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An Epic Swindle by Brian Reade

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    An Epic Swindle by Brian Reade

    Read an extract from Brian Reade's new book - An Epic Swindle: 44 Months With A Pair Of Cowboys

    By Brian Reade in Mirror Football Blog
    Published 23:00 17/04/11

    (18) Recommend (9)

    Brian Reade’s new book An Epic Swindle: 44 Months With A Pair Of Cowboys is the riveting inside story of how Liverpool FC was dragged to its knees during the *shambolic reign of US owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett. Here is an extract:

    Tom Hicks’ favourite camera crew was summoned to his Dallas mansion for the most repulsive PR stunt ever pulled by anyone connected with Liverpool FC.

    As he sat in his cosy armchair, his wounded expression as fake as the gas-flamed fire burning behind him, back at his Formby home Steven Gerrard stared at his TV in disgust.

    A year into the Americans’ reign, civil war was raging at Anfield, with fans, manager and board members at each others’ throats. And now the absentee Texan owner was calling for chief executive Rick Parry’s head on worldwide TV.

    That Sky interview was the final straw for the Liverpool captain. He never wanted to look at Hicks or Gillett again.

    Gerrard says: “I was thinking, ‘When is this going to end? One year? Two years?’ You could see it was just going to get messier and the people really suffering were the team and the supporters.”

    In their first meeting, the Americans promised Gerrard they would restore the club to the pinnacle of European football while respecting its history.

    “But that wasn’t the case, especially when they were dragging the club through the courts,” he says. “That was a disgrace. I can’t find the words to describe them. Let’s just say they had some balls. I didn’t think they’d drag the club to those lengths for some money. It just showed how greedy they were.”

    At his home a few miles down the Merseyside coast, Jamie Carragher watched that same TV interview in April 2008 in despair. He recalls: “That’s when I thought it had got past a joke. To fly a TV crew over to your house, dress your kids in Liverpool tops, and start dishing the dirt on worldwide telly I just thought, ‘Oh my God, what’s going on?’ It was unforgivable.”

    Like Gerrard, Carragher became emotionally exhausted with the Anfield anarchy.

    “It was like your mum and dad scrapping. You don’t care what they’re fighting about, you just want to scream at them to shut up,” he says.

    “The manager and owners might not have liked each other but they should have concentrated on letting us play football. I got sick of the rowing – it just wouldn’t stop. Everyone was playing politics with no regard for the damage they were doing to the club. I wanted to shout, ‘Can we forget about this and just play football?’”

    The two local legends were also conscious that, in the final 18 months the Americans were there, the team suffered from an acute lack of investment. “We were so close,” says Gerrard. “Two European finals, finishing second – we were two or three decent signings away from competing with anyone. That was the frustration.”

    Gerrard won’t say it because it would seem like an excuse, but friends say there were times when he felt that the Americans cost him the one thing he’s craved all his professional life – the Premier League. Carragher feels the same. “I want to win medals and if the owners had put their money in like they promised then I might have won more than I did. You look at other players who are winning titles and you want to be better than them. So when the transfer money dries up like it did with those two, it gets you angry.

    “I’d never say they definitely cost me a League title medal as it was down to us players, but if we hadn’t had crippling interest payments like we had we could have been spending an extra £15-£20million in the last few transfer windows, which could have made the difference.

    “I’d loved to have played in a new Anfield, too, but I won’t. If they’d put that spade in within 60 days as they promised, I’d be playing in it now.”

    Spanish goalkeeper Pepe Reina told the pair he was amazed they didn’t go public and demand answers. Both admit the dilemma tortured them at the time and still plays on their consciences today. “I totally understand why some of the fans were frustrated we didn’t speak out,” says Gerrard. “When I’m down with England I hear stories about what big players have said at their clubs, but when me and Jamie speak we’re worried people might say, ‘Does he think he’s bigger than Liverpool?’ So it was a horrible situation as I wanted to come out and use my status to help but I was terrified of it backfiring.

    “Should I say something? Would it make a difference? Who are we to criticise our bosses? They were the questions I kept asking myself and at times they were on the tip of my tongue. But if I’d wanted to speak to the owners I couldn’t, they were never there. It was a mess.”

    Carragher agrees: “Maybe me and Stevie should have come out when we had the power and said something, but we’re from here. We love the club and never like saying anything negative about it. It’s what we believe in. So whatever is thrown at you, you feel you have to take it.

    “It’s like if someone in your family does something wrong you’ll still stand behind them even if you want to slag them off.”

    The pair’s major worry was how the fans were suffering. Gerrard says: “The lowest point was when the Kop were holding sit-ins to protest. I was thinking, ‘Let’s get them out, enough is enough, the sooner these are out the better.’”

    It got to Carragher so much he stopped reading newspapers. “I switched off. I wasn’t reading about football, it was backbiting and bitching and plots and people slagging each other off.

