god_bless_john_houlding wrote:I don't see the rest of the top 4 changing their side because they're playing Blackburn for example. Scholes and Carrick would be the central pair for United whether it be Derby at Old Trafford or Blackburn away.
Scholes and Carrick would be the central pair for United whether it be Derby at Old Trafford or Blackburn away.
stmichael wrote:I love all our midfielders
Doesn't sound as if Warnock was a lover of rotation!
Bamaga man wrote:When Rafa leaves and eventually Carra or Gerrard or someone else brings out a biography, I bet they'll slate his rotation policy.
s@int wrote:Bamaga man wrote:When Rafa leaves and eventually Carra or Gerrard or someone else brings out a biography, I bet they'll slate his rotation policy.
If we haven't won the league by the time Rafa goes, no doubt they will, if we have won the league a few times however, it will be the best thing Rafa ever did.
I must admit I would like to see the same team for a few games while we are short of 3 of our best players.
Bamaga man wrote:Doesn't sound as if Warnock was a lover of rotation!
Coming from a player who was part of the rotational chaos, we can definately say it is "comical". Warnock wouldnt be the only player thinking that either I reckon.
I hate to say it but rotation will be Rafa's downfall, it seems the players cant even get their heads around it. And I dont blame him for moving on, he's playing regular football now and would improve himself into form, not that he ever got the chance here.
He was decent enough, probably not to hold down a place but then again like he said he could never find his groove in the side as he was in and out all the time.
When Rafa leaves and eventually Carra or Gerrard or someone else brings out a biography, I bet they'll slate his rotation policy.
s@int wrote:Stephen Warnock’s head is still spinning after escaping Rafael Benitez’s rotation
James Ducker Times
Given his placid demeanour and disarming smile, it is hard to imagine Stephen Warnock getting worked up about anything. Mention Rafael BenÍtez, though, and he cannot spit his words out quickly enough.
Ten months have passed since Warnock left Liverpool for Blackburn Rovers, but as he prepares to face his former teammates and manager for the first time, at Ewood Park this evening, it is clear that the defender’s frustration and annoyance with the Spaniard has not subsided.
It is not that Warnock regrets joining Blackburn. In fact, he has never been happier and credits the move with helping to salvage a career that he fears may have taken a nosedive had he stayed at Anfield. But lingering not far beneath the surface of this affable character is a level of resentment about how things transpired under BenÍtez at Liverpool that, in an emotional sense at least, he is not ready to put behind him.
“I don’t see this game as being any different because I’ve got a point to prove in every game that Liverpool shouldn’t have sold me,” Warnock said. “It bugs me every day because I feel I was good enough to be there.”
Warnock would have less cause for complaint had he not persevered for so long at Liverpool, and the irony is that it was the man who gave him his chance who also closed the door.
Things had looked promising for Warnock when BenÍtez succeeded Gérard Houllier in June 2004 and immediately included the left back in his plans. But elation gave way to frustration, then despair, as Warnock felt the full force of the Spaniard’s infamous rotation policy. During the course of 2½ seasons, Warnock started 45 matches, but he barely remembers playing more than a few back-to-back and as his confidence and form waned, so did his faith in a system of which he is deeply critical.
“Even if you’d played really well one week, you never thought you would play the next,” Warnock said. “People were being rested in September and October and I just think that’s crazy. You don’t want to be rested at that stage of the season. I thought I needed to play week in, week out to improve myself as a player.
“But it was not just the team, it was the same with the squad as well. The squad used to go up on a Friday afternoon and you wouldn’t even know who was going to be in it. It was comical sometimes. No one would have a clue why certain people were not included but the manager would keep his reasons to himself.”
Warnock is convinced that BenÍtez still does not know what his best team is, but as frustrated as he had grown with the policy, it was the Spaniard’s handling of Warnock’s departure that most aggrieved the defender.
News of Blackburn’s interest, as part of an exchange deal with Lucas Neill, the Australia defender, had turned Warnock’s head in August of last year, but when BenÍtez insisted that he was still part of his plans and would play, the left back opted to stay put. By the next January, Warnock had made only six starts for Liverpool that season. His career, as he saw it, had stalled. “I was so annoyed that he [BenÍtez] had said he’d like me to stay and wasn’t playing me,” Warnock said. “I was stuck in a rut then until January, but luckily Blackburn kept their interest.”
A £1.5 million move followed and Warnock has not looked back. Although Benni McCarthy and David Bentley have stolen the headlines, Warnock has been one of Mark Hughes’s most consistent performers and, as Liverpool visit today, they do so a point behind Blackburn in the Barclays Premier League table.
“If I’d left Liverpool at this stage of my career now, having played a year in the reserves or something, I would probably have been lucky to even get a team in the Championship,” he said. “I suppose you could say it has gone better than I could have envisaged at Blackburn, but I still feel that if I had been given the chance at Liverpool then I could have done the same.”
Doesn't sound as if Warnock was a lover of rotation!
Bad Bob wrote:Bamaga man wrote:Doesn't sound as if Warnock was a lover of rotation!
Coming from a player who was part of the rotational chaos, we can definately say it is "comical". Warnock wouldnt be the only player thinking that either I reckon.
I hate to say it but rotation will be Rafa's downfall, it seems the players cant even get their heads around it. And I dont blame him for moving on, he's playing regular football now and would improve himself into form, not that he ever got the chance here.
He was decent enough, probably not to hold down a place but then again like he said he could never find his groove in the side as he was in and out all the time.
When Rafa leaves and eventually Carra or Gerrard or someone else brings out a biography, I bet they'll slate his rotation policy.
Well, I'll certainly put more stock in the criticism if Gerrard and especially Carra slate it down the road. I understand Warnock's frustration but the truth is he wasn't good enough and that's why he barely got a game in, ironically, one of our weaker positions.
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