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    Guardian prediction....

    Premier League preview No8: LiverpoolTitle No19 after a 19-year drought is Liverpool's main goal but can Rafael Benítez invest wisely and quickly enough to deliver?
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    Glen Johnson, the England right-back, promises to offer adventurous support to Dirk Kuyt down the Liverpool right. Photograph: Paul Harding/Action Images

    The following blog was published in this morning's Guardian, so we have decided to bring it forward ahead of schedule. The Everton preview blog will be published here on Friday afternoon

    Guardian writers' prediction: 1st Odds to win league: 11-4

    Nineteen years have passed without league title No19 and still the prediction is that this could be Liverpool's year. But now the expectation is justified at Anfield and so high, so unforgiving, that not even Xabi Alonso's departure diminishes the demand on Rafael Benítez. Regaining the mantle of England's most decorated champions from Manchester United is imperative.

    First, however, there must be caution amid the exultation. Benítez envisaged a summer of fine-tuning his squad after the first genuine title challenge of his reign but, despite the capture of Glen Johnson and impending arrival of Alberto Aquilani, it stands diminished. Alonso represents a serious loss from the spine of a first-choice XI that ranks alongside that of any Premier League rival and several other, albeit far less influential, players have been sold to raise funds. The loss of Alonso, however, does not have to be catastrophic to Liverpool's title prospects.

    The club will undoubtedly miss the guile, technical ability and experience of a player who responded to Benítez's attempts to sell him last summer with arguably the finest season of his five-year spell on Merseyside. Of more importance is how Benítez spends the £30m he prised out of Florentino Pérez and Real Madrid for Alonso, a player he signed for £10.7m and valued at £18m 12 months ago on account of two injury-plagued but mediocre seasons; and whether Benítez will be allowed to reinvest Alonso's full transfer fee plus other monies promised this summer.

    It is strange that the Liverpool squad has not been bolstered when it was lack of strength in depth, plus injury to Fernando Torres, that Benítez cited as the major reasons for falling four points short of United last season. In terms of numbers the arrival of Johnson and Aquilani, for instance, is offset by the departures of Alvaro Arbeloa and Alonso to the Bernabéu.

    There remains time for strengthening and Liverpool indicated that the sale of Alonso might prompt a flurry of activity by securing a deal for Roma's playmaker Aquilani yesterday but it is unlike Benítez to leave money in his pocket should he have any available, as has been the case this summer. Cover is required at centre-half following Sami Hyypia's free transfer to Bayer Leverkusen while quality support for Torres and Steven Gerrard up front has not arrived seven months after Robbie Keane's return to White Hart Lane.

    Given Benítez was promised £20m to spend plus whatever he raised in sales at the start of this summer – before the owners, George Gillett and Tom Hicks, secured a refinancing deal that involves repaying £60m of a £290m debt over the next 12 months – the Liverpool manager must have more than £40m at his dis- posal following Alonso's move. Should Aquilani overcome his injury problems and settle instantly – a prerequisite with the title at stake – a forward of the calibre of Valencia's David Silva arrive and defensive cover in the form of Sylvain Distin, for example, be brought in, then Benítez will have achieved his summer goals and Liverpool will embark on the new campaign wiser and stronger. But only Aquilani and a cheap defender would alter that assessment and raise further question marks over the Americans' financial might.

    It is United, not Liverpool, who have lost more to the continued lure of Real Madrid and superior Spanish tax rates this summer and Sir Alex Ferguson could not ignore the foundation for Anfield's confidence even as he sought to dismiss their title credentials this week. "The thrust of the Liverpool team is really all about Gerrard and Torres," the United manager said. "If they stay fit, it improves Liverpool's chances."

    Liverpool found a consistency that has long eluded them in the Premier League last season, even with Gerrard and Torres starting only 14 of 38 league matches together. Captain and talismanic striker produced 30 of Liverpool's 77 league goals last term, despite Torres suffering three hamstring strains that ruled him out of 14 league games. When fit, they represent Anfield's greatest hope. Injury to Torres or Gerrard would have a severe impact on the side but that argument applies to Wayne Rooney at Old Trafford.

    Benítez finally got the measure of his "big four" rivals last season by taking 14 points from a possible 18 against the champions, Chelsea and Arsenal. Liverpool remained unbeaten in the league at Anfield all season, although their well-documented achilles heel – the seven draws at Anfield – continues to pain their manager. It is surely where a forward of Silva's ilk comes into the reckoning.

