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Steven Gerrard's testimonial (v Olympiakos, August 3rd 2013)

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    #46


    Houllier: Stevie had to be skipper

    Former Liverpool manager Gerard Houllier has revealed how Steven Gerrard told him it was the 'best day of his career' when the Frenchman handed the captain's armband to the midfielder for the first time.

    The Kop hero is set to become the Reds' longest-serving captain in the club's illustrious history this season and Houllier believes that handing Gerrard the responsibility at a young age helped him to realise his potential as a great leader.

    The ex-Anfield boss told the Liverpool Echo: "I met Stevie after the Champions League final in Istanbul and asked him if that was the best day of his life.

    "He said no, and told me the best day of his career was when I gave him the captain's armband at Liverpool.

    "Don't forget he was 22 when I made him captain but you could see he was a natural born leader and he could have an influence and an impact on everybody."

    Houllier recalled how he was taken aback by Gerrard's leadership qualities beyond his years when watching him in an U19s game - a catalyst in the Huyton native's rapid promotion to the senior squad.

    "I remember Steve Heighway asked me to watch a game because I told him I needed a right-winger," Houllier added.

    "He called me to a game where Richie Partridge was involved and he thought he would be the answer to our problems on the right.

    "I think it was an U19 game against Blackburn and I remember in the middle of the park there was this boy I didn't know at the time going box to box, shouting at people and already behaving like a leader.

    "He was quick, he was tackling and could see a pass quickly.

    "Even if we had taken Richie with us and given him a chance, I wanted to have Stevie. At the time the coaches said we couldn't because he's always injured. I said: 'I'm the boss, so he is coming with us'.

    "Sammy Lee and Patrice Bergues looked after him very carefully and gradually he became the player we know today."

    The Frenchman had confidence that Gerrard would revel in the captaincy role and the decision proved to be a masterstroke as the 33-year-old achieved a seamless transition in replacing Sami Hyypia.

    Houllier explained: "Sami was - and still is - a huge figure at Liverpool, but Stevie is a natural leader and I thought the armband would boost his game even more.

    "At the same time, Sami was not performing that well at that time and I think the captaincy was a pressure on him. He understood that and he was quite happy with the decision as Sami is an intelligent player.

    "You have different levels of players. There are Premier League, international and world-class levels. The world-class level is players at the peak of their career and there's only maybe 50 maximum in the whole world.

    "Stevie moved from a Premier League player to an international player and then world-class.

    "You win things with world-class players. I was lucky enough to have Stevie at the right time when I was at Liverpool, and even when I left they won the Champions League. He played a major part in that."

    In addition to his Anfield duties, the Liverpool No.8 also wears the armband for England; his proud former manager believes both sides will continue to benefit from Gerrard's leadership qualities.

    "I am pleased for Stevie," the Thérouanne-born manager concluded. "It is a good reward to be captain of England. He must be absolutely over the moon.

    "He is a winner and he will give an urge to drive them on all the time. He never gives up. He leads by example, giving a lot of mental and physical energy to himself and the team.

    "His game should be even better. He likes responsibility. He likes when people trust him. That is when he can surpass himself and deliver even more."
    What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

    Batman

    F*** off!!!

    Comment


      #47
      Originally posted by Yozza View Post
      http://www.liverpoolfc.com/news/late...-to-be-skipper

      Houllier: Stevie had to be skipper

      Former Liverpool manager Gerard Houllier has revealed how Steven Gerrard told him it was the 'best day of his career' when the Frenchman handed the captain's armband to the midfielder for the first time.

      The Kop hero is set to become the Reds' longest-serving captain in the club's illustrious history this season and Houllier believes that handing Gerrard the responsibility at a young age helped him to realise his potential as a great leader.

      The ex-Anfield boss told the Liverpool Echo: "I met Stevie after the Champions League final in Istanbul and asked him if that was the best day of his life.

      "He said no, and told me the best day of his career was when I gave him the captain's armband at Liverpool.

