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Torres Interview - Guillem Balague

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    Torres Interview - Guillem Balague

    From The Times
    February 19, 2008
    Fernando Torres: Rotation is a fact of Mersey life
    Liverpool striker Fernando Torres (John Cassidy/The Times)
    Guillem Balague

    On the way to the interview room, Fernando Torres starts chatting away with one of the members of the Liverpool staff, one whose accent reveals his Merseyside roots and is difficult to understand for new students of the English language. The way Torres answers suggests a complete appreciation of everything that has been said to him. He even laughs at a half-baked joke.

    Before the interview, I say to him: “Say 'work.'” “Werk,” he replies. Didier Drogba and Thierry Henry struggled for a year to come to terms with the Premier League and everything that surrounds it, but Torres, with a newly acquired Scouse accent, has needed only a few months.

    “The effort from my part has been minimal,” he said. “The big effort has come from people at the club. They welcomed me with open arms, helped make everything much easier so I only have to think about playing football. I didn't have to worry much about getting a house, a car, a language teacher, those little but important details. My team-mates, the ones I knew already and the new ones, made me feel as I have been here all my life. I have enjoyed myself so much since I arrived, nothing seems to be an effort.”

    A tally of 18 goals in 29 appearances in all competitions is an excellent return for the £26.5million that the club paid Atlético Madrid for him. Not everyone, including key members of staff, expected such an immediate impact. “I think, though, he would score a similar amount of goals if he was at Barcelona or Real Madrid,” one of his best friends, who remembers that Torres's most impressive matches used to be against Barcelona, said. “A team [Barcelona] that played happy football, with lots of spaces. In England, almost everybody plays like that.”

    Torres appreciates the role of Steven Gerrard in his success. “The striker feeds from players who decide to make passes that most of us do not try,” he said. “Gerrard is one of those guys. He has an eye to see the line of pass and my run at the same time. And, certainly, I benefit from the direct football played here. There is not so much passing, the excessive control you find in Spain.

    “You don't need 30 touches to get to the box. Here, after four or five, you put your cross in or your shot. There are more chances of a one-to-one or two-against-two and often what decides a match is not so much the work a team has put in but the quality of their players. Against the top teams, you must have order and put lots of work into it, but with others below us in the table the defining factor is the quality of players.”

    This is a new Fernando Torres to the one who left La Liga, one who has learnt from previous mistakes. “Here, the boss [Rafael Benítez] asks me for one thing only and I have to do that,” he said. “Sometimes at Atlético, I wanted to do too much. Each one of us has his role on the pitch and no more. I used to play too far from the box and that is not where my game can harm the opposition.”

    Torres's team-mates speak highly of him because they understand that not everybody is made to succeed in the hardest of leagues. “He is not afraid of the physical contact,” Xabi Alonso, his Spanish compatriot and Liverpool midfield player, said. “Rival defenders know he is not scared of them.”

    Gerrard concurs. “In many matches, he has been kicked around, but he keeps going back for more,” he said. A member of staff chipped in: “He is probably the best player around with space in front of him.” Benítez, the Liverpool manager, nods his assent. “He has the strength and the ability to succeed here,” he said.

    Torres has missed a month and a half with injuries and sat out the 2-1 defeat by Barnsley in the FA Cup fifth-round tie at Anfield on Saturday. Yet his contribution is valued as much as that of Gerrard, Lucas Leiva and José Manuel Reina, probably the only players to equal or improve their form of the previous season.

    But are Torres's goals enough to turn around the fortunes of Liverpool after two decades without a league title? “The real Liverpool is the one that impressed earlier on,” he said. “We have to keep that level for longer. Those who do that fight for the league title and the ones who can't have to fight for the knockout competitions.

    “We are a very uncomfortable team to play against, but we have dropped too many points. We didn't win a league match in January. We could find a thousand excuses, but that would be an easy exercise. The players could have done it better.

    “There are matches where we had the impression that we have dropped points and others where we thought we had got something out of it by a pure miracle. We were lucky against Derby, but not so much against Wigan, for instance. Generally, we have dropped points where the top three haven't.”

