Posts Tagged ‘history’

Manchester United’s record 19th title cannot hide need for rebuilding | Louise Taylor

Sir Alex Ferguson knows that, despite knocking Liverpool off their perch, changes are needed to his side

It was April 1990, Liverpool had just beaten Queens Park Rangers to seal a record 18th English League title and everyone at Anfield remained blissfully ignorant of the train hurtling towards them from the near east.

Winning championships was a habit many on Merseyside believed to be unbreakable but little did they know that, 21 years later, the wait for the 19th would still be ongoing.

Instead Manchester United are the English title record breakers after reaching that magic number at Blackburn Rovers on Saturday when, just like Liverpool two decades ago, they seemed cloaked in an aura of invincibility and virtual immortality.

United’s celebrations had barely begun fading at Ewood Park before the euphoric talk turned to not only the prospect of beating Barcelona in the Champions League final but boosting the domestic championship tally to 20 next spring.

Plenty of United fans regard this as a probability rather than a possibility but, as Alan Hansen can remind them, assumptions are dangerous things. “When we lifted our last title at Liverpool the mentality was that it would be ours the next year, too,” says the former Anfield defender. “In 1990 no

Lucas Leiva understands he is finally accepted at Liverpool

The Brazilian midfielder admits his early days on Merseyside were tough but he is blossoming under Kenny Dalglish

After more than three years on Merseyside, Lucas Leiva still struggles with the local accent, but understands it well enough to work out that Liverpool’s supporters are now singing his name without irony. But although his relationship with the fans at Anfield has improved immeasurably, the Brazilian acknowledges that his every move will be scrutinised each time he steps on the pitch. It is a familiar feeling.

“Playing for Liverpool brings a similar kind of pressure to when I represent my country,” Lucas says. “Both sets of fans have a very low tolerance level of defeat and will not hesitate to demand more from the team. Playing for Liverpool is like being watched by Brazilians!”

The 24-year-old midfielder should know, having featured in each of his country’s last five games since being called up by the new coach Mano Menezes, under whom he played at Gremio. Alongside Chelsea’s Ramires, Lucas has formed a solid midfield partnership that, barring a late injury, should start Sunday’s friendly against Scotland at the Emirates.

Nonetheless, Lucas reveals that he had to convince Menezes he would fit into his plans. Since taking over from Dunga after Brazil’s dismal World Cup quarter-final defeat by Holland last summer, Menezes has introduced a more traditional attacking game while Lucas has been deployed in a more defensive role by Liverpool than he was at Gremio. “In Gremio I had carte blanche to go forward and participate more in the attacking plays. But things had to change when I arrived in Liverpool, where I am used much more as a holding midfielder. That transition took time and made settling in even more challenging. It was necessary to prove to Mano that I could still be useful.”

Indeed, Lucas partly attributes his struggles to win over the fans and his early lacklustre performances at Anfield to being asked to change his game by the then manager Rafael Benítez when he arrived in 2007. The Brazilian rarely got a glimpse in the first team and even created problems for the club indirectly – in Brazil’s 3-0 defeat by Argentina in the 2008 Olympic semi-finals he earned a red card in a dangerous tackle that also injured his club team-mate Javier Mascherano.

“Things were not looking good and some supporters were obviously not happy,” he says. “I still think people needed to see the bigger picture. The move to Liverpool represented a change of country, language and there was also the not so small detail that I was only 20 and arriving at a traditional club in one of the most demanding leagues in the world. Also, few people seemed to remember Liverpool had a group of players that had made two of the last three Champions League finals. It would have been impossible to just parachute in. Maybe the supporters thought a Brazilian midfielder would do magic.”

His frustration and anxieties were alleviated by a combination of long conversations with his parents back home and the support of Benítez, who publicly backed him while privately advising Lucas to keep his head down and work harder. Lucas speaks fondly of the role the Spaniard played in rebuilding his confidence and it is no surprise that Benítez’s departure last summer was a huge blow, not least because the Brazilian thought the club would sell him at the first opportunity.

“How could I blame Liverpool [if they had]? At that point I had not had a sequence of games long enough for people to see what I was all about. I had the feeling they were not counting on me for the new era. But at the end the club and I reached common ground. I was happy because nobody would want to leave a club as big as Liverpool without a true chance to show their abilities.”

Not that there was any immediate chance for Lucas to do so. The arrival of Roy Hodgson in Benítez’s stead was followed by a collective dip in form that resulted in Liverpool going out of the Carling Cup and into the bottom three in the Premier League. Reports indicated the players had lost faith in the manager. Lucas, however, fervently denies any mutiny contributed to Hodgson’s entry in the history books as Liverpool’s shortest-serving manager.

“We lost Rafa and until the pre-season there was not a substitute,” he says. “Roy simply brought a philosophy that did not work with the team at that time and this is not the first or last time it will happen. This rumour about us not working hard enough is nonsense. And so was the questioning of Roy’s managerial capabilities. He did a great job at Fulham and now is doing well at West Brom.”

Hodgson’s departure at the start of this year brought the return of an Anfield legend under whom Lucas, and Liverpool, have prospered. The midfielder had met Kenny Dalglish in his ambassadorial role at the club and the manager had also featured heavily in Lucas’s crash course in Liverpudlian culture when his move to Merseyside was finalised. Along with piles of Beatles CDs, Lucas devoured DVD anthologies of Liverpool FC goals. A good bunch were scored by his now-manager.