    Johnson, desperate to seize his second chance at a top-four club following the disappointment of Stamford Bridge, appears a fine addition to the defence, able to provide adventurous support to Dirk Kuyt on the right and sure to improve defensively under Benítez's tutelage. Ryan Babel, having earned a reprieve from his manager this summer, will have to grasp his opportunity while greater responsibility will now fall on Javier Mascherano in light of Alonso's exit.

    The Spaniard's sale means there is no prospect of the Argentina captain being granted his coveted move to Barcelona and much rests on his response. The title, however, may rest on Benítez's next moves in the transfer market.

    Ins: Glen Johnson (Portsmouth, £18m), Alberto Aquilani (Roma, £20m)

    Outs: Xabi Alonso (Real Madrid, £30m) Alvaro Arbeloa (Real Madrid, £3.5m), Sebastien Leto (Panathinaikos, £1.3m), Paul Anderson (Nottingham Forest, £250,000), Sami Hyypia (Bayer Leverkusen, free), Jermaine Pennant (Espanyol, free), Jack Hobbs (Leicester, free), Astrit Ajdarevic (Leicester, free), Shane O'Connor (Ipswich, free), Ryan Flynn (Falkirk, loan), Dean Bouzanis (Wrexham, loan)

    #2
    Nice article - Im sure we got some money for Jack Hobbs though.
    K ris90210

    Comment


      #3
      That's a prediction based on some very important ifs. (if Rafa buys well, if key players stay fit)

      It's pretty fair to say that Alonso's sale will be detrimental to the momentum we built at the end of last season. We gelled as a team and benefitted greatly from Rafa keeping things relatively consistent (as opposed to the rafa teamsheet prediction game we saw earlier in the season.) With Alonso gone we are forced to change the way we play, it would be unfair to expect Aquilani to just come in and reproduce the same play.
      With Xabi's passing ability we naturally became reliant on his distribution and with him out the way and Aquilani as the new boy, returning from injury, and aclimatising to a new league , I would guess Gerrard will drop deeper and take more responsibility for orchestrating the team. This of course makes Torres more isolated and demands more of not just him, but players like Riera, Kuyt and Benayoun in our wide positions.

      A player who can drift in from wide, support Torres or fill in if Fernando gets injured would be ideal. (shame Tevez went to City and Silva seems inexplicably unwilling to trade the sunshine of spain for the Costa del Wirral / Southport.)

      So Rafa, who've you got up your sleeve? (and how long can we sensibly wait for a new signing to come in and be ready for the start of the season?)

      Comment


        #4
        looking at that, we haven't exactly spent much...

        We recouped most of the Keane money towards the end of the season, Johnson was brought in with a deal including the money owed from the Crouch transfer. £35m has been brought in this summer and £20m has just gone out on Aquamaria.

        We must be skint.
        Last edited by FatTony; 06-08-09, 11:46 AM.

        "If Gerrard continues to play up front, leaving this lack of creativity and intelligence in Midfield, the season WILL be over by Xmas."

        I still don't think we'll finish in the top 4 this season."

        FatTony 24/08/09

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by kubrickscube View Post
          That's a prediction based on some very important ifs. (if Rafa buys well, if key players stay fit)

          It's pretty fair to say that Alonso's sale will be detrimental to the momentum we built at the end of last season. We gelled as a team and benefitted greatly from Rafa keeping things relatively consistent (as opposed to the rafa teamsheet prediction game we saw earlier in the season.) With Alonso gone we are forced to change the way we play, it would be unfair to expect Aquilani to just come in and reproduce the same play.
          With Xabi's passing ability we naturally became reliant on his distribution and with him out the way and Aquilani as the new boy, returning from injury, and aclimatising to a new league , I would guess Gerrard will drop deeper and take more responsibility for orchestrating the team. This of course makes Torres more isolated and demands more of not just him, but players like Riera, Kuyt and Benayoun in our wide positions.

          A player who can drift in from wide, support Torres or fill in if Fernando gets injured would be ideal. (shame Tevez went to City and Silva seems inexplicably unwilling to trade the sunshine of spain for the Costa del Wirral / Southport.)

          So Rafa, who've you got up your sleeve? (and how long can we sensibly wait for a new signing to come in and be ready for the start of the season?)
          we have a lot less ifs than

          Chelsea
          Arsenal
          Scum

          but the ifs which really are luck is what will be the difference between any of the above winning it, although Arsenal will do a lot better than other people think i do believe that they arent strong enough to last the course
          _____________________________________

          Weak willed, Wank or do they have a masterplan?

