Thursday, May 31, 2012

KOP News # 1270

Jolly Rodgers! Swansea boss agrees to take over at Liverpool on three-year contract

By Dominic King

PUBLISHED: 21:30 GMT, 29 May 2012 | UPDATED: 22:24 GMT, 30 May 2012

Liverpool's extensive search for a new manager is over after Brendan Rodgers agreed a three-year deal to take charge at Anfield.

Rodgers will be officially announced as Kenny Dalglish's replacement within the next 24 hours after he informed Swansea  chairman Huw Jenkins of his desire to move to Merseyside.

And one of the first acts Rodgers could  perform is to sign Gylfi Sigurdsson, as the Iceland midfielder has not had a medical at Swansea and his £6.8million move from  Hoffenheim has not been ratified.

Main man: Brendan Rodgers will be installed as the new Liverpool manager

Liverpool will have to pay compensation in the region of £5million to acquire Rodgers, though they will try to get their man for less and, 15 days after sacking Dalglish, it seems Fenway Sports Group have their man.

Rodgers spoke with Anfield officials on Wednesday, including chairman Tom Werner, after Swansea accepted Liverpool's official approach for the Northern Irishman late on Tuesday night.

He then headed to South Wales to tell Jenkins he would be ending his successful two-year stint at the Liberty Stadium.

Centre of attention: Wigan boss Roberto Martinez is now out of the running

Jenkins said in a statement: 'Following on from discussions with Liverpool's owners, Brendan has informed us that he would like to take up their offer to manage Liverpool.

At the moment we are in talks to agree compensation. We are trying to finalise that within the next 24 hours. Although we didn't wish to lose an outstanding young manager, we didn't wish to stand in his way.'

Assuming talks go well, Liverpool could install Rodgers just in time for the start of their £25m-a-year kit deal with American firm Warrior Sports, which begins on Friday.

Wigan's Roberto Martinez, who has also been courted by Aston Villa, had initially been favourite to succeed Dalglish and his odds tumbled after he met Liverpool's principal owner John W Henry in Miami seven days ago.

Replacement: Rodgers is set to take over from Dalglish at Anfield

Since the start of the week, however, the momentum has been firmly with Rodgers and it is understood that dialogue with Martinez and his representatives broke down after the Spaniard discovered he was not FSG's first choice.

Rodgers, who was in New York last weekend to watch Wales play Mexico, initially withdrew from the first round of interviews when as many as a dozen names — including Pep Guardiola, Fabio Capello, Andre Villas-Boas and Frank de Boer — were pulled together following Dalglish's sacking on May 16.

But despite that rejection, he remained firmly in FSG's thoughts because of the impression he made last season, steering Swansea to 11th place thanks to results such as a 0-0 draw at Anfield and a 1-0 victory over Liverpool at the Liberty Stadium.

New arrival? Rodgers could snatch Gylfi Sigurdsson from under Swansea's nose

Henry and Werner have been determined to implement a new tiered structure at Liverpool, though Louis van Gaal's hopes of landing the position of sporting director in the shake-up have dramatically receded.

Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre met the Dutchman in Portugal last week but the former Bayern Munich, Ajax and Barcelona manager is believed to have made it clear that he also wanted to be considered for the role in charge of the first team. Van Gaal has been on Liverpool's radar since Damien Comolli was sacked on April 14.

 

KOP News # 1269

BRENDAN RODGERS FITS THE LIVERPOOL VISION

Brendan Rodgers celebrating victory that put Swansea in the top flight

Thursday May 31,2012

By Paul Joyce

BRENDAN RODGERS' thinking was simple when he first rejected the opportunity to participate in the 'beauty parade' of managerial candidates flung together by Liverpool in the immediate aftermath to Kenny Dalglish being sacked.

His own interview had actually taken place four days before Dalglish's contract was unceremoniously terminated.

Swansea's 1-0 victory over Liverpool at the Liberty Stadium on the final day of the Premier League campaign, a match in which the visitors barely managed a kick, neatly encapsulated the different directions in which the clubs appeared to be heading.

Factor in, too, the reality that one of the few Anfield matches that Liverpool owner, John W Henry, attended this season was when the Swans drew 0-0 on Merseyside, as they out-Liverpooled their hosts in many respects. And perhaps his stance has ultimately been justified.

Yet, if Liverpool's owners, Fenway Sports Group, caught a close-up view of the man they wanted to replace the King on those two occasions, then Rodgers has also witnessed at first hand the task he is set to take on.

For all the romantic appeal Liverpool still muster, with their history and pedigree, you do not have to scratch too far below the surface to recognise the barriers that exist in returning the club to the heights they once took for granted

Yesterday marked the anniversary of Swansea's 4-2 play-off victory over Reading that propelled them back into the big time for the first time since 1982-83. Rodgers has therefore revived a club once before – now he will endeavour to do it again.

For all the romantic appeal Liverpool still muster, with their history and pedigree, you do not have to scratch too far below the surface to recognise the barriers that exist in returning the club to the heights they once took for granted.

At precisely the time that moves to appoint Rodgers were gathering momentum at the start of the week, Chelsea were winning the £32million race for Eden Hazard and whispers persist that they are looking to add £30m FC Porto striker Hulk to the ranks of their Champions League winners.

Buying success still works for some – Premier League champions Manchester City are the other example. But FSG have so far had their fingers burnt with such a philosophy, as £110m lavished in 2011 rewarded them with a trophy [the Carling Cup] they had not heard of and an inadequate eighth-place finish.

Instead, a re-education is required, building blocks put in place and the appointment of one of the best up-and-coming British managers to oversee that process makes sense.

Rodgers' footballing values, based on possession, passing and moving, fit neatly with the Liverpool of old.

Back in the Sixties when black and white TVs were the order of the day, there was once a banner on The Kop which screamed: "For those of you watching at home, Liverpool are the ones with the ball."

