How long as he got? - AKA "Rafa's Last Chance" thread

Liverpool Football Club - General Discussion

Postby Espionage » Sat Jul 26, 2008 4:22 pm

Successful clubs stick with one manager in England.  I really see no reason to swap and change, Rafa is obviously a classy guy and would be snapped up by any other club. 

Its much easier to have a manager that makes the same sorts of decisions that you think you would make.  Then when things go pear-shaped it must be the fault of the players, not the managers.  But if you dont understand his decisions it must be his fault ???

IMO managers are there for 2 things:

(1)building a team
Rafa has been A (maybe not A+) in the transfer market, bringing in some real quality (Torres, Masch, Agger, Reina, Alonso, Crouch) with most of them young and buying heaps of players for our long term future in the reserves.

(2) employing good tactics and improving players
Tactically he is reveared as a genius by the football world (his record speaks for it self) and likewise by his players and people around the club.  Torres time and time again gives credit to Rafa for improving him as a player, and preparing him with technical info on each team's defense.  And he is not the only player to credit Rafa with helping him improve in leaps and bounds.

These are the things that Rafa CAN change, and what he should be judged on.  IMO he has done more then good enough in my eyes for him to warrant long term confidence.  I believe that poor performance by the team is not just the manager's fault.  The weakest area of our team is some of the players we have wouldnt make it into the starting 11 at Chelsea or Man U and not our manager.  As far as I am concerned that is our problem.


*I am not going to get dragged into a rotation arguement as its been done to death.  But yeah, I am fine with Rafa's rotation policy.  IMO he rotates when its broken, and he generally doesnt try to fix it when its not.
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Postby Penguins » Sat Jul 26, 2008 4:36 pm

Espionage wrote:Successful clubs stick with one manager in England.  I really see no reason to swap and change, Rafa is obviously a classy guy and would be snapped up by any other club. 

Its much easier to have a manager that makes the same sorts of decisions that you think you would make.  Then when things go pear-shaped it must be the fault of the players, not the managers.  But if you dont understand his decisions it must be his fault ???

IMO managers are there for 2 things:

(1)building a team
Rafa has been A (maybe not A+) in the transfer market, bringing in some real quality (Torres, Masch, Agger, Reina, Alonso, Crouch) with most of them young and buying heaps of players for our long term future in the reserves.

(2) employing good tactics and improving players
Tactically he is reveared as a genius by the football world (his record speaks for it self) and likewise by his players and people around the club.  Torres time and time again gives credit to Rafa for improving him as a player, and preparing him with technical info on each team's defense.  And he is not the only player to credit Rafa with helping him improve in leaps and bounds.

These are the things that Rafa CAN change, and what he should be judged on.  IMO he has done more then good enough in my eyes for him to warrant long term confidence.  I believe that poor performance by the team is not just the manager's fault.  The weakest area of our team is some of the players we have wouldnt make it into the starting 11 at Chelsea or Man U and not our manager.  As far as I am concerned that is our problem.


*I am not going to get dragged into a rotation arguement as its been done to death.  But yeah, I am fine with Rafa's rotation policy.  IMO he rotates when its broken, and he generally doesnt try to fix it when its not.

Good post and some good points.
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Postby Toffeehater » Sat Jul 26, 2008 7:00 pm

Espionage wrote:Successful clubs stick with one manager in England.  I really see no reason to swap and change, Rafa is obviously a classy guy and would be snapped up by any other club. 

Its much easier to have a manager that makes the same sorts of decisions that you think you would make.  Then when things go pear-shaped it must be the fault of the players, not the managers.  But if you dont understand his decisions it must be his fault ???

IMO managers are there for 2 things:

(1)building a team
Rafa has been A (maybe not A+) in the transfer market, bringing in some real quality (Torres, Masch, Agger, Reina, Alonso, Crouch) with most of them young and buying heaps of players for our long term future in the reserves.

(2) employing good tactics and improving players
Tactically he is reveared as a genius by the football world (his record speaks for it self) and likewise by his players and people around the club.  Torres time and time again gives credit to Rafa for improving him as a player, and preparing him with technical info on each team's defense.  And he is not the only player to credit Rafa with helping him improve in leaps and bounds.

