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A lack of depth at the full-back position apparently forced Roy Hodgson’s hand today, as the manager agreed to a £2.5m with Aston Villa for full-back Luke Young. Whilst Young isn’t the most...

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Liverpool send West Brom back to the Championship with 2-0 win

Posted by AnfieldRed-Admin | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 17-05-2009

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Goals from Steven Gerrard and Dirk Kuyt were enough to give Liverpool a 2-0 win over West Brom which sent them down to the Championship.

Gerrard capitalised on a defensive error to be 1 on 1 with Dean Kiely before chipping the ball over him to make it 1-0. Kuyt made it 2-0 in the second half with a brilliant individual goal, picking the ball up around 35 yards out before beating a defender and drilling a low shot into the net infront of the away fans.

Javier Mascherano went off injured, replaced by Alonso; Fernando Torres had a quiet game as did Benayoun. Ngog and Babel got late run outs, Babel missing an absolute sitter to make it 3-0.

The main talking point will be the mini bust up between Carragher and Arbeloa, who had words with each other after Carra had a go at Arbeloa for not getting tight enough to the West Brom attack:

Liverpool 3-0 West Ham

Posted by russell | Posted in Fixtures, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 10-05-2009

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Was it really that easy? Apparently so, as Liverpool took the lead 76 seconds into the match via a fantastic throughball from Fernando Torres that sprang Steven Gerrard loose for an opener that pretty much summed up the entire match.

At points during the match I could’ve sworn I was watching a mirror image of last weekend’s 3-0 win over Newcastle. Liverpool never had to get out of third gear for the entire match but looked by far the better side for almost the entire day. Whilst United won earlier today to move three points clear at the top, you can not help but smile at how easily we’re dispatching teams at the moment. I can recall how difficult we made it the last time Liverpool played West Ham at Anfield. Granted, the opening goal really made the difference, but never once yesterday did I have that feeling of nervousness that seemed to be so common in matches against lesser opponents.

To West Ham’s credit, they looked the better side late in the match. They created a couple of great chances but couldn’t capitalise. The missed clearance by Carragher that led to Di Michele going one-on-one with Reina was probably one of the most comical moments I’ve seen in a match this season. After Di Michele latched on to the ball with only Reina in his sights, the Italian proceeded to round Reina awkwardly, tripping over his own two feet before diving and earning himself a yellow card for his antics. That was pretty much the story of West Ham’s day.

After the opening goal, Liverpool continued to press for the opening 45 minutes. A wonderful lofted ball for Torres in the box gave the Spaniard a fantastic chance to make it 2-0; however, Boa Morte (who was furious not to have won a foul a couple minutes earlier) tugged on Torres’ shirt and gave Gerrard the chance to add another goal to his tally. His penalty was saved brilliantly by Robert Green, but like most of the day, the ball bounced back into the line of fire for Gerrard who slotted it home with ease.

Babel’s goal in the 84th sealed the match for good after a couple of tense moments late in the second half. Other than that it really was business as usual for Liverpool, as they surely looked primed to finish the season without a loss (or draw) to their name. That’s all we can really hope for…well that and a Wigan victory on Wednesday night!

Side notes:
- I was impressed for the most part with Benayoun’s pace during the match. He created a couple of great opportunities for his team-mates and almost got on the scoresheet himself. I know Xabi’s absence made the decision to start Yossi an easy one, but over the last couple of weeks I’ve grown more and more impressed every time he’s featured in a match. There has been talk of him getting a new contract in the summer; I for one would welcome that new contract if he can maintain his current form.

- I was a bit shocked to not see Agger feature in the match. After just signing a new contract recently and being inserted in the starting XI, I figured Rafa would give him another shot. But I guess when you have three fantastic centre-backs it really doesn’t matter who’s featuring in the match.

- Always good to see Insua on the pitch. I was a bit surprised to see Rafa pull Aurelio after an hour; but given the Brazilian’s injury issues, I guess nobody should be shocked with the substitution.

- Wonderful to see Babel got on the scoresheet after coming on for Torres late. But I still wonder where he fits on this side. Is he cover for Torres? Is he better out on the left? My mates and I had this discussion during the match and I can honestly say that none of us could come into agreement on where he stands. There’s been talk about Rafa moving him this summer, but I for one would like to have him stick around. He’s a fantastic talents that’s still finding his way at a big club.