I could see that Dalglish was unbelievable as a player, but he has also made an impression on me as a manager. The world is full of great players flunking as managers. But Dalglish has rescued our confidence and at the same time he has helped us think a bit better.”

Dalglish and his assistant manager Steve Clarke have masterminded a change which Lucas says was most evident in the team’s first-half display in the 3-1 defeat of Manchester United this month. “During the week of the game, Dalglish talked about the possible United line-ups and made sure we understood how important it would be for us to give them some of their own medicine. He went on and on about suffocating them in midfield. We had a great afternoon doing what he said. His mantra is: make it simple and work together.”

Impressive enough for Lucas to forgive his Scottish manager’s banter in regards to the London friendly. In the last few weeks, Dalglish has constantly told his player that Scotland will finally break their duck against Brazil in their 10th meeting. After a promising start under Menezes, with victories over the US, Iran and Ukraine, Brazil stumbled against Argentina and France. Winning at the Emirates is essential to keep the fans on board.

“It’s a new era and the team is still gelling, for a lot of players who were around in the last World Cup have departed,” says Lucas. “We lost both games 1-0, with Argentina scoring in the 90th minute and against France we played almost 60 minutes with 10 men. Scotland will be desperate to surprise us which makes our responsibility to ensure they do not even greater.”

When Lucas returns to his club, he will have more on his mind than mulling over the aftermath of the game with Dalglish. With his club contract ending this summer, Lucas is hoping to re-open talks over an extension: He wants to stay and has even joked that would like to see his newborn son Pedro Lucas speaking English with a Scouse twang. But he is still waiting for the club’s move.

“I have no reasons to go and I hope the club see things the same. It would be fantastic to play for Liverpool in the Champions League again and I don’t see why we can’t return.

“We have a squad that is united in its will and desire to return this club to where it belongs.”

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Fernando Torres decided to leave Anfield well before transfer

• Chelsea striker tried to arrange departure in summer
• Liverpool were a club in chaos, he believed

Fernando Torres has revealed he resolved to leave Liverpool long before his January transfer to Chelsea because the club were in “chaos”. In a damning assessment, the striker said he could not reject a move to Stamford Bridge because the remaining six months of this season would have felt like three years at Anfield.

Torres hit out at the direction Liverpool have taken, describing them as a club no longer living up to their history and unable to compete with England’s biggest teams. He said he had found greater togetherness in the Chelsea dressing room than at Anfield.

“[Leaving Liverpool] was a decision I had mulled over for a long time, even though it appeared to be taken very hastily,” Torres said in an interview with the Spanish newspaper Marca. “I had made up my mind a long time before. In the summer in which Xabi Alonso left [2009] I started to wonder.

“I had the best three years of my career at Liverpool. I thought I was at the best club around, one that would win things with time. But when Xabi and [Javier] Mascherano left, and before them [Peter] Crouch and [Alvaro] Arbeloa, when reinforcements didn’t arrive, I started to wonder if Liverpool was the club its history suggests or if it was in fact a selling club.

“I knew I was an idol at the club but it was no longer the same. There was also the departure of [the manager Rafael] Benítez and the club was in chaos with the sale. There was so much said, so much talk about projects, but then nothing. It reminded me of Atlético Madrid: great history, lots of ideas but without money you need time. And I didn’t have much of that.”

Torres said that he had first tried to move in the summer but was told that he could not depart with Liverpool in the midst of a battle over ownership. “They told me they would not sell anyone and I turned down an offer from Chelsea in the summer,” he said. “I understood Liverpool’s reasons for not wanting to sell me, even though I knew I was letting an opportunity go by – one that might not come back again. [But] the club was not the same, it wasn’t heading in the direction I thought it should head in and I could see that a change was needed.

“What other teams could I have gone to? I couldn’t go to [Manchester] United out of respect for Liverpool. Or [Real] Madrid, because of my past. I don’t think Barcelona needed anyone. I didn’t like the idea of Italy. Chelsea were the only club left. There was only one option. In fact, I thought there were no options at all until Chelsea appeared out of nowhere [in January]. The idea was in my head before but it was a long way from being a reality.

“And then suddenly one day, 20 days before [the end of the transfer window], the opportunity appeared. I didn’t expect it; it was like a light bulb coming on in a long, dark passageway. I thought that the six months left at Liverpool this season would feel like three years.”

In a veiled criticism of Liverpool’s handling of his move, he said: “I wanted to be honest. If others haven’t been honest, that’s not my problem. Football is not a sport populated by honest people. You can’t tell the truth or be up front with people. It’s a business and no one is friends. I was honest. I know [the transfer] wasn’t [handled in] the best way but I was honest. If anyone used the press, it wasn’t me. I was straight and I have a clear conscience.”

He said he had no regrets at joining Chelsea. “We have an owner who will invest when it is necessary and I have been surprised by the atmosphere in the dressing room, considering there are so many stars. There is more of personal relationship and jokes between players than there was at Liverpool. There, it was much more serious. Here, you don’t have to prove you are a professional. That’s just taken as read.”

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