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Rafa talks about the CL, Gerrard, Garcia and Sterling...

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Rafa Benitez Column: I think Liverpool will qualify for Champions League ahead of Manchester United because they have no European distractions
Liverpool will get back to those great European nights at Anfield
RAFA BENITEZ

Thursday 16 January 2014


The new year means a great race in the Premier League – something we haven’t seen for a long time – and everybody is talking about who they think will take a place in the top four, knowing that those predictions can’t be made with confidence.

I think it will be the season when my old club Liverpool will finish in the top four, and get back to experiencing the great Anfield Champions League nights which were very special to me. I think there will be a changing of places because Liverpool coming fourth will mean Manchester United finishing outside of the Champions League. It is hard to talk confidently about these things in a crazy British season, of course, but Liverpool will have one important advantage when January is over.

That is time. They don’t have to play in Europe in the months ahead and that is a big advantage when the others are distracted by those commitments. I don’t mean it is not good to be competing and pressing to win in the Premier League and Europe, too. In early 2009 at Liverpool – the middle of March that year – we played United, Real Madrid and Aston Villa in 12 days, won them all, scored 13 goals and conceded one. We found that precious moment when everyone was on fire and wanting to play, play, play – and pushing. We had so much confidence that we could beat anyone at that time.

Liverpool have discovered confidence again, too, but three of the other teams – Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal – are stronger, with better squads, and the time Liverpool have to refocus and prepare for the league games will be very important to them. There will also be less risk of the injuries that they cannot afford.
It is not the only factor playing in their favour, though. A lot of people talk about the strikers but do they realise how much Steven Gerrard still brings to Liverpool, because I have seen more talk this season about whether he is the same “Gerrard of old” – as you like to say in England.

It was interesting to see him playing in the deeper regista role in the win against Stoke City, because regular readers of this column will know why I think he has the qualities to be an influence there. It is his anticipation, ability to pass long and short with incredible accuracy and also dictate the tempo. Not many players can do that.

Gerrard’s return is very important. He is one of the best players I have worked with; an analyser who can play anywhere and still cause trouble in the box. He has always played with a lot of patience and commitment but now it is easier for him because he has more experience, has worked with different managers and has different visions of how teams can play.

It will also help Liverpool to play Arsenal, Manchester City and Chelsea – the big teams who have beaten them – at home in the second half of the season, because Anfield has become a difficult place to go to again. A run of wins at home or away can create the confidence I was talking about us having in March 2009.

City and Chelsea look like the best two squads in the Premier League to me. I remember our first discussion of the season in the column, when we said that City were the ones who could be the biggest danger. Looking from the outside here in Italy – from where I probably see less Premier League football than you – they are developing that soaring confidence.

Chelsea are spending more money now, too, and building on the Europa League we won there. So, they are a little bit ahead of the others, with Arsenal just behind in the group who are stronger than all the rest.
We will have to see if Manchester United can make it into the top four and, after all I have learnt about the club over the years, I know that you cannot rule it out. I only have to go back in my mind to 2008-09, when we finished second to United by four points.

We won 10 of our last 11 league games that season, with the crazy 4-4 draw against Arsenal the only one that broke the run, while United had that Federico Macheda goal against Aston Villa (after 90 minutes) and Michael Carrick at Wigan (86 minutes). It was their title and they earned it but it showed how hard it is to predict!
For Liverpool, the expectation is always there and a big part of the challenge is how to manage it without creating pressure for the players. You cannot play down the expectations. The fans want to know that you believe you can achieve your target so you have to say that, without having fear.

When you do that, some players might say, “He is just saying that because he has to” and perhaps in a way sometimes you are. But what matters most at a club like that is not what you say in public, behind the microphones and all the dictaphones, but what your actions are in front of the players.
They need to look at you and know you are prepared, know you have solutions and have done what is needed to prepare them for the challenge of each game.

The expectations and the noise grow bigger and bigger as the end of the season gets closer. But if you can transmit that confidence, nobody will be intimidated.

Farewell, Luis, you could always do the unexpected
I was talking the other day to Luis Garcia, who has announced his retirement, and I can’t let this column pass without talking about the quality that made him very special for us at Liverpool.

He would sometimes give the ball away and the fans would be frustrated but he was so good when creating things, working between the lines and showing his game intelligence.

In the big games it can come down to who can make that little bit of difference and do the unexpected thing on the pitch. Maybe the thing you cannot always coach or expect. Luis Garcia always had that.

Keep your eye on Sterling – I rated him from the start
I am sure we will talk more about England as the summer comes near, but one of the players we must watch now is Raheem Sterling. I remember the day I met him, with his mother Nadine at Melwood. The head of our academy, Frank McParland, had been telling me how good he was and that we must sign him and when I took him on the tour of our Liverpool training ground that day we came across Fernando Torres. I introduced him to Fernando and he wasn’t fazed. That told me something.

He was very young but he had that quality of wanting to receive and be on the ball. That is rare. England could benefit from the way he is meeting some of the expectations we had back then.
 
