Monthly Archives: March 2014

Liverpool – Sunderland Betting Preview: Expect another explosive start at Anfield

After three away wins on the spin, Brendan Rodgers brings his side back to Anfield where they face Black Cats and our tipster is backing early goals

Liverpool and Sunderland meet in the Premier League this evening with both teams fighting at opposite ends of the table. Whereas the Reds have a real chance of wining the league, Gus Poyet’s men are struggling in the bottom three, three points adrift of 17th place.

The Black Cats come into this game with no wins in their last five matches, losing four of those games so they are really up against it when they visit one of the most in-form teams in the division.

A 2-0 defeat last weekend to Norwich was a huge blow to Sunderland, with the Canaries also fighting to avoid the drop. Bet365 price them at 18/1 (19.00) to cause a major upset on Merseyside.

Liverpool have been firing on all cylinders in recent weeks, netting 16 goals in their last four matches. The Reds tore Cardiff apart at the weekend, with a Luis Suarez hat-trick leading them to a 6-3 win. Rodgers’ side are unbeaten in their last 11 league matches, winning six in a row.

With Steven Gerrard, Daniel Sturridge and Suarez all scoring at ease at the moment, it’s no surprise they are 1/6 (1.16) to win against Sunderland. Bet365 also price the draw at 8/1 (9.00).

With Liverpool over 2.5 goals and -1 handicap far too short to touch, it’s worth looking elsewhere for value in this match.

A bet that has paid out in nine of Liverpool’s last 11 home league games is over 1.5 first half goals. The price of this bet landing this evening at 10/11 (1.91) is certainly worth backing .

As well as paying out so often at home for the Reds, it landed easily at the weekend, with four goals scored in the opening 45 minutes. It’s also worth noting Liverpool have scored 48 first half goals in 30 league games this season.

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Farewell Harry Kewell, the great unfulfilled talent

Voted the greatest ever Australian footballer in 2012, the rest of world was rather less impressed with the finished product of a player heralded as a potential superstar

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By Iain Strachan

At the end of the 2002-03 season, Harry Kewell had the football world at his feet. The flying winger was expected to spurn the advances of AC Milan and Barcelona to join newly crowned Premier League champions Manchester United, and had been earmarked as a replacement for Ryan Giggs on the left flank at Old Trafford.

Fast forward 11 years and Giggs is miraculously still putting in a shift for the Red Devils, albeit at a substantially reduced intensity and with some coaching duties thrown in.

His one-time supposed successor meanwhile called time on his playing career in front of a packed press conference at Melbourne’s AAMI Park on Wednesday, aged 35.

He had already become the youngest Socceroo in history before entering the world’s spotlight at Leeds. And during the last decade Kewell has continued to write himself into Australian football history, with moments like the goal against Croatia at the 2006 World Cup, or the equally dramatic red card against Ghana four years later, with plenty of other highs and lows thrown in before, during and after those landmark events.

But the sad truth is that outside these shores, Kewell may as well have hung up his boots the day he left Leeds in 2003.

The succession of injuries that plagued his career meant – to a global audience – the most promising player ever produced by Australia never lived up to that billing.

Instead, throughout five years at Liverpool, three at Galatasaray and a nomadic existence thereafter, the appearances became less and less frequent and his pace largely dried up, robbing him of his explosive acceleration and forcing him to become a different type of player.

There is no doubt he remained supremely talented, and still produced occasional flashes of game-changing brilliance.

But they happened away from the main stage. When chances to stamp his mark on a major occasion arrived, his body denied him a chance to seize it, most notably in the 2005 Champions League and 2006 FA Cup finals.

Every Australian football fan has their favourite Kewell moment. Unfortunately, for most people elsewhere in the world, the most enduring image is of him limping off at the Atatürk Stadium in Istanbul, with an uncharacteristic consoling arm offered by Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez.

Let’s get you a nice ice pack | ‘Rafa’ proves he’s capable of putting an arm around the shoulder

Subbed off with a torn abductor muscle 28 minutes into the biggest match of his club career. 12 months later it happened again, a torn groin forcing him off at the Millennium Stadium 48 minutes in the game against West Ham.

Worse still, these were two of the best finals in the modern history of the respective competitions. Both were settled on penalties after 3-3 draws, and each time the Australian was already on the treatment table, the prospect of another long spell on the sidelines ahead.

Make no mistake, this is Kewell’s legacy to the football world, outside Australia. The player himself acknowledged it this week, when asked if he felt in anyway unfulfilled upon hanging up his boots.

“I do sit there with my wife and my close friends and wonder, what if? I wonder if I didn’t have those injuries, what could have been?”  

We’ll never know now. Australian supporters can console themselves with Kewell’s star turns in green and gold down the years, while Liverpool, Galatasaray and even some Leeds fans, those not alienated by his defection to the Turkish club, will have some fond memories.

But for the neutrals, the question is the same as that which may nag at Kewell in the recesses of his retired mind. What could have been?

Liverpool – Sunderland Preview: Rodgers’ men aiming to close gap at Premier League summit

Liverpool will be one point behind Premier League leaders Chelsea if they beat Sunderland at Anfield on Wednesday.

Brendan Rodgers’ men have secured six successive league wins and have scored 82 goals in just 30 games.
Liverpool head into the fixture following a 6-3 win at Cardiff City, and Rodgers has called on the club’s supporters to create a special atmosphere for the Sunderland clash.

“We’re really looking forward to playing at Anfield now on Wednesday night,” Rodgers told the club’s official website.

“Hopefully the supporters can really get behind the team well before kick-off, get the atmosphere revved up for the game and we’ll look to continue on this great run. As you can see, we believe we can perform well and get results.”

Luis Suarez stole the headlines at Cardiff, scoring a hat-trick to take his tally to 28 goals in just 25 Premier League appearances this season.

He is comfortably ahead of his nearest rival in the scoring charts – team-mate Daniel Sturridge with 19 – and was the main man in Liverpool’s 3-1 win at Sunderland in September.

Making his Premier League return from his 10-match suspension for biting Chelsea’s Branislav Ivanovic, Suarez scored twice in his first appearance in the competition for over five months.

Sturridge struck Liverpool’s other goal in that win, and the prolific partnership between the pair has been one of the main reasons for Liverpool’s success.

Rodgers also has a relatively clean bill of health coming into the final stages of the season, with just defenders Sebastian Coates and Jose Enrique (both knee) missing.

Lucas and Mamadou Sakho have recently returned from knee and hamstring injuries respectively and will look to play a big part in the title run-in.

Sunderland’s form, meanwhile, is in stark contrast to that of their hosts, with the relegation-threatened Wearsiders winless in their last four Premier League outings.

Gus Poyet’s 18th-placed side have not responded from their Capital One Cup final defeat to Manchester City and slumped to a 2-0 loss at Norwich City on Saturday.

They remain three points adrift of safety, but do have up to three games in hand on their relegation rivals.

Sunderland could be without striker Steven Fletcher (ankle) but they recalled England Under-21 forward Connor Wickham from his loan spell at Leeds United on Monday.

Goalkeeper Keiren Westwood remains on the sidelines with a shoulder injury for Sunderland, who have not won at Anfield since 1983-84 – a season in which Liverpool went on to win the league.