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    Rodgers: We'll work to develop again

    25th Apr 2014 - Latest News

    Among the consequences of qualifying for the Champions League is the necessity for further squad depth – a fact acknowledged and embraced by Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers.

    The Reds ensured that they will play in Europe's premier club competition next season by downing Norwich City 3-2 last weekend, a result which meant a minimum finish of third in the Barclays Premier League.

    In five months, therefore, Anfield can welcome some of the finest opponents from around the continent for the first time since the 2009-10 campaign, when the team were last involved at that level.

    To have secured their berth in the division's top trio with three fixtures still to navigate is a 'remarkable' achievement according to the boss, although he is already planning ahead for the additional demands it may bring.

    "We're going to need depth to our squad - there's no question about that," Rodgers told reporters ahead of Sunday's meeting with Chelsea in the Premier League.

    "And certainly, this summer Liverpool Football Club becomes a really exciting and attractive proposition for players.

    "That's something that we'll continue to look at and continue to work on, to get those talents into the club to help grow and develop the squad. We've got targets; we know we need to improve - we're in the Champions League now, so we can say that."

    The Canaries were the 11th consecutive side to suffer defeat against the Reds in the Premier League, while Rodgers' charges have not been on the wrong end of a loss during the calendar year.

    Indeed, Liverpool hold a five-point advantage over their weekend combatants as they enter their final three matches - prompting the manager to laud the contribution of his players today.

    He added: "Everyone would have looked at it at the beginning of the season, and probably saw it as a real challenge for us to even be in the top four.

    "The competition at this level, the teams and obviously the money that was spent in the summer would have projected that we would have been really challenged to get in the top four.

    "So, with three games to go, to have confirmed our place in the top three and the Champions League really shows you the effort that our players have put in, how hard they've worked and the quality with which they've played.

    "That's something remarkable.

    "But I'm not surprised, because of how the players have worked and how they've played consistently. It's good for us; we just want to keep it going."
    What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

    Batman

    F*** off!!!

    Comment


      Truth be told I felt that Rafa would have been better fit for us right after Kenny but I was so wrong and I'm so glad I was.

      I just cannot stop listening to what this man has to say now.

      He truly turned me into a believer.
      Member #1 of the Luis Suarez fan club

      Comment


        Originally posted by Mostar View Post
        Truth be told I felt that Rafa would have been better fit for us right after Kenny but I was so wrong and I'm so glad I was.

        I just cannot stop listening to what this man has to say now.

        He truly turned me into a believer.


        I think a lot of people shared this view. A brave, bold, but ultimately correct decision by FSG - one of many!
        Modifying post.

        Comment


          Rodgers and the rest should take a leaf from Sir Alex Ferguson and Davie Moyes. Modest men but remarkable at their jobs.

          They have earned the right to nice things in life but they will keep it in the background. They do not attract unnecessary attention to themselves.

          You certainly won’t see them buying a car in the same forecourt as Snoop Dog.

          Rodgers is light years behind Ferguson and a million miles away from Moyes' achievements.
          Just read this in an article from 2012. !
          The times they are a changin'.

          Comment


            Originally posted by Mostar View Post
            Truth be told I felt that Rafa would have been better fit for us right after Kenny but I was so wrong and I'm so glad I was.

            I just cannot stop listening to what this man has to say now.

            He truly turned me into a believer.
            What do we know eh?
            "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

            Comment


              i didnt know much about rodgers when he came in so was more than sceptical. the way he came across on being liverpool was cringeworthy to be fair.
              i was ok with martinez so long as we had an old head to steer and assist, a DOF like van gaal or the like.
              rodgers has done a little better than expected. in a few games i might even get a tattoo with his big cheesey grin on it
              removing all the weak links makes us stronger

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

              Comment


                Originally posted by Buzzo View Post
                I think a lot of people shared this view. A brave, bold, but ultimately correct decision by FSG - one of many!


                Originally posted by Tee View Post
                What do we know eh?
                Member #1 of the Luis Suarez fan club

                Comment


                  I want a gif of him bouncing in a low rider

                  Comment


                    Liverpool's Brendan Rodgers: Melwood's meticulous master

                    By Ben Smith

                    BBC Sport

                    Brendan Rodgers has always talked a good game but this season he has finally been able to practise what he preached.

                    Long before he arrived at Anfield, the man from Carnlough on the Antrim coast of Northern Ireland spoke with a zeal that fans wanted to hear, journalists wanted to listen to and players wanted to respond to. But the question many asked was could he also walk the walk?

                    The answer has been both eloquent and emphatic. Liverpool are on the brink of winning a first league title since 1990, 12 months after they finished seventh in the Premier League. Club owners, Fenway Sports Group, had set him the target of Champions League qualification from next season.

                    To be welcoming his old mentor, Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho, to a city abuzz with title fever is an illustration of how quickly Rodgers's methods have taken root on and off the field.

                    Liverpool have scored 96 goals in 35 Premier League matches this season - already a club record - playing a brand of football that has captured the imagination by entertaining and, at times, enthralling the rest of the English game.

                    Anfield feels like a different ground this season and 15 wins from 17 home matches says it all.

                    But the subtle changes made by Rodgers may have gone unnoticed. The traditional red nets were restored, as was the oldest surviving 'This is Anfield' sign, which hung over the tunnel from 1974 to 1998, a period in which Liverpool won 25 major trophies, including four European Cups.

                    Likewise, the playing of 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is now delayed until the players and, more importantly, the opponents are on the field.

