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Gerrard would have stayed as squad player if offered coaching role

Steven Gerrard has revealed that he’d still be at Liverpool and would have accepted a bit part role if they’d offered him a player / coach position for this season.

 

‘I was surprised a role wasn’t mentioned when chief executive Ian Ayre sat down with my agent but maybe it might happen one day” he told Mail Sport in a exclusive chat. “I’d have stayed on as a squad player if I’d had the chance to learn more about management or coaching. I left with all the doors still open, but yes, I could still have been at Liverpool now.’

 

The Anfield legend acknowledges he is no longer able to play twice a week but admits he found it difficult to accept that last season. “Ability-wise, I could still play but physically I couldn’t play every game at my age,’ he said. ‘I didn’t enjoy being sub last season. I didn’t enjoy not knowing if I would be in the XI or not. I didn’t enjoy when Liverpool were in the Champions League, the idea that I might have to miss matches. I struggled to get my head around it.”

 

“Maybe that was selfish of me but I had gone a long time playing every single game. I might be contradicting myself here but what would have kept me at Liverpool into this season was the chance of shadowing Brendan Rodgers and his staff as well as playing. Those ideas were only mentioned to me after I had announced I was leaving.”

 

“I don’t know if I am going to be good enough to be a manager, or a No 1, No 2, No 3 or No 4" he explained. "Liverpool replaced coaches Colin Pascoe and Mike Marsh in the summer, so they were looking for a new No 2, or No 3 or No 4. I would have been tailor-made to fill one of these roles, as well as making myself available as a squad player. I could have been a good squad player, a good sub, as well as getting management experience that money can’t buy."

 

Having previously - and unconvincingly - stated that his departure was due to wanting to play every game and being unable to accept being rotated, this change of story is hardly a surprise. 

 

The question is why did LFC allow this to happen, particularly after making the same mistake with Jamie Carragher two years earlier? Two men with almost unparalleled levels of experience who live and breathe Liverpool Football Club as much as anybody out there are now employed elsewhere, presumably because Rodgers either sees no use for them or would feel threatened by their presence.

 

gerrardcoach.jpg

 

One of the first things the Northern Irishman did on his arrival at Anfield was try to persuade Carragher to join his coaching staff - an offer the defender asked to be put on hold while he concentrated on playing - but when the time came for ‘Carra’ to announce his retirement, the subject of joining the coaching staff was never brought up again and he took a job at Sky.

 

Gary McAllister was brought in this summer because Rodgers (or possibly the club) acknowledged the need to have a former player with experience of winning things and who knows what LFC is all about on the coaching staff, but while everyone is happy to see Gary Mac back on board, it is a little puzzling that neither Carragher nor Gerrard were offered that opportunity. 

 

Gerrard asks the question in his book, why couldn't Liverpool have done for him what United did for Ryan Giggs?

 

Perhaps the answer to that is because when things went wrong for David Moyes the clamour from United fans was for "Giggseh" to take over, which of course he eventually did (his hairy ar$e was in the manager's chair before the seat had even gone cold). Even now there are United fans who would happily see 'the Welsh Walking Carpet' take over from Louis Van Gaal.

 

Rodgers may well feel he could do without that kind of shadow looming over him, and who knows, perhaps the owners felt the same?

 

 

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I find it all a bit weird with Gerrard.

 

Like talking about all the top strikers he played with, and the best players, and the he goes on about Torres, and Alonso, and Suarez, but never gives Sturridge a mention.

 

He also reckons Xabi would still be here if it wasn't for Rafa, which I find delusional. He looked pretty happy in Spain to me.

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Gerrard as a coach - are you kidding me?

 

 

The guy is too self-absorbed and has zero game intelligence. We could however put him in charge of Hollywood balls or manager shafting.

 

Oh dear. 

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He also reckons Xabi would still be here if it wasn't for Rafa, which I find delusional. He looked pretty happy in Spain to me.

 

 

Don't take this the wrong way, but I somehow believe Gerrard has a bit more to base that opinion on than your experience from various internet forums and Woolie the Chauffeur.

