Bad Bob wrote:bigmick wrote:My prediction is that if Rafa stays another ten years or leaves tomorrow, we will still qualify for the Champions League and make it out of the group stages regardless of who takes over. Then we will need to win three home and away matches and a final to add to our big ears tally. To me, though it's lovely and a fantastic experience for the fans, it doesn't form my opinion on whether Rafa should stay or go, or indeed the identity of any new manager. When the Champions League was dreamt up over a decade ago, it was formulated just like the Premier League, to benefit the bigger and wealthier clubs. Over time that has come to fruition, and it also stands to reason that those from the richest and most widely watched league in the World (the Premiership) are at a significant advantage to most of the other teams. Get used to Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United etc being in the quarters, the semi's and winning it because over the next few years unless something happens to disturb the status quo it will continue to happen.
Kinell, Mick, have you always felt this way about the Champions League or do I detect a new--and to me quite unfathomable--flippancy about progressing in football's premier club competition? Are you really saying that we basically just have to show up in order to have a good CL run? That our position in the richest league in the world means we'll walk it to the quarters at least, year in, year out? That any old manager could successfully navigate us through the group stages and see us get past the likes of Inter, Barcelona or Juve? Really? Or have I misunderstood?![]()
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It's one of my more outlandish thoughts I must admit but I've been mulling it over for a while now. It does kind of get you thinking when the same teams keep reaching the latter stages of the competition time after time.
If we look at it logically, in England there are really only four teams who can possibly win the Champions league at present, five if you include Everton (which I don't) who qualified a couple of years back. I think these days you can discount the likes of Ajax, Stau Bucherest, Red Star Belgrade, Dukla Prague (don't know if they really ought to be in there I just like the name, ever since the hlf man half biscuit song

You are left with the four from the prem, a couple from Spain (Barca and Madrid) and a couple from Italy (and even then the Italian League is poor at the mo). Occasionally you get someone do what Portsmouth are going to do in the FA Cup this season (Porto for example, must be the name) but the pool of teams who can actually win it is very small.
We sacked Houlier because he struggled to get in the top four and therefore qualify, while the knives are certainly out for Rafa each time we flirt with missing out. we can take it from that that we as fans consider finishing at least fourth as the minimum standard, and so it should be. If we do finish fourth, then we qualify.
Once we or any of the other English teams have qualified (and like I say only Everton once have broken the status quo in recent times) we go into the group, and avoid the other English teams. How hard it is to get out of the group is probably best demonstrated by how often the English team fail to get out. I think Man Utd did once a couple of years back, but other than that, almost always the English teams get out and therefore make it into the last sixteen. At that point they again avoid each other and need to win a home and away tie to get in the quarters. It's by no means a given, but it's by no means impossible either and you've only got to look at the english clubs records to see.
Now I'm probably ahead of myself here, but my suspicion is that if any of Grant, Ferguson, Wenger or Rafa failed to firstly qualify, and secondly get out of the group then questions would be asked.
I've said on another thread earlier that beating Arsenal is an excellent achievement, as was beating Chelsea those couple fo times. I'm not though buying into this idea that it is some kind of managerial genius to get us into a position where we have these games. Pretty soon I would have thought, UEFA will have to look again at the format because as it is, the same teams will get to the latter stages year after year after year.
If it's not the case already, it'll become like the FA Cupwhere the bigger teams absolutely dominate. All this is even more reason where a manager of Liverpool must be judged on how he performs in the truest of all tests, the league.