Yet this was not Dalglish's undoing last season. The football Liverpool played was far better than their eventual position suggested, though FSG were less inclined to believe hard-luck stories and insisted instead that more could have been gleaned from the players.

They will hope that Rodgers, a coach happiest on the training ground, can do just that.

There also now falls an onus on FSG to be realistic. They need to offer time and, inevitably, further funding if the new man is to make a proper mark.

Henry dare not repeat last summer's assertion that it would be a "major disappointment" if Liverpool did not infiltrate the top four, primarily because he will not want to put pressure on Rodgers in the way that he left Dalglish with no doubt as to how he would be judged.

This appointment of a man who started in management at Watford and endured a short-lived spell at Reading before re-establishing himself with Swansea seems, at first glance, a gamble.

However, once you accept that Liverpool, unlike Chelsea and Manchester United, are not in a position to be competing realistically for the likes of Pep Guardiola and Jose Mourinho again, then the gamble seems less risky.

Perhaps it is also a gamble for Rodgers, though Liverpool will take delivery of someone who combines humility with enthusiasm and who is also his own man.

"I like everything in him," said Mourinho of the man he promoted from youth academy director to reserve coach at Chelsea before Rodgers got that chance at Watford.

It is that which ensured the hair-brained idea of installing Dutchman Louis van Gaal as a Sporting Director or Director of Football at Anfield quickly faltered.

What will be interesting is whether the much-vaunted changes to the management structure will now take place at all. Some 18 months after buying Liverpool, FSG have finally got, in Rodgers, someone who fits with their vision. The least they can do is let the manager manage.

 

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

KOP News # 1266

Brendan Rodgers: What He'll Do Differently Than Kenny Dalglish at Liverpool

By

Pradeep Kumar

(Featured Columnist) on May 30, 2012

1,514 reads

Bryn Lennon/Getty Images

It's not official.

And we mustn't act in haste before anything is official. But we'll take the word of the Beeb on this occasion!

What I mean to say here is that Brendan Rodgers and Liverpool Football Club have agreed in principle for the former to take over the reins from Anfield legend Kenny Dalglish as the new manager for the 2012-13 English Premier League season.

Supporters, both shocked and confused, are taking to forums and message boards to express their approval/disapproval of the new boss who, by agreeing to this switch, is certainly on the verge of taking one of the biggest steps in terms of his career.

Rodgers, for those that need a short introduction, leaves his current job as boss of Welsh club Swansea City to start afresh with Liverpool. Rodgers, who took over at Swansea in 2010, led them to promotion to the English top flight in just his first season in charge.

And the Swans did the unthinkable, when they defied all odds and bets stacked against them, as they finished at eleventh position in the standings in their first season back in the top division since 1983.

Along the way, the Swans scored impressive victories over Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City. More than that, it was the possession brand of football that was the talking point of Brendan Rodgers' youthful side.

Perhaps, it could have been the very same reason why Thomas Werner and John W Henry felt it right to offer the Northern Irishman a contract that could see his star rise to the levels of his mentor Jose Mourinho, the current head coach at Real Madrid.

Chance of a Lifetime


Richard Heathcote/Getty Images

For Rodgers, however, it is going to be one of the toughest tasks that he has ever had to deal with in his entire lifetime.

With Liverpool, not only is it the pressure that comes with managing one of the top clubs in World Football, but also gaining the trust of supporters of a global brand that is Liverpool Football Club.

Rodgers' only previous experience of working at a top club in the league was with Chelsea under Jose Mourinho in 2005, where he managed the reserve squad after spending a year managing the youth squads.

Rodgers' prior stints with Watford and Reading, as head coach of the football clubs, turned out to be disasters. So Liverpool's appointment of a novice manager to take over the hot seat at one of the most prestigious clubs in the world has gained notoriety even before Rodgers has begun his work.

Well, profiling aside, what did FSG see in Brendan Rodgers that made them decide that the ex-Swans boss was the right fit for the job?

To keep it plain and honest, Rodgers may well have been the only candidate who was fine with working under a complex, multi-tier system of football management methodology proposed by FSG.

So, he's in. In that case, what is it that Rodgers would want to do differently to Kenny Dalglish at Anfield?

KOP News # 1267

Liverpool Transfer News: Reds Must Obtain Ibrahim Afellay for Meager Price

By

Jessica Isner

(Featured Columnist) on May 30, 2012

 

David Ramos/Getty Images

If Liverpool has the opportunity to obtain Ibrahim Afellay for a mere £6 million, what's holding them back?

According to talkSPORT, not only will Afellay be available for purchase this summer, but he'll be available for a lot less than expected. This makes it crucial for the Reds to pursue him. They've already lost out on Eden Hazard, and Shinji Kagawa seems to be on the verge of signing with Manchester United. Therefore, Liverpool must resort to alternative means to keep pace.

Coming off an eighth-place finish in the Premiere League, there's no time like the present to get started.

Though Afellay missed six months due to a ligament injury in his knee last September, he's still expected to recover and regain the form that saw him become one of the top-rated midfielders in Europe. And despite the knee injury, he can still be expected to return to full health and use his creativity to help a Reds team that truly needs some good signings to work its way back to the top of the league standings.

In the short time he had to get back out onto the field before the end of the season, Afellay already showed flashes of the player he used to be before the injury. Plenty of teams should be willing to take a gamble on him for such a small price.

According to the Live4Liverpool blog, it's a move the Reds should have no qualms about making because they "are in need of more creativity in midfield and genuine pace on the right-hand side—Afellay ticks both boxes."

Of course, expending anything on a player coming off a devastating injury is a risk, but in this sense, it's a risk worth taking. The reported £6 million is a meager price to pay for a player of Afellay's caliber, and if he's able to return to form, he'll be a massive steal for a Liverpool team that very much needs a resurgence.

