Best manager in the world

Liverpool Football Club - General Discussion

Postby A.B. » Mon Dec 19, 2005 2:26 pm

Moores says that Benitez is the best manager in the world, and I couldn't agree more. He's been a breath of fresh air to this club.

From The Echo

DAVID MOORES today insisted Liverpool will return from Japan with pride intact and the greatest consolation prize in football - the best manager in the world.

The Anfield chairman paid a moving tribute to the courage of Rafa Benitez for leading his side through an emotional week.

Although Liverpool's bid to become world champions ended with a controversial defeat to Sao Paulo, after seeing his side dominate the Brazilians, Moores said he was more convinced than ever Benitez will lead the club 'back to greatness'.

Moores is more optimistic now than at any time during his reign that Liverpool's wait for the title will soon be over.

"I wouldn't swop Rafa for any manager in the world. If I had to go back and make the appointment again, I know there couldn't be anyone better," said Moores. "I really believe he's going to lead this club back to greatness, I really do.

"The team is progressing so well and that's down to Rafa. Look at what he's had to deal with in Japan because of what happened to his father. He has shown he is an unbelievable man.

"For something like that to happen and Rafa to stay with his team is absolutely amazing. "I'm very proud of him.

After everything that's happened and the way we played, we didn't deserve to leave Japan without that trophy.

"I'm also extremely proud of the players and all the staff. I've told Steven Gerrard I thought all the players were magnificent in the competition. We couldn't have done any more other than score in the final.

"Obviously Flo's goal should have stood, but I don't want to talk too much about that. It shouldn't take away how well we've played.

"The way we're playing at the moment is showing how much confidence there is throughout the team. The football is great. Everything has been going fantastically well, apart from this result."

The Premiership title remains the holy grail which has so far eluded Moores during his 14-year reign at Anfield.

But after so many false dawns, he's convinced he's appointed the man who can deliver the trophy he and the Liverpool fans crave most.

He added: "We'll give it a good fight for the title this year. Maybe it's too late for this season, we'll have to wait and see. But we'll go all the way and hopefully there will be a few slip-ups from Chelsea.

"I'm sure the others are watching Liverpool a lot closer now.

"I'm more optimistic about us winning the title now than I've ever been, even though we should have won it the season we came second.

"Things have developed very quickly. Rafa has settled and the players he's brought in have settled, which has made a big difference.

"We've quickly established a relationship where he under-stands us and we understand him."

Liverpool left Japan in the early of hours of this morning and will now prepare for a daunting Christmas schedule.

Benitez will find some comfort in the fact his side has retained its Champions League spot, despite having played two games less than most of the Premiership.
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Postby tubby » Mon Dec 19, 2005 2:46 pm

He is indeed.
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Postby Red squirrel » Wed Dec 21, 2005 10:46 pm

Not only the best but the most dignified..

Mourinho needs to eat some humble pie the whinging tw.at!! Wheres me xmas card!!! :D
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Postby metalhead » Wed Dec 21, 2005 11:35 pm

Rafa will always be remembered as a gentleman in football and indeed a great manager.
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Postby barnesrush » Thu Dec 22, 2005 1:38 am

dunno if this letter to mourinho from a guy from the independent has been put on here but it mentions how rafas all round excellence is not going unnoticed:


An open letter to Jose Mourinho from the Independent's Chief Sports Writer on the ugly truth behind Chelsea's ascent

Published: 20 December 2005

Dear Jose,

Not so long ago, when you were a figure of hope rather than darkness, you said you were a star in your own movie. We could all enjoy that; it implied fun and celebration of outstanding deeds. It even added a little to the gaiety of the football nation. But now we have a better idea of the kind of movie you had in mind.

From where you are sitting, in the penthouse of your mind, you may not have noticed that it is turning into a grotesque mix of Sweet Smell of Success and Citizen Kane.

You have blown it, Jose; not in terms of column inches or television exposure or advertising spin-offs or security at the heart of your oil-rouble empire, but in the regard of all those who long for new messiahs of the game, men like Busby and Stein who gloried in their teams and their achievements and didn't scramble in such unseemly fashion to be at the heart of the reflected glory.

