's frustration was clear to see as he tangled endlessly with Coutinho and the immense Steven Gerrard, excelling in his new role in front of the back four.

At the start of the second half, Arsenal showed some purpose to their game but it was clear to see from their body language that it was going to be a long, long drive back home to North London. Their heads had not only dropped, but squarely dragged on the lush green Anfield turf. It was against another half hearted Arsenal attack that the final nail into their coffin was dealt. Contrary to my assertion in the LFC File preview earlier, Aly Cissokho turned up for this match and was actually, "...all that". His forward clearance found the effervescent Sterling who controlled the ball neatly before stabbing home his second on the rebound from the on-rushing Szczesny - and effectively seal his man-of-the-match performance,. 

It was all over now. The fat lady didn't even have to open her mouth, let alone sing. The Kop cheered Liverpool's each pass as Wenger's men, bereft of ideas, chased the game to no avail. However, a clumsy challenge from captain Gerrard on Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain inside the Red's area gave Mikel Arteta the chance to at least, spare Arsenal the ignominy of a complete whitewash. The penalty was greeted with cheers from both supporters. The Liverpool fans in keeping with their reputation for wit and sportsmanship!

So a good afternoon's work for Rodgers' men and a good result to set them up for their stay in London next week with away games at Fulham and, what will surely be a tasty FA Cup Fifth Round tie at Arsenal's Emirates Stadium, following this result. The Reds have shown their promise today and I wouldn't even say this was their best performance of the season so far. The drubbings of Tottenham and Everton can't be overlooked either although given Arsenal's place at the top of the league one could argue as such. 

What I'd like to see though, is less of the kind of sloppy play that undone the side against West Bromwich Albion last week. As the teamtalk in Football Manager goes... "Why can't you play like this every week?"

Follow me on Twitter: @ Mrbengreen

Saturday, 18 January 2014

Nothing will do for me...

LFC needs a bit of bite in defence!
I was sitting in the airport last night and thinking about a chat I had earlier in the day with my colleague, a fellow Liverpool supporter. "I'm hoping for a good win against the Villans this weekend, mate...!" I said with the confidence of a man who's team is in the hunt at the top of the league. "Well..." He replies with caution, "There are no easy games these days my friend, and everybody can beat everybody...".

Now as cliche'd as that may sound, the lad has a point and it got me thinking. Aston Villa have only won one of their last five matches, and they've shipped six goals in that time scoring only three. Liverpool on the other hand have scored 11 in as many matches. However, it's at the other end wherein lies the problem. Liverpool have actually shipped seven goals during that time. 

My colleague went on... "Mignolet's having a mare at the moment too". But, this is something I don't entirely agree with. The Red's defensive back four have been, frankly hopeless this season in my opinion. The column marked 'A' in the table shows Brendan Rodger's men have conceded more goals than any other team in the top ten, with the exception of Hull which, with all due respect, is nothing whatsoever to be happy about. 

Thus for me, it's not actually just down to Mignolet. More is the case that his defence is terribly wobbly and offers him and the goal very little protection if any at all on occasion. I can't pin it down to any particular player either. All of them have been poor this season. Martin Skrtel seems to want to change shirts with the opposition at every set piece - regardless of which end of the pitch - and Mamadou Sakho, although accurate in his passing, has about much positional sense as the spinning kid in a game of Blind Man's Bluff. Not to mention Daniel Agger's infatuation with the treatment table.

Rodgers is due to meet the club's owner John W. Henry and Chairman Tom Werner this weekend and despite all the talk of signing Pedro Rodriguez and Mohamed Salah et al, the acquisition of one or two solid defenders has to be penciled into the agenda as the main topic. At the moment, Liverpool cannot be considered serious title contenders until the leaky defence is shored up. This is without question. An integral part of any successful team is a watertight defence and LFC does not have that at this time. 

So as the title of this says, nothing will do for me. Nothing as in come this evening, I want to see a big fat zero for the away team's goal count. It's about time we saw the defence stand up, be counted and become an equal unit to the midfield and attack in terms of reliability and being more clinical. Nothing more, nothing less. And on the subject of nothing, nothing but a win will suffice.

Follow me on Twitter @Mrbengreen