30-07-22, 09:36 PM
|
#201
|
Big Girl's Blouse
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 36,683
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by BigChief
Andy Carroll mkII gets an assist and a goal against City. 
|
Weirdest post of the day winner
|
|
|
30-07-22, 11:15 PM
|
#202
|
Shankly
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,348
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by BigChief
Andy Carroll mkII gets an assist and a goal against City. 
|
Andy Carroll mkII was playing for city and missed a sitter
|
|
|
30-07-22, 11:20 PM
|
#203
|
Paisley
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 24,277
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by fidget
Andy Carroll mkII was playing for city and missed a sitter 
|
 long may it continue
__________________
No 1 Klopp supporter
|
|
|
30-07-22, 11:28 PM
|
#204
|
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 22,504
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by SB
 long may it continue 
|
Am already excited at the prospect of him starting against Fulham. Darwin that is, not Andy C mk 2
__________________
I don't hate people. I just feel better when they aren't around.
|
|
|
31-07-22, 12:17 AM
|
#205
|
Paisley
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 24,277
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaco_Pastorious
Am already excited at the prospect of him starting against Fulham. Darwin that is, not Andy C mk 2 
|
Patience mate. Bring him on against tiring legs imo.
__________________
No 1 Klopp supporter
|
|
|
31-07-22, 12:59 AM
|
#206
|
Befuddled
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 3,608
|
My wife glanced at the screen, saw Haaland and said: that is one ugly looking woman.
I was proud.
__________________
I love Sarah
|
|
|
31-07-22, 01:06 AM
|
#207
|
Dalglish
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 2,154
|
Made some great runs when he came on.
__________________
Y.N.W.A!!!!!!
"There are two great teams on Merseyside; Liverpool and Liverpool Reserves." - Bill Shankly
|
|
|
31-07-22, 10:46 AM
|
#208
|
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 22,504
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by SB
Patience mate. Bring him on against tiring legs imo.
|
Nah start him and we can figure out what to do with him after he has bagged a hattrick.
__________________
I don't hate people. I just feel better when they aren't around.
|
|
|
31-07-22, 11:30 AM
|
#209
|
Still sulking...
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 3,686
|
Quote:
“The world has gone crazy, we had better strikers in our youth team. I ordered my assistant to open a bottle of champagne, it felt like we had won the lottery” - Benfica president Rui Costa
|
Now I will enjoy watching Benfica come 12th this season using their 'better' strikers.
|
|
|
31-07-22, 12:23 PM
|
#210
|
Paisley
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 12,099
|
I think that's a fake quote. Something similar floated around for Fred to Utd.
__________________
It's Kloppering time!
|
|
|
31-07-22, 12:55 PM
|
#211
|
Paisley
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 24,277
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by BigChief
I think that's a fake quote. Something similar floated around for Fred to Utd.
|
Yeah but that’s totally believable
__________________
No 1 Klopp supporter
|
|
|
31-07-22, 05:49 PM
|
#212
|
Fagan
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 1,246
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corndog
Made some great runs when he came on.
|
One of the papers described his performance as being as if Liverpool had thrown a box of fireworks into Man City's penalty area.
|
|
|
31-07-22, 06:21 PM
|
#213
|
Paisley 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 27,518
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul12
One of the papers described his performance as being as if Liverpool had thrown a box of fireworks into Man City's penalty area.
|
How was Haalands described? A box of tissue papers?
__________________
_____________________________________
Weak willed, Wank or do they have a masterplan?
Think we have the answer ..Klopp   
|
|
|
31-07-22, 11:34 PM
|
#214
|
Run the Jewels
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 37,565
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by red g
How was Haalands described? A box of tissue papers?
|
An over-inflated male sex doll.
__________________
Fuck off.
|
|
|
01-08-22, 03:56 AM
|
#215
|
Paisley
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 24,277
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fosterbloke
An over-inflated male sex doll.
|
I told you you’d be back when we beat City in the Final
__________________
No 1 Klopp supporter
|
|
|
01-08-22, 12:16 PM
|
#216
|
Donald Buzzworth 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 52,928
|
Quote:
Liverpool’s Darwin Nunez: From a hospital bed to the Premier League
Jack Lang
Aug 1, 2022
Fernando Curutchet can still remember the moment when he feared he had unwittingly ruined Darwin Nunez’s career.
