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    It has got to the point that even if Roy got us 4th and won us the Europa and FA cups, I'd still want him out. I ****ing hate him. I despise us having a manager who pulls down the team and tries to dampen down expectations due to his own failings.

    Just **** off Wwoy.
    Forwards.......

    Comment


      Originally posted by DannyMan2006 View Post
      It has got to the point that even if Roy got us 4th and won us the Europa and FA cups, I'd still want him out. I ****ing hate him. I despise us having a manager who pulls down the team and tries to dampen down expectations due to his own failings.

      Comment


        Originally posted by Armchairkopite View Post
        I know, I find myself switching on out of curiosity rather then expectation.

        I can take defeats, I can take playing badly every so often but i cannot accept a leader with no ambition.

        He must go, he is having a negative effect on our club and he can take Carragher with him imo.


        exactly how I feel not even watching games on MOTD these days! The guy had a plan to lower our expectations and in that he has succeeded in spades
        Henderson, Downing, Adam, ?

        "Don't start banging on about bloody Sandhurst again. I was in the Jewish Lads' Brigade, Stanford Hill division, trainee bugler, but it didn't make me sell computers when I got older."
        Lord Sugar

        Comment


          Originally posted by DannyMan2006 View Post
          It has got to the point that even if Roy got us 4th and won us the Europa and FA cups, I'd still want him out. I ****ing hate him. I despise us having a manager who pulls down the team and tries to dampen down expectations due to his own failings.

          Just **** off WRoy.
          Its so frustrating its infuriating.

          Comment


            just noticed this threads been moved,

            not quite sure where though



            for those that may have missed it




            Mutual respect for mediocrity spawned this fine bromance

            We've all had enough pain. We've all had enough misery and dissembling. But the next 24 hours will bring more, although it will be disguised as a heart-warming story of friends re-united. Gerard Houllier returns to Anfield tomorrow and he will be met there by his great friend Roy Hodgson.

            If you had Roy Hodgson's away record, you too would have many friends in football. Since August 2009, Hodgson has won two league matches away from home, so it is no surprise he is greeted warmly wherever he goes.

            Hodgson, as he repeatedly reminds people, may be one of the game's most respected figures, but when he walks through the front door of a football club, he is also a walking, talking three points for the home side. All that is left is to choose the wine. They spend a lot of time talking abut wine.

            Instead of points, he accumulates friends, who tell him how well he's doing in his latest job, the management of the decline of Liverpool.

            He will be emboldened by the words from his great friend Houllier, who returns to Anfield, despite never really having left. From afar, he guided Liverpool to victory in the Champions League in Istanbul. It was his side, a side containing Djimi Traore, that won the European Cup. At the UEFA conferences where he sees his friends or when he sits down with a journalist, Houllier tells them this and they nod sagely. It is a version of the truth. Signing Djimi Traore was Houllier's achievement. Winning the European Cup with Djimi Traore was Rafael Benitez's.

            These stories of managerial bonhomie are not complete without mention of the "good bottle of red" that one has decanted for another. The mistrust of Arsene Wenger by many stems from the fact that Wenger, though clearly French, eschews the good bottle of red.

            There will be more talk of red wine in the build-up to tomorrow's game than during a Keith Floyd show where he is cooking coq au vin with red wine gravy followed by a red wine tapioca pudding.

            They are both friends with Alex Ferguson too. Ferguson has acquired many friends in football, but he has rarely shown up at a football ground without considering if he could build a lifelong grudge around the presence of some enemy in the vicinity.

            Hodgson last week described Liverpool's draw in the FA Cup with United as "sad". There are eight members of the team that won 4-1 at Old Trafford still in Liverpool's squad. Hodgson will be able to pick on seven of them and the painful decline of Jamie Carragher means he will not miss the eighth.

            If Liverpool have disintegrated since that time, Manchester United have got no better. Hodgson's sadness was over the meeting of two big teams in the third round, but there was the underlying sadness as he jokes about putting on his make-up for live TV that, once again, his real record would be scrutinised and exposed.

            He is just a patsy. Most of those who appointed him are no longer employed at Anfield but yet he must muddle on.

            Many of his supporters in the media castigate Liverpool fans for abandoning their principles and not showing the patience they have traditionally granted previous managers. This, they will claim, is a reflection, of our impatient times with its demand for instant gratification (my problem with instant gratification is that it takes too long).

            Yet Liverpool fans were pretty patient with Benitez and that was six months ago. It may not be the times that have changed just the credentials of the incumbent.

            Hodgson's supporters still point to his record, highlighting in all seriousness his exploits at Fulham. There is no real success. Hodgson has never won a league title outside Scandinavia.

            His methods, as he put it himself, "have translated from Halmstads to Malmo, to Orebo to Neuchatel Xamax, to the Swiss national team".

            Liverpool fans are not showing impatience with Hodgson, they are voicing their feeling that he was the wrong appointment for a club that demands more than going a year without an away win and nobody noticing.

            It could be that those who praised Hodgson so highly weren't really paying attention. It was easy to praise a friendly and welcoming manager while he was at Fulham. It was easy, even if he was going from one end of the season to the next without winning away from home to talk about his exploits.

            One journalist recently wrote a piece defending Hodgson (guess what? He needs time). Liverpool fans were criticised for chanting Kenny Dalglish's name and the writer wondered if maybe Liverpool fans should get Dalglish just to see how they would react if it was a Dalglish side that lost at home to Northampton, went into the bottom three or lost at Stoke.

