Posts Tagged ‘announcement’

Liverpool announce 7% rise in season ticket prices

• Fans already incensed with owners hit by increase
• Liverpool were third-highest paying club for wages in 2008-09

Liverpool have announced the ticket prices for next season, with an increase of 7% hitting supporters who are already incensed with the club’s American owners. There had been fears the new ticket prices would be higher as the announcement was late but even so an increase is not going to be well-received with the team finishing seventh in the league and missing out on Champions League football.

Supporters will also argue that an increase could have been avoided althogether if the co-owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett, had not loaded the club with debts of £350m. Kop seats will be £680 online (£732 at window), with the Main Stand, Paddock and Centenary Stands £732 online (£785 at window) and the Anfield Road end, £722 (£774 at window), according to the club’s official website.

The long-awaited details came as a new report showed Liverpool are the third highest paying club for player wages in the Premier League, up 18% in 2008/9, according to the Liverpool Echo. The season ticket prices are understood to be based on purchases being made before June 25.

Liverpool are currently looking for a new manager after Rafael Benítez left the club by mutual consent. Roy Hodgson appears to be the front-runner but there have been no confirmation of talks between Liverpool and his club Fulham or the manager himself.

LiverpoolPremier Leagueguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Stoke City 1-1 Liverpool

Rafael Benítez was denied refuge from the storm threatening to engulf him by a 90th-minute equaliser from Robert Huth. Liverpool thought they had won it with a scruffy second-half goal from Soitirios Kyrgiakos, but battling Stoke refused to accept defeat and their spirit had its reward at the death.

Liverpool were quick to point out that they were denied a penalty when Lucas was brought down inside the area by Danny Higginbotham, and that Dirk Kuyt might have won it in added time, when he headed against a post when it seemed easier to score.

Stoke were plucky but prosaic – as one might expect from a team for whom no player has scored more than three league goals all season – and it speaks volumes for Liverpool’s decline that they could not see them off. Last year’s runners-up would have been out of sight by half-time.

The first surprise came early, with the announcement of the Liverpool team. There had to be sympathy for Benítez over the absence of Torres, Gerrard and Benayoun, who between them have contributed more than two-thirds of Liverpool’s goals this season, but there was only head-scratching over the selection of Philipp Degen ahead of Alberto Aquilani in midfield. Degen, who regards himself principally as a defender, has been such a flop since his arrival from Dortmund 18 months ago that he had previously made only one start in the Premier League, at Fulham, where he was sent off.

Among the sizeable scouse contingent present, there was also apprehension – unfounded as it turned out – about the promotion of another poor signing, the hirsute Kyrgiakos, who covered for the injured Daniel Agger in central defence. In the circumstances, it was with some relief that Liverpool saw Rory Delap, of the howitzer throw, depart hors de combat midway through the first half. With him went Stoke’s likeliest route to goal.

The only incident of note in a tediously mundane first half saw Liverpool refused a penalty when Lucas, cutting in from the right, was floored by Higginbotham. It was clearly a foul, but the referee compounded one obvious error with another, booking Lucas for diving.

The theory that it could only improve proved correct in the 57th minute, when Fabio Aurelio’s free-kick from the right was spilled by Sorensen and Kyrgiakos bundled the ball over the line from three yards.

Suddenly the mood changed. From having the home fans taunt him with choruses of “You’re getting sacked in the morning”, Benítez heard his name chanted by the travelling loyalists.

But the vocal backdrop was to change to “You’re not singing any more” when Matthew Etherington’s corner from the right was headed back across goal from the far post by Higginbotham for Huth to equalise from point-blank range.

Stoke CityLiverpoolPremier LeagueJoe Lovejoyguardian.co.uk