    But why were those points dropped? Is it a psychological blockage? Quality of the squad? Rotation? “Sometimes we felt superior and did not kill the games,” Torres said. “But if you look at the stats, this season is better than last season. The problem is that people asked us to win the Premier League this year. There is a progression, I don't think it's a bad season. We started wanting to win everything, but, as it progresses, you are forced to change your targets.”

    Torres is surprised by the negativity linked to rotation. “When things don't go the way one wishes, people look for things to blame,” he said. “We have a manager with a philosophy that people knew before he came and one that has succeeded. It is very opportunistic to blame rotation for everything that goes wrong. It is not a problem for us. Liverpool have won a Champions League, FA Cup and so on with rotation. It is normal to rest. We players never want to, but if the manager says so, you have to. If everybody accepts that is the way forward, the atmosphere doesn't suffer.”

    The impatience that has surrounded the club lately means that, suddenly, the Champions League and even the FA Cup are viewed as lesser in significance to that elusive league title. Torres does not share that sentiment. The Champions League first knockout round meeting with Inter Milan, the first leg of which is at Anfield tonight, has whetted his appetite.

    “Even in training, everybody seems very switched on,” he said. “The Inter match is going to be very hard, but very watchable. I don't think there will be many goals and it will all be decided in the return leg. The key is how effective the strikers are. They used to say that Zlatan Ibrahimovic was not a regular goalscorer. This season, he is silencing his critics. He is one of the most in-form players in Europe.”

    Torres finishes the conversation to go back to the rest of his day, a routine that consists of enjoying the company of his girlfriend and his dogs, a visit to Reina to chat or to watch some games. And maybe some time spent on the PlayStation.

    Nothing describes better what Torres is like.

    The rise of El Nino

    The forward nicknamed El Niño — The Kid — was born in 1984 in a suburb of Madrid. A supporter of Atlético, he captained the side at the age of 19.

    Atlético Madrid

    Second division (2000-02): 40 appearances; 7 goals

    La Liga (2002-07): 174 apps; 75 goals

    Spanish Cup 24 apps; 7 goals

    European games (all Intertoto Cup): 5 apps; 2 goals

    Spain 46 apps; 15 goals

    Liverpool

    Premier League

    Home 10 (plus 2 sub) appearances; 10 goals

    Away 9 (1) apps; 2 goals

    Champions League (incl qualifying round)

    Home 2 apps; 2 goals

    Away 2 (1) apps; 1 goal

    Domestic cups

    Home 1 app; 0 goal

    Away 1 app; 3 goals

    First-half goals 5

    Second-half goals 13

    Longest run without a goal Three games
    Javier Mascherano: 'I want to be settled and kill myself on the pitch so the team wins lots of games'

    #2
    Good lad.
    **********
    LFChistory App for Andorid = http://www.lfchistory.danwms.co.uk | Facebook = http://goo.gl/fjmp0 | Twitter = http://goo.gl/ehFUf

    **********

    Comment


      #3
      The only highlight of the season has been this man. I think he can also become alot better aswel he has immense talent!
      I'm normally not a praying man, but if you're up there, please save me Superman.

      Comment


        #4
        man, he has a scouse accent! what has Molby been giving him lessons!!


        "Who's your Daddy now?"

        LFC Champions one season someday
        Jurgen Klopp is just boss
        Semi retired poster
        twitter: @parmsahota
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          #5
          Fernando Torres loving life at Anfield

          Feb 19 2008

          EXCLUSIVE by Tony Barrett, Liverpool Echo


          HAVING just shivered his way through the coldest spell he has endured since arriving on Merseyside seven months ago, anyone would be forgiven for thinking that Fernando Torres might just be hankering after the warmth of Madrid.

          But the man himself dismisses such notions with the kind of contemptuous ease with which he flies past Premiership defenders.

          "I came here for the football, not the beach," he insists. And make no mistake about it, Torres loves the football.

          He loves the club which brought him to this country last July and he loves the city which he is proud to call his adopted home town.