      "Don't forget he was 22 when I made him captain but you could see he was a natural born leader and he could have an influence and an impact on everybody."

      Houllier recalled how he was taken aback by Gerrard's leadership qualities beyond his years when watching him in an U19s game - a catalyst in the Huyton native's rapid promotion to the senior squad.

      "I remember Steve Heighway asked me to watch a game because I told him I needed a right-winger," Houllier added.

      "He called me to a game where Richie Partridge was involved and he thought he would be the answer to our problems on the right.

      "I think it was an U19 game against Blackburn and I remember in the middle of the park there was this boy I didn't know at the time going box to box, shouting at people and already behaving like a leader.

      "He was quick, he was tackling and could see a pass quickly.

      "Even if we had taken Richie with us and given him a chance, I wanted to have Stevie. At the time the coaches said we couldn't because he's always injured. I said: 'I'm the boss, so he is coming with us'.

      "Sammy Lee and Patrice Bergues looked after him very carefully and gradually he became the player we know today."

      The Frenchman had confidence that Gerrard would revel in the captaincy role and the decision proved to be a masterstroke as the 33-year-old achieved a seamless transition in replacing Sami Hyypia.

      Houllier explained: "Sami was - and still is - a huge figure at Liverpool, but Stevie is a natural leader and I thought the armband would boost his game even more.

      "At the same time, Sami was not performing that well at that time and I think the captaincy was a pressure on him. He understood that and he was quite happy with the decision as Sami is an intelligent player.

      "You have different levels of players. There are Premier League, international and world-class levels. The world-class level is players at the peak of their career and there's only maybe 50 maximum in the whole world.

      "Stevie moved from a Premier League player to an international player and then world-class.

      "You win things with world-class players. I was lucky enough to have Stevie at the right time when I was at Liverpool, and even when I left they won the Champions League. He played a major part in that."

      In addition to his Anfield duties, the Liverpool No.8 also wears the armband for England; his proud former manager believes both sides will continue to benefit from Gerrard's leadership qualities.

      "I am pleased for Stevie," the Thérouanne-born manager concluded. "It is a good reward to be captain of England. He must be absolutely over the moon.

      "He is a winner and he will give an urge to drive them on all the time. He never gives up. He leads by example, giving a lot of mental and physical energy to himself and the team.

      "His game should be even better. He likes responsibility. He likes when people trust him. That is when he can surpass himself and deliver even more."
      I was at his first game as Captain.
      Oh I don't know.

      Comment


        #48
        Originally posted by Yozza View Post
        http://www.liverpoolfc.com/news/late...-to-be-skipper

        Houllier: Stevie had to be skipper

        Former Liverpool manager Gerard Houllier has revealed how Steven Gerrard told him it was the 'best day of his career' when the Frenchman handed the captain's armband to the midfielder for the first time.

        The Kop hero is set to become the Reds' longest-serving captain in the club's illustrious history this season and Houllier believes that handing Gerrard the responsibility at a young age helped him to realise his potential as a great leader.

        The ex-Anfield boss told the Liverpool Echo: "I met Stevie after the Champions League final in Istanbul and asked him if that was the best day of his life.

        "He said no, and told me the best day of his career was when I gave him the captain's armband at Liverpool.

        "Don't forget he was 22 when I made him captain but you could see he was a natural born leader and he could have an influence and an impact on everybody."
        I call BS on Houllier the bull**** merchant!

        As ****ing if

        "When I made him captain"... ...as if it was some outlandish move that Houllier deserves credit for. He was obvious captain material.

        Someone's telling fibs anyway and I doubt it's SG - Gerrard has repeatedly said Istanbul was the best day/night of his life. After the 05 semi, he said that was the best day of his life. Not the day Ged made him captain.

        Gerrard said: "The ground was shaking 50 minutes before the game when we went out for the warm-up. I have never known anything like it.

        "At the end I felt like jumping in and celebrating with the fans. They are the best in the country by miles and I just hope they enjoy the final as much as they enjoyed this evening.