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Steven Gerrard could have easily joined chlesea f.c. and the portuguese rat in 2005 a few weeks after Istanbul and he would still be in the Top 3 Liverpool F.C. Legends ever and he would have thrived and won everything multiple times with chelsea and now he would be considered one of the best english players ever. But he stayed on and kept us at the top for as many years as he could. But yeah, "Stevie-me". I bet you've learned that from your manc boyfriends, who also taught you how to pronounce "slippy g", that it wasn't our ridiculous defending that cost us the title but it was one unfortunate moment leading to one goal.

 

Steven Gerrard golden-showers you and you love it.

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He'd probably have had a warmer relationship with Alan Curbishley than with Benitez, but thankfully himself, Jamie Carragher and other senior players weren't fully in charge of choosing their own boss.

 

Granted he had issues with Benitez. That's his entitlement. But he'll lose credibility if he isn't in any way critical of Hodgson in this book. A legend like him should be above petty point-scoring.

 

I'm not sure what he gains from this. He doesn't need the money and could have a go at anybody he wants in newspaper interviews or through television punditry.

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He'd probably have had a warmer relationship with Alan Curbishley than with Benitez, but thankfully himself, Jamie Carragher and other senior players weren't fully in charge of choosing their own boss.

 

Granted he had issues with Benitez. That's his entitlement. But he'll lose credibility if he isn't in any way critical of Hodgson in this book. A legend like him should be above petty point-scoring.

 

I'm not sure what he gains from this. He doesn't need the money and could have a go at anybody he wants in newspaper interviews or through television punditry.

I agree, it's unedifying, but he's keeping a great deal of his powder dry.  It's certainly badly timed, and the manager needs this like he needs another tooth implant right now, but I still have far more respect for Gerrard than I do for any of the managers he's played for apart from Dalglish.  

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He'd probably have had a warmer relationship with Alan Curbishley than with Benitez, but thankfully himself, Jamie Carragher and other senior players weren't fully in charge of choosing their own boss.

 

Granted he had issues with Benitez. That's his entitlement. But he'll lose credibility if he isn't in any way critical of Hodgson in this book. A legend like him should be above petty point-scoring.

 

I'm not sure what he gains from this. He doesn't need the money and could have a go at anybody he wants in newspaper interviews or through television punditry.

 

Judging by his previous interviews he'll blame the fans for not getting behind Hodgson.

 

I really don't get him when it comes football managers. The quote abut if only Rafa had Rodgers' man-management skills is as insulting as it's laughable (Same with the if only Rodgers had been manager the last 10 years i'd have loads of titles). Just because Rodgers spent three years kissing Gerrard's hoop doesn't make him a good man-manager. He's fell out with and alienated more players than Rafa ever did, even if Rafa could be awkward. Rodgers was in awe of Gerrard.

 

Rafa's a better manager than Rodgers could dream of being but Gerrard seems to equate good management with how much smoke gets blown up his backside. 

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Judging by his previous interviews he'll blame the fans for not getting behind Hodgson.

 

I really don't get him when it comes football managers. The quote abut if only Rafa had Rodgers' man-management skills is as insulting as it's laughable (Same with the if only Rodgers had been manager the last 10 years i'd have loads of titles). Just because Rodgers spent three years kissing Gerrard's hoop doesn't make him a good man-manager. He's fell out with and alienated more players than Rafa ever did, even if Rafa could be awkward. Rodgers was in awe of Gerrard.

 

Rafa's a better manager than Rodgers could dream of being but Gerrard seems to equate good management with how much smoke gets blown up his backside. 

 

Wibble.

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Was Bob Paisley a mong for saying "let a player lose his legs on someone else's pitch" as he kept us at the top by regularly freshening things up?

 

Gerrard didn't want to be a squad player. He's 35.

 

Im saying you're a mong you fuckwit.

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I find it all a bit weird with Gerrard.

Like talking about all the top strikers he played with, and the best players, and the he goes on about Torres, and Alonso, and Suarez, but never gives Sturridge a mention.

