Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'speedy g tactical genius'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Categories

  • Members Only Content
    • Match Reports
    • Round Ups
    • That Was the Week that Was
    • Other Members Only Content
  • Latest News
  • Features
    • Interviews
    • Opinion
    • In their own words
    • The Burning Question
    • Magic Moments
    • Bunch of Fives
    • 10 Players that Shook the Kop (with laughter)
    • All Time XI's
    • Mongo's Diary
    • Britain's Bitterest
    • You Don't Want to Know Your History
    • Misc Articles
    • Red of the Day
    • From the Fanzine
    • Podcasts
  • Hall of Fame
  • Content

Forums

  • TLW Discussion forums
    • MF - Members Forum
    • FF - Football Forum
    • GF - General Forum
    • TNF - Techy Nerd Forum
    • XMF - Arguing over ex Managers Forum
    • HOF - Hall of Fame Forum
    • Draft Forum
  • Draft Club's Topics

Product Groups

  • TLW T-Shirts
    • Current & Recent Heroes
    • Commentary, Flags & Songs
    • 60s & 70s Legends
    • 80s Legends
    • 90s, 00s, 10s Legends
    • 'Number Six' Collection
    • Double Acts & Trios
    • The Boot Room
    • Istanbul Heroes
    • Cult Heroes
    • Funny / Ironic
    • TLW Podcast
  • Fanzine

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


AIM


MSN


Website URL


ICQ


Yahoo


Jabber


Skype


Location


Occupation


Biography


Interests

Found 1 result

  1. The Times Online Liverpool do not need a new manager, they need new owners Tony Barrett There is a growing feeling, in some quarters, that the time has come for Rafael Benitez, the Liverpool manager, to be relieved of his duties and sent back to Spain with three Premier League defeats in the Anfield club’s first eight games of the season having made knees jerk the length and breadth of the land. There is a debate to be had about Benitez’s ability to guide Liverpool to the league title and it is one which will become more vociferous and increasingly polarised as the campaign wears on should results fail to pick up significantly. Until and unless he takes his team to the promised land after almost two decades in the wilderness then the Spaniard will be open to criticism, some of it justified and some of it not. That comes with the territory of being the manager of one of the world’s most famous and most successful clubs in a league which is becoming increasingly competitive. Should Liverpool and Benitez fall short, mitigating circumstances will be put forward by those who believe he really is the real deal with blame for failure being laid at the door of Liverpool’s American owners, while the seemingly growing army of nay’sayers will argue that he has had enough time and enough money to be able to deliver regardless of the shambolic goings-on off the pitch. That debate is healthy and it is totally justified. Benitez must be subject to the same kind of judgment as his predecessors at Anfield and only time will tell if he can live up to the standards that he set for himself last season when Liverpool fell just four points short of winning that all important first league title since the days when John Barnes’s shorts were tight through choice rather than because of an expanding waistline. But anyone calling for his removal is missing the target as spectacularly as Ronnie Rosenthal did at Villa Park all those years ago and it is actually as ridiculously misplaced as fans of relegation-threatened clubs who argue that dropping down a division might actually be a good thing. Firstly, who would make the decision? Tom Hicks and George Gillett Jr are the owners and therefore the powerbrokers but they attend Liverpool games about as regularly as they are spoken of in glowing terms, so how could they possibly make an informed judgment about what is best for the team? The fact that the duo are barely on speaking terms – a situation which won’t have been improved by Gillett wrongly accusing Hicks of being the one who claimed a spade would be in the ground to signal the start of work on Liverpool’s much-promised but still to be delivered new stadium within 60 days of their takeover in February 2007 – so how could they possibly come to a reasoned conclusion about the manager’s position? There is also the Klinsmann factor to take into account. It was only a couple of years ago when Hicks and Gillett approached Jurgen behind Benitez’s back with a view to the former German international replacing the Spaniard in the Anfield hot seat. Since then, Benitez has guided Liverpool to runners-up spot in the Premier League while Klinsmann is probably now back driving a battered Beetle around Miami’s wonderful Collins Avenue having been found to be totally out of his depth running the show at Bayern Munich. If Jurgen was the answer back then, then heaven knows what the question was that Liverpool’s owners were asking. Would anyone really want them to ask it again? Of equal importance is the problem which no-one seems to have provided a solution to. That is, who in their right minds would agree to manage a club as dysfunctional as Liverpool have become? Any top manager with a modicum of common sense would surely run a mile if offered the position. The job description would allude to running one of the world’s greatest clubs, working with players of renowned ability like Steven Gerrard, Pepe Reina and Fernando Torres and an opportunity to become an absolute legend to fans who crave success. The reality, though, would be a job in which you have no guaranteed money to spend; an interest repayment-inspired book-balancing exercise that does not allow you to compete in the transfer market; owners who have failed to provide the kind of leadership which makes a manager’s job easier; the possibility of new investors coming in and not particularly fancying you; the kind of instability and disunity which makes progress, if not impossible, then certainly difficult in the extreme; and all this without a reduction in sky high expectations. Liverpool do not need a change of manager. They need new owners, the kind who can make a proper, reasoned judgment of how their manager is performing. Until they have that then replacing Rafael Benitez would be about as logical as an argument put forward by George Gillett Jr
×
×
  • Create New...