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ECHO Comment: "Fears of Witch-hunt Against Liverpool FC"

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(Apologies for the long post). It looks like the Times are onto it now, and as I predicted the fans are starting to vent at FSG, and wake up to the fact there is something seriously wrong at the club. @davek .

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/sport/football/clubs/liverpool/article4444751.ece

Vulnerable Liverpool are mediocre - and they know it


Tony Barrett
Last updated at 10:53AM, May 19 2015

Not since buying Liverpool in October 2010 has Fenway Sports Group (FSG) endured such a chastening 72 hours. On Saturday, supporters at Anfield reacted with derision to the suggestion that the club are heading in the right direction. Then yesterday there was a vicious double whammy as Michel Platini confirmed that the Financial Fair Play rules which attracted John W. Henry to purchase the club are to be relaxed and Raheem Sterling’s camp made it known that the winger wishes to leave.

Liverpool are vulnerable right now. They are mediocre and everyone knows it. The reality is that those at the top end of the football industry have known it for some time, hence senior scouts from Manchester City and Chelsea becoming Anfield regulars this season in the knowledge that Liverpool’s best players are there for the taking in a way that they haven’t been for half a century.

For all the opprobrium – some of it just, some of it not – that will inevitably be showered on Sterling and his representative, Aidy Ward, following yesterday’s events, the reality is that it is Liverpool’s weakness that allows players and agents to act in the way that they are. One of the club’s first and most important responsibilities is to make it a place that players find difficult to leave and it would be absurd to claim that is the case.

With no Champions League football to offer, only one trophy (the League Cup) won in the past nine seasons, just three title challenges since 1991, a transfer policy that prioritises the future over the present and an inability to compete for top players, Liverpool are failing to keep their end of the bargain in terms of how a big club are supposed to behave. Expectations have been lowered, almost dumbed down, and if the supporters can recognise that so too can the players.

Thus far, the strongest argument that Liverpool have been able to muster in their attempts to convince Sterling to remain at the club is that it is the best place for his development at this stage of his career; not that if he remains at Anfield he can fulfil his ambitions, that success is around the corner or that they will pay him as much as others are willing to. It is an argument rooted in weakness and lacking in conviction.

It could also be argued that it is flawed given that Sterling, a creative player, has spent the past 12 months playing in a team without a forward. It is all well and good playing regular first-team football but doing so in a dysfunctional team that stymies your best qualities is hardly developmental.

The reality is that Liverpool’s problems – their failure to finish in the top four, their struggle to hold on to their best players, the lack of supporters’ faith in the club’s direction and the pressure that is building on the Anfield hierarchy – are symptoms of the same cause: a flawed transfer strategy that it is causing untold damage. Signing potential rather than proven talent is undermining everything that Liverpool are supposed to stand for. It has reached the stage where one of their better young players is not prepared to hang around to see if their inferior young players will improve.

For all the accusations that Sterling is going the wrong way about forcing a move (and many of these are wholly legitimate), Liverpool are at the mercy of the ambition of others because they are either unwilling or unable to match their rivals’ ambition. That situation is only likely to become more severe now that FFP is about to be watered down. As Henry himself conceded recently, without FFP it becomes “very difficult” for Liverpool to compete. The established football food chain, ordered according to owners’ wealth, leaves them exposed. Rival clubs, avaricious agents and even their own supporters know this only too well.

FSG’s model is failing. Whether that is because it is fundamentally flawed or poorly executed is a moot point but what is not in question is that Liverpool’s entire football operation is in need of urgent evaluation. Until the things that are going wrong are put right, then Raheem Sterling won’t be the last to believe the grass is greener elsewhere, he’ll just be one of a number in an ever lengthening line who view Liverpool Football Club as a stepping stone rather than a final destination.
Barrett is a lightening rod for their fans, so FSG would best be concerned with that.