It was late 2016. Curutchet, the director of Penarol’s academy, had been asked to take charge of the first team for the final few games of the season. His job was to steady the ship, but he had other plans: he wanted to introduce the world to the explosive, irrepressible striker who had been making mincemeat of opposition defenders for years in the youth leagues.
Nunez was only 17, but Curutchet knew he was ready. There was only one issue: the under-23 team were fighting for a league title and wanted Nunez to play in the run-in. Curutchet reluctantly assented and waited for word of Nunez’s latest exploits.
But the news, when it came, was devastating. Nunez had gone up for a header in a game against Sud America and landed awkwardly. His knee had buckled under the weight of his body, tearing his anterior cruciate ligament.
“I got a lump in my throat when I found out what had happened,” Curutchet tells The Athletic, emotion adorning his voice. “Apparently the pitch was in a poor state. It was such a bad injury at what should have been his big moment.”
Rationally speaking, Curutchet was not remotely to blame. Yet he was overcome by a feeling of unease that only subsided when he visited Nunez in hospital. He went there to offer consolation and succour; instead, it was the teenager who comforted him.
“He had such a mature attitude,” recalls Curutchet. “He told me, ‘Don’t worry. Don’t feel guilty. It’s just life. I will recover and keep moving forward. It’s just one of those things I have to get past’.”
Nunez, now a hit with Liverpool, pictured after his knee injury (@Rlima5dt/Twitter)
This was not the first obstacle Nunez had to clear on his journey to the highest level. Nor was it to be the last. Any telling of the Nunez story will touch upon the hunger pangs he experienced as a child, the homesickness, the tears shed during every training session for months because that knee still wasn’t right.
But his outlook in that hospital bed — the clear-headed, self-pity-is-for-suckers grit that bowled Curutchet over — was telling. For all Nunez’s technical and physical attributes, those who know him best agree that what makes him really special is that inner strength — the ability to face hardship and resist, as another of his former coaches puts it.
“He has this huge resilience inside him, this desire to keep going,” says Curutchet. “It is one of his big virtues.”
Nunez grew up in Artigas, in Uruguay’s rural north. The city sits next to the Cuareim, a river that separates Uruguay and Brazil over some 250km.
Artigas, jutting up into a curve in the flow, looks like it quite fancies being on the other side. Sometimes the water itself seems to like the idea, too: the Cuareim is an unruly thing and is prone to overflowing its banks when heavy rains come.
Many houses in the poorer parts of the city are built on the flood plane. Nunez lived in one of them. It was not uncommon to see families rebuilding their homes — rebuilding their lives — every few years. It is the kind of place where resolve is simply written into your DNA. At which point we should probably call the Obvious Metaphor Police before we have a real situation on our hands.
The Nunez family had to grind to make ends meet. Darwin’s father, Bibiano, worked in construction. His mother, Silvia, did some shifts as a cleaner and collected glass bottles in the street. She could sell them later, but not for much; there was not always enough money to feed everyone.
“I sometimes went to sleep with an empty stomach,” Nunez told El Observador in 2019. “But it was my mum who went hungry the most, so us kids had something to eat.”
Nunez played local youth football until 2013, when he was picked up by Penarol, one of Uruguay’s most historic teams. His first trip down south to Montevideo proved to be a false start. He was only 14 and all alone, 600km from home. Understandably, he missed his family. After a couple of months, he returned to Artigas.
A year later, he tried again, with the promise that his parents would come to the capital to accompany him for longer spells. It helped that his older brother, Junior, had also been asked to join the Penarol academy.
This time, he made it stick. Nunez joined the under-16 side and set about making up for lost time.
“He was fast and powerful, even before he started to grow into his body and put on a bit more muscle,” recalls Curutchet.
“His physical attributes allowed him to dominate opponents with ease. The other team could never really stop him. He also had a good shot from outside the area, which was a big weapon at that age.
“Darwin already looked like the kind of player who would go as far as he wanted in the game. If he had a ceiling, he would decide where it was. You could not fail to see his quality.”
In the youth teams, Nunez usually played up front in a 4-4-2. He studied videos of Edinson Cavani and tried to mimic his movements, particularly his diagonal runs in behind the defence. But Nunez’s superiority was such that he did not always have the patience to wait for a cross or a through ball.
