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    Brendan Rodgers has removed his name from the list of candidates who could potentially replace Manuel Pellegrini this summer by declaring his priority is to build a new trophy-winning dynasty at Liverpool.

    Pellegrini’s position is under scrutiny at Manchester City due to the champions’ lack of progress in the Premier League and Champions League, with last Sunday’s 2-1 loss at Liverpool undermining their hopes of retaining the title.

    While Pep Guardiola would be first choice for any leading club should he decide to leave Bayern Munich, he has ruled out departing the Allianz Arena this summer. Rodgers also fits the criteria of an attacking, possession-minded coach that City’s chief executive Ferran Soriano and director of football Txiki Begiristain want at the Etihad Stadium.


    Blackburn out to ruffle Liverpool feathers after surviving fowl times
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    The Liverpool manager has been touted as a possible replacement for Pellegrini since City’s defeat at Anfield, and has been courted by the reigning Premier League champions previously, but moved quickly to quash talk of any possible move. Liverpool host Blackburn Rovers in their FA Cup quarter-final on Sunday having hauled themselves back into contention for a Champions League place and Rodgers believes he is close to delivering long-term success to Anfield.

    “That doesn’t distract me,” he said of the City link. “I chose to come to Liverpool because I hoped I could be here for many years. The speculation is just the nature of football I think. I remember earlier this season playing Ludogorets away and as I walked off I saw a banner that said ‘Rodgers Out’ so I never get too carried away. I always have that in the back of my mind, although it was near the dug-out and wasn’t someone with the away supporters. As long as the people here at Liverpool, the board, the supporters and the players are ultimately happy with the work, I would love to be here for as long as I can.

    “We are working into an exciting phase after this season where hopefully, if we get young players tied to contracts, that will allow us to win trophies with this way of working. We’re on the way there and it’s about making the steps to challenge for major honours consistently and to win them. That’s what we want to do.”

    Rodgers is under contract at Liverpool until 2018 having signed a new four-year deal last May but has never stayed in any coaching position longer than three years. Next season will be his fourth as Liverpool manager but he insists Anfield represents “a destination” rather than a staging post in his career.

    He explained: “If I’m here after this year, and touch wood I go into the fourth year, this will be the longest period in any role I’ve been in football. After three years I’ve always moved a role or a job, from youth football right the way through. But I’ve always seen Liverpool as a club that, all being well, was going to be a destination for me not somewhere that was part of the journey.



    “I really wanted to be here, to follow some incredible managers with a support that is unrivalled, and to have success knowing that I was young enough to create and build something. That is why I came here. I know I need to justify that by working well and winning trophies and hopefully that is the next step.

    “For me there is great excitement at Liverpool with the young players coming through, with the development of the stadium, more supporters coming in because of that, and travelling the world promoting the club.”

    Asked if he could envisage himself working for another English club, Rodgers replied: “Where do you go from Liverpool, one of the biggest clubs in the world? It is all hypothetical, Liverpool might sack me and then I need to be in work, but I’ve signed a deal here and hopefully I’ll earn enough time to warrant another one.”




    guardian
    Go **** yourself

    Comment


      Brendan Rodgers: Liverpool boss has no plans to leave club

      Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers says he has no plans to leave the club.

      Rodgers signed a long-term deal with the Anfield club in May 2014 but has been linked with Manchester City.

      "Where do you go from Liverpool, one of the biggest clubs in the world?" said the 42-year-old.

      "I've signed a deal here and I want to be here to see that through. Then, hopefully, I've earned enough time to warrant another deal, to keep growing and building here."

      The Northern Irishman has yet to win a trophy since taking over at Liverpool in the summer of 2012 but did lead the club to second place in the Premier League last season, which earned qualification to the Champions League.

      After a poor start to the current campaign, they are now unbeaten in 12 league games and are just two points behind fourth-placed Manchester United.

      "If I'm here after this year, it will be the longest period in any role I've been in football. I've always been the same. After three years, I've always moved a role or job," he said.

      "I always saw Liverpool as a club that was going to be a destination for me, not somewhere that was part of the journey."