He also reckons Xabi would still be here if it wasn't for Rafa, which I find delusional. He looked pretty happy in Spain to me.

He was heaping praise on Sturridge tonight on radio city.
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http://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/sep/15/rafa-benitez-steven-gerrard-wrong-frosty-relationship-liverpool

 

Rafael Benitez says that Steven Gerrard is wrong over the midfielder’s claims that they the pair never had a personal relationship when they worked together at Liverpool.

 

Gerrard made the comments in his new autobiography, which has been serialised in the Daily Mail, and said there was a “frostiness” between him and Benítez, and that he didn’t “think Rafa liked me as a person” as there was “no bond between us.”

 

But Benítez, now manager of Real Madrid, has told Spanish TV that Gerrard’s remarks are wide of the mark, and suggested that they were made in order to sell more copies of his book.

 

“I have read the quotes and I believe he is wrong,” Benítez said. “Out of the respect that I have for Stevie and for the value and appreciation I have for him, and for Liverpool and the supporters, I think it’s best to just let it pass. He has brought out a book and now I’m the Real Madrid manager, that sells.”

 

Gerrard enjoyed the most successful period of his playing career under Benítez, and was instrumental in helping Liverpool win the Champions League in 2005 and the FA Cup Final in 2006, but said that the Spaniard is the only manager he worked with at Anfield that he could not just pick up the phone to.

 

The 35-year-old also said that before he had even met Benítez, the manager had asked his mother “a very blunt question: ‘Does Steven like money?’ Apart from a standard ‘Hello ... good to meet you’ introduction, those were the first words Rafa said to my mum. I thought: ‘What kind of question is that?’

 

“On a basic human level I prefer a likeable manager, such as Gerard Houllier or Brendan Rodgers, but in terms of football I really don’t mind working with a colder man,” Gerrard also said. “An emotionless and distant relationship with the likes of Rafa Benítez and Fabio Capello can sometimes produce more success.”

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These books are a curse. With all the cash the modern day player earns surely they can say, I'll wait till I'm finished, before getting the biro out? This one has come out so fast it seems as though he started it on the way to Dubai after Stoke.

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Gerrard is in the reckoning when ever a discussion happens about the best player to ever pull on the red shirt.

 

However, pretty much every snippet of his book is making him come across as a bit of a needy whopper.

 

Particularly the Benitez parts. Whether you like Rafa or not, that's who he was. Cold. Professional. Focused to the extent of it being obsessive. Vital goals scored - no display of emotion, just a scribble in his notebook. Sitting like a Buddha during a Champions League penalty shoot out.

 

It's a wholly unsavoury affair, from which nobody comes out with any credit. Gerrard is sullying his reputation with this petty stuff. It's almost as cringeworthy as when everybody found out that he likes Phil Collins.

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Bruce Arena better be nice to Steven or he'll find himself criticised in the third instalment of Gerrard's memoirs. "Bruce was doing a great job for soccer in the USA but he never understood that former Premier League superstars require deep rimming, not just cursory arse kissing, after training sessions. Nice guy but lacking professional tongue".

 

I understand that these books are essential reading for some fans, and I've read a few myself, but these 'insights' into a footballer's thoughts don't do anyone much good, apart from giving the author a bank account top up.

 

Gerrard and Benitez are both modern Liverpool legends and both - and I might be shocking some people here -both are human. Full of the mood swings, misery and bad manners that we all display from time to time. Also like many, they were good at their jobs.

 

Yet, unlike many, their jobs were performed before a massive audience, the large majority of which they had to please by winning football games. For me winning those games was all that counted, the personal interactions of the players didn't matter. unless they adversely affected the results we sought, and even then my only demand would be 'you're professionals - leave it out or sort it out'. Rafa and Gerrard were professional enough to sort it out.

 

It looks, though, as if Gerrard is still sorting it out, but his reminiscences seem pretty petty compared to his achievements, the details of which I could never tire of studying.

 .

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