“He was an individualist,” says Curutchet. “If nothing was happening, he would drop back to get the ball, turn and cause problems. He created a great number of goals for himself.
“I always remember a goal he scored against Liverpool (the Uruguayan team based in Montevideo) at under-17 level. He dribbled half the length of the field. At that point, I knew he had nothing left to learn in that age category. He needed a bigger challenge.”
Nunez started to train with the first team. Then came that crushing injury, which kept him out of action for the best part of a year. His positive attitude carried him through the surgery and the rehab, but the recovery did not go as smoothly as everyone had hoped: when he returned to training, he felt a nagging pain his knee.
“He said he felt something scraping inside it,” says Fabian Estoyanoff, a former Uruguay international who was one of Nunez’s mentors in Penarol’s senior squad. “For some time, they couldn’t work out what the problem was. They thought it was tendonitis. It was very frustrating for him.”
In the end, it went far beyond frustration. Leonardo Ramos, who took over as first-team coach at the start of 2017, says that Nunez was so distraught that he wanted to give football up altogether.
“He’d end every training session in tears,” Ramos tells The Athletic. “At one stage I took him aside and asked him how he was. He told me he wanted to quit football and return to Artigas. He said he could not take the pain. He said that he loved playing but that he could not give 100 per cent because of his knee. It was a lot to cope with. He was clearly feeling really low.”
Ramos refused to let Nunez walk away. “We had a father-son chat,” he says. “When you speak to a player in that way, sometimes you are gentle and other times you need to be firm. I told him to remember his dreams. In that moment, I wanted to reawaken the footballer he had inside him.”
Ramos gave Nunez his first-team debut in November 2017, asking him to play through the pain for a glimpse of what the future might look like. When further exams showed extra bone growth on Nunez’s patella, he travelled to Argentina for another operation.
He did not play again until the following June. In total, apart from that one brief substitute appearance, Nunez spent a year and a half on the sidelines.
“He had to have patience,” says Curutchet. “It strengthened him. He overcame it, but it was a time of sacrifice. He showed huge personality.”
Nunez did not immediately become a fixture in the side after returning to fitness. Ramos often used him as an impact substitute — someone who could make life difficult for tired defenders.
“Darwin’s biggest strengths at that time were the intelligence of his movement and his pace,” says Ramos. “He was very clever. He found space in the same way the great players do. And he had amazing acceleration. He knew he could outrun anyone and he used that pace well.
“Playing against Darwin was like being under siege. He was one of those players you couldn’t leave alone for 10 seconds.”
Estoyanoff is similarly effusive in his praise. “He had this really long stride,” he says. “He usually played out on the left. He’d control the ball, knock it down the line, past his marker, and then set off at amazing speed.
“And he was always, always thinking about the goal. If he scored one, he wanted two. If he scored two, he wanted three. He was obsessed. That’s Darwin. He’s a predator. He’s never satisfied.”
Nunez’s goal record in those early days suggests they sell rose-tinted spectacles in Montevideo — or at least that he must have been absolutely deadly in training. Nunez scored once in 12 matches for Penarol in 2018. He started 2019 with Uruguay’s under-20 side, playing at the South American Championships, but failed to find the net. Five goalless club matches followed.
It was only at the Under-20 World Cup that things started to click. Nunez scored a stunning volley in Uruguay’s opening game against Norway and followed it up with an instinctive finish against New Zealand. He returned to Penarol with his tail up and promptly netted a hat-trick against Boston River.
That blitz was enough to convince Almeria, newly ambitious after an injection of Saudi money, to pay an initial $4.5 million (£3.7m) for his services.
“His characteristics were exactly what I wanted,” says Pedro Emanuel, the coach who signed him. “Mobility, movement, finishing ability, technical quality… We knew that Darwin would add those things to our team.”
It was, nonetheless, a gamble. Nunez had only scored in two of his 22 appearances for Penarol. He was in the strange position of being both a relative unknown and someone of whom great things were immediately expected, thanks to what was, by the standards of Spain’s second division, a gigantic transfer fee.
Those worries soon dissipated. Nunez lent dynamism and power to the Almeria attack, just as Emanuel had predicted. The move to Andalusia allowed Nunez to buy his parents a house and six hectares of land back home, but it was clear he was not there simply to pick up an easy pay check.
“He really identified with the club,” says Emanuel. “He quickly understood Almeria’s DNA. He is the kind of player that every fan loves, because he gives his life in every match.”