    “The game wasn’t played on the pitch but off it. Political games. It became a bad soap opera. I wasn’t just thinking about my game. I was thinking, ‘Whose side should I be on?’ I wished I could do my training and think about nothing else, but it became impossible. I was taking it all home with me.

    “In the end I was so pleased the Americans walked away with nothing as they had their chances to sell the club and make their profit but chose not to. They didn’t care about Liverpool – they just cared about themselves.”

    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

    #2
    Bit of a backhanded stab at Rafa there.
    Are we winning?

    Comment


      #3
      Wow - we never usually get to hear what's really going on, so it's going to be fascinating reading.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Helios Creed View Post
        Wow - we never usually get to hear what's really going on, so it's going to be fascinating reading.
        Did you never get your copy of Anfield Exposed then?
        "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

        Comment


          #5
          Whatever people thionk about Rafa as a manager, the way he refused to roll over and bow to the demands of the Americans was first class. You could tell he was so happy here, and he knew he ran the risk of being booted out by speaking out, but the fact he still did is a credit to the man.

          In the end, Carra and Stevie didn't have to talk because Rafa did it for them. I know this club should be about business done behind closed doors, but for me personally, the time under G+H called for exceptional circumstances, and lucky for us we had an exceptional manager.
          Forwards.......

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by DannyMan2006 View Post
            Whatever people thionk about Rafa as a manager, the way he refused to roll over and bow to the demands of the Americans was first class. You could tell he was so happy here, and he knew he ran the risk of being booted out by speaking out, but the fact he still did is a credit to the man.

            In the end, Carra and Stevie didn't have to talk because Rafa did it for them. I know this club should be about business done behind closed doors, but for me personally, the time under G+H called for exceptional circumstances, and lucky for us we had an exceptional manager.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by DannyMan2006 View Post
              Whatever people thionk about Rafa as a manager, the way he refused to roll over and bow to the demands of the Americans was first class. You could tell he was so happy here, and he knew he ran the risk of being booted out by speaking out, but the fact he still did is a credit to the man.

              In the end, Carra and Stevie didn't have to talk because Rafa did it for them. I know this club should be about business done behind closed doors, but for me personally, the time under G+H called for exceptional circumstances, and lucky for us we had an exceptional manager.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by DannyMan2006 View Post
                Whatever people thionk about Rafa as a manager, the way he refused to roll over and bow to the demands of the Americans was first class. You could tell he was so happy here, and he knew he ran the risk of being booted out by speaking out, but the fact he still did is a credit to the man.

                In the end, Carra and Stevie didn't have to talk because Rafa did it for them. I know this club should be about business done behind closed doors, but for me personally, the time under G+H called for exceptional circumstances, and lucky for us we had an exceptional manager.
                Was muß, das muß.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Quite incredible to hear Gerrard saying he thought 'lets get them out' about the owners, and that it took the sight of fans 'sitting in' to make him think that, imo no player deserves any credit at all for ridding the club of those two eejits, when Rafa was the one doing all the leg work on that score and getting all the stick publicly, and putting up with even more behind the scenes, it was he who informed the fans of the ****e going on and the broken promises by owners, and so the sit in's followed.

                  A bit of backing from Stevie for what Rafa was saying would have been nice, and imo correct.

                  Anyway, we live and learn, thankfully it's all in the past.
                  Last edited by Vermilion; 18-04-11, 10:41 AM.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    12.99?

                    That's another 'epic swindle'

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Aye, rings a bit hollow when , if stories are to be believed, they didnt support Rafa when he needed it most- especially as now they are saying he was so close. Fair enough leaving him to it if they thought he was better placed, but at least bear in mind that he was on the right side of that battle.

                      Interesting stuff mind.
                      3rd place. Worst champions ever.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by spud_gun View Post
                        12.99?

                        That's another 'epic swindle'
                        Amazon - it's on pre-order for £7.92

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by rcasemore View Post
                          Amazon - it's on pre-order for £7.92
                          That makes it a veritable Nick Lesson as opposed to a Bernie Madoff

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by PC Plod View Post
                            Aye, rings a bit hollow when , if stories are to be believed, they didnt support Rafa when he needed it most- especially as now they are saying he was so close. Fair enough leaving him to it if they thought he was better placed, but at least bear in mind that he was on the right side of that battle.

                            Interesting stuff mind.
                            Yes, if anything the excerpt here makes out they saw him as part of the problem too, which would certainly explain their behaviour.

                            I can see how it must have been incredibly frustrating and embarrassing for them to see these public (and private) rows at the club but, as you say, they should have seen the bigger picture and backed the right side, at least in private.

                            Note for Arn: it's all water under the bridge now.
                            .
                            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


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Neil Young View Post
                              Note for Arn: it's all water under the bridge now.
                              Is that a cryptic clue as to where you have hidden Arn?

                              Under a bridge, under the water?

                              Prefer the old propping up the supporting pillar of a bridge on the M6 for getting rid of unwanted nuisances
                              Bob Paisley - "This club has been my life. I'd go out and sweep the street and be proud to do it for Liverpool if they asked me to."

                              Comment

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