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So yeah... Swansea

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Ryan

The Prophet
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Can't wait for this one, it's gonna be mega.

If only we had 11 Downing's and could play all of them in this one. Then usher them forward to the Kop at the end for a sympathy clap.

Here's who won't play (hopefully):
Wisdom
Skrtel
Agger
Gerrard
Allen
Raheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeem
Suarez
Downing (for obvious reasons)

Who does that leave us with, Barry Venison?
 
Jones

Flannagan (though maybe throw in McLaughlin)
Coates
Carra
Enrique

Sahin
Shelvey
Suso

Downing
Assaidi
Yesil
 
Prediction: Sahin to get loads of time and space on the ball and get the man of the match award.
 
Took me a while to figure out what game you were actually talking about.

Jones

Carra
Coates
Enrique

Henderson
Shelvey
Sahin

Suso
Assaidi
Downing

I don't really want Downing to play but we don't have very many options.
 
Is McLaughlin ready for a first team call up?

Would like to see Robinson get some playing time as well.
 
Prefer (Expect)

Jones

McLaughlin (Wisdom)
Skrtel / Wisdom (Carra)
Coates
Enrique

Henderson
Sahin
Shelvey

Assaidi
Suso (Downing)
Yesil (Cole)
 
BBC said:
Ian Rush backs old friend Michael Laudrup to keep Swansea up
Wales and Liverpool legend Ian Rush is certain former Juventus team-mate Michael Laudrup will keep Swansea City in the Premier League.
Rush hopes to renew acquaintance with Laudrup on Wednesday after Swansea's Capital One Cup visit to Anfield.
"He'll keep them up without doubt," said Rush. "Swansea did really well last season and they'll stay up because of the football they play.
"I'm looking forward to seeing him. He's a lovely man and a great manager."
Laudrup and Rush played alongside each other and shared rooms during the Welshman's one season at Juventus in 1987-88.
_63782546_ian_rush.jpg

“He probably had the most individual skill I've seen”
Ian Rush on former Juventus team-mate Michael Laudrup
Rush struggled to replicate his trademark scoring prowess in Italy, although he maintains his 14-goal return contradicts the general perception that his time in Serie A was a failure.
He also insists he never uttered the infamous quote attributed to him that he failed to settle in Italy because "it was like living in a foreign country".
But Rush, now a Liverpool ambassador, revealed he will forever be grateful to Laudrup for doing more than anyone else to help him adapt to life in Turin.
"Michael looked after me when I was at Juventus," said Rush, who joined the Italian giants from Liverpool for £3.2m in 1987.
"He could speak very good English and he really looked after me. I'm thankful to him for that."
There was plenty to admire about Laudrup's on-field demeanour too, said Rush, describing the Dane as a player that "probably had the most individual skill I've seen. He was an incredible player".
Rush and Laudrup, who has never played or managed a team at Anfield, came extremely close to being team-mates five years earlier.
Laudrup was set to sign for Liverpool but a late contractual change persuaded him, then 19, to change his mind, paving the way for a move to Italy.
The former Real Madrid and Barcelona playmaker has made an encouraging start since a summer move to Swansea, taking them to a comfortable mid-table position after nine games.
He has built on the foundations and philosophy developed by Brendan Rodgers, whose impressive debut Premier League season with Swanseaput him on Liverpool's radar.
Rodgers will face his former employers for the first time on Wednesday in a League Cup fourth-round clash, and Rush, admitting the Reds are stuttering under the new manager, feels the tie could go either way.
"Both teams will want to play football and that's the good thing about it," said Rush, Wales' all-time leading scorer with 28 goals.
"Stoke City tried to bully Liverpool out of it the other week and got a result. But I'm sure Swansea will try to play football.
"On the day, whoever plays the best football will win. Whoever wins this has a chance of going all the way.
"Liverpool have the advantage because they're at home, but they'll have to make the most of that."
 
I'd like to see Wisdom and Suso because they were (justifiably) subbed early on Sunday and might be a bit down.
 
Is McLaughlin ready for a first team call up?

Would like to see Robinson get some playing time as well.

I think he's probably at least as ready as some others who've had game time like Morgan and Yesil, but he won't be getting it this time as I believe he's travelling to Dortmund for the next gen fixture.
 
