Monthly Archives: October 2012

Spanish starlet Suso more than picking up the slack in Rodgers revolution

COMMENT
By James McManus

Liverpool have welcomed a new breed of exciting young talent into the first-team squad this season and while Raheem Sterling may have earned rave reviews for his performances so far, it is Spanish starlet Suso who could yet be the most talented of the bunch.

The 18-year-old moved to Anfield from Cadiz back in 2009 – firstly on loan – until he signed professional terms on his 17th birthday in 2010, and credit must go to Rafa Benitez for spotting a player largely ignored up until that point by the national team’s youth sides.

Suso spoke of how close he came to not signing for the club earlier this year: “I was going to sign for Real Madrid but one day before it the phone rang and Rafael Benitez spoke to me. He convinced me that Liverpool was the club for me and after that I had to change my plans. I was going to come to Liverpool.”

At a time when belts are being tightened around Anfield and the coffers a darn sight emptier than they were just 18 months ago, new manager Brendan Rodgers, partly out of necessity, has had to place his faith in the club’s highly-thought of youth system and on a crop of emerging talent as a budget-saving measure.

The simple fact is that Suso is better than anything the club could have afforded to bring in instead this summer and, while frustrations may have been felt at Liverpool’s inability to compete financially with Clint Dempsey slipping out of their grasp, Suso has more than picked up the slack this term, repaying Rodgers despite the move initially being fraught with risk.

Comfortable in a number of roles while predominantly playing as part of the attacking triumvirate alongside both Luis Suarez and Sterling, his ability to drift in off the flank and glide past players is a key part of what is now termed ‘breaking lines’ in the opposition’s defence, while he can also pick a pass.

Liverpool have hardly been blessed with quality wide-men in recent years, with a whole swathe of failed strikers being hastily converted into wingers in an attempt to prolong their careers at the club, but now it seems that two of huge promise have come along in quick succession.

From relative obscurity, despite garnering attention for his reserve team displays in the past, Suso has become a key member of Rodgers revolution and the club are finally starting to reap the rewards for the infrastructure put in place by Benitez back in 2009 as a result of his radical overhaul of the youth systems in place at the time, with Spanish coaches Pep Segura and Rodolfo Borrell right at the forefront of that change.

In what represents something of a pivotal week for Rodgers, with a delicately placed Europa League group still to negotiate and a stuttering league campaign to contend with, Liverpoo face three games inside six days: at home to Anzhi, away to city rivals Everton and another home game against their manager’s former employers, Swansea.

Suso’s willingness to ask for the ball in tight spaces is absolutely vital to the success of the side’s 4-3-3 system, but there’s a growing maturity to his play as well, with the goal he laid off for Nuri Sahin in the 2-1 Capital One Cup victory over West Brom serving as a prime example of his rapid development.

Running with the ball at the heart of the Baggies back four, he jinked on to his favoured left foot just outside the area, but instead of electing to shoot as most young players would in such a position, he played in Oussama Assaidi outside of him, who in turn laid it across the box for Sahin to tap home to hand Liverpool the win.

Quique Gonzalez, Suso’s youth-team coach at Cadiz, exclusively told Goal.com back in 2009 that the player was an “extraordinary talent” and that Liverpool had signed a “jewel” and, on the evidence so far, it is easy to see why he was quick to praise him so highly.

After signing a new long-term contract at the club, Rodgers lauded him, stating: “At 18, he has demonstrated outstanding technical qualities but also shown very good temperament to play for such a prestigious club.”

While caution must be attached to hyping up such a precocious talent whose career is still only just beginning, the initial signs have been more than promising and, in Suso, the club have one of the most dangerous young players in the country worth not only keeping an eye on, but of placing their faith in for the long haul.

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Reina backs Agger and Skrtel to emulate Carragher and Hyypia for Liverpool

Liverpool keeper Pepe Reina believes that Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel can emulate the Premier League club’s former heroes and become legends themselves.

The centre-backs have both committed their long-term futures to Brendan Rodgers’ side and Reina thinks they can become as good as Champions League-winning pair Sami Hyypia and Jamie Carragher.

“I don’t see any reason why they can’t do the same as Carra and Sami did, though they were one of the greatest centre-back couples this club has ever had,” Reina told the club’s official website.

“The understanding between them is great and they’ve been really solid lately. In the last year and a half or so they have been brilliant for us.

“It’s great for the club and I’m happy for them that they’ve got new deals.”

Both Skrtel and Agger are 27-years-old and Reina is eyeing several years behind the pair, who have just signed new contracts with the Reds.

He added: “If I am not mistaken they are similar ages to each other, so they have five or six years still to play their best football.

“It’s good they’ve signed contracts because it’s a fact that they are one of the best centre-back couples in the Premier League.”

Liverpool – Anzhi Makhachkala Preview: Merseysiders look to bounce back from Udinese defeat


With the eagerly anticipated Merseyside derby with Everton on the horizon, Brendan Rodgers will again look to rotate his squad for the Europa League as he prepares for the visit of in-form Russian moneybags Anzhi.

Rodgers’ hand has been forced somewhat by the injuries to Pepe Reina (hamstring), Martin Kelly (knee) and Fabio Borini (foot), all of whom would have surely played in this fixutre. The likes of Steven Gerrard, Daniel Agger, Martin Skrtel, Joe Allen and Raheem Sterling could all be rested.

In their place should come fringe squad members such as Jamie Carragher, Sebastien Coates, Jose Enrique and Stewart Downing. However, without any other senior striker available to them, Luis Suarez looks set to lead the line once again for the Reds.

Big-spending Anzhi, led by former Netherlands and Russia coach Guus Hiddink, have impressed in the Russian league this season and currently top the standings by two points from CSKA Moscow.

Hiddink could make only one change from the starting XI that secured a 2-1 victory over title rivals Spartak Moscow at the weekend, with France international midfielder Lassana Diarra (knee) dropping out.

In Christopher Samba and Yuriy Zhirkov the Dagestan outfit have players who will have competed at Anfield before, while their attack is set to be spear-headed by African legend Samuel Eto’o, reportedly the highest-paid player in world football.

  • Stewart Downing may have failed to either score or assist in the Premier League since arriving at Anfield, but the winger has contributed a goal and three assists in Europe this season.
  • Liverpool won this competition under the guise of the UEFA Cup back in 2001 as part of a “treble” season that included both FA and League Cup triumphs.
  • Brad Jones is set to make only his eightH start for Liverpool despite arriving in the summer of 2010, three of those have come in the Europa League.
  • The last time Liverpool played Russian opposition came in the 2005 Uefa Super Cup final, where two Djbril Cisse goals helped see off CSKA Moscow in a 3-1 victory.
  • Anzhi are on a four-match winning streak and are currently unbeaten in all competitions since August 12.
  • Samuel Eto’o is currently this season’s Europa League top goalscorer, with seven strikes to his name.
  • Anzhi centre-back Christopher Samba once lined up as a lone striker for Blackburn in their 4-0 defeat at Anfield in April 2009.
  • This is Anzhi’s first participation in European competition since the 2001-02 season, where they were defeated by Scottish side Rangers. The match was chosen to be played on a one-legged affair at a neutral venue in Warsaw, Poland due to the unstable situation in Chechnya.
  • Anzhi’s Yuriy Zhirkov only started once against Liverpool during his two-year spell at Chelsea, coming at Anfield in a 2-0 home victory courtesy of a Fernando Torres (who now plays for Chelsea) double.