Good article.
Rafa always rated Gerrard but was also a critic on certain aspects of him. So it's nice to read about his confidence in Gerrard having the intelligence to work from the deep lying position.
Really hope it works out, cause it would certainly be a good feeling having one of the best midfielders in decades operating in front of the defense without having to expend a whole lot of energy like he'd have to in any other position.
 
It was interesting to see him playing in the deeper regista role in the win against Stoke City, because regular readers of this column will know why I think he has the qualities to be an influence there. It is his anticipation, ability to pass long and short with incredible accuracy and also dictate the tempo. Not many players can do that.

It always feels nice when one of LFC's greatest managers agrees with you 🙂.

@Ryan, what do you say now?
 
Rafa also envisioned him playing as a striker at the tail end of his career, and he had his most productive time with us not playing there at all, when Rafa had someone he bought to be better than him in that same position, so I was a little surprised to see this.
 
So was I. Rafa may have been pushing Stevie for the position in question in his column recently, but he was saying very different things on the subject when he was still LFC manager.

Maybe he's changed his opinion in the past four years. It happens.
 
So was I. Rafa may have been pushing Stevie for the position in question in his column recently, but he was saying very different things on the subject when he was still LFC manager.

He said the almost exactly opposite about stevie if I remember it correctly!
 
Luis retired - shame.

I <3 Lil' Luis - one of the standout Liverpool players of the 'noughties'. Champions League hero and scorer of one of the best headed goals I've seen
 
He's taking account that we have one of the best strike partnerships in world football.

An aging Steven Gerrard has no place disrupting that.
 
So was I. Rafa may have been pushing Stevie for the position in question in his column recently, but he was saying very different things on the subject when he was still LFC manager.

That was quite a few years ago and he was combining beautifully with Torres
 
So was I. Rafa may have been pushing Stevie for the position in question in his column recently, but he was saying very different things on the subject when he was still LFC manager.

Whereas that's true, he probably re-accessed his opinion after Stevie's injury. Everyone always knew Stevie would lose his pace, but it was a lot harder to predict that he would lose his shot power, and since the flesh eating bug, Stevie hasn't been able to shoot anywhere near as well (he can still place it, but he can no longer blast the ball unless it's on the volley) as he used to.
 
Whereas that's true, he probably re-accessed his opinion after Stevie's injury. Everyone always knew Stevie would lose his pace, but it was a lot harder to predict that he would lose his shot power, and since the flesh eating bug, Stevie hasn't been able to shoot anywhere near as well (he can still place it, but he can no longer blast the ball unless it's on the volley) as he used to.



This post makes me sad.
 
He said the almost exactly opposite about stevie if I remember it correctly!

That was in 2004, when he took over and Stevie was 24/5 I think. He said he was an exceptional talent but had to learn more about tactics and be cleverer in certain situations.
Ten years on, I think it's fair to say Gerrard's mind set has changed a fair bit.
 
That was in 2004, when he took over and Stevie was 24/5 I think. He said he was an exceptional talent but had to learn more about tactics and be cleverer in certain situations.
Ten years on, I think it's fair to say Gerrard's mind set has changed a fair bit.


But he still plays that position by virtue of his general quality and versatility. He's no more suited for it than he ever was, we're just losing out less than we used to when he was more productive in attack. I remember posting years and years ago about how I wondered whether Gerrard would ever really end up specializing as a midfielder, and I feel like he just hasn't. When I think of Gerrard being most Gerrard, its in a mix of different roles, and if I had to pick one, it would be earlier on in his career when he was doing fucking everything in a way that doesn't really make sense long term.
 
But he still plays that position by virtue of his general quality and versatility. He's no more suited for it than he ever was, we're just losing out less than we used to when he was more productive in attack. I remember posting years and years ago about how I wondered whether Gerrard would ever really end up specializing as a midfielder, and I feel like he just hasn't. When I think of Gerrard being most Gerrard, its in a mix of different roles, and if I had to pick one, it would be earlier on in his career when he was doing fucking everything in a way that doesn't really make sense long term.

But you can't deny that he has game intelligence. And that he's the best defender, one on one, that we have.
I really haven't a clue if he'll succeed in that position. But he is a freak of nature and if anyone can adapt to a new position close to his mid 30's, it's him.
 
Love Rafa but every time he speaks it's laced with the self promotion and exaggeration that he doesn't need to do.
 