        "I can't take it in. This is the best night of my life by a million miles and it will be the proudest moment of my career when I lead these incredible men out in Istanbul.

        "We have beaten the Premiership champions for the first time in five attempts this season, but it was well worth the wait."
        Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

        Comment


          #49
          Gerrard is a legend.

          Comment


            #50
            Houllier has a habit of taking credit where none is due!

            GERARD HOULLIER has launched an astonishing attack on former Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez by claiming it was he that was largely responsible for the club’s Champions League final triumph.

            And the 63-year-old Frenchman believes the Spaniard was lucky to inherit a club in good health but has ultimately destroyed that legacy for new manager and close friend Roy Hodgson.

            Speaking of Liverpool’s memorable win over AC Milan five years ago, Houllier said: “Twelve out of 14 in Istanbul were players I had signed or developed.

            “I left Liverpool with a team and in the Champions League.

            "But when you finish seventh with Torres and Gerrard…

            “When I came into the changing room in Istanbul some of the players said: ‘Boss, it’s your team’.

            "After Rafa Benitez left this summer, one of the players sent me a message.

            “He said, ‘Boss, he hasn’t beaten you’.”

            Houllier believes his pioneering approach during six years at Anfield made life easier when Benitez took over in June 2004.

            “One, the pattern of getting a foreign coach was already accepted,” said the Frenchman.

            “Two, he had a Champions League winning team.

            "Three, the team were already in the Champions League.

            "Four, we had built new facilities.

            "And five, it was a different training routine, different attitude and mentality,” he said.

            “I claim that we – Phil Thompson, Sammy Lee and the staff – definitely turned it round.
            What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

            Batman

            F*** off!!!

            Comment


              #51
              Has he been eating smoking grass?
              Football without Origi is nothing

              Comment


                #52
                Originally posted by Shaggy View Post
                I call BS on Houllier the bull**** merchant!

                As ****ing if

                "When I made him captain"... ...as if it was some outlandish move that Houllier deserves credit for. He was obvious captain material.

                Someone's telling fibs anyway and I doubt it's SG - Gerrard has repeatedly said Istanbul was the best day/night of his life. After the 05 semi, he said that was the best day of his life. Not the day Ged made him captain.
                TBH, there were some s raised when he was made captain at such a young age, deposing the established and much loved Hyypia.

                The rest, I agree with.
                Oh I don't know.

                Comment


                  #53
                  Reading that just reminds me why I detest Houllier. Him leaving was the best thing that could have happened to the club and another reason to love and admire Rafa for what he did.
                  "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

                  Comment


                    #54
                    Originally posted by Tee View Post
                    Reading that just reminds me why I detest Houllier. Him leaving was the best thing that could have happened to the club and another reason to love and admire Rafa for what he did.
                    Detest is a little strong, no?

                    From my point of view, Houllier did a good job for us, maybe he stayed on a season too long and a lot of his signings were bad (So were a lot of Rafa's). I see no reason to detest the man though?

                    JURGEN KLOPP - LIVERPOOL MANAGER

                    YNWA

                    Comment


                      #55


                      I made Gerrard captain and he said it was the best day of his life!



                      I think you'll find that was me and I signed him for Liverpool from Accrington Stanley.



                      He's overrated, I'd swap him for Carlton Cole in an instant.
                      Was muß, das muß.

                      Comment


                        #56
                        Originally posted by Gingawaria View Post
                        Detest is a little strong, no?

                        From my point of view, Houllier did a good job for us, maybe he stayed on a season too long and a lot of his signings were bad (So were a lot of Rafa's). I see no reason to detest the man though?
                        Maybe, but I genuinely do not like him. Crazy as it seems because of THAT season, but he killed the footballing DNA the club had built since the Shankly days IMO and I actually hated watching his Liverpool teams play.

                        Sorry if you don't understand that, but it is the way I felt/feel.
                        "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

                        Comment


                          #57
                          Originally posted by Tee View Post
                          Maybe, but I genuinely do not like him. Crazy as it seems because of THAT season, but he killed the footballing DNA the club had built since the Shankly days IMO and I actually hated watching his Liverpool teams play.