            It was Hodgson who did this but it seems it is always somebody else's problem.

            Usually, it is Benitez's. Last week's news that Liverpool incurred £9m in agents' fees thanks solely to Benitez was another example. This cost came about "tackling the legacy of the previous regime" as it was widely reported.

            Hodgson arrived saying Liverpool were over-staffed and then recruited Konchesky, Poulsen and Joe Cole while letting some young talent go and releasing a finally fit Alberto Aquilani on loan.

            The reality is that Hodgson has discovered that Liverpool is a club apart, uninterested in the soothing words from the media.

            "Everyone I know in football respects the job I'm doing here and aren't too surprised it hasn't been an easy start," he said last week as he anticipated a meeting with another old friend, Harry Redknapp, before reminding people that Jose Mourinho had said Liverpool will get "worse and worse". Hodgson left White Hart Lane pointless and characteristically fatalistic, even after a good bottle of red.

            Tomorrow promises more warmth and conviviality. Hodgson and Houllier will talk about their mutual respect and reflect on their great gifts of survival, skipping over their exploits which have earned them such admiration from their many friends in football.

            A draw would be the most fitting demonstration of this great bromance.

            [email protected]

            Sunday Independent

            Comment


              Originally posted by Assassin View Post
              Comolli is keen to deal with the argument that a Director of Football imposes players on a manager that he does not want. “It is about collaboration,” he said. “A lot of people ask: who is going to make the final decision? I can guarantee you, 100 per cent, that in this job - especially in England - I have never signed a player without the manager agreeing to it. Never, ever. I don’t care what people say. And it won’t happen here. If you sign a player that the manager doesn’t want you are just throwing money into the bin.

              “We had a very long meeting last week with Roy about the window. We went through the list and there was one player who Roy said ’This one, I really don’t like him, I know him well and I’m not comfortable with him.’ So we take him off. It is not issue.” If ever there was a club that needed some long-term strategy, it is Liverpool. Since the inauguration of the Premier League, the club has been in stasis, refusing to modernise, trading on its traditions.

              Why do I get the feeling we have missed out on a cracking, talented attacking footballer
              Probably Lionel Messi.
              Brandt - Keita - Van Dijk - Sessegnon

              Comment


                Its a fecking tragedy how he's getting a free ride with the media while we get closer to mediocrity.

                Comment


                  edit

                  Comment


                    For the love of God please everyone at matches be vocal otherwise FSG won't hear as they are surrounded by Jowly's supporters as advisors.

                    Poor old Kenny, who has had the ignomony of being told he can't have the job, but is still here despite being the only internal voice raising concern...and that is even though he was on the interview panel that recommended Jowly.

                    Hodgson for England or anything obvious enough to ensure FSG listen to the fans...

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by wavydavy View Post
                      He's got me to the point where I'm barely interested in footy any more. It's astonishing. I hope NESV have a big summer planned for all our sakes.
                      Exactly right. I am just not bothered in watching football this bad. It is supposed to be entertainment. I can handle losing, I can handle not winning trophies. I can't handle ****e uninspiring football.
                      Modifying post.

                      Comment


                        There is no shame in losing a long as you put the effort in but with us it is just so uninspiring. I'm at breaking point and i'm sure i'm not alone.

                        He is just so clueless and oblivious to how we feel about him but i'm sure thats due to Carra telling him how great he is.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by Buzzo View Post
                          Exactly right. I am just not bothered in watching football this bad. It is supposed to be entertainment. I can handle losing, I can handle not winning trophies. I can't handle ****e uninspiring football.
                          That's how I feel. I hate the way he's made us ****e.

                          Under Benitez we played badly for too many games last season. But at least we still played football that could win trophies, even if we didn't play it very well.

                          Now we play like a team that's happy to grab a goal, try to hang on. Liverpool is not about survival or doing OK. It's about winning (big) trophies and we will never do it with the sort of football Hodgson makes us play.

                          He has made us ****.
                          .
                          Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



                          May the Lord bless this post.

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by Neil Young View Post
                            That's how I feel. I hate the way he's made us ****e.

                            Under Benitez we played badly for too many games last season. But at least we still played football that could win trophies, even if we didn't play it very well.

                            Now we play like a team that's happy to grab a goal, try to hang on. Liverpool is not about survival or doing OK. It's about winning (big) trophies and we will never do it with the sort of football Hodgson makes us play.

                            He has made us ****.
                            funny you should mention that. have you ever heard of an unnecessary metaphor? or is this actually some sort of tautology?
                            dave of mutilation

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by little dave hedgehog View Post
                              funny you should mention that. have you ever heard of an unnecessary metaphor? or is this actually some sort of tautology?
                              It's a simile I think.

                              And it is necessary to what I was saying. Liverpool aren't a team that play to grab a goal and hang on desperately.

                              In other words Liverpool don't play like Liverpool any more. See, he's made us ****e.
                              .
                              Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.



                              May the Lord bless this post.

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Neil Young View Post
                                Liverpool don't play like Liverpool any more. See, he's made us ****e.
                                There is no fight or passion. This is the biggest problem for me. I can take having **** players if they fight for us. I wish the players had a fraction of the fire in their bellies that most of us do. Hodgson is the biggest loser at the club, his mentality is completely wrong. I can't absolve the players of their responsibility they should be giving more. The manager and the players are cowards. The manager's strategy is wrong and the players don't give a ****. I long for the day when I start caring about my club again. This is wrong. I am totally disillusioned with the whole thing.

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