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    #16
    Our best player this season IMO.

    The thing he improved most is the change of tempo. He is now much better deciding when to slow down the game and play safe and when to up the tempo.

    He is also much better deciding when to stay back and when to attack.
    Stop the cyberhate


    from now on I will skip talking about our finances. That is a promise and will save myself from looking like a

    Susan Black

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      #17
      She's tidy! The boy's done well for himself.

      Comment


        #18
        Originally posted by Redspin View Post
        I don't think he's developed particularly. He's playing exactly like he always has and the only difference is that he's finally getting due recognition.

        I always liked him from the very beginning and could see his quality. The trouble is that he's a bit more intelligent than most of our squad and plays a modern, short-passing, ball-retaining game - typically Brazilian - that's complete alien to some of the dinosaurs in the squad - and is too complex for the knee-jerk merchants in our support.

        Let's face it many of our feeble-minded supporters love nothing more than a scapegoat and yearn to single out someone for mindless abuse. It's always been the same for as long as I've been a supporter. Lucas is just the latest in a very long line of players to suffer
        I think you may put people of from giving your opinions credence with your somewhat patronising tone.

        I tend to agree that many of the qualities Lucas is now showing were always there. Equally though I think that some of the flaws were too. When there is good movement in the team and people are passing confidently Lucas helps them - when they don't he isn't the sort of player (in contrast to say Fabregas or Alonso who are) whose passing and movement induce others to follow their example or brings them into play and create space.

        I like him a lot (and always have) but you have to consider the downsides as well as the positives. In the PL I think his interception and 'nick the ball' rather than crunching tackle style is perceived as a weakness and if the rest of the team don't step up the opposition are encouraged in their efforts to bully us and referees tend to let this happen if they believe you are weak. He is also clearly not mobile enough to be a Mascherano style sweeping presence in midfield. His short, quick passing is excellent but he does not possess the option of longer, aerial passes, even when they may be a good option. This sometimes leads to him dallying in midfield if there are not sever deep running options.
        "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
        -- William Blake

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          #19
          Originally posted by dww View Post
          I think you may put people of from giving your opinions credence with your somewhat patronising tone.

          I tend to agree that many of the qualities Lucas is now showing were always there. Equally though I think that some of the flaws were too. When there is good movement in the team and people are passing confidently Lucas helps them - when they don't he isn't the sort of player (in contrast to say Fabregas or Alonso who are) whose passing and movement induce others to follow their example or brings them into play and create space.

          I like him a lot (and always have) but you have to consider the downsides as well as the positives. In the PL I think his interception and 'nick the ball' rather than crunching tackle style is perceived as a weakness and if the rest of the team don't step up the opposition are encouraged in their efforts to bully us and referees tend to let this happen if they believe you are weak. He is also clearly not mobile enough to be a Mascherano style sweeping presence in midfield. His short, quick passing is excellent but he does not possess the option of longer, aerial passes, even when they may be a good option. This sometimes leads to him dallying in midfield if there are not sever deep running options.
          "somewhat" patronising?

          He's always uber-patronising, speaks like he and nobody else knows anything about football, and never once have i read a post from him which ISNT like this.

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by dww View Post
            I think you may put people of from giving your opinions credence with your somewhat patronising tone.

            I tend to agree that many of the qualities Lucas is now showing were always there. Equally though I think that some of the flaws were too. When there is good movement in the team and people are passing confidently Lucas helps them - when they don't he isn't the sort of player (in contrast to say Fabregas or Alonso who are) whose passing and movement induce others to follow their example or brings them into play and create space.

            I like him a lot (and always have) but you have to consider the downsides as well as the positives. In the PL I think his interception and 'nick the ball' rather than crunching tackle style is perceived as a weakness and if the rest of the team don't step up the opposition are encouraged in their efforts to bully us and referees tend to let this happen if they believe you are weak. He is also clearly not mobile enough to be a Mascherano style sweeping presence in midfield. His short, quick passing is excellent but he does not possess the option of longer, aerial passes, even when they may be a good option. This sometimes leads to him dallying in midfield if there are not sever deep running options.
            I'm far too drunk to discuss this properly but I honestly don't think Mascherano was that much more 'mobile'. I also think you're underrating Lucas' passing ability, he may not go for the exotic pass that often, but when he does, he rarely misses. I thought this was evident against Stoke the other night as he sprayed a few lovely balls in the first half.