 

KOP News # 1265

Brendan Rodgers, Why He Makes Sense as The Next Liverpool Manager

May 28, 2012

By DaveHendrick

If reports are to be believed Liverpool's search for a new manager has been narrowed down to two likely candidates, Roberto Martinez of Wigan and Brendan Rodgers of Swansea. Karl Matchett had a look at how Martinez and his lauded 3-4-3 formation might fit at Liverpool the other day. While the support for the Martinez appointment has grown over the last week or so, my belief is that Rodgers is the better fit for Liverpool.

The key to my belief is the structure that FSG appear to be putting in place with a Sporting Director and a Technical Director to be appointed along with Manager who's more likely to be a Head Coach than the traditional English style Manager. Martinez is believed to be demanding control over the footballing side of the club, which is something that in my opinion he's not ready for. Not at a club like Liverpool. I don't believe Rodgers is ready to have full control over the footballing side of the club either, but my thinking is that he may be ready to have control of the team and I don't think he would be as demanding as Martinez because I think he'd be far more comfortable in a coaching role than the Spaniard who has no real coaching experience and has always been given free reign at the clubs he's managed. Rodgers as worked in a variety of positions at the clubs he's been at, so a Head Coach position, where he handles mainly the training, tactics and team selection, while be just part of the decision making process on things like transfers, might be more to his liking than Martinez'.

It has been said that the method and structure Liverpool are planning to adopt is that which clubs like Lyon, Bayern Munich, Ajax, Juventus and others have been using for years. It's a set-up where the traditional manager's role is split up among three or four people with the premise being that many great minds working together can make for great ideas and great decisions. With the Sporting Director and the Technical Director being in place to not only share the workload but also to act as sounding boards for the Head Coach and support him in whatever ways he requires.

I thought I'd take a look at the different factors which have led me to believe that Rodgers is the better fit for the Liverpool job from the apparent two remaining candidates.

Coaching Background

With the role being largely centred around the coaching aspect, Rodgers truly stands out from the crowd. Having retired from football at the age of 20 due to a combination of injury and not believing he was ever going to be good enough to play at the highest level, Rodgers began coaching at Reading. He began by coaching at the youth level and worked his way into the job as youth team manager. He served the club in this role for almost nine years whilst also being involved in the coaching of the first team, and the reserve team as he continued his coaching education. During his time at Reading he also spent significant time travelling around Spain picking up ideas and philosophies which would help shape the type of manager he became. He spent quite a bit of time at Barcelona, where he took note of the clubs philosophy of football. He also traveled to Holland and spent time at Ajax which gives you an indication of the type of football he wants his teams to play.

He was plucked from Reading and brought to Chelsea by Jose Mourinho who was clearly impressed with Rodgers and his work at Reading as he made him his first external appointment after taking over at Chelsea. Rodgers has said the following about making the move to Chelsea,

"Jose played 4-3-3, or a 4-4-2 diamond, and he wanted a coach to implement his methodology. As you can imagine I was nervous meeting him, a guy I'd read a book about. But he was brilliant, and made me his first external appointment. He took me under his wing a wee bit, maybe because he saw something different in me, or maybe there was a bit of empathy because, like him, I hadn't had the big playing career. Anyway, that started one of the best times of my life. Jose had learnt from his mentor, Louis van Gaal, and I learnt from him, that there must never be a lazy day in training, and that preparation is vital."

Mourinho's influence on Rodgers is a huge factor in my thinking, Mourinho methods on the training ground are widely praised and Rodgers is believed to have gleaned quite a lot from them and implemented them in his own regimes.

When Rodgers moved into management at Watford in 2008, he had fifteen years as a coach, youth team manager and reserve team manager under his belt. That's a rarity in football, even moreso in someone who was only 35 years old at the time.

Man-Management

Another aspect of Rodgers make-up for which he has received significant grounding from Jose Mourinho is the man-management side of things. Mourinho is widely regarded as one of the best man-managers in world football. He makes a connection with his players that few others can even dream of. Rodgers has made a similar connection with his players at Swansea who are all fiercely loyal to him. An example of that is the young Icelandic midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson who seems set to turn his back on moves to bigger clubs to make the permanent move to Swansea, as long as Rodgers is still at the club. Rodgers strikes the right balance between being the players friend, and being their boss. It's a difficult balance to get right but Rodgers seems to have managed it at Swansea.

A key aspect in man-management is getting the players to buy into a philosophy and at Swansea the players have done just that with Rodgers. Swansea's players have embraced his ideas and teachings, and the results speak for themselves. Players who, before being managed by Rodgers, had often been seen as being slightly lazy – Scott Sinclair to name one, Danny Graham to name another, are now totally committed to working hard for the good of the team every time they set foot on the pitch. The work rate of Swansea's midfield and attack is truly exceptional and is often overlooked due to their attractive style of play.

Philosophy

When Kenny Dalglish returned to Liverpool as manager one of the things that fans were most excited about was the idea that the pass and move style of football that was such a big part of the success in the past would return to the club. Rodgers is the sort of manager who plays the type of football that Liverpool fans love to watch. His team play a fantastic style of football based on making the ball do the work when you have it which allows you to have more energy to get it back when you don't have it.

Rodgers is on a crusade to rid the world of long ball football. He believes that if you keep the ball, and pass it well, you win football matches. Here's an excerpt from an article in the Guardian earlier this month which is well worth reading.

 "I like teams to control and dominate the ball, so the players are hungry for the ball," Rodgers says. "You'll see in some of our exercises this morning, a lot of our work is around the transition and getting the ball back very quickly. Because I believe if you give a bad player time, he can play. If you give a good player time, he can kill you. So our emphasis is based around our positioning both with and without the ball. And for us, when we press well, we pass well."