These are the things that Rafa CAN change, and what he should be judged on.  IMO he has done more then good enough in my eyes for him to warrant long term confidence.  I believe that poor performance by the team is not just the manager's fault.  The weakest area of our team is some of the players we have wouldnt make it into the starting 11 at Chelsea or Man U and not our manager.  As far as I am concerned that is our problem.


*I am not going to get dragged into a rotation arguement as its been done to death.  But yeah, I am fine with Rafa's rotation policy.  IMO he rotates when its broken, and he generally doesnt try to fix it when its not.

Spot on , good post mate
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Postby account deleted by request » Sat Jul 26, 2008 7:18 pm

Espionage wrote:Successful clubs stick with one manager in England.  I really see no reason to swap and change, Rafa is obviously a classy guy and would be snapped up by any other club. 

Its much easier to have a manager that makes the same sorts of decisions that you think you would make.  Then when things go pear-shaped it must be the fault of the players, not the managers.  But if you dont understand his decisions it must be his fault ???

IMO managers are there for 2 things:

(1)building a team
Rafa has been A (maybe not A+) in the transfer market, bringing in some real quality (Torres, Masch, Agger, Reina, Alonso, Crouch) with most of them young and buying heaps of players for our long term future in the reserves.

(2) employing good tactics and improving players
Tactically he is reveared as a genius by the football world (his record speaks for it self) and likewise by his players and people around the club.  Torres time and time again gives credit to Rafa for improving him as a player, and preparing him with technical info on each team's defense.  And he is not the only player to credit Rafa with helping him improve in leaps and bounds.

These are the things that Rafa CAN change, and what he should be judged on.  IMO he has done more then good enough in my eyes for him to warrant long term confidence.  I believe that poor performance by the team is not just the manager's fault.  The weakest area of our team is some of the players we have wouldnt make it into the starting 11 at Chelsea or Man U and not our manager.  As far as I am concerned that is our problem.


*I am not going to get dragged into a rotation arguement as its been done to death.  But yeah, I am fine with Rafa's rotation policy.  IMO he rotates when its broken, and he generally doesnt try to fix it when its not.

Good post mate and I agree with most of it.

The successful players you pick out:-

Torres (our highest ever fee for a striker)
Masch (our highest ever fee for a midfield player)
Agger (Our highest ever fee for a defender at the time)
Reina (Our highest ever fee for a Goalkeeper)
Alonso(Our highest ever fee for a midfield player at the time)
Crouch(Not in the same league as the above but nonetheless still a success for me.)

As I have said when he spashes the cash and buys quality he does extremely well, its the cheap gambles and too many average players that don't improve the team thats the problem.

Far too many comings and goings which not only unsettles the team, but must make it much more difficult to bond them together and get a good fighting teamspirit going.
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Postby faldo » Sat Jul 26, 2008 7:59 pm

can somebody tell me what identifies a rafa team.every manager has signature to each team they create.

we have seen what wengers signature is after he has rebuilt arsenal teams ,the same for fergie.
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Postby account deleted by request » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:06 pm

faldo wrote:can somebody tell me what identifies a rafa team.every manager has signature to each team they create.

we have seen what wengers signature is after he has rebuilt arsenal teams ,the same for fergie.

Very strong defensive unit, very athletic hardworking team with great strength through the spine.
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Postby faldo » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:09 pm

s@int wrote:Far too many comings and goings which not only unsettles the team, but must make it much more difficult to bond them together and get a good fighting teamspirit going.

i get the impression rafa dare not bring in top top quality players,because if it goes wrong then everybody is in no doubt who is to blame.but if you bring in a lower class players, the fans will want them gone rather than the manager.....houliers trick.

i also don't like the goalkeeper shuffle every season.each season a new one comes to liverpool,chuck one in and cost us an important match and then leaves or never play again....very curious.
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Postby faldo » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:20 pm

s@int wrote:
faldo wrote:can somebody tell me what identifies a rafa team.every manager has signature to each team they create.

we have seen what wengers signature is after he has rebuilt arsenal teams ,the same for fergie.