            To be continued (ha ha).
            If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

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              #21
              Drunk at 2:45pm?

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                #22
                Originally posted by Craig_H View Post
                Drunk at 2:45pm?
                Yes, I slept in.
                If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

                Comment


                  #23
                  Originally posted by RedReet View Post
                  I'm far too drunk to discuss this properly but I honestly don't think Mascherano was that much more 'mobile'. I also think you're underrating Lucas' passing ability, he may not go for the exotic pass that often, but when he does, he rarely misses. I thought this was evident against Stoke the other night as he sprayed a few lovely balls in the first half.

                  To be continued (ha ha).
                  I will qualify the comment about Mascherano - in this context I refer mostly to his acceleration. He was exceptional at dashing from one point to another quickly to 'fight fires' when others were out of position. I really don't think Lucas has anything like the acceleration and that it is something generally lacking in our defence.

                  I didn't see the Stoke game this year, but I did last season when he played with Gerrard and we/they spanked them (4-0 IIRC). When given space and runs from deep by wide players he works well (another example would be our spanking of Newcastle, again with Lucas and Gerrard centrally, a couple of season back - that day Babel was providing the runs). Other times he doesn't and he isn't a player who naturally looks for those balls even when we need to force the situation - which in many ways is ideal in the way we are currently playing football but it should be recognised as a limitation.
                  "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
                  -- William Blake

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Originally posted by dww View Post
                    I will qualify the comment about Mascherano - in this context I refer mostly to his acceleration. He was exceptional at dashing from one point to another quickly to 'fight fires' when others were out of position. I really don't think Lucas has anything like the acceleration and that it is something generally lacking in our defence.

                    I didn't see the Stoke game this year, but I did last season when he played with Gerrard and we/they spanked them (4-0 IIRC). When given space and runs from deep by wide players he works well (another example would be our spanking of Newcastle, again with Lucas and Gerrard centrally, a couple of season back - that day Babel was providing the runs). Other times he doesn't and he isn't a player who naturally looks for those balls even when we need to force the situation - which in many ways is ideal in the way we are currently playing football but it should be recognised as a limitation.

                    Ha ha, I'd written what I thought was a good reply to this but obviously didn't hit submit.

                    Sadly it will probably be Tuesday before I have a second go.
                    If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Originally posted by RedReet View Post
                      Ha ha, I'd written what I thought was a good reply to this but obviously didn't hit submit.

                      Sadly it will probably be Tuesday before I have a second go.


                      I look forward to in.
                      "The man who never alters his opinion is like standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind."
                      -- William Blake

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Originally posted by dww View Post


                        I look forward to in.


                        I don't feel as stupid now.
                        If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

                        Comment


                          #27
                          The changing man
                          Peter Fraser looks at Lucas Leiva's transformation from boo-boy to midfield lynchpin at Liverpool

                          It was late in the second half at Stamford Bridge and a grimace of personal disgust shot across the face of a mild-mannered Brazilian in a demonstration of personal frustration at surrendering the ball.

                          A tackle-back and possession was immediately regained in a snapshot of the mindset of Kenny Dalglish's revolution. Amid the focus upon the act of fate which saw £50million striker Fernando Torres making his Chelsea debut against his former club, the man in question was Lucas Leiva. Liverpool's No.21 demonstrated why he has emerged as a lynchpin.

                          Martin Kelly, Dirk Kuyt, Daniel Agger, Raul Meireles and, of course, Jamie Carragher and Steven Gerrard are to list six names from the 13 heroes for those in red on Sunday, when Torres was brutally outplayed in the wake of what has been labelled an act of treachery. But the transformation of Lucas deserves special mention.

                          The 2007 arrival from Gremio is often used as a label for the faults in the Liverpool reign of Rafa Benitez; a mistake in the transfer market; a square peg for a round hole. But the former Anfield boss was always rigorous in his defence of a player upon who he spent £6m and once announced that 'people just don't know how good Lucas is'.

                          General consensus is that among the wretched 12 months that was 2010 for Liverpool, Lucas was the man who stood out as the club's best player. While team-mates and managers wilted around him, the now-24-year-old showed spirit for the fight as sceptics and opponents circled like vultures.
                          Trust

                          The man from Dourados, a city in the south west of Brazil, had presumably been hardened by the barrage of negativity he had been forced to shoulder since crossing the Atlantic almost four years earlier. Lucas himself told skysports.com in an interview conducted in March 2010: "I don't know why the criticism started with me, but some people just do not like me."