Remembering the 1-0 Upton Park nightmare

Posted by russell | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 08-05-2009

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I’ve watched this video over and over again on YouTube for the past couple of minutes and every time I think I’ve had enough, I press play one more time.

Call me a masochistic, but for some reason I rather enjoy seeing how far we’ve come since that fateful match in January 2008. Let’s take a look at where we stood at that point in the league:

Liverpool checklist:
- Seventh place in the league
- Hadn’t picked up three points since Boxing Day.
- 4 points from four matches against Manchester City, Wigan, Middlesbrough and Aston Villa.
- Talks were fast and furious between Rafa Benitez and ownership over his future at the club (or lack thereof).
- Hicks had asked for Jurgen Klinsmann’s advice on Rafa’s club; he was also supposed to supplant Rafa if things went south.

Looking at that list makes me recall just how numb I was at that point. When Mark Noble was gifted a 93rd minute penalty I recall staring at the tele in an emotionless state. I was spent at that point. All of the news surrounding Rafa and the quality of our play on the pitch had taken me to a point where I almost didn’t care any longer.

Rafa had been banging on about how the team were still was within shouting distance of Manchester United, but I think we knew better. When Noble took the spot and slammed home the penalty to send Upton Park into raptures I knew we needed something, anything really, to get going again. We were 17 points adrift of United at that point. 17 points!

Fast forward to this season and we find Liverpool sitting three points behind Manchester United with a legitimate chance at claiming the Premier League title on the final day of the season (assuming United slip). That’s a far cry from where we were when we went to Upton Park last season.

If Rafa needed any more motivation to get the lads ready for tomorrow’s match, I’d suggest he show them this video, tell them to remember where they were at that point last season and look at how far they’ve come so far this year. It’s amazing what a little bit of unity and perseverance can do.

Here’s hoping we go out there on Saturday with the goal of erasing last season’s Upton Park nightmare.

Liverpool beat Hull 3-1 : Kuyt scores twice

Posted by AnfieldRed-Admin | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 25-04-2009

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Liverpool beat Hull 3-1, with Dirk Kuyt and Xabi Alonso getting the goals.

Alonso scored on the stroke of half time with a follow up from a free kick, smashing the ball through a crowded penalty area after a boring first half. Dirk made it 2-0 when he headed in Skrtel’s shot, before Geovanni pulled one back for Hull.

Kuyt made it 3 when he belted home a rebound after Arbeloa saw his shot pushed away by Myhill in the Hull goal. Caleb Folan was sent off for kicking Martin Skrtel.

Liverpool v Arsenal – All the goals!

Posted by Ahmed Bilal | Posted in Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 21-04-2009

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All 8 goals from the frantic game last night:

1st Goal for Arsenal – Arshavin 36′

1st Goal for Liverpool – Torres 49′

2nd Goal for Liverpool – Benayoun 56′

2nd Goal for Arsenal – Arshavin 67′

3rd Goal for Arsenal – Arshavin 70′

3rd Goal for Liverpool – Torres 73′

4th Goal for Arsenal – Arshavin 90′

4th Goal for Liverpool – Benayoun 90+3′

Enjoy!

League in the balance as Liverpool lose a game of Russian Roulette

Posted by Neil Jones | Posted in AnfieldRed, Discussion, Fixtures, General News, Liverpool FC, Players, Results, The Kop | Posted on 21-04-2009

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Liverpool-Arsenal affairs have always had a little special tinge to them, a little bit of magic. The Cup Finals of 1950, 1971 & 2001 provided their own drama, late goals, remarkable comebacks and controversial incidents, the Champions League clashes last season were an advert for pragmatism & solidity versus fluidity & idealism, whilst recent league fixtures between the sides have invariably brought with them goals and drama. Especially at Anfield.

But nothing quite like this. This evening, in front of a crowd which seemed to dictate the pattern of the game in a manner which I must confess I have never seen, the two sides served up an absolute classic. Even the 1989 title decider never had this unpredictability, this sheer volume of drama. Even the atmosphere- understandable of course given that when George Graham’s side rolled into Anfield needing a two goal win, the home fans were still in a state of shock of the events of a month previous.