All along their strategy has been to get in and secure two goals: CL football and a stadium solution...and then sell up for a billion. Part of that strategy has also been to keep the fanbase from doing what they did to H&G, which they've so far done with huge spending on fees. If that's now being called into question (and the wages paid to top playerrs) then they really are facing a crisis down the barrel.

In my opinion, they need to get Rodgers (who cant use the cash wisely) out and take another chance on the managerial front to see if they come up trumps.
 
This concentrated assault by the ex-kopite media heads will surely convince him to stay.

That's the elephant in the room that their fans and media installations will never address. The club is a complete circus in the press, what other mid table club gets that kind of attention? What other club has eight (eight!) books written about a second place finish? They do it to themselves too, you think lining the road to great the coach (at home games no less!) didn't add to the pressure and strain of a title challenge?

Maybe sterling is just tired of having to carry the feverish delusions of a massive cult on his shoulders.

On the other hand maybe he just wants to play for a coach that can correct his horrible mincing gait. Start to feel a bit camp myself every time I see him sprint up a blind alley with the ball.
 
Had a chat with some Kopites on Friday

Sound enough lads, but some aspects of the conversation interested me for the wrong reasons

- Ibe is good enough that no worries if Sterling leaves
- Rodgers will get another year
- Balotelli is a World Class player and it just hasn't worked out this season

We all agreed that it's best for Sterling if he stays though. If he goes to a Man City or Chelsea, he'll be sitting on a bench and making up a quota. If he stays at Liverpool, he'll be the big man on campus and will start every week.
Hopefully he will get next season to prove his worth.
 

Couldn't he be backup to Oscar at Chelsea? Although Sterling plays on the wing think his preferred position is a #10. Add in backing up Hazard or Willian with the number of games Chelsea have, think he could get a decent amount of game time.

I really don't think he would

Someone like Chelsea signing Sterling would be most likely for the following reasons

- Increase the English player quota

- Deny Liverpool from having a decent player

-Give Jose Mourinho a chance to amuse himself at the almighty Kopite fume


Sterling could very well be a tippy top player, but not yet and not without another season or two as a regular starter for a decent PL outfit IMO

Liverpool, despite us all having a go now and then, are a decent side and it would bode best for Sterling to bed in and make his move in a couple of seasons

He won't though
 
I really don't think he would

Someone like Chelsea signing Sterling would be most likely for the following reasons

- Increase the English player quota

- Deny Liverpool from having a decent player

-Give Jose Mourinho a chance to amuse himself at the almighty Kopite fume


Sterling could very well be a tippy top player, but not yet and not without another season or two as a regular starter for a decent PL outfit IMO

Liverpool, despite us all having a go now and then, are a decent side and it would bode best for Sterling to bed in and make his move in a couple of seasons

He won't though
Jose would absolutely love the popcorning!
 
I really don't think he would

Someone like Chelsea signing Sterling would be most likely for the following reasons

- Increase the English player quota

- Deny Liverpool from having a decent player

-Give Jose Mourinho a chance to amuse himself at the almighty Kopite fume


Sterling could very well be a tippy top player, but not yet and not without another season or two as a regular starter for a decent PL outfit IMO

Liverpool, despite us all having a go now and then, are a decent side and it would bode best for Sterling to bed in and make his move in a couple of seasons

He won't though
Think he's pretty good at bedding in, how many kids has he ?
 
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I really don't think he would

Someone like Chelsea signing Sterling would be most likely for the following reasons

- Increase the English player quota

- Deny Liverpool from having a decent player

-Give Jose Mourinho a chance to amuse himself at the almighty Kopite fume


Sterling could very well be a tippy top player, but not yet and not without another season or two as a regular starter for a decent PL outfit IMO

Liverpool, despite us all having a go now and then, are a decent side and it would bode best for Sterling to bed in and make his move in a couple of seasons

He won't though

Arsenal is the one club where you can see him fitting right in and they would probably want to buy him (and that he would want to go there), though City are always mug enough to pay for players they dont need. Chelsea would only buy him to popcorn the nonsense, and United dont really need him.
 

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