          Even the storm of controversy which has engulfed Liverpool for virtually the entirity of his first season at Anfield has failed to put him off. In fact, if anything, it has made his bond with the fans stronger.



          So much so, that when he stands in the tunnel waiting to go onto the pitch before tonight's Champions League showdown with Inter Milan and hears the Kop singing ‘You'll Never Walk Alone’, Torres will be overcome by the kind of emotion he finds impossible to explain.

          "How can you describe it?" he asks, adamant that even if he was speaking in his native tongue he would be unable to find the words to do it justice.

          But in his first interview he has given in English, Torres endeavours to explain his feelings.

          "When I was at Atletico Madrid I went with the Spanish national team and I asked Xabi (Alonso) and Pepe (Reina) what it was like to play at Anfield when the crowd sing You'll Never Walk Alone.

          "They would tell me how special it is but I think you have to be there, in the stadium, to feel the sensation. It is a very big sensation. To play at Anfield is always special. I just feel very comfortable whenever I play there.

          "I have scored in nearly all the games I have played there and I think that part of that is because of the fans – they help make every game I play there special.

          "It is a wonderful stadium and it is even better when we play in the Champions League and in other big games. I feel the love of the fans and it is very good for me.

          "I came in as a new player who cost a lot of money and that comes with a lot of responsibility but the fans gave me a fantastic welcome and that really helped me.

          "I think the fans like the way I play and enjoy watching me but I think I am enjoying it even more than them because they make it so special for me."


          Having been knocked out of the FA Cup by Barnsley at the weekend, Liverpool currently have the unwanted tag as being the nation's crisis team.

          The Champions League represents their one remaining path to glory this season and with Italian champions and current Serie A leaders Inter standing in their way everyone at the club is acutely aware of just how tough just getting through to the last eight will be.

          But Torres has seen enough of Liverpool – both watching them on TV at home in Spain and as a player – to know that they are often at their best when they find themselves with their backs against the wall.

          "Big teams win the important games and we are a big team," he said. "After losing to Marseille at home we knew we had to beat Porto at home and then win in Marseille and in both games we played really, really well.

          "We scored four goals against Porto and four against Marseille. This is what Liverpool can do and we need to do it again in a big game against Inter Milan.

          "We were third in our group, we needed to win our games and we did.



          "I also saw Liverpool beat Barcelona in the Champions League last season. That was also a big game, Liverpool played very, very well and got a great result. To win 2-1 away at Barcelona is a big result.

          "They were the best team in the world when it comes to ability because they have so many great players but Liverpool played like a team and if you play like a team you can win every game against every team. If we play like a team tonight then we can win, for sure.

          "I think this tie is a bit different though because the first game is at Anfield in front of our own fans.

          "But it is important to get a similar result because of our position in the league and because we are out of both cups."

          Torres looks at the wealth of talent at the disposal of Inter boss Roberto Mancini and reams off player's name after player's name, making the point that Liverpool cannot afford to make any special plans for any single individual, they have to be wary of every last one of them.

          "Ibrahimovic, Cruz, Crespo, Zanetti, Vieira, Suazo – they are a big team and they have two or three players for every position. It's brilliant.

          "In the midfield they have Cambiasso, Stankovic, Figo and Maniche. They have a lot of good players and I do not know which one is the best. Maybe Ibrahimovic, he is brilliant.

          "But we have good players as well though and the Liverpool mentality is to play like a team so we need to play like a team tonight and if we do that then I am sure we will be in the next round.

          "We need to have a lot of respect for Inter Milan but I am sure we can beat them."

          No matter what the result against Inter, one thing Torres is unlikely to lose is his love for Liverpool, the club or the city, and he says he’s never been happier.

          "The city is great," he adds. "The people in the street, everyone you come across is very friendly. I can go for a coffee here and be left alone, that could not happen in Madrid.

          "And the weather is not a problem for me. In the winter we have cold weather in Madrid as well, you know."

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by simey85 View Post
            The only highlight of the season has been this man. I think he can also become alot better aswel he has immense talent!
            his best mate has been pretty good again.

            EDIT So has Masher
            Nah. He won't win the Prem. You can quote me on that. - Sarb24

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