Winning the ball back quickly and high up the pitch was a key feature of Barcelona's approach under Pep Guardiola and, as Rodgers explains, is much more sophisticated than it may appear. "You cannot go on your own," he says. "You work on zonal pressure, so that when it is in your zone, you have the capacity to press. That ability to press immediately, within five or six seconds to get the ball, is important. But you also have to understand when you can't and what the triggers are then to go for it again because you can't run about like a madman.

"It's decision-making and intelligence. And this was always the thing with the British player, they were always deemed never to be intelligent, not to have good decision-making skills but could fight like hell for the ball. I believe they have all of the [attributes] and, if you can structure that, then you can have real, effective results."

That's very much the same idea that the Liverpool teams which dominated played under. It's something that Liverpool fans can relate to.

Rodgers team sets up as a 4-2-3-1 when they don't have the ball, but when they are in possession they take more of  3-4-3 formation with the fullbacks pushing forward, the central defenders moving ten yards in either direction, Leon Britton dropping back between them, Joe Allen and Sigurdsson as dual attacking midfielders, and Nathan Dyer and Scott Sinclair pushing forward either side of Danny Graham. That 3-4-3 variation is something that Rodgers has been doing at Swansea for two years without people falling over themselves to credit him, instead preferring to credit Roberto Martinez for apparently re-inventing the wheel by taking on a 3-4-3 in desperate times at Wigan.

Rodgers style of football is one that works very well and translates well to all levels. While Arsene Wenger amongst others have made note of Swansea "not being brave" and often "not doing much with the ball". that's quite short-sighted and ignores the fact that for the most part, that Swansea team was made up of players who had never played in the Premier League before, yet managed to outplay many of the best teams in the country, and finish comfortably in mid-table without ever looking likely to become entrenched in a relation battle. With a higher calibre of players, Rodgers style of play would be more effective and more difficult to contain.

Against teams that "park the bus", rather than try to bludgeon them into submission as Liverpool attempted to do last season and in previous seasons, it's a more measured approach aimed at creating chances rather than forcing chances. One of Liverpool's big problems last season was that while they had huge amounts of shots on goal, a lot of them were not clear chances. Luis Suarez, for example, was often guilty of trying to do too much because his team-mates weren't  able to create clear chances for him. With Rodgers more patient style of build up, and his creative style of passing football, that should not be an issue.

Against the higher calibre of teams, Rodgers' style of play is suffocating. He likes to starve the opposition of the ball, and then force them into mistakes when they do have the ball. That high pressing style is something Rafa Benitez was noted for during his time at Valencia and Liverpool but his sides were never as good at keeping possession as Swansea are.  Rodgers believes in tactical discipline, mixed with creative attacking play. It's the perfect blend when correctly put into practice.

Preparation

In my opinion, one of the reasons Liverpool struggled last season was a lack of preparation for matches against teams outside the top four. Far too often it just seemed that Liverpool went into matches with the mindset that they should just be walking through their opponents because "We are Liverpool, and they're not". In the matches against United, City and Chelsea, Liverpool came out with clever tactics and a set gameplan. In matches against the likes of Swansea, Sunderland and others, they did not. And it cost them.

Rodgers is noted for his meticulous preparation for both training and each individual matches. This again is something he learned working under Mourinho, but a lot of what he learned came from a certain Andre Villas-Boas who, depending on who you believe, is either in the running for the job or has been ruled out/ruled himself out. Rodgers helped Villas-Boas in the scouting of future Chelsea opponents and preparing reports for Mourinho who would then adjust his tactics accordingly. Rodgers operates in a similar way, having his assistants prepare reports as per his instructions and then tailoring tactics and training accordingly.

He also puts a large amount of time and effort into preparing his training program in order to make sure players don't go stale by doing the same things day after day. His players look forward to going to training because he puts in that time and effort and makes sure they while they work hard and are constantly learning and improving, they're also having fun.

Existing Relationship With Van Gaal

Rodgers learned his craft as a manager under Jose Mourinho after getting a solid basis through his experience as a coach. But Mourinho alone is not the only man who's shaped the mind and helped him develop. When Rodgers was beginning his career as a coach he spent a lot of time at Barcelona studying how they did things. The Barca manager at the time was one Louis Van Gaal who is widely regarded as one of the best teachers of potential managers in the world. His star pupil is Jose Mourinho, to whom he served as a mentor for many years but Frank DeBoer, Frank Rijkaard and a number of others have also turned to Van Gaal for advice.

With Van Gaal looking likely to arrive as Sporting Director, having that existing relationship in place could be of huge benefit. Van Gaal would not be the only person at the club that Rodgers already has an existing relationship with. He worked very closely with Steve Clarke during their time together at Chelsea and that could be highly beneficial if Clarke is retained as assistant manager. Clarke is someone Rodgers knows and trusts and having Clarke at the club might help put his mind at ease if he does have any doubts about not bringing his entire backroom team with him from Swansea.

Ambition, Dedication, Determination

These are three things you want to see in any up and coming you manager and Rodgers displays them all. His ambition is to manage at the highest level of the game, he's stated that openly in the past. This is generally the aim of every manager but Rodgers has gone about it the right way. He got his experience as a coach at a good club in Reading, travelled and learned the methods of others managers and coaches in other countries, spent his time learning Spanish, and now Italian in order to not only be able to go and manage in Spain or Italy at some point, but also to be able to speak with Italian or Spanish-speaking players at any club he went to. He went and worked under one of the best managers in the world and used the opportunity to learn as much as possible. All of this shows the type of dedication he has towards achieving his ambition. As does his hard work throughout his coaching and managerial career. Rodgers has his footballing principles and won't change them. It would have been easy for Swansea to come into the Premier League and play an ugly brand of football and fight their way through a relegation dogfight, Rodgers never even entertained the idea. That, to me, shows a man determined to do things his way, using his philosophies and his tactics. That's admirable.