It helped that Nunez was able to add more cutting edge to his game. He compiled a highlight reel of thumping finishes — note to all footballs: don’t make an enemy of this guy — and ended the season with 16 league goals.
That put him on the radar of bigger clubs; when Almeria failed to secure promotion, his departure was inevitable. In September 2020, he moved to Benfica for €24 million.
You probably know much of the rest, at least in the broad strokes. Nunez had a mixed, COVID-interrupted first season but exploded in 2021-22, netting 26 times in 28 league games and taking the Champions League by storm.
Liverpool, of course, got a crash course in Darwinism in April. But for Nelson Verissimo, Benfica’s caretaker coach for the last five months of last season, that was just a small taster of what Nunez can do.
“Physically, he’s an animal,” Verissimo tells The Athletic. “There is a real intensity to his play. He’s really fast and very good at attacking space, making runs in behind a defensive line.
“When people talk about classic No 9s, I think about forwards who like to position themselves in that central corridor, close to the penalty area. But Darwin is a player who also likes to run into the channels, particularly down the left. He scored quite a few great goals like that, drifting left, dribbling inside and shooting.”
For Verissimo, Anfield is the perfect place for Nunez to hone his craft. “Honestly, after the season Darwin had, and particularly those performances in the Champions League, I always thought he would be a great fit at Liverpool,” he says.
“I think he suits the way they play. It was just a personal feeling, but now it has become a reality. I’m sure that Darwin will show what he can do.”
Nunez is still only 23. It makes sense that he is still sanding off some of the rougher edges of his game. What, then, should Jurgen Klopp be working on with him?
“He needs to be more objective,” says Emanuel, his former coach at Almeria. “There is an altruism to his game, but sometimes his desire to help the team means he loses his position and roams about. He spreads himself too thin. He will have to understand that Liverpool will need him to be in the penalty box, to score goals.”
Verissimo picks out a more technical aspect of Nunez’s game: “His first touch… making sure it takes him into space. It’s about orientation: when he receives the ball, he needs to be able to take one touch — two maximum — and be in a position to shoot. When he has the ball in front of him, he finishes brilliantly.
“But what he has to work on most is the defensive side of the game. One-on-one duels, positioning, protecting the right spaces, knowing the right moment to lead the press… he has to know his job in the team’s defensive processes.”
The Premier League is, by any metric, another big step up for Nunez. Liverpool will doubtless preach patience, but that stratospheric transfer fee will make scrutiny and pressure unavoidable.
“I’m not surprised he has joined a team like Liverpool, because I know about his quality,” says Emanuel. “But I never thought things would go so quickly. I can’t lie: it’s a lot of money for a 23-year-old. There will be a weight on him. People will look at him differently due to that fee.”
Those who know Nunez best, though, do not think he will be found wanting in terms of mentality and he showed no nerves in scoring off the bench in Saturday’s Community Shield. “He has an enormous capacity to learn,” says Verissimo, while his former mentors back home all point to his inner strength.
“Darwin has perseverance, resolve, the adaptability to deal with new things,” says Curutchet. “He’s a big personality who knows how to face adversities.”
National stereotypes are not normally very instructive, but multiple people tell The Athletic that they see Nunez as a distinctly Uruguayan footballer, exhibiting the same traits that have made some of his countrymen — Cavani, say, or Luis Suarez — such success stories at the top level.
“He embodies our football culture,” says Gustavo Ferreyra, who coached him in the Uruguay Under-20 side. “He has this ability to deal with difficult situations, to resist. The aggression, the predisposition to work, with or without the ball. If he has to press, he does it with maximum intensity — sometimes even too much. That’s a characteristic of Uruguayan players: that aggression, that solidarity with the team.”
That view is echoed by Estoyanoff. “Determination, rebelliousness, a sense of comradeship: those are the virtues of the best Uruguayan players. Darwin has them.”
These are the attributes that seem most likely to endear Nunez to the Liverpool fans in the months ahead. His route from the floodplains of Artigas to Anfield was not always the easiest, but it strengthened him, supercharged his tenacity. If he fails, it will not be for a lack of effort or commitment.
“He knows that his has been a story of hard work and sacrifice,” concludes Emanuel. “He takes that into every training session and every game. He’s a fighter.