          Think we have the answer..Slot!!

          Comment


            #6
            Liverpool should be title favourites, no matter what Sir Alex Ferguson says

            By Rob Kelly Football Last updated: August 6th, 2009

            1 Comment Comment on this article

            Somewhat unbelievably, the most cantankerous old man in football, Sir Alex Ferguson, has already dismissed Liverpool’s hopes of winning the Premier League. Yet if the Overlord of English football feels it necessary to lay into Rafa Benitez’s side without a ball of the new season being kicked, it surely only means one thing: Liverpool are a major threat to Manchester United’s hegemony.

            Ferguson’s critical assessment - “Liverpool have just had probably their best season for 20 years, finished up with 86 points and still finished four adrift. It will be hard for them to match that, let alone improve. Other teams will read Liverpool better” - is borne out of fear. For while the Anfield club have just lost a key figure in Xabi Alonso, it does not come close to the impact United will feel without Cristiano Ronaldo.

            Liverpool fans have been ridiculed in the past for their regular pre-season refrain of ‘This is our season’, but 2009-10 really could, and should be. Never will they have a better chance of ending their league title drought, never will they be better prepared.

            Benitez has improved his already formidable defence with the signing of Glen Johnson, and if he replaces Alonso with the exciting Alberto Aquilani and then uses the rest of his transfer budget to sign a striker and/or an out-and-out winger, then I believe Liverpool will win the Premier League by five or six points.

            United, going for a record fourth consecutive title, will badly miss Ronaldo, no matter much they protest otherwise. You cannot take the Portuguese’s goals, assists and general aura out of a team and not weaken it. Replacing Ronaldo with Luis Antonio Valencia is akin to trading in a Ferrari for a BMW. Valencia is very good, but he will not score 20+ goals this season and that will put extra pressure on Ferguson’s strike force.

            While United fans are now pretending they were never that bothered about Carlos Tevez, the departure of the Argentine has weakened their front line. An awful lot is resting on Dimitar Berbatov, one of last season’s most underwhelming signings, and Michael Owen, one of last season’s most underwhelming footballers.

            United simply do not look the force that Liverpool do, no matter how much Ferguson tries to talk himself, and anyone who’ll listen, into it.

            Chelsea will be the team to push Benitez’s men closest, and with a strong, settled side rejuvenated under the command of the now departed Guus Hiddink, they will start the new campaign infused with confidence. But the priority at Stamford Bridge is to win the Champions League, and while Carlo Ancelotti has the squad to compete on all fronts, I feel they will fall short of Liverpool.

            Arsenal’s fate is reliant upon their next moves in the transfer market. If Arsene Wenger adds the commanding centre-half and defensive midfielder his team needs, they could launch a sustained title bid. However, with injury concerns over the returning Tomas Rosicky and Eduardo, and major upheaval at boardroom level, the environment at the Emirates does not seem conducive to success at present.

            Will Manchester City break up the Big Four cartel? The potential is certainly there, and with their summer outlay, that should be the very least of their ambitions. However, I still feel it is unlikely. Mark Hughes has a massive job on his hands moulding his new-look squad into a cohesive unit, and whether he can handle the rampant egos in his dressing room, coupled with the elevated expectation levels foisted upon him, is highly debateable. I expect Hughes to be gone before Christmas, and replaced by Jose Mourinho.

            Predictions are almost designed to make you look foolish, so with a heavy heart here is my top seven for the 2009-10 season:

            1. Liverpool
            2. Chelsea
            3. Manchester United
            4. Arsenal
            5. Tottenham
            6. Everton
            7. Manchester City
            Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

            Comment


              #7
              rob kelly 's




              hopefully aquilaini is up to it and if we can sign this elusive attacker/forward i'll be happy - if the option is there to add some experienced cover for rb/cb i'd be even happier.
              i own everton fans on the internet....that's what i do

              Comment


                #8
                Where does Rob Kelly write ?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Cormack74 View Post
                  Where does Rob Kelly write ?
                  Carlsberg Herald!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Cormack74 View Post
                    Where does Rob Kelly write ?
                    Sorry, should've included the link. Telegraph.
                    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                      Sorry, should've included the link.
                      Yes. Yes you should.

                      Comment

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