A Risk That Others Have Taken

Jurgen Klopp at Borussia Dortmund in 2008, Rafa Benitez at Valencia in 2001. Two managers who had not had what you might call "stand out" careers prior to getting those jobs. Two men who before they got those jobs were never mentioned in discussions about being among the best managers in world football. Klopp is many people's favourite choice to be the next Liverpool manager, but that looks highly unlikely. Benitez, of course, would leave Valencia in 2004 to join Liverpool and write himself into Anfield lore by winning the Champions League in his first season. There are many people who want Benitez back at the club but he's not in FSG's thinking for one reason or another.

The point about the two managers I've just mentioned was made to me on Twitter during the last week or so and initially my thinking was that Liverpool are a bigger club than both Dortmund or Valencia and therefore it was less of a risk those clubs to appoint Klopp and Benitez than it would be for us to appoint someone like Rodgers. As I've already said, I don't believe Rodgers is ready to manage a club like Liverpool, but having given it a lot of though I've realized that we're not looking for someone to manage the club, we're looking for someone to manage the team. That's what this structure gives us. It separates the team from the overall club and the man who takes over as Manager/Head Coach is being asked to take care of the team.

Van Gaal, one of the most respected and successful managers in the world, is likely going to be the man who takes over the running of the club.  He will likely be aided by Pep Segura and Rodolfo Borrell. Having those three men in place would allow the Head Coach to focus solely on the team. I believe Rodgers is ready to manage Liverpool as a team. Whilst, as a club, Liverpool remain amongst the worlds biggest, as a team they are currently nothing more than a mid table team fighting to get back amongst those challenging for the title. While you can excuses for why Liverpool finished 8th last season, the fact remains that in the last three seasons Liverpool have finished 7th, 6th and 8th. That's mid-table. Rodgers is more than ready to manage a mid-table team.

Kristian Walsh made the point on the Redmen TV season review that when Liverpool are targeting players they should be looking to get them before they become stars. He used the examples of Falcao and Alexis Sanchez, rather than buying players like them from Porto or Udinese, Liverpool should be looking to buy them from River Plate or Cobreloa. Porto made a profit of about £30million on Falcao, whilst Udinese made a similar profit on Sanchez. Liverpool could therefore save themselves that sort of money by buying those players directly from South America and developing them in-house. It's a great point and one that could also be put towards the Head Coaching role in this circumstance. Rather than getting Benitez or Klopp from Valencia or Dortmund, get them from Tenerife or Mainz. To translate, get Rodgers from Swansea before he goes elsewhere and becomes more of a known quantity. Get him now and allow him to become a great manager at Liverpool, rather than letting someone else get him and then trying to get him at a later date where bigger compensation, large wages and more competition for his signature would all be a factor.

With Van Gaal at the club to act as a guiding hand, Rodgers could thrive, learn and develop into something very special. With the structure that's going to be in place, the internal pressure on him will be lessened and he can focus on the team and getting the best from them.

I don't know for certain if Brendan Rodgers is one of FSG's two or three favourites for the job, nobody knows for certain who's on that list of what jobs people are actually being interviewed for. But if Rodgers is a candidate for the Head Coaches job, I can see why and I hope that after reading this article, you can see some logic in it as well. My own personal preference would be Villas-Boas, but I think Rodgers is the next best thing with the potential to be just as good.

 

KOP News # 1261

KOP News # 1262

Liverpool Transfer News: Signing Ryad Boudebouz Would Be Major Coup for Reds

By

Mike Chiari

(Featured Columnist) on May 29, 2012

4,191 reads

Photo courtesy of Mirror Football

Although the biggest story with regards to Liverpool at the moment is finding a new manager to replace Kenny Dalglish, life goes on in terms of improving the squad as well. One particular move that would be of great benefit to the Reds would be the signing of Sochaux midfielder Ryad Boudebouz.

According to Mirror Football, Liverpool has taken an interest in the 22-year-old Algerian and has opened discussions with his agent.

Boudebouz was impressive in the French Ligue 1 this season, and several French squads such as Lyon, Lille and Marseille will try to hold off Liverpool's advances.

While Sochaux didn't have a particularly good season as a squad, Boudebouz shined, as he was second on the team in goals with six and second in assists as well with six. While his numbers weren't overwhelming by any stretch of the imagination, they show that he has a ton of promise.

Would Boudebouz be a good addition for Liverpool?

·  Yes, he is a rising star who is only going to get better.

83.2%

·  No, he won't be able to handle the transition to the EPL.

16.8%

Total votes: 754

There is no doubt that the Reds are thin in the midfield, as Charlie Adam led the team in assists this past season with six. There is an overall lack of creativity at that position and it is a big reason why Liverpool was only able to finish eighth in the EPL and is currently in no man's land in terms of being a contender or pretender.

Boudebouz would obviously have to adjust a bit to Premier League play, but he has a skill set that the Liverpool faithful will love.

The French Ligue 1 has a lot of talent and he is considered one of the top rising talents in the league, so as long as his projected development continues in an upward trend, he will ultimately be a major asset for the Reds.

This wouldn't simply be a long-term investment, though, as he would probably see quite a bit of playing time right away. Liverpool needs help in the midfield desperately and will be looking for a quick fix, so Boudebouz is going to have to be a guy who contributes immediately and gets better the more he plays.

In one respect, Liverpool has the advantage over the French teams vying for Boudebouz's services, since the Reds play in the world's top league, but the absence of a manager may hurt their chances at the same time.

Even without a boss in place, the Reds have to push forward, but there is reason to wonder whether Boudebouz may view Liverpool as too volatile of a situation.

Bringing in such an immense talent despite so much turmoil would be huge for the Reds' confidence as an organization as well as the confidence of their fans. Whatever the case, Boudebouz has a great opportunity to become an integral player on one of the world's most famous squads, so the Reds may present him with something he can't pass up.

