Really interesting piece.
It’s all in the numbers: why Liverpool’s great start to the season makes perfect sense
Daniel Finkelstein Fink Tank
Last updated at 12:01AM, September 21 2013
Liverpool have made an impressive start to the season, no doubt about it. And I am not that surprised. I expected an excellent start to the season.
The first reason for this is that the fixture list was pretty kind to them. They have scored one more point than we expected them to at this stage.
The second reason for my lack of surprise is more encouraging for them. The Premier League title is much more open this season. There are now five clubs with a 10 per cent or more chance of becoming champions. Manchester United (25 per cent), Chelsea (21 per cent), Manchester City (20 per cent), Arsenal (and note this because it’s a properly big chance, 15 per cent) and Tottenham Hotspur (10 per cent).
Liverpool are only just behind this with an 8 per cent chance of winning the title. They have a 49 per cent chance of securing a Champions League place. So, of course they have done well so far. They are a good team.
There is one more reason for my lack of surprise. They did well in the transfer market. The most important reason for this is that they did not sell Luis Suárez. According to the Fink Tank Dec Tech Player rankings, the Uruguay striker is the third best performing player in Europe and the best player in the Premier League. Trouble he might be, but be is very, very talented.
Partly as a result of his contribution, Liverpool are stronger in attack than defence, so it is impressive that they have added to their team one of the best defenders in Europe. Mamadou Sakho is one of the best 60 players in European leagues according to our rankings. They have also bought, in Simon Mignolet, a better goalkeeper.
Looking back over the past four managers, the picture is pretty clear. Rafael Benítez was a good manager constrained by lack of money. He did consistently well, and the moment he left the team dropped off considerably. During Roy Hodgson’s period as manager the team had very poor results, which started to improve, slowly, under Kenny Dalglish.
This improvement has continued under Brendan Rodgers without increasing in pace. Yet the improvement has had a rather odd shape. The team have sharply improved their attack, but this has been almost (but not quite) cancelled out by a deterioration in defence.
The improvement means that Liverpool have just popped back above Everton, having dipped below them. In 2008 Liverpool were 180 per cent as good as Everton, now they are only 113 per cent as good.
Daniel Finkelstein has been awarded the Royal Statistical Society Prize for excellence in statistical journalism for the Fink Tank
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Given this piece was written before the Southampton result, however it should not detract from the fact that we in general are both playing better football and accruing more points under Rodgers. Ignoring the stats about our title winning chances (no one in their right mind thinks we'll win the title), our start can only be a massive step in the right direction to finishing in the top four.
Onwards and upwards.