Tonight however, the fans were determined to have some kind of say. And without romanticising too much, I think they did. When the crowd feared the worst, the Liverpool players lifted the tempo. When the crowd got complacent, Arsenal produced the sucker punch, and when the Kop collapsed in a sort of post-coitus fit of despair at Andrey Arshavin’s fourth (yes, fourth) strike of the evening, the players responded with one last leveller to ensure that Liverpool’s title bid is in intensive care, rather than the funeral parlour.

Liverpool needed three points from this fixture, make no mistake about it. Playing 24 hours before Manchester United & Chelsea, this was the chance to heap a little bit more pressure on their rivals ahead of what should turn out to be (reasonably) comfortable wins tomorrow- Everton’s recent record against Chelsea means I am comfortable saying this without fear of being pelted with Toffees.

Arsenal have come full circle this season, the autumn pessimism which brought boos for Ebouè, Bendtner & even Wenger had subsided, and spring had brought new optimism about an ever-maturing crop of youngsters playing typically Arsenal football. Yet they arrived at Anfield off the back of a chastening defeat to Chelsea in the FA Cup semi final at the weekend, and without their two premier strikers in Emmanuel Adebayor & Robin Van Persie, as well as three of their first choice back five- Manuel Almunia, William Gallas & Gael Clichy. Subsequently Rafa Benitez could rightly have expected his side to continue their Premiership winning streak here.

As it happens, they couldn’t. The 4-4 draw- how many times has a side drawn two successive games 4-4 in recent times?- leaves Benitez’s side top of the Premier League table on goal difference, but with Manchester United armed with two games in hand, it is undeniably two dropped points that could ultimately spell the end of Liverpool’s first sustained title assault in twelve years. And like Jose Mourinho’s departure from Chelsea, and most of James Bond’s headaches, there was a Russian to blame.

Arshavin has a lot of fans in English football. Like myself, plenty of supporters found themselves spellbound by the Russian’s poise, balance, dribbling and creativity both for Zenit St. Petersburg in their successful UEFA Cup campaign last season, and for his country in Euro 2008. His January arrival at Arsenal was hailed as a good move for English football, how nice to have such a player in our league. Well now he can add supporters of Manchester United & Chelsea to his adoring public.

Four times tonight the 27 year-old was afforded a shot at Pepe Reina’s goal. Four times tonight he hit the target. Four times he found the net. The Kop had chuckled midway through the first half as a rare technical glitch saw him spoon an attempted cross embarrassingly out of play, but they weren’t laughing by the time half time had arrived, Arshavin crashing in the opening goal via the underside of the bar after Samir Nasri & Cesc Fabregas had taken advantage of some sloppy play in his own box by Javier Mascherano. Arshavin held his finger to his lips, and he had three more bullets up his sleeve with which to silence Anfield.

Liverpool thought they had gripped the contest tightly with a post-interval surge which simply blew away Arsene Wenger’s men. For twenty minutes after the break, it was the Liverpool supporters yelling “hoof” as Arsenal’s panic-stricken defenders launched the ball aimlessly forwards in a vain effort to stem the Red tide that looked like sweeping the ball into the net with every foray forwards. Twice, the hoofs were not sufficiently hoofed, and led to goals. Dirk Kuyt provided both, landing crosses on the head of first Fernando Torres, and then Yossi Benayoun, both of whom beat Lukasz Fabianski with varying levels of panache. With Mikael Silvestre, Kolo Toure & Kieran Gibbs looking like rabbits in the headlights every time the ball threatened to enter their penalty area, it seemed that more goals would follow.

They did, but both of them fell to Arshavin. Both owed much to errors from Liverpool’s much-improved full backs. First Alvaro Arbeloa committed the cardinal sin of waiting for a ball to reach him, allowing Arshavin to nip in like a Tesco queue-jumper and arrow a sublime right foot strike past Reina from 25 yards, then Aurelio decided the best way to deal with Nasri’s left wing centre was to cushion the ball neatly down towards the penalty spot, where the Russian lay in wait to complete his hat-trick with a skimming right foot strike. This time he did not need to put his fingers to his lips.

Still Liverpool came back, within minutes Albert Riera’s cross had found Torres, and the Spaniard had shifted the ball past Silvestre and smacked it low past Fabianski to re-ignite the Kop’s fire, but after Gibbs had denied the Spaniard his own hat-trick, Benitez’s side fell into Wenger’s trap by chasing the winner late on. Wenger had sent on Theo Walcott by this point, and when Aurelio’s corner was cleared to him thirty yards from his own goal, memories flashed back to THAT run in the Champions League last season.