If Liverpool is going to get back to the upper tier of the EPL along with squads like Manchester City, Manchester United and Arsenal, then an infusion of talent is needed.

The Reds can't necessarily sign every mega star on the market, but Boudebouz is a player with a lot of promise who can one day become a star if all goes well.

 

KOP News # 1264

Seize your big chance: Roy rouses squad as Carroll is given prized No 9 shirt

By Matt Lawton

PUBLISHED: 22:52 GMT, 29 May 2012 | UPDATED: 00:30 GMT, 30 May 2012

 

The first day with the full England squad — well, all except for a third-choice goalkeeper who reports for duty on Wednesday — and Roy Hodgson kicked things off with a rousing speech.

It was, say those who witnessed it on Tuesday, impressive stuff. 'You've worked bloody hard to get here,' said the England manager at a team meeting held just before lunch. 'To qualify; to get in this squad. Now I want you to enjoy the tournament.'

Hodgson urged them to embrace the experience that awaits England; to embrace the host countries, not least when it comes to visiting Auschwitz and the Schindler factory in Krakow, where England will be based next month.

Part of the team: Andy Carroll looks set to start to start for England after being handed the No 9 shirt

ENGLAND SHIRT NUMBERS

1. JOE HART
2. GLEN JOHNSON
3. ASHLEY COLE
4. STEVEN GERRARD
5. GARY CAHILL
6. JOHN TERRY
7. THEO WALCOTT
8. FRANK LAMPARD
9. ANDY CARROLL
10. WAYNE ROONEY
11. ASHLEY YOUNG
12. LEIGHTON BAINES
13. ROBERT GREEN
14. PHIL JONES
15. JOLEON LESCOTT
16. JAMES MILNER
17. SCOTT PARKER
18. PHIL JAGIELKA
19. STEWART DOWNING
20. ALEX OXLADE-CHAMBERLAIN
21. JERMAIN DEFOE
22. DANNY WELBECK
23. JACK BUTLAND

It was a day for training together as a group for the first time but it was also the day when they received their official squad numbers and their official tournament suits. As Phil Jagielka revealed, he was not asked to squeeze into Gareth Barry's jacket and trousers.

Reading too much into squad numbers can be dangerous. Robbie Fowler was handed the No 9 shirt at the 2002 World Cup and made just one appearance as a substitute, against Denmark.

But the allocation of numbers must have been done with half an eye on what Hodgson has in mind for Euro 2012. The defenders made sense, with Gary Cahill seemingly deployed alongside John Terry as England's No 5 and No 6.

Andy Carroll has the No 9 shirt, which again makes sense given Danny Welbeck's recent injury problems. That, in turn, left Wayne Rooney with the shirt Hodgson considers his best position. The No 10.

Will Ashley Young and Theo Walcott be deployed on the flanks as Nos 7 and 11 once Rooney has served his two-match suspension? Well, there is a good chance given how  little impact James Milner and Stewart Downing made in  Norway at the weekend.

It is only when it comes to central midfield that a sense of doubt creeps in. The No 4 and No 8 have gone to Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard respectively, and, while it would be foolish to rule Lampard out when he finished the season so well for Chelsea, Scott Parker, at No 17, remains favourite to start alongside Gerrard.

Look Roo's back: The Manchester United striker shares a joke with Steven Gerrard and Glen Johnson

Brothers in arms: Wayne Rooney warms up with John Terry ahead at an England training session on Tuesday

Hodgson looked thrilled to have Rooney and Chelsea's Champions League players with the rest of the group for a training session on the perfect pitches at Arsenal's London Colney training ground last night.

Only Young was absent, the FA revealing the Manchester United winger had suffered a slight knock to an ankle in Oslo that forced him to train in the gym. Oh, and Jack Butland, who it seems has not exactly rushed back from a holiday in Mexico.

Of some encouragement was the sight of Welbeck and Glen Johnson among their international colleagues.

England's medical staff have reported to Hodgson that they are recovering well from their injury problems and it is hoped they will be in full training by Friday, although that might be a bit late for a starting place against Belgium the next day.

Leading by example: Gerrard will captain England at this summer's tournament

Perhaps the most excited to be there was Jagielka, and not just because he was the last-minute replacement for the injured Barry.

'My grandparents are Polish,' he said. 'They moved over in about 1948, via Africa, and  settled in Weaverham. My  grandad died just before I was born, hence the middle name (Nikodem). My grandma, my babcia, lives in Weaverham  now. My dad lives there too. She'll be happy to see me go back to Poland.

'My dad speaks Polish but I can only manage the odd hello and goodbye. I'm not telling the lads that because I don't want to get stitched up.'

In charge: Roy Hodgson addresses his squad on Tuesday

Jagielka could have played for Poland, perhaps even Ukraine, given where his family are from. 'It was the Russian border but the borders have all changed,' he said. 'Technically it could be Ukraine now. But I don't have any relatives there so I've never been back.

'I could have played for Poland but I don't see myself as Polish — I was born in England. I speak with an English accent. Thankfully, I got to play for England.

'Maybe if I'd been nowhere near the England team I might have played for Poland, but I don't know if I'd have felt  comfortable joining up with  the squad.'

No 9: Andy Carroll has taken the shirt traditionally worn by star strikers

Jagielka deserves to be in this squad. Not only did he agree to be on stand-by and travel to Norway — when some players declined the opportunity — but he performed so well that he made it impossible for Hodgson to ignore him.

'It's been a little bit of a whirlwind,' he said. 'But I'm delighted to be here. I was supposed to be golfing on Friday in Portugal but I'll take being at the Grove. I can play golf when I'm retired. I was gutted not to be in the original 23-man squad but half understood why I wasn't. I was still looking forward to the four days and the Norway game, though.