Boss expects double bonus for Gerrard

18th Jan 2014 - Latest News

Brendan Rodgers expects the new position he has chosen for Steven Gerrard within the Liverpool team to have a dual benefit, strengthening the Reds in the short-term and prolonging the 33-year-old's career.
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The vast majority of the midfielder's 650 appearances for the club have featured the No.8 in an advanced position to allow his natural creative ability and vision to flourish on a personal and collective level.
On the day the skipper equalled Phil Neal's games record in Red and further closed the gap on third place in that all-time list, Gerrard was utilised in a noticeably deeper role during the 5-3 victory at Stoke City.
His deployment at the base of Rodgers' midfield provided the Englishman with a zone from which he could dictate play, and freed the energetic pair of Jordan Henderson and Lucas Leiva to press the opposition in threatening areas.
The boss was satisfied enough with the experiment at the Britannia Stadium to reveal afterwards that the new tactic would continue; now he has explained precisely why it could prove so positive.
Rodgers told the Liverpool Echo: "It's something Steven and I have spoken about for a while. I thought he did very well in that role at Stoke - the mix of his game was excellent.
"It's a special type of player who can play that position. Lucas Leiva has played there outstandingly well for us, Joe Allen has played it well, and I think Steven Gerrard can play it because of his personality.
"If you look at the profile of someone in that position, tactically, it's someone who can co-ordinate the game and can lead it from behind. You have to understand when to play short, when to play long and when to press the ball.
"You need to have charisma and leadership qualities to play in there. You need to have the love of the football. You need to want the ball; you have got to be the guy who opens up the game for the team.
"Steven has all those qualities. Steven is not - and he will tell you himself - at 33 what he was at 23. But what he still has are world-class qualities such as his passing and his reading of the game.
"You see with his passing range, short and long, that he can really contribute from there. I believe that role could prolong his career into his late 30s."

Having spent more than 15 years in the first team steadily increasing his goal tally - 163 is the current total for the captain - the transformation is, of course, not going to occur overnight.
Following the clash with Stoke, Gerrard himself accepted that he may require 'a few games' to claim complete comfort in the role, but his boss could not have more confidence in the man from Huyton.
"Steven's movement patterns in games for most of his career have been in the other half of the field," the Northern Irishman continued.
"Now you are reprogramming him for his movement patterns in this half of the field. Once we continue to do more work on it on the training field, he'll get that total picture of where he's at.
"Physically, you don't need to be running the length of the field, but you need to be able to move quickly over short spaces. Steven has that agility.
"I always look and analyse every player and think: 'That's his No.1 position but where else could he play?'
"You can't put everyone into other roles but I think there are certain players you can. I always felt, having watched Steven over many years, he could play there.
"Physically, there comes a point where you aren't what you were at 23. Then it's a question of how can you still exploit the qualities?
"Steven is still one of the best dead-ball specialists in world football and we are the highest goalscorers in the Premier League from set-pieces this season.
"It's a role I think he's excited to play. If you look at some of the top players in world football, they have had spells in that position."
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Expanding on his theory further, Rodgers outlined how the subtle switch of Gerrard's starting position provides a host of combinations between the skipper, Joe Allen, Henderson and Lucas.
He added: "We've been playing with a single pivot and two in front since the game at Tottenham. I prefer it with two attacking players in the midfield three.
"I don't like two defensive players, I'd rather have one defensive and two attacking. For the two pushed on, it's about getting up, pressing and suffocating the game when we don't have the ball.
"When we have it, it's about being positive and getting in the corridor in the box. It's my preferred system when we have the players available but obviously certain games dictate certain tactics. At times we may need to spin it around and play the other way.
"If you think back to when Lucas first came to the club, he was an attacking midfield player. I like players to be multi-functional and be able to play in different positions.
"I believe Lucas can play that role. What's important for me in the two advanced roles is that they have to be able to really go and press the ball high up the field. That's how the system works.
"Jordan and Joe Allen did that exceptionally well in the games when Steven was out and Lucas was controlling in behind.
"If you flip it around and put Steven there, look at the range of passing he gives you and his agility with the ball. That leaves the other two boys in midfield to go and join in higher up the pitch, like they did at Stoke."
 
Seems rafa is still as gutted as me about that year he should have won PL. He may have still been boss now
 
If Gerrard really is going to be our DM and he's happy with that and is going to focus on it then it's fucking ace.
 
I love what Brendan said there about not liking two defensive midfielders. That was my biggest frustration with rafa. The best two PL teams in history only had 1 defense minded person I.E keane and petit/vierra. And they scored as well


That was always my issue with masher and Alonso to a degree together. Not enough attacking between them.

Love Brendan's attitude.
 
I love what Brendan said there about not liking two defensive midfielders. That was my biggest frustration with rafa. The best two PL teams in history only had 1 defense minded person I.E keane and petit/vierra. And they scored as well


That was always my issue with masher and Alonso to a degree together. Not enough attacking between them.

Love Brendan's attitude.

You can still score goals with 2 defensive midfielders. Chelsea play with 2 and they are very solid in midfield and still very creative.
 
All Rafa said there may well be true but the Villa game was bloody nonsense until Lucas came on and Gerrard went further forward.

I get that Gerrard isn't up to playing 90 minutes in the opponents final third but he brings so much to that area when he's there it's unreal.

Maybe he can play the DM role consistently. I've said for years that he's got the game intelligence to play in any position on the field but, right now, we're missing him badly in the attacking third and not really benefiting from him that much in the defensive third.
 
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