“The solidarity, the work ethic, the collective spirit… he fits Liverpool like a glove.”
|
|
|
|
06-08-22, 09:34 AM
|
#217
|
Unidentified Rascal
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 133,785
|
__________________
Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’
|
|
|
06-08-22, 06:43 PM
|
#218
|
Martin Skrtel can win a game of Connect Four in three moves
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 40,627
|
Yeah he should start the next game, should have started this one.
__________________
When in doubt, mumble.
|
|
|
06-08-22, 08:34 PM
|
#219
|
Est1892's Fire Warden
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 33,139
|
Changed the game alongside little Harv.
Definitely should be starting
__________________
James Philip Milner Fanclub #1
Curtis Julian Jones Fanclub #1
|
|
|
06-08-22, 09:19 PM
|
#220
|
Shankly
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 7,142
|
Almost identical impact off the bench as last week.
Immediately getting on the end of chances, involved in making chances, gets an assist/wins a pen and scores.
Can’t wait to see him get a start.
__________________
.
.
.
.
|
|
|
07-08-22, 11:13 AM
|
#221
|
Expect the Wurst
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,544
|
He makes things happen, doesn't he?
|
|
|
07-08-22, 11:39 AM
|
#222
|
Fagan
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,562
|
Helps his case for a start when Bobby was so poor
YNWA
|
|
|
07-08-22, 10:35 PM
|
#223
|
If you fail once....
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 6,526
|
Can also say that poor as we perceive Bobby to be, his non-stop movement will wear a defender down, so Nunez is benefiting from facing tired legs. But doing a damn fine job when called upon, no matter what.
__________________
|
|
|
07-08-22, 10:48 PM
|
#224
|
Shankly
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 5,493
|
True enough, but we need more than intelligent running from Bobby.
__________________
In the beginning, Fowler created the Heaven and the Earth.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 02:14 AM
|
#225
|
Randy Marsh
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 24,236
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scratch
Can also say that poor as we perceive Bobby to be, his non-stop movement will wear a defender down, so Nunez is benefiting from facing tired legs. But doing a damn fine job when called upon, no matter what.
|
What about his non-stop passing to opposition players every time he actually gets the ball? Whats that doing?
Firmino is shite now, its like playing with 10 men the amount he gives away possession.
__________________
"When a man insults my country I insult him, by taking his woman" Tony Yeboah
"looking through your posts since 2007 and what you have consistently written about my football team I have come to the conclusion that if you had 1 more brain cell you would be a plant .. your father was a hamster and your mother smells of elder berries, I fart in your general direction ..." Nicey
Last edited by Harv; 08-08-22 at 05:30 AM.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 07:15 AM
|
#226
|
Martin Skrtel can win a game of Connect Four in three moves
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 40,627
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Harv
What about his non-stop passing to opposition players every time he actually gets the ball? Whats that doing?
Firmino is shite now, its like playing with 10 men the amount he gives away possession.
|
Used to be brilliant, but been way off for years now and we can't keep making excuses for him. Nunez may be raw but even raw he's scored 6 goals in 4 games he has featured in. He has start from now on in.
__________________
When in doubt, mumble.
Last edited by danperkins; 08-08-22 at 07:20 AM.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 09:49 AM
|
#227
|
Paisley
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 12,099
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scratch
Can also say that poor as we perceive Bobby to be, his non-stop movement will wear a defender down, so Nunez is benefiting from facing tired legs. But doing a damn fine job when called upon, no matter what.
|
This almost sounds condescending. Do City employ the use of a donkey to wear a team down before poor old Haaland has to step in?
I use the term donkey lovingly obviously.
__________________
It's Kloppering time!
|
|
|
08-08-22, 09:55 AM
|
#228
|
Donald Buzzworth 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 52,928
|
Amazing start to the season from Nunez. Goal in the Community Shield and then a debut goal, both from the bench.
His finish was class also. Though it was a bit of an underwhelming result and performance, there seemed to be decent signs in the potential of the front three working well together. Particularly Salah and Nunez.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 10:37 AM
|
#229
|
Anti-Antipodeanite
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 24,915
|
Yeah Salah and Nunez definitely seem to have a connection already.
He has to start the next game. He is up and running now, the pressure is off him, let him loose and see how he does!
|
|
|
08-08-22, 10:40 AM
|
#230
|
Paisley
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 20,653
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pablo
Yeah Salah and Nunez definitely seem to have a connection already.