To tell you the truth, Jose, your current performance would look bad enough on reality TV.

You have jettisoned style for some chintzy version of celebrity for its own sake. Some woolly-minded observers say that your antics provide a valuable service to the team, that it deflects attention from them, allows them to go about their relentless work. Well, here's a fact: I never saw a great football man, and this includes Ferguson and Wenger, who willingly tried to grab the attention from their players, not on occasion but as a matter of carefully calculated course.

You know why? Because they are football men to their bones and they know that their great glory will always be the performance of their players. That's why they are so excitable and natural on the touchline. Wenger can be a cold fish at times, God knows, and he has that reputation among rival managers, but he doesn't pose, he bares his hopes and his fears and he doesn't turn everything into his own glory - and if Ferguson was not ready to salute his team, and express his gratitude, why would he run along the touchline like some demented schoolboy in the tuck shop when United achieve something extraordinary?

The harsh view of your own self-absorbed act must be that it can only be explained by your own lack of a significant playing career.

You never knew the cheers from the terraces, and now it is presumably not enough for you to shape great achievement through your talent for coaching and plotting a set of winning tactics. Now you have to plunder the glory of your players while it is white-hot.

The last time I wrote to you it was, believe it or not, in a spirit of avuncular concern. I thought, like so many others weary of the back-biting and self-interest of Ferguson and Wenger, you were a star on the cusp of shining a brilliant light on English football and that all you needed to do was rein in the cockiness, not entirely but to a certain pleasing degree, and then march on to only the heavens knew where along the peaks of achievement.

It was in that phase when you were still capable of wit rather than appalling bombast, but a lot of people know better now. It has become apparent you don't know the difference between a feisty stance and sickening control freakery. We could not know back then you would soon be saying it was all right to ruin the reputation of a referee with an outright lie, and that you were capable of the kind of boorish performance you put in at Highbury on Sunday.

Presumably you thought you were being smart, even masterful, storming off down the tunnel like that without offering a hand to the vanquished Wenger, and then hurling abuse at the Sky TV people for their "crime" of rerunning shots of Michael Essien's disgusting tackle on Dietmar Hamann a few weeks ago.

You said that Barcelona, your next opponents in the Champions' League, thanked Sky. Wrong, everybody who cares for the morality of football and who isn't always bowled over by the bite of their analysis of their own flagship product, thanks them. They showed up the bruising cynicism that is growing at the heart of your all-conquering team: the £24m signing whose function is becoming increasingly apparent. Essien has talent, no doubt, but against the frail young things of Arsenal's midfield his essential role was highlighted with gut-wrenching clarity. He was there to bully, and no doubt he should have been sent off for his fouls on Lauren and Robin van Persie.

Your team are becoming dauntingly efficient but with each machine-like victory they are becoming a notch more charmless, and in this they are only keeping pace with you.

To be fair, you are far from the first and certainly will not be the last football manager to develop a siege mentality. It was long a basic plank of Ferguson's success, and Wenger has seen more conspiracies than the command posts at MI5 and the CIA. But if their positions were often absurd, if all grace melted at moments of victory and defeat, let's be honest, they never quite carried the baggage you have had to haul to your position of power in English football.

They didn't have to confront the unease which would have greeted any Chelsea success even if you had displayed endless layers of charm and your boss Roman had come over as a merely well-heeled version of Peter Ustinov. But the fact is whatever Chelsea achieve there will be the worry that success has been underpinned by unprecedented and wealth - resources taken from a country where the majority of the population live lives of hardship unimaginable in all parts of this country, let alone the Fulham Road.

So, Jose, there are unanswerable misgivings about the crowning of Chelsea as the undisputed masters of English football. This doesn't prevent admiration for the strength of your work, and the team ethic you have developed at Stamford Bridge. You have done it with a skill which has been at times awe-inspiring. But admiring is not the same as celebrating, or even liking, and anyone beyond your own support who says this is not so is spinning a line.