                    The supporters have noticed the difference. Rodgers was applauded at Anfield last season but never with the acclaim that has poured from the stands this term. Now his name is sung by the Kop, while scarves bearing his image are sold outside

                    A look around Rodgers's office at Liverpool's Melwood training ground is revealing. On the walls are black and white images of past managerial masters: Bill Shankly at Anfield, one finger raised in celebration; Bob Paisley holding the league trophy aloft; Kenny Dalglish; Ronnie Moran - the men who set the tone for the club. They provided the benchmark to which all successors must aspire.

                    On his desk, colour-coded files hold the secrets behind the transformation - the tactical intelligence, hunting in packs, pace on the counter attack. Detail is everything and each training session is planned meticulously, with a four-day schedule designed to lead the players into game day.

                    He is now planning to re-lay the pitch at Anfield and those at Melwood to make them quicker, allowing Liverpool's passing even more zip.

                    Nothing is left to chance.


                    His relationship with psychiatrist Dr Steve Peters has been vital to the club's success. The pair have freed the players from the burden of pressure and expectation, focusing on what can be controlled and ignoring what can't.

                    If Liverpool prepare properly, the entire squad believes it can and will beat any opponent. The fearlessness that has been a feature of their play is no coincidence.

                    Rodgers himself has also changed. Mind games have gone - now his players do the talking. Where once "relentless possession" was his managerial pillar, Manchester City (3-2), Arsenal (5-1), Tottenham (4-0) and Everton (4-0) were torn apart by counter-attacking football coupled with a relentless and devastating pressing game.

                    Rodgers's players practice the "five-second rule", in which the team press their opponents immediately on losing possession for five seconds, before easing back. They then wait for precise triggers to press again. If a pass bounces off a foot, or an attacker needs to look down at the ball - as soon as their opponents' options are limited, Liverpool pounce.

                    Possession is no longer the be all and end all. Liverpool are arguably at their most dangerous when they don't have the ball.

                    As a man-manager, Rodgers is more flexible too. In the summer of 2012, he attempted to sell Jordan Henderson to Fulham having decided he might not develop into a top-class midfielder. Martin Skrtel and full-back Jon Flanagan were told they could look for other clubs. There was even a reluctance to sign Daniel Sturridge - who has 20 league goals this season - when he was offered to Rodgers 18 months ago.

                    To bring back the Boot Room feel, on being appointed as manager in 2012, Rodgers requested that the red nets return to Anfield for the first time since 1994-95 season.

                    Now, he has created an environment where, if players impress him enough, he is willing to change his mind.

                    The decision to switch Steven Gerrard to a deep-lying midfield role has been one of the success stories of the season. Rather than attempting to mould the players to his vision, he has looked at their strengths and picked his team to play to their strengths not his.

                    Rodgers stands on the brink of achieving something special as a manager but has been preparing for this moment over a 15-year-coaching career, updating and reworking the 180-page dossier that is his coaching bible.

                    It is the document that convinced Liverpool's principal owners, John W Henry and Tom Werner, to employ him in 2012. It explains how he wants to play, the way in which he wants to develop young talent and his blueprint for the attractive, attacking football that has taken the Premier League by storm.

                    Rodgers's experience as a youth-team coach at Chelsea remains crucial to the work he does on the training field, where he spends time coaching his players individually to make them technically better footballers.

                    Henderson, Flanagan, Raheem Sterling, Sturridge, Philippe Coutinho and Skrtel to name but a few have all improved - and there is a daily commitment to coaching the best out of individuals, plus the squad as a collective.

                    Rodgers worked under his mentor Jose Mourinho at Chelsea as youth team manager in 2004 and was promoted to reserve team manager in 2006.

                    Rodgers has prided himself on his ability to learn from everyone he has worked with during his career. He tells friends that being employed by Mourinho was "like going to Harvard". But his ambition has been overriding. During his time at Chelsea he was writing to England's World Cup-winning rugby coach, Sir Clive Woodward, to ask about opportunities at Southampton.

                    He got his chance to manage first with Watford and then at Reading, only to be sacked. It was then, in December 2009, that Sir Alex Ferguson took time to dictate a letter to be sent to Rodgers, who had impressed the Manchester United manager during his time at Watford.
                    Ferguson told him to keep his chin up and that his time would come. The Scot was right. It was that same talent that persuaded Mourinho to promote Rodgers to reserve-team coach. The men remain close and will meet on the touchline at Anfield on Sunday as peers and equals.

                    Rodgers was influenced by Mourinho, as he was by Barcelona managers Pep Guardiola, Frank Rijkaard and, going further back, Johan Cruyff.

                    It remains to be seen if Rodgers can write himself into Anfield folklore by doing what only Shankly, Paisley, Dalglish and Joe Fagan have done since the war - lead Liverpool to the league title.

                    The gospel according to Rodgers is building to a dramatic climax.
                    What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

                    Batman

                    F*** off!!!

                    Comment


                      Bit too revealing on tactics

                      Comment


                        Always been his way. From day one he has been upfront with how he wants to play. Its too his credit too. Because we are top of the ****ting league with that approach
                        *Except Michael, who died.

                        Comment


                          Won't be able to have 4 days prep for games next season with the champions league
                          Originally posted by fah-q
                          Didn't someone once see Philip Schofield ****ting into a crisp packet?

                          Comment


                            Will have a bigger squad though and his ideas will have been ingrained into his players too

                            Comment


                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Yozza View Post
                                Liverpool's Brendan Rodgers: Melwood's meticulous master

                                By Ben Smith

                                BBC Sport

                                ....

                                But the subtle changes made by Rodgers may have gone unnoticed. The traditional red nets were restored, as was the oldest surviving 'This is Anfield' sign, which hung over the tunnel from 1974 to 1998, a period in which Liverpool won 25 major trophies, including four European Cups.

                                Likewise, the playing of 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is now delayed until the players and, more importantly, the opponents are on the field.


                                ....
                                Small changes. Giant steps.
                                Another MASSIVE game

                                Comment

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