                          Lucas arrived at Anfield as an attacking midfielder, who made late runs into the box and essentially represented a Brazilian version of captain Gerrard. But Benitez decided he would be best deployed in the responsible holding role, having never trusted Gerrard to fill such a position. The 2007 Merseyside derby at Goodison Park was famously an illustration as the hot-headed Gerrard was substituted by Benitez in favour of Lucas, who went on to secure a match-winning penalty.

                          The sale of Xabi Alonso to Real Madrid led to a regular first-team role for Lucas alongside Javier Mascherano, who has since joined Barcelona. However, the arrival of Roy Hodgson in the summer of 2010 seemed set to spell the end of his Liverpool career. He was told he could leave if he wanted and did not seem to feature in his new manager's plans. But the fighting spirit, which is not always evident in South American imports to the Premier League, again shinned and a first-team place was reclaimed.

                          Hodgson has gone, Lucas remains. He is clearly an integral part of Dalglish's plans, as well as inheriting Brazil's famous No.5 shirt under former Gremio boss Mano Menezes. The transformation from boo-boy to midfield engine room has been remarkable and it now appears that the much-sought-after commodity of time in football was the vital element. Lucas needed to settle, especially after arriving on a foreign continent, just out of his teenage years, and being deployed in a different position to that which earned the Bola de Ouro, the Brazilian Footballer of the Year, in 2006. A look at the Chelsea team-sheet on Sunday provided a perfect example of how difficult it can be for South Americans to find form and avoid injury in the rough and tumble of the Premier League as Ramires was not even named among the substitutes, despite costing three times as much as his compatriot.

                          There is a need to not to get carried away. The frustrating elements of Lucas' game remain evident; he started slowly against Chelsea; he can get caught in possession; he can give away clumsy free-kicks. But, as demonstrated by his tackling back in a direct duel with Michael Essien, there is the pride in personal performance that is rated so highly by Dalglish and mistakes have significantly decreased in frequency. 13 Premier League points have been collected under Dalglish in the process of close to 400 minutes without conceding a goal.

                          Argument

                          A look at Lucas' Opta statistics during his 90-minute, plus injury-time, outing against Chelsea demonstrates his improvement. His overall pass completion rate was an incredible 88.89 per cent, 81.82% when in the opponents' half of the field. These figures are very similar to his contribution for the 2010/11 campaign to date, with an overall pass completion of 84.02% and 81.08% when in the opponents' section of the field. One goal has been assisted and 14 chances created from a total of 1133 passes.

                          The obvious argument would be to suggest that the majority of passes have been simple 10-yard side-foots when under no pressure. But there is a skill to decision-making when doing the unsung task. Ask Sergio Busquets. A destructive force has also been added to Lucas' game. Ninety-nine tackles have been made throughout the season at a success rate of 66.67%. Four yellow cards have been collected. The second booking earned in the defeat to Stoke in November was an act of petulance, but also a reflection of new-found aggression. Seven tackles were made against Chelsea. This may not sound a lot, but that is one player recording exactly one third of Liverpool's entire tackle count at Stamford Bridge.

                          Lucas does not possess the natural pace, power and overall athleticism to dictate midfields, but he is beginning to patrol in front of the defence, whether it be three or two centre-backs, with brilliant effect.

                          He deserves immense praise amid the clamour for Dalglish to be given a permanent contract and the dissections of Torres' terrible 65-minute Chelsea debut. Lucas embodies what Dalglish seems to be trying to impose upon his team - a personal freedom within a team responsibility.

                          Clicky
                          Stop the cyberhate


                          from now on I will skip talking about our finances. That is a promise and will save myself from looking like a

                          Susan Black

                          Comment


                            #28
                            Turning into a beast, go-on Lucas...
                            Brandt - Keita - Van Dijk - Sessegnon

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                              #29
                              His average pass completion rate is something like 85% - astonishing! That's gotta be in the top 3 in the league surely??
                              Thanks for the memories Rafa - YNWA!

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Of the 5 missed passes, 2 were headers which seemed harsh. On the deck, his success rate would have been even higher.
                                If we are all only happy when we are really winning in the end, when your race finishes, what life would that be?

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