      Rodgers, who led Swansea to the Premier League in 2011, added: "I really wanted to be here, follow some incredible managers with a support that is unrivalled, and to have success while knowing I was young enough to create and build something.

      "That is why I came here. I know I need to justify that by working well and winning trophies. I hope that is the next step.

      "When you come here, that is what you are judged on. It is something I want to do for all the supporters and people here."
      http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/31779431

      I think he's doing a great job. He's built a young, talented squad that play excellent football.

      We will win trophies. This year's FA Cup would be a good start (Gerrard's last game for Liverpool).
      Another MASSIVE game

      Comment


        Opportunities to win trophies don't come around often, I think its vital for Rodgers to get that monkey off his back and goes on and wins this years fa cup.
        Always borrow money from a pessimist. He won’t expect it back. Oscar Wilde

        Comment


          Goalkeepers
          1 Brad Jones
          25 Pepe Reina S
          32 Doni
          Defenders
          2 Glen Johnson
          3 José Enrique
          5 Daniel Agger
          6 Fábio Aurélio
          16 Sebastián Coates
          23 Jamie Carragher
          34 Martin Kelly
          37 Martin Škrtel
          38 Jon Flanagan
          49 Jack Robinson

          Midfielders
          8 Steven Gerrard (C)
          11 Maxi Rodríguez
          14 Jordan Henderson
          19 Stewart Downing
          20 Jay Spearing
          21 Lucas
          26 Charlie Adam
          31 Raheem Sterling
          33 Jonjo Shelvey

          Forwards
          7 Luis Suárez
          9 Andy Carroll
          18 Dirk Kuyt
          39 Craig Bellamy

          Amazing the turnaround in 3 seasons. Only 9 players left from when he joined of which god willing we will only have left 5 of them after the summer.

          Quite a remarkable job.
          _____________________________________

          Weak willed, Wank or do they have a masterplan?

          Think we have the answer..Slot!!

          Comment


            Originally posted by red g View Post
            ........

            Amazing the turnaround in 3 seasons. Only 9 players left from when he joined of which god willing we will only have left 5 of them after the summer.

            Quite a remarkable job.
            Agreed

            A back line marshalled by Coates, along with Glen and Enrique, shielding Jones, will give us the rock on which to base our irresistible attack. Add in Lucas' goals and we'll be right up there.
            "I will make the boys feel your support"
            Jurgen Klopp June 2020

            Comment


              Originally posted by McDermotX View Post
              Agreed

              A back line marshalled by Coates, along with Glen and Enrique, shielding Jones, will give us the rock on which to base our irresistible attack. Add in Lucas' goals and we'll be right up there.
              Managed by the second coming of Hodgson when Rodgers leaves for City....what could go wrong?
              _____________________________________

              Weak willed, Wank or do they have a masterplan?

              Think we have the answer..Slot!!

              Comment


                Trophies are the barometer here.
                Substance > Style

                Comment


                  Comment


                    Hello.
                    Another MASSIVE game

                    Comment


                      Is it me you're looking for?

                      Comment


                        Bloody hell, Brendan's wife is looking very different.
                        "Its not about the long ball or the short ball, its about the right ball." Bob Paisley

                        Comment


                          Jermaine Pennant's let himself go quite a bit.

                          Comment


                            Originally posted by Tee View Post
                            Bloody hell, Brendan's wife is looking very different.


                            She's a Corker eh!

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by Phoenix07 View Post
                              Jermaine Pennant's let himself go quite a bit.

                              Comment


                                Liverpool have not conceded in six away games... credit must go to Brendan Rodgers for changing tactics and shoring up defence

                                Brendan Rodgers changed Liverpool's formation to 3-4-3 to much success
                                Simon Mignolet, Martin Skrtel and Mamadou Sakho have all prospered

                                The progress Liverpool have made since that defeat at Old Trafford in December has been nothing short of remarkable. They remain the only unbeaten team in the Barclays Premier League this year and it owes much to the solidity of a defence now boasting six straight away games without conceding a goal.

                                Clearly, it amounts to a tactical triumph for manager Brendan Rodgers. Not least in the way he tore up his own blueprint for life without Luis Suarez and came up with an entirely new strategy that has worked for the players who remain at Anfield.