What it really means is that there is an obligation on you to perform with a lot more understanding of your highly privileged situation. If you don't, if you carry on in the style you displayed at Highbury, the result will be beyond speculation. Even your victories will not inculcate the envy you imagine, because all football supporters are not fools, and a recent visit to Stamford Bridge - for a grinding victory over unglamorous Middlesbrough - confirmed the suspicion that if Chelsea's fans cannot quite believe their luck, if they are pleased with the power of their club, it does not express itself in the kind of joy which is so tangible in places like Anfield and Old Trafford and, in the not so ancient good days, Arsenal.

You will probably hate this, but there is a model you shouldn't ignore, and his name is Rafael Benitez.

Your scorn for his Liverpool is not so convincing. Admittedly you have a series of victories, but they have outsmarted you in Europe and please, as a matter of urgency, drop the fiction that they didn't score against you in that European Cup semi-final at Anfield. The goal was awarded, it is on the record, and if it hadn't been, Liverpool, the whole world could see, were due a penalty and the sending-off of your invaluable goalkeeper Peter Cech.

That's the kind of reality you have to absorb if you are going to win the respect which your achievements are due. You may not know it, but Benitez is drawing a lot of neutral admiration. He isn't backed by seamless millions, he doesn't sneer at the rest of the football world, he doesn't tell lies about referees, he just gets on with the job of building a football team.

There will be quite a bit of unpatriotic support for Barcelona, too, when you collide with them again in the Champions' League.

This isn't pure envy, Jose. It comes from the feeling that you bent the truth terribly when you last met Barcelona, and that victory came through a most cynical foul by Ricardo Carvalho on their goalkeeper. Your silence on that was noted by those who believe in the old truth that these things have a way of levelling out.

One last point: the Barcelona of Ronaldinho and young Lionel Messi play beautiful football. It has brilliance and charm. It can lay a hand on the hearts of the unattached. It is a sad truth that your current affect is one of repulsion.

Yours in sport,

James Lawton
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Postby Lando_Griffin » Thu Dec 22, 2005 4:20 am

Spot on. Absolutely spot fecking on!
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Rafa Benitez - An unfinished Legend.
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Postby Knowledge King » Thu Dec 22, 2005 4:47 am

I don't read the Independent but i might do now. He really hits the nail on the head!  :cool:
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Postby redmikey » Thu Dec 22, 2005 9:23 am

great post. i loved the way rafa dealt with the gerrard situation. i love the rafa refuses to get drawn into petty arguments because he doesn t want to be the centre of attention . he is a great credit to the club and fans. which are quite rightly know as one of the best world wide . If the club can give him the support in the transfer market and the new stadium does nt spoil things i believe he will take us to the level we were at in the 80 s
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Postby mighty mo » Thu Dec 22, 2005 3:55 pm

he wrote a column last week on the liverpool website,he wrote that the liverpool side of 1987-1988 "barnes beardsley aldridge etc etc" season is the best english side he has ever seen in his football reporting career
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Postby 2520years » Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:16 am

I didn't know where to put this, but I thought it was funny.

You've heard some amazing excuses over the years from Alex Ferguson, explaining why it wasn't their fault that they got beat, e.g. wrong colour kit, referee, linesman, dirty opposition, tired, bad luck.  Well it's clear now that Fergie has been mentored by Bobby Charlton all these years.  Yesterday he said why ManUre were knocked out of the Champions League:
"Maybe the opposition did not motivate the players, I really don't know."

:laugh: :D

It's the opposition's fault for not motivating the ManUre players!  That's going to take some beating.
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Postby Espionage » Fri Dec 23, 2005 10:35 am

wow............great read :laugh:
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Postby AussieKopite » Fri Dec 23, 2005 11:53 am

RIght on.
You'll never walk alone.

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Postby The Manhattan Project » Fri Dec 23, 2005 5:27 pm

You can't buy class and respect.

Those are things that Rafa has.

Jose does not.

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Postby tiki » Fri Dec 23, 2005 6:36 pm

best manager... without doubts some Jose Mourinho... will be itself impartial knows that yes
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Postby liamac » Sat Dec 24, 2005 2:38 am

Knowledge King wrote:I don't read the Independent but i might do now. He really hits the nail on the head!  :cool:

Its a good paper  to read , i always buy that to read whats going on in the world ..............oh and razzle for the jubblies   :rasp











  :down:  ok ill get me coat
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