                          Sorry if you don't understand that, but it is the way I felt/feel.
                          Fair enough mate!

                          I do agree with you to an extent with regard to some of the football we played with him in charge. However I do feel a lot of people tend to disregard a lot of the good things he did because of the dour way we were playing!

                          JURGEN KLOPP - LIVERPOOL MANAGER

                          YNWA

                          Comment


                            #58
                            Originally posted by Gingawaria View Post
                            Fair enough mate!

                            I do agree with you to an extent with regard to some of the football we played with him in charge. However I do feel a lot of people tend to disregard a lot of the good things he did because of the dour way we were playing!
                            Possibly quite true as well.
                            "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

                            Comment


                              #59
                              Originally posted by foresterbloke View Post


                              i get a little cold shudder every time i see him in a LFC tie
                              removing all the weak links makes us stronger

                              too many gutless players, no beef or desire. pussies everywhere... sack them all.

                              Comment


                                #60
                                Steven Gerrard: All hail Liverpool's captain fantastic

                                Ahead of his testimonial on Saturday, the midfielder talks Sam Wallace through his Anfield highs, lows, near misses...and the one strike that changed the destiny of the club

                                Steven Gerrard will walk out the tunnel at Anfield on Saturday afternoon as he has done so many times before, although – even taking into account the dramatic highs, and occasional lows, of his career at Liverpool – he admits that this occasion will be especially emotional.

                                It will be his three young daughters who walk with him on to the pitch of his hometown club, and his team-mates and the opposition, Olympiakos, who form the guard of honour. Almost 15 years after his debut, as he approaches a decade as captain, Gerrard will be honoured with his first testimonial. Anfield sold out weeks ago.

                                He smiled as he considered the prospect – not least the sense of excitement and anticipation among his family, who he says have been looking forward to it for months. The Gerrard girls have, he says, “had new frocks made and they are getting their hair done”, although they have also been told by dad that they will not be staying up all night at the dinner for 1,000 guests that will follow on Saturday evening.

                                Anfield can feel like a big family gathering at most home games: raucous, disputatious but with the sense that, when push comes to shove, everyone pulls together. And at the centre of that family for the last generation has been Gerrard. It has not always been easy being the local boy who ended up captaining Britain’s most successful club – and England – but looking back now, at 33, he would not have wanted it any other way.

                                All the money raised on Saturday from the game, broadcast by BT Sport, will go to his foundation which works with charities on Merseyside, throughout the country and overseas. Gerrard has visited many of the projects and has a clear idea of what is required to help.

                                “I have been to some different places all round the area,” he says. “It has been a real eye-opener to see how some of these charities run and what they need to keep their heads above water. But also some of the conditions that children and families are in. We have seen some really difficult cases. But when you come away from the places and you see that you have made a big difference and you can help financially, it’s a good buzz.”

                                Olympiakos have a special place in Gerrard’s history. It was against them that he scored the 86th-minute goal at Anfield in December 2004 that gave Liverpool a 3-1 win, clinching the necessary two-goal margin that saw them through the group stages on their way to winning the Champions League in Istanbul that season. For Saturday, Olympiakos have donated their match fee to charity and have been “superb”, Gerrard says, in playing their role on the day.

                                As for the memory itself of that night in 2004, it still feels, Gerrard says, “like yesterday”. “When you are in that position and one falls for you it’s make or break at that moment. Luckily for me it was one of the sweetest strikes I have ever hit. Just such a relief to see the net go. If I had to pick my favourite goal for connection and also the reaction of the crowd – that’s the one.



                                “The memory is still so strong. When I look back over my career so far it pops up as one of the main games. And it started the journey to Istanbul. And Andy Gray’s commentary made the goal even better than it was.”