Away he went, Xabi Alonso backed off, terrified of the pace, trying to buy time. But Walcott had an ally, arriving at breakneck speed on his left. The pass was precise, the first touch was assured, and the finish was ruthless. Julio Baptista scored four times for Arsenal at Anfield a little over two years ago, now Arshavin had written his own name into the history books. The final, decisive blow.

Only it wasn’t. Five minutes of stoppage time was indicated by the fourth official, and within three of them Liverpool had pulled yet another leveller out of the fire- Mascherano heading Alonso’s cross back into the six yard box, and Benayoun seizing on the loose ball to steer in his second. It says a lot about the craziness of the evening that the first thing I heard in the aftermath were the words “get the ball, we’ll win this”

We didn’t of course, even this Liverpool side found securing a fifth goal in two stoppage time minutes beyond their capabilities, but for the second week running Liverpool fans can take not only great pleasure in watching their side involved in a truly incredible game of football, but also enormous pride and heart at the indomitable spirit shown by Benitez’s much-derided troops. No doubt the critics will point to the fact that eight goals have been shipped in seven days by a usually watertight defensive unit, and the realists will surmise that a potential six point gap to Manchester United is unlikely to be overcome by the season’s end, but at this point it seems fitting to simply revel in the drama and beauty of yet another phenomenal spectacle involving Liverpool.

We’ve been here before, haven’t we? Ok so maybe the denouement was not quite so final, nor as last-kick-of-the-last-game-of-the-season dramatic, but for 1989, now read 2009, and for Michael Thomas, now read Andrey Arshavin.

Liverpool out of Europe after goalfest at Stamford Bridge

Posted by AnfieldRed-Admin | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 14-04-2009

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Liverpool are out of the Champion’s League after a 4-4 thriller with Chelsea, going out 7-5 on aggregate.

Liverpool were 2-0 up at half time, but that was out the window after 55 minutes; Pepe Reina gifted Chelsea a goal by pushing a low cross into his own net, before Alex unleashed an unstoppable free kick.

Chelsea went 3-2 up through Frank Lampard, who slid home a Drogba cross, before Lucas saw his shot deflected in by Essien to make it 3-3. Dirk Kuyt scored a header to give Liverpool the lead on the night but still needing another goal, before Frank Lampard curled in a cross from Anelka.

Aurelio and Alonso had given Liverpool the 2-0 lead at half time; but it wasn’t to be as Chelsea went through.

No Gerrard? No sweat.

Posted by Neil Jones | Posted in AnfieldRed, Fixtures, Liverpool FC, Players, Results, The Kop | Posted on 12-04-2009

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Liverpool without Steven Gerrard. A bit like a roast dinner without gravy, only more noticeably weak. Take the skipper out of Rafa Benitez’s plans and watch them unravel. The press has been full of it. Michael Essien apparently is the sole reason Chelsea were able to stifle Liverpool at Anfield in midweek, his diligent midfield work squeezed the life out of the Reds’ number eight and set Guus Hiddink’s side on the way to a resounding Champions League quarter final win. The message was clear. Stop Gerrard, stop Liverpool.

How refreshing then to see Benitez’s side respond to their midweek night-class at the hands of Hiddink & Chelsea with a display that not only brushed aside Blackburn, but also this silly notion that Gerrard is indispensable to Liverpool, even in this sort of run-of-the-mill home fixture.

Ok fair play. Blackburn are not Chelsea. Paul Robinson is not Petr Cech. David Dunn is not Frank Lampard (just don’t tell him that). Tugay is not Michael Essien (more like Michael Douglas these days), and Christopher Samba is certainly not Didier Drogba. But just because Sam Allardyce selected a side with a centre back at left back, a left back in centre midfield, a centre midfielder at right back and a Christopher Samba in attack, does not mean that plaudits should deflect away from Liverpool. Here they were, days after the kind of defeat that threatened to derail Manchester United’s Greatest Ever Squad™ a month ago, and they responded in style.

Five minutes was all it took to extinguish the early nerves. Fernando Torres, just as on Wednesday, breaking the Anfield Road net with a superb finish off his right foot. But unlike Wednesday, there was to be no inexplicable implosion from Liverpool’s reshuffled defence. Emiliano Insua & Daniel Agger had replaced Fabio Aurelio & Martin Skrtel, but there were no signs of rustiness from either. Without Gerrard, Dirk Kuyt & Yossi Benayoun took turns apiece to play the withdrawn striker role behind Torres, whilst behind them Xabi Alonso assumed the mental of driving force with a display of genuine world class alongside the Energizer bunny that is Javier Mascherano.