Its refreshing that we're talking about which kids or young squad players that should get a chance, instead of the usual Jovanovic, Degen and Voronin crap.

Good times.
 
Its refreshing that we're talking about which kids or young squad players that should get a chance, instead of the usual Jovanovic, Degen and Voronin crap.

Good times.

*clears throat* Downing and Cole
 
Thats a very low percentage of the team though, and God knows if Cole will even be involved.

These games were a certainty for shite old squaddis to get a game. Now the average age is around 23 years, which is great!
 
Joe Cole set for starting role as Brendan Rodgers prepares to face former club

• Joe Cole in line for first Liverpool start in three months
• 'I had two incredible years at Swansea,' says Rodgers
brenadan-rodgers-008.jpg

Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers had two happy seasons at Swansea but sees the Reds as a 'real destination' for him. Photograph: Matt West/BPI/Corbis
Joe Cole is expected to make his first proper start of the season forLiverpool in the Capital One Cup game against Swansea, with Brendan Rodgers also likely to give Samed Yesil his chance to lead the attack with Luis Suárez and Steven Gerrard allowed a rest.
Cole has only started for Liverpool once this season, in a Europa League game at the start of August, but his manager was quick to quash speculation that his lack of games might lead him to regret not returning to France, where he had a successful season long loan with Lille in 2011-12.
"You don't walk away from Liverpool," Rodgers said. "Maybe nine out of 10 clubs you could walk away from, if you had the prospect of Champions League football somewhere else, but you are not going to do that here. Liverpool is one of the biggest clubs in the world."
Cole returned to Merseyside when Rodgers indicated he would like to have him in his squad, only to last 23 minutes against FC Gomel, his first Liverpool start for over a year, before a hamstring injury. "It's been difficult for him because he worked hard in the pre-season and then got injured, and other players have come in and done well," Rodgers said. "I'm not going to throw them on to the garbage because a more senior player is available again. This is an opportunity for Joe to come in and prove himself … he's working very hard and he's very keen to be a success at Liverpool, no complaints there. Joe isn't the type of player who would want to be picked on what he has done before, he knows it the form of players at present that's important. He wants to show he has a future here, and just needs games to show what he can do."
Rodgers, left, was making a similarly difficult decision in the summer, weighing up the chance to manage Liverpool against the success and the friends he had won with Swansea. "Joining Liverpool should have been a no-brainer, but I had had my fingers burnt before," he said.
"I left Watford, a club where I was really happy and the team was progressing really well, and I went to Reading and didn't have the best experience. I knew I had to go to the right club, and Swansea turned out to be a perfect fit. There are probably a lot of clubs in this country that I couldn't go and work for, because of the way I work. It's not the norm.
"I had two incredible years at Swansea, the players were brilliant, very receptive to my ideas, and we had success. I built up a close relationship with the supporters and my family was happy and settled. I knew I was in a good place and I wasn't in a particular hurry to leave. So Liverpool represented a bit of a dilemma. It was tough to say goodbye to people who had helped me personally, giving me a lot of support when my parents died, for instance, so there was an emotional attachment as well. But the professional challenge was too great in the end. With Liverpool I felt I was walking into a club that could be a real destination for me for many years to come."
Rodgers is hoping the same can be said of Suárez, who might well have felt aggrieved at Everton putting his perceived lack of sportsmanship under the spotlight ahead of the Merseyside derby, but found a response that most people enjoyed. He is clearly not a sulker. Controversy will probably continue to follow the Uruguayan around, but Rodgers cannot see him being hounded out of English football. "I speak with Luis regularly and he loves playing English football," Rodgers said.
"He loves the passion and the excitement, as I think you can see. He's mentally very strong and if people give him stick it's a driver for him, it motivates him. He loves the city, he loves the club and I can't see any chance of him being driven away. He is our only fit striker but he's been tireless. His enthusiasm is outstanding. I think he's a breath of fresh air."​
 
Henderson at RB?

I'd assume Cole will play in the Gerrard position, further forward, with Assaidi & Downing providing width - metaphorically speaking in Stewies case.
 
Henderson at RB?

I'd assume Cole will play in the Gerrard position, further forward, with Assaidi & Downing providing width - metaphorically speaking in Stewies case.

I'm reminded of McAteer who arrived as a central midfielder and ended up playing right back.
 
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