He has to start the next game. He is up and running now, the pressure is off him, let him loose and see how he does!
|
They do  and anything that encourages Salah to pass the ball a bit more is fine with me
__________________
Sack swinging like Dub-D40 on a door hinge
|
|
|
08-08-22, 01:27 PM
|
#231
|
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 22,504
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by wiw
They do  and anything that encourages Salah to pass the ball a bit more is fine with me
|
You mean the Salah that had the most assists for our team in the league last season and second highest amount of assists for us in all comps?
Double figures in assists four out of the past five seasons for us in all comps?
Salah's passing/chance creation is just fine imo.
__________________
I don't hate people. I just feel better when they aren't around.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 02:12 PM
|
#232
|
Paisley
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 20,653
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaco_Pastorious
You mean the Salah that had the most assists for our team in the league last season and second highest amount of assists for us in all comps?
Double figures in assists four out of the past five seasons for us in all comps?
Salah's passing/chance creation is just fine imo.
|
Yeah that guy
Maybe it was because our style of play was different/people weren't making the runs, but seeing him square it to Darwin felt like a breath of fresh air
__________________
Sack swinging like Dub-D40 on a door hinge
|
|
|
08-08-22, 03:06 PM
|
#233
|
Shankly
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 5,493
|
I understand what you mean. I felt like last season our forward line was made up of three individuals. There did not seem to be the silky interplay of previous seasons, and I put that down to Firmino not playing.
I think it is inceasingly looking like its time to offload Firmino. I think that Elliott could do a better job.
Its wierd how Firmino has lost the basics of passing and ball control. Players get slower as they get closer to 30, but should still be able to knock it about.
__________________
In the beginning, Fowler created the Heaven and the Earth.
|
|
|
08-08-22, 11:31 PM
|
#234
|
Martin Skrtel can win a game of Connect Four in three moves
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 40,627
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Charly
I understand what you mean. I felt like last season our forward line was made up of three individuals. There did not seem to be the silky interplay of previous seasons, and I put that down to Firmino not playing.
I think it is inceasingly looking like its time to offload Firmino. I think that Elliott could do a better job.
Its wierd how Firmino has lost the basics of passing and ball control. Players get slower as they get closer to 30, but should still be able to knock it about.
|
 it's been an incredible drop off in form. Actually I don't know you can even say form after 3 years of below par showings.
__________________
When in doubt, mumble.
|
|
|
09-08-22, 12:06 AM
|
#235
|
Daddy day care
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 24,017
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by danperkins
 it's been an incredible drop off in form. Actually I don't know you can even say form after 3 years of below par showings.
|
 for Roberto
__________________
removing all the weak links makes us stronger
too many gutless players, no beef or desire. pussies everywhere... sack them all, but not VVD or Fabinho
|
|
|
14-08-22, 06:13 AM
|
#236
|
Fagan
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 1,839
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by danperkins
 it's been an incredible drop off in form. Actually I don't know you can even say form after 3 years of below par showings.
|
Just to clarify, 3 years would include title winning season?
|
|
|
14-08-22, 08:34 AM
|
#237
|
Martin Skrtel can win a game of Connect Four in three moves
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 40,627
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by BG1973
Just to clarify, 3 years would include title winning season?
|
He was ok in the title winning season but not premium Bobby. He is no longer the "linchpinch" in our side and hasn't been for a long time. He ll be sold soon.
But we can scrap that for arguments sake and it's only a 2 years then
__________________
When in doubt, mumble.
Last edited by danperkins; 14-08-22 at 08:36 AM.
|
|
|
14-08-22, 11:33 AM
|
#238
|
Fagan
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 1,839
|
He's going to play less for sure, but I doubt he'll be sold unless he wants to go.
|
|
|
14-08-22, 12:05 PM
|
#239
|
Martin Skrtel can win a game of Connect Four in three moves
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 40,627
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by BG1973
He's going to play less for sure, but I doubt he'll be sold unless he wants to go.
|
I don't think he will accept been a squad player, which unfortunately is what he is these days.
__________________
When in doubt, mumble.
|
|
|
14-08-22, 06:44 PM
|
#240
|
Not to be taken seriously
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 34,935
|
He starts tomorrow.
__________________
Are we winning?
|
|
|
Thread Tools |
|
Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:11 PM.
|