Against Chelsea on Wednesday, Alonso found himself struggling against the Blue tide that descended on the midfield from about the quarter of an hour mark. With only the ineffective Lucas beside him, Alonso found himself chasing rather than scheming, tackling rather than creating. Here, with his enforcer next to him, he tucked the game up neatly in his back pocket from the word go. Sam Allardyce probably helped him, Tugay & Dunn look like a midfield pairing for which the term “have seen better days” was invented for, whilst the South African Aaron Mokoena looked like he was playing with blinkers on before his merciful half-time withdrawal.

It all meant that the lone “striker” Samba was left to forage for possession against Carragher, Agger and co with minimal success. He may well be 6ft 5in, but when you have no-one to head the ball to, and Alonso and/or Mascherano snapping at your heels as soon as you even think about chesting the ball down, you are not going to have much joy. One shot on target was all Blackburn’s attack mustered.

Liverpool by contrast were pinging the ball round at will. Alonso played with 360º vision and utilised beautifully the space afforded to Insua & Albert Riera down the left, Riera had one of his better games attacking the vulnerable Keith Andrews time and time again, whilst Benayoun & Kuyt caused problems either down the right flank or drifting infield. Both could have had their names on the scoresheet in one move, Kuyt heading at Robinson from point blank range before Benayoun blazed the rebound off target. It took Torres to add the second, a fine header from Alonso’s whipped free kick, and Liverpool- like their fans- had the deckchairs and Bermuda shorts out before half time, allowing Agger & David Ngog added the icing in the second half as Blackburn downed tools. It was a walk in the park, just what the doctor ordered.

Benitez takes plenty of criticism for his rotation policy. His argument has always been that it is necessary to take risks early in the season to avoid burn-out later on. In previous seasons this theory has proven hard to justify seeing as though Liverpool have usually been out of contention for league honours by January/February and therefore able to rest and rotate their squad as and when needed, but with this season’s title challenge threatening to linger on into May, the Spaniard’s analysis seems bang on. Liverpool’s players look hungry, they look focused, they look super-fit. One incident in the second half summed this up. Mascherano, just ten days after an oxygen-sapping defeat with Argentina in the Bolivian mountains, charged forty yards to throw himself into a (admittedly needless) challenge on Andre Ooijer. He missed, but was up in a flash and launching himself back into nick the ball away for Riera. The Kop loved it, they always do. It was an indication that this side is not prepared to fold and blame fixture congestion or lack of rest.

In the end Gerrard wasn’t even required to do much more than excite the Main Stand with a gratuitous jog down the touchline, with Lucas sent on for man-of-the-match Alonso late on. It may only have been a patched up Blackburn- they will stay up but god they were awful yesterday- but Liverpool sent out two clear messages yesterday. One is that this is a side that is strong enough physically and mentally to withstand setbacks and pressure, the other is that Steven Gerrard is not Liverpool FC, he is just the best bit….

Watch Yossi score a very late winner against Fulham!

Posted by AnfieldRed-Admin | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Players, Results | Posted on 04-04-2009

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Yossi Benayoun came off the bench to score the winning goal in the game against Fulham, scoring in the 92nd minute to give Liverpool all 3 points. Want to see the goal? Look no further…

Liverpool hit the woodwork 4 times in the first half, and it looked like it was going to be one of those days where nothing goes in, but Yossi popped up and scored a beast in injury time to put Liverpool top of the table. Click here to see the winning goal!

Want to see Liverpool’s goals against Man Utd? Links provided here!

Posted by AnfieldRed-Admin | Posted in Discussion, Liverpool FC, Results | Posted on 14-03-2009

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After Liverpool destroyed Man Utd 4-1 at Old Trafford, everyone wants to see the goals again and again, so here are some links to the goals!

Goals from Torres, Gerrard, Aurelio and Dossena battered Utd, enjoy the goals here:

Torres makes it 1-1

Gerrard’s pen gives Liverpool the lead

Aurelio’s amazing free kick makes it 3-1

Dossena adds a fourth with a quality lob