                                One suspects that Gray’s commentary on Gerrard’s goal – “Oh you beauttttttttty, what a hit, son! What a hit!” – will be played over the Tannoy on Saturday along with a few more reminders of famous Gerrard moments over the years. He has won a Champions League title, a Uefa Cup, two FA Cups and three League Cups. Not a bad haul, although there is one major club honour missing.

                                The club’s 19th league title, their first since 1990, looks like it will not come in Gerrard’s career and although he says he will never stop trying, he has made his peace with the possibility that it could forever elude him. The current battle to keep the striker Luis Suarez at Anfield, about which Gerrard is outspoken, is a sign of just how hard it will be even to regain Liverpool’s place in the Champions League.

                                He says: “Sometimes you have to be realistic and say we just fell short [in the league in past years]. Realistically sitting here now we are not one of the favourites to win it this season or the season after but we have to see what happens. I am never going to give up fighting for it. I won’t give up the dream of winning it but I have to be proud and happy with how my career has gone from a personal point of view and also what I have won with the team.

                                “We had no right to win the Champions League in 2005. We were probably the 10th, 12th best team in the tournament. With a little bit of luck and a bit of desire and determination that made up for the lack of ability. We went and achieved the impossible. A lot of top players all over the world never win the Champions League. I think that’s the best trophy to win in any footballer’s career besides maybe the World Cup.

                                “I have to be grateful for what I’ve done and not be too upset that I fell a bit short in the Premier League. It hasn’t been through a lack of effort or a lack of trying. In certain seasons we fell short by inches, in other seasons we have been nowhere near it. I have to accept it.”

                                He has a new one-year extension to his contract which will keep him at the club until the summer of 2015. The shoulder operation in May meant he has had the benefit of a full pre-season to stand him in good stead in a World Cup year.

                                He will be Liverpool’s longest-serving captain in October, passing the previous record set by Alex Raisbeck more than 100 years ago. What he wants is a “couple more trophies” and one more tilt at the Champions League before he calls time on the unique pressure of being a Liverpudlian captain of Liverpool.

                                “I think that pressure helps with your own performances and your own form because you are always striving for the top. When you have that relationship you don’t want to let the fans down. You want to maintain a high standard every time you go out and play.

                                “But it also has the other effect, too. It’s tough. Liverpool fans are a tough crowd – the expectations and what they demand from players every single game, whether it be the third round of the Carling Cup or the Champions League final, you are expected to perform the same level. They are only ever happy when they win, the Liverpool fans.

                                “It does come with pressures and demands but I wouldn’t want it any other way. I don’t think I would enjoy it if I played at a club where there wasn’t the same demands and pressures. That’s what I enjoy: big games and big pressure situations.”

                                To celebrate Steven Gerrard’s testimonial BT Sport will donate £1, up to £100,000, for every tweet that includes £thesupportersclub on 3 August between 9am and 9pm. The Supporters’ Club is a fund established by BT Sport to help change the lives of young people in the UK and some of the world’s poorest countries. It will fund the coaches, mentors and teachers to help young people achieve their goals in life.

                                Fair Kop: Gerrard’s Liverpool career

                                Debut 29 November 1998, v Blackburn (h), as sub for Vegard Heggem in 2-0 win

                                First goal 5 December 1999, v Sheffield Wednesday (h) in a 4-1 victory

                                Season by season

                                1998-99 13 games 0 goals

                                1999-2000 31 games 1 goal

                                2000-01 50 games 10 goals

                                2001-02 45 games 4 goals

                                2002-03 54 games 7 goals

                                2003-04 47 games 6 goals

                                2004-05 43 games 13 goals

                                2005-06 53 games 23 goals

                                2006-07 51 games 11 goals

                                2007-08 52 games 21 goals

                                2008-09 44 games 24 goals

                                2009-10 49 games 12 goals

                                2010-11 24 games 8 goals

                                2011-12 28 games 9 goals

                                2012-13 46 games 10 goals

                                Honours Champions League 2005; Uefa Cup 2001; FA Cup 2001, 2006; League Cup 2001, 2003, 2012; PFA Player of the Year 2006; FWA Footballer of the Year 2009

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