                                That is no easy task, as Roberto Martinez and Louis van Gaal would probably testify.

                                But watching Liverpool at Swansea on Monday night, their success in stopping their hosts from scoring was down to more than the clever deployment of certain players.

                                Yes, there is no doubt the decision to move Emre Can into a back three - when he was signed principally as a midfielder – was quite brilliant. Can has been superb in the role alongside Martin Skrtel and Mamadou Sakho, who have also benefitted hugely from a tactical reshuffle that appears to provide them with more security and with it greater confidence.

                                The decision to drop Simon Mignolet earlier this season has also proved an astute piece of leadership by Rodgers. How a player responds is of the utmost importance and Liverpool’s goalkeeper, much like we saw with Joe Hart at Manchester City, has returned with greater focus and determination. Against Swansea he made some marvellous saves, in particular to deny Bafetimbi Gomis and Gylfi Sigurdsson.

                                That said, Liverpool’s defence also demonstrated against Swansea that they remain prone to the occasional mistake. There was a moment at The Liberty Stadium, which led to the Mignolet save to deny Gomis, when a neat exchange of passes between Swansea’s French striker and Wayne Routledge left a gaping hole in Liverpool’s back three.

                                In the press box we do not have the benefit of Jamie Carragher and Gary Neville’s tactical analysis but I can imagine one of them might have highlighted that on their super-duper tactics board at half-time.

                                This is where Liverpool have also been riding their luck a little; a luxury teams sometimes enjoy when they have a bit of momentum and something that was illustrated further by the nature of Jordan Henderson’s winning goal.

                                But football teams often make their own luck and the truth is their success in defending their own goal in recent weeks goes way beyond good organisation and some fine individual performances.

                                It points to the fact that Liverpool, having started the season so poorly, are working doubly hard to get back into contention for the Champions League places.

                                They are defending as a team, with players tracking back tirelessly from midfield to rescue their colleagues when mistakes are made.

                                Neil Taylor tested Can on Swansea’s left flank but it was Henderson who was there to make one important interception, even if the challenge was a little over-zealous and earned the England midfielder the first yellow card of the night. When Gomis burst past Skrtel later in the game, it was Joe Allen who was there to cut out the shot.

                                Desire and determination are important qualities at this stage of the season and Rodgers declared his side’s ambition to finish second again this season in the knowledge that these players want it every bit as much as he does.

                                Yes, the defenders look more assured. Yes, Skrtel is proving himself a leader in the Liverpool defence. Against Swansea he was outstanding, even producing the initial pass that led to Henderson’s goal. And yes, Sakho and Can are now playing to the level we have long come to expect of Liverpool defenders.

                                But they are working as a team, and playing with more composure after Rodgers realised the more cavalier approach they employed when Suarez and Daniel Sturridge were terrorising defenders just wasn’t working this season.

                                The statistics make interesting reading. Only five Premier League goals conceded in 10 games in 2015 compared to 25 in the 19 they had played before the turn of the year. But it’s as much down to hard graft as the intelligence of Rodgers.

                                And while the deployment of Gerrard as a holding midfielder, and with it a slight change to a diamond formation, gave Henderson the freedom to get further forward last night, it was the mere fact that Henderson was fit enough and determined enough to make that run in pursuit of Sturridge’s flick-on that earned Liverpool their goal.

                                Seriously motivated, Liverpool are on the move again.

                                Liverpool have not lost in their last 13 games - a run that has seen them rise from 10th in the table to fifth.

                                D - 2-2 Arsenal (H)
                                W - 1-0 Burnley (A)
                                W - 4-1 Swansea (H)
                                D - 2-2 Leicester (H)
                                W - 1-0 Sunderland (A)
                                W - 2-0 Aston Villa (A)
                                W - 2-0 West Ham (H)
                                D - 0-0 Everton (A)
                                W - 3-2 Tottenham (H)
                                W - 2-0 Southampton (A)
                                W - 2-1 Man City (H)
                                W - 2-0 Burnley (H)
                                W - 1-0 Swansea (A)

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