TOMKINS: ARE WE WATCHING THE SAME TORRES?
Paul Tomkins 25 June 2008
Watching Liverpool players in Euro 2008 brings to mind the difficulties any manager faces when bringing new players to his club.
It's fairly clear that the Fernando Torres playing for Spain does not look like the player we see for Liverpool. And it's a common phrase in football: "He just doesn't look the same player." It often happens when a player is taken out of one environment and placed into another.
It brings to mind John Barnes playing for England. Exceptional for Liverpool in the late '80s, he just couldn't replicate his form for his country, even against moderate opposition. He wasn't treated the same by the fans, he had less licence to roam, and received far less of the ball.
Ian Rush at Juventus wasn't happy, confident and settled. He was a different player. The same is a risk every time a player joins Liverpool. If players as good as Barnes and Rush can suffer in different teams, then any player can.
A player is largely a product of his environment, and all the interactions therein; he does not act alone. He is helped to look good, or bad, by his own efforts, but also by his teammates and his manager, and a myriad other factors. Different diet, tactics, lifestyle, training, expectations, home life, teammates, crowd, philosophy, language etc, all impact on the player. All affect his psyche.
Torres for Spain is not playing against better defenders than he faced against Chelsea and Arsenal, yet he scored against those teams on three occasions. He is not playing against better defenders than he faced in Champions League games, but after a slow start he scored regularly in Europe for the Reds.
How the manager treats a player affects his confidence. When I watch Torres for Spain, I sense that he doesn't feel totally trusted by Luis Aragones, or comfortable in the style of play. It's like he has no idea when, or indeed if, a pass will ever come; his runs off the ball are less assured. The possession is so controlled, so patient, that at times it appears to have no aim other than keeping the ball. Cesc Fabregas has twice come on and been prepared to hit forward passes, but both times Torres has been taken off.
But that's not to say that Spain are wrong to play that way. Every team has its own way of playing. When it works for Spain they can take teams apart, and they are having their best tournament for 24 years. It's about what works for the team, and Torres has played a part, all the same, by occupying defenders and trying to make things happen when he gets a chance. He's a threat, a player who cannot be left unmarked. It's not that he's playing badly, just that he doesn't look the player we've grown accustomed to seeing.
It's like Steven Gerrard and the issue of his best position –– it's the result that counts, not the performance of a single individual. If Spain do well without getting the best out of Torres, where's the problem?
I laugh when I hear that Gerrard is 'wasted' on the right or playing behind Torres as it's 'not his best position'. Since when is a player getting a lot of goals, and creating even more, in a team that's doing well, a waste? In 2005-06 Liverpool were struggling until Gerrard moved to the right wing. Then last season, the best run of results came after Gerrard was moved into a semi-striker role, playing off Torres, for the last few months of the season.
In neither case it was purely down to where Gerrard played. But it was clearly a major factor. It wasn't his best position, but at the time, it was the best position for him in the team.
In any system, it's impossible to get 100 per cent out of every player. Someone's effectiveness –– particularly if we are talking about creative players –– will always be compromised somewhere along the line if players with similar skills are in the side. For example, play an exceptional right winger and the left winger might not get as many touches. And of course, for England, Lampard and Gerrard have shown that they cannot both play their natural game if they are paired together; one always has to hold off.
With Gerrard in his role behind Torres, you lose the box-to-box drive. So part of his game is compromised. But if Gerrard being at 80 per cent effectiveness –– which is still a hugely impressive talent –– enables Torres to be near to 100 per cent of his, then that can have a better overall result. Gerrard and Torres together seem to exceed the sum of already impressive parts.
It's all about the balance, and that includes players who are in the team to help others shine. Holland had some hugely talented wingers in reserve, but why did Marco Van Basten, a supreme individual talent as a player, keep picking Kuyt on the right, and keep getting results with him? Kuyt was a big part of the dismantling of world champions Italy and runners-up France.
Admittedly, Kuyt didn't last long against Russia, but Holland got a better 'result' -- were unbeaten -- when he was on the pitch. It was no coincidence that Torres said a few weeks ago that Kuyt's efforts for Liverpool were 'sensational' and that he was a player who helped him score so many goals.
Going back to a player's psyche, it was also no coincidence that Kuyt's form dipped after the death of his father. I wonder how many of us could shrug off such a major life-changing event, and the loss of our biggest supporter, particularly when we are still relatively new to a different country? But the man has character, and eventually he bounced back.
But there are still issues with Liverpool in wide areas that will be addressed this summer. From what I've observed, it seems that pace, and attacking verve, from full-back will be a key addition to the style of play next season.
With two holding midfielders, the full-backs become important for getting width, while the 'wingers' are then freed to drift infield to create chances or go for goal.
While Riise was a good attacking left-back, he was more inclined to drift inside to look to shoot rather than go outside his man. I felt Riise was under-appreciated at times, and certainly in 2005-06 he was extremely solid in the position, while a year later he scored some vital goals, particularly from left-midfield.
But he seemed to lose his way a tiny bit last season - and I can't say that I'll miss his free-kicks! After that wonderful one against Man United in 2001, he was sometimes more of a threat to the opposition's wall than its goal, although he did curl in a couple of peaches.
His one-footedness was also frustrating –– if only he trusted his right foot in the way he did at the Nou Camp, when he didn't have time to think. However, he gave his all, and I felt that he was, on balance, a very good player over the past seven years. But his exit is a sign of the changes taking place at the club this summer, as Benítez reshapes his squad.
Happily, it seems as if all of Rafa's key players are fully committed to the club –– unlike the Reds' three main rivals.
All are facing a lot of change this summer. Chelsea have a new manager, while they, Arsenal and Manchester United are fighting to hold onto key players who are looking to play elsewhere. Liverpool don't have that unrest. Some good players may leave, but Benítez will be keeping those he sees as important for his plans.
All three rivals will have money to spend as a result, should those moves come to fruition, and of course Chelsea have money to spend regardless. After a series of ins and outs they may all end up stronger. But it could take time, and with Flamini already gone, if players like Ronaldo, Hleb and Lampard follow, not to mention one or two others, it could leave weaknesses in those teams.
It took Hleb two years and Flamini three to get into their stride, so replacements won't necessarily slot straight in. But of course, those are their problems; from Liverpool's point of view, I expect a number of the younger players to do as that Arsenal pair did, and grow as players in the coming seasons.
While, like most Reds, I'm hoping for some quality additions, I'm looking to see players like Babel and Lucas, who improved as last season progressed, step up another gear, and two or three youngsters from the reserves to push harder for games after making waves last season.
The return of Daniel Agger will be like a new signing, too. His passing and movement with the ball from the back adds another dimension to Liverpool's play. I can't express how important I think Agger is, and how undervalued he is outside of the club.
And if Torres takes his goalscoring form from the second half of last season into the start of next season, I feel there's no need to get too uptight about what does or doesn't transpire in the transfer market.