The Round Ball Game
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For a glorious twenty minutes Arsenal demonstrated what professional football should be all about.
We expect professionals in any sphere of work to be 'extraordinary' rather than 'ordinary'
Sadly that is not always the case in today's world of boring, over-rated and over-salaried mediocrity.
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Thanks Rob for the comprehensive service. Good to see ICT recovering from their poor start to the season with a derby win. Hereford also seem to be doing well though you can tell you're in a lowly league when you have no idea of the geographical location of most of the opposition (a bit like some of the Scottish clubs I suppose).
Elsewhere I'm enjoying the travails of Mourinho and Chelsea - what an unpleasant manager and dreary team they have become. Arsenal definitely playing the most attractive football, if frustratingly inconsistent. North-east forum teams seem to be struggling this season....
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As the dust of inevitability settles on the diluted drama of departure, if I were to think of one word to describe Liverpool this term, it would be "ordinary". Last season we went from tentative to almost-great to disastrous, whereas 2013-14 will always be remembered for astounding attacking brilliance, 4s and 5s sweeping in every week, scorelines like 6-3 and 6-1 (away!) dizzyingly regular, a Brazilian-Corinthian "if you score 4, we'll score more" exuberance. Rodgers' philosophy uniquely matched by perfectly-suited personnel. Then the final operatic heartbreaks - Chelsea, Gerrard, Crystal Palace...So very, very Liverpool. Chance and Necessity.
A strange three seasons for Rodgers to reflect on, but ultimately it was the poor buying decisions that cost him his job, with Balotelli only the most disastrous. (I do think Lallana has been lumped in with the "failures" unfairly though - given the chance he often did well). Rodgers seemed to think he could switch approaches instantly from fluid pass-and-move to target-man crosses, but it never worked, and even Benteke appeared isolated in a malfunctioning team. Were transfers decided by "committee" at Liverpool? So the rumours go and, as we all should know, a group cannot think.
The game that stands out from Rodgers' tenure? Liverpool 3 Manchester City 2, Easter 2014. An unbearable, rollercoastering thunderstorm of emotion...!
So is it the headline-writers'-dream, devoutly Christian Jurgen Klopp, or the lugubrious, saturnine Ancelotti?
I hope it's Klopp - looking almost like an unhinged Mourinho (not far from the edge himself...), he has the inspiring, maniacal edge that matches a city like this. God Knows this team needs it!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostSo is it the headline-writers'-dream, devoutly Christian Jurgen Klopp, ....
Agree with your comments about Klopp though. The best managers are often individualistic oddballs and he appears to have exactly those credentials over and above the essential track-record of success.
I hope he gets/takes the job too as Liverpool should then be exciting to watch if nothing else.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAs the dust of inevitability settles on the diluted drama of departure, if I were to think of one word to describe Liverpool this term, it would be "ordinary". Last season we went from tentative to almost-great to disastrous, whereas 2013-14 will always be remembered for astounding attacking brilliance, 4s and 5s sweeping in every week, scorelines like 6-3 and 6-1 (away!) dizzyingly regular, a Brazilian-Corinthian "if you score 4, we'll score more" exuberance. Rodgers' philosophy uniquely matched by perfectly-suited personnel. Then the final operatic heartbreaks - Chelsea, Gerrard, Crystal Palace...So very, very Liverpool. Chance and Necessity.
A strange three seasons for Rodgers to reflect on, but ultimately it was the poor buying decisions that cost him his job, with Balotelli only the most disastrous. (I do think Lallana has been lumped in with the "failures" unfairly though - given the chance he often did well). Rodgers seemed to think he could switch approaches instantly from fluid pass-and-move to target-man crosses, but it never worked, and even Benteke appeared isolated in a malfunctioning team. Were transfers decided by "committee" at Liverpool? So the rumours go and, as we all should know, a group cannot think.
The game that stands out from Rodgers' tenure? Liverpool 3 Manchester City 2, Easter 2014. An unbearable, rollercoastering thunderstorm of emotion...!
So is it the headline-writers'-dream, devoutly Christian Jurgen Klopp, or the lugubrious, saturnine Ancelotti?
I hope it's Klopp - looking almost like an unhinged Mourinho (not far from the edge himself...), he has the inspiring, maniacal edge that matches a city like this. God Knows this team needs it!
RE AGUERO'S FIVE:
Does anyone know if a player has scored a double hat trick in the top flight - if so who was it please and when? If it turns out to be Arsenal, I'll look like a clown but what the heck!Last edited by Lat-Literal; 06-10-15, 13:36.
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I'm not sure that Lallana can be said to have not performed.
As for Lambert, well he was a flawed signing. Despite being a good target man, and a decent finisher, the part of his game that might have been best suited to Liverpool , is his passing from a deep lying position, which is really excellent. Clearly they bought him as cover, but the way to have got the best out of him might have been to have him playing as a deep centre forward, feeding Sturridge and Sterling. but this was never the plan, so it can't be said to have failed.
I think your double hat trick man from memory might be Ted Drake?
yes , it was indeed the Southampton born man, one of several Winchester born England Internationals. ( also from memory Terry Paine and Wayne Bridge).
Strange case Liverpool. Until they get a 60k stadium, or a sugar daddy, there is no logical reason for them to be a top 4 team. ( Sorry Jayne). Liverpool may still be something of a global brand, but you pretty much need £30m players to win leagues these days.
History and being a big city team are all well and good, but ask sheffield Wednesday( or united) or Huddersfield( or Leeds or Villa, or Spurs) if they are enough.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI'm not sure that Lallana can be said to have not performed.
As for Lambert, well he was a flawed signing. Despite being a good target man, and a decent finisher, the part of his game that might have been best suited to Liverpool , is his passing from a deep lying position, which is really excellent. Clearly they bought him as cover, but the way to have got the best out of him might have been to have him playing as a deep centre forward, feeding Sturridge and Sterling. but this was never the plan, so it can't be said to have failed.
I think your double hat trick man from memory might be Ted Drake?
yes , it was indeed the Southampton born man, one of several Winchester born England Internationals. ( also from memory Terry Paine and Wayne Bridge).
Strange case Liverpool. Until they get a 60k stadium, or a sugar daddy, there is no logical reason for them to be a top 4 team. ( Sorry Jayne). Liverpool may still be something of a global brand, but you pretty much need £30m players to win leagues these days.
History and being a big city team are all well and good, but ask sheffield Wednesday( or united) or Huddersfield if they are enough.
Mind you, that was the Yorkshire/County Durham Arsenal of course.
(Chapman/Allison)
It all links up in a wacky sort of way.
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sorry, schooolboy error in my post.
i should have said " one of several ex Winchester city England internationals !!" ...which do include Paine and Drake , but not Bridge.
I blame this cold......
( I bet I get in big trouble with JLW.......)I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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