'For me, the glass is half full.  I never envisaged, when I  got released by Everton at 15, ever getting back to play for Everton, nor playing for my country.

Pleased to be here: England's Phil Jones was happy to be called up to the squad from the stand by list

'If I'd said no to Norway, I might as well have said I was retiring from international football. And I don't see myself doing that. I never thought I'd get this far.'

As Hodgson said on Tuesday, he's earned it.

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KOP News # 1263

Liverpool FC: 5 Main Reasons Why the Reds Will Improve Next Season

By

Nabeel Khokhar

(Featured Columnist) on May 28, 2012

6,330 reads

Alex Livesey/Getty Images

Most Liverpool fans will probably agree that last season could not be considered a success.

Despite the first silverware in years, the league position was not acceptable which led to the sacking of Liverpool legend and icon Kenny Dalglish.

The accumulation of a mere 52 points in the league which positioned the Reds a dismal eighth, behind city rivals Everton, was dire to put it mildly.

Improvement on this is an absolute must. A challenge for a top four placing in the coming season must be at the top of the list of priorities for the club.

If Champions League football is not achieved in the coming season, then Liverpool could be stuck in mid-table obscurity for years to come.

Without the financial rewards that Champions League football brings to a club, it is virtually impossible to compete in modern day football.

Liverpool need to see a massive improvement in result to achieve this, lagging 17 points behind fourth place Tottenham and a unbelievable 37 points behind champions Manchester City seems almost insurmountable.

But the Reds have no choice, a drastic and rapid improvement is urgently required.

However, there are signs that Liverpool could be up to the challenge next season. Many promising signs are there that should see the Anfield giants up there with the best in the league next season.

KOP News # 1260

Martinez and Rodgers remain in the mix as Liverpool set to name new manager on Friday

Updated: Tuesday, 29 May 2012 18:46

Swansea have denied a fresh Liverpool approach for their manager

Liverpool's search for a new manager is due to end this week with an announcement expected on Friday.

Roberto Martinez and Brendan Rodgers have been the two main candidates throughout the two-week process of whittling down potential contenders and Press Association Sport understands an announcement will be made on Friday.

Both Martinez and Rodgers returned to Britain in the last 24 hours after trips across the Atlantic but only the former had spoken to Reds principal owner John Henry, interrupting a holiday in Barbados to fly to Miami for brief talks.

Rodgers along with his wife, was a guest of the Football Association of Wales for Sunday's friendly against Mexico in New Jersey.

The Northern Irishman met with chairman Huw Jenkins on Tuesday but the club insist it was a scheduled appointment and he had not cut short his trip to America especially for it.

Swansea stress they have received no second approach from Liverpool - Rodgers having turned down their initial advances almost a fortnight ago - and PA Sport understands the pair did not even discuss the Anfield vacancy at their meeting.

The primary topic of conversation appears to have been transfers, with the Swans on the verge of completing a club-record £6.8million transfer for on-loan Hoffenheim midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson and interested in a loan deal for Tottenham's out-of-favour Giovani dos Santos - whom Rodgers watched in New York.

However, despite suggestions elsewhere that Rodgers had already been offered the Liverpool job the club refused to comment officially on their manager's position.

Yesterday Jenkins dismissed the Reds' renewed interest as "pure speculation" and the club issued a statement to stress their position had not changed from two weeks ago when Rodgers turned down the chance to speak to Liverpool.

It read: "We would like to clarify the speculation in the press surrounding our manager Brendan Rodgers.

"We would like to confirm that there has been no contact from Liverpool and nothing has changed since our previous statement on the issue."

On 18 May the south Wales club had said: "The club is pleased to confirm that Brendan has declined the current opportunity to speak to the Anfield club about the vacant position," it said.

"The Swansea manager is currently working hard to strengthen the squad in readiness for the new Barclays Premier League campaign."

Yesterday's statement did little to quash speculation and overnight bookmakers moved Rodgers ahead of Martinez, who flew into Manchester Airport this morning from the Caribbean to be confronted by a television camera crew and photographers but left without commenting.

The Spaniard has been given a deadline of Thursday by Latics chairman Dave Whelan to decide his future.

But he touched down in England to reports suggesting Rodgers was now in the driving seat despite having turned down Liverpool first time around because, it was suggested, he did not want to become involved in a lengthy process with up to 12 names mentioned at the time.

There have been growing murmurings in Wales and his native Northern Ireland that Rodgers would now be more receptive to the Reds with the list of candidates having been whittled down.

 

Monday, May 28, 2012

KOP News # 1246

Liverpool warned that luring Roberto Martinez from Wigan will cost 'a minimum of £2-3 million'

Liverpool have been warned they will face a compensation bill of ''£2- £3 million, minimum'' if they appoint Roberto Martinez as Kenny Dalglish's successor after holding formal talks with the Wigan manager on Thursday night.

In the forefront: Wigan manager Roberto Martinez has had discussions about filling the vacancy left by Kenny Dalglish (rear) Photo: GETTY IMAGES

By Mark Ogden

9:50PM BST 24 May 2012

Martinez, who is understood to have spoken to Liverpool briefly last Sunday, interrupted a family holiday in the Caribbean to fly to Miami for discussions with the club's American owners, Fenway Sports Group, over the managerial vacancy at Anfield.

While FSG's face-to-face talks with Martinez are significant in that they represent the first meeting between the Spaniard and the Americans, it is understood that several other candidates – including Swansea manager Brendan Rodgers and former Ajax coach Louis van Gaal – are still to be interviewed and that an appointment as manager is not imminent.

But with Wigan chairman Dave Whelan voicing concerns over the possible distraction caused by Liverpool's slow-moving attempts to replace the sacked Dalglish, he has made it clear to FSG that he expects full compensation for Martinez should he emerge as the favoured candidate.

Whelan said Martinez signed an extension to his contract, "so Liverpool would have to buy out his contract. You are into £2 million to £3 million, minimum. Whatever the contract is worth I am sure Liverpool would honour that and buy it out.

"I have asked Roberto to make his mind up as soon as possible. If we have to lose him, I will move very quickly to appoint a successor."

Whelan said if Martinez decides to go, "I will accept it and get on with life. If it's 'no' I'll be delighted. I would love him to stay, I hope he will stay, but I told him I need an answer in the next seven days".

Liverpool are determined to interview an extensive list of candidates to succeed Dalglish, although former Chelsea manager Andres Villas-Boas is understood to be out of the running to take the position.

FSG also keen to restructure senior management positions at Anfield and Whelan has warned Martinez that he risks losing full control of football matters if he leaves Wigan for Liverpool.

Whelan said: "My information is that the new Liverpool manager will not be given full responsibility of the football department. There will be somebody else signing players and they might not necessarily be the choice of the manager.

"My advice to Roberto is to think very carefully about this, but Liverpool are a big club and I hope that they remain one of the big clubs. But Roberto likes total control, from the youngsters at 16 to the first team, so if he doesn't get that, I don't think he will take the job."

Off the field, Liverpool have taken steps to fill the vacuum of senior figures at Anfield by appointing Fenway Sports Management's managing director, Billy Hogan, as chief commercial officer.

Jen Chang, formerly of the American magazine Sports Illustrated, has replaced Ian Cotton as the club's corporate relations and communications director.

Attempts to fill the sporting director position are continuing, and Van Gaal is understood to be a leading candidate for that position.

The former Ajax, Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach apparently prefers the managerial role, however, and Liverpool's Dutch forward, Dirk Kuyt, insists that Van Gaal would bring knowledge and experience to Anfield.

Kuyt said: "It is not usual for players to speak about candidates, but he is a Dutchman, has a great track record and has the experience that the club could put to good use.

"At the moment, Liverpool have no coach or technical director, but each club benefits from structure. You look at the Dutch national team and see that consistency and clarity are important."

Meanwhile, Italian midfielder Alberto Aquilani could be forced to return to Anfield this summer after failing to make enough appearances on loan at AC Milan to trigger a £6 million buy-out clause.

Milan vice-president Adriano Galliani claims that a deal could still be struck for the former Roma player, however.

"We will not use our option to buy Aquilani before May 31," Galliani said. "We will reopen talks with Liverpool in June."

 

KOP News # 1247

Premier League clubs lost £361m last year despite record £2.3bn income

• Only five Premier League clubs made a profit in 2010-11
• Manchester City's £197m loss the biggest in football history

Manchester City, in the third year since Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan bought the club, lost £197m. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA Wire/Press Association Images

The Premier League's 20 clubs collectively made a loss of £361m last year, after spending all of their record £2.3bn income. Of the clubs which were in the Premier League in 2010‑11, the year of most clubs' latest published accounts, eight made a profit, of £97.4m in total.

Of the other clubs, 11 made losses, totalling £458m. Manchester City, in the third year since Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan of Abu Dhabi's ruling family bought the club and began to pour in money to acquire a team capable of winning the Premier League, lost £197m, the greatest financial loss in the history of football.

Chelsea lost the next highest amount, £68m, bankrolled by their owner, the Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, who loaned £94m to the club during 2010‑11. Liverpool, documenting the first eight months of ownership by John Henry's Fenway Sports Group, lost £49m.

Birmingham City, now in the Championship, have failed to file their accounts for 2010‑11, which were statutorily due on 31 December. The club's parent company, Birmingham International Holdings, registered on the Hong Kong stock exchange, has not yet published its own accounts, and Carson Yeung, who led the takeover of the club in 2009, is awaiting trial on money-laundering charges, which he denies.

The clubs' combined turnover of £2.3bn is partly the result of the first year of the Premier League's 2010‑13 TV deals, in which a record £1.5bn was earned from overseas broadcasters. The financial figures portray a league of fierce sporting competition which relentlessly forces up players' wages.

In total, £1.5bn was spent on wages by the 20 clubs in 2010-11 (including Birmingham's £38m wage bill in 2009‑10). That accounted for 69% of the clubs' total income, slightly up from the 68% of income the clubs spent in 2009‑10 on wages.

The largest profit was recorded by Newcastle United, in their first season back in the Premier League since relegation in 2009. The accounts were published before last summer's transfer business, swollen by the £35m sale to Liverpool of the striker Andy Carroll, which netted £33m profit. Manchester United, despite paying £50m in interest on the debts loaded on to the club by United's owners, the Glazer family, won the championship having spent less on wages, at £153m, than Chelsea and City, and still made a profit of £12m.

Liverpool, by contrast, made an operating loss of £90m. Had they not recorded a profit of £43m for the sale of players, including £50m from Chelsea for Fernando Torres (the money spent on buying players, such as Carroll, is accounted for more gradually), Liverpool would have stated a much greater overall loss than the £49m final figure.

Richard Scudamore, chief executive of the league which this season celebrated 20 years since it was formed by a breakaway of the old Football League First Division clubs, has rejected introducing a break-even rule similar to "financial fair play". Such rules, designed to make clubs break even rather than rack up losses, whether bankrolled by an owner or not, have been agreed by Uefa for its competitions and, more recently, by the Football League.

In the Premier League, clubs playing in Uefa's Champions League or Europa League must comply with financial fair play over this year and next. Even the two which are lavishly backed, Chelsea and City, have stated they want to move towards breaking even.

Lower down, most clubs make losses in the effort to stay up. The Wigan Athletic owner, Dave Whelan, who wrote off £48m in loans to the club last August, said that financial fair play "can only be a good thing … for football in general to ensure that debt is maintained at reasonable and sustainable levels".

 

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