Very strong defensive unit, very athletic hardworking team with great strength through the spine.

ok so thats rafa's signature.

the next question on my mind is if he is the very best at building a defensive team . to win the league with all the above against teams with super flair like manu and arsenal is hard.is rafa's strong athletic teams superior to wenger and fergies flair....have we even come close to being superior to them with rafa's signature......winning the league is all about superiority.
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Postby account deleted by request » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:25 pm

faldo wrote:
s@int wrote:Far too many comings and goings which not only unsettles the team, but must make it much more difficult to bond them together and get a good fighting teamspirit going.

i get the impression rafa dare not bring in top top quality players,because if it goes wrong then everybody is in no doubt who is to blame.but if you bring in a lower class players, the fans will want them gone rather than the manager.....houliers trick.

i also don't like the goalkeeper shuffle every season.each season a new one comes to liverpool,chuck one in and cost us an important match and then leaves or never play again....very curious.

I just think he has been trying to do too many things at once, maybe due to the pressure of knowing he can't afford to have a really bad season as without the CL MONEY we are fk'd. Spread the money just a little too thinly through trying to strengthen 3 or 4 positions at once, and then unfortunately the next season you need to strengthen the same positions again.

I think maybe now that he has seen how big a difference top quality players like Masch and Torres can make we may see a few more quality players brought in and a few less average squad players. At least I hope so. 

He does seem to have a bit of a fetish for goalkeepers and midfielders  :D
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Postby account deleted by request » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:32 pm

faldo wrote:
s@int wrote:
faldo wrote:can somebody tell me what identifies a rafa team.every manager has signature to each team they create.

we have seen what wengers signature is after he has rebuilt arsenal teams ,the same for fergie.

Very strong defensive unit, very athletic hardworking team with great strength through the spine.

ok so thats rafa's signature.

the next question on my mind is if he is the very best at building a defensive team . to win the league with all the above against teams with super flair like manu and arsenal is hard.is rafa's strong athletic teams superior to wenger and fergies flair....have we even come close to being superior to them with rafa's signature......winning the league is all about superiority.

I think we just need a creative second striker and maybe a top quality winger and we will blow Arsenal and Chelsea away, the mancs may take a little more huffing and puffing first.

They are like the 3 little pigs. Arsenal live in a house made of straw, Chelsea in a house made of wood (polished oak though)and the mancs in a house made of bricks.

:D
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Postby LegBarnes » Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:51 pm

s@int wrote:
Espionage wrote:Successful clubs stick with one manager in England.  I really see no reason to swap and change, Rafa is obviously a classy guy and would be snapped up by any other club. 

Its much easier to have a manager that makes the same sorts of decisions that you think you would make.  Then when things go pear-shaped it must be the fault of the players, not the managers.  But if you dont understand his decisions it must be his fault ???

IMO managers are there for 2 things:

(1)building a team
Rafa has been A (maybe not A+) in the transfer market, bringing in some real quality (Torres, Masch, Agger, Reina, Alonso, Crouch) with most of them young and buying heaps of players for our long term future in the reserves.

(2) employing good tactics and improving players
Tactically he is reveared as a genius by the football world (his record speaks for it self) and likewise by his players and people around the club.  Torres time and time again gives credit to Rafa for improving him as a player, and preparing him with technical info on each team's defense.  And he is not the only player to credit Rafa with helping him improve in leaps and bounds.

These are the things that Rafa CAN change, and what he should be judged on.  IMO he has done more then good enough in my eyes for him to warrant long term confidence.  I believe that poor performance by the team is not just the manager's fault.  The weakest area of our team is some of the players we have wouldnt make it into the starting 11 at Chelsea or Man U and not our manager.  As far as I am concerned that is our problem.


*I am not going to get dragged into a rotation arguement as its been done to death.  But yeah, I am fine with Rafa's rotation policy.  IMO he rotates when its broken, and he generally doesnt try to fix it when its not.

Good post mate and I agree with most of it.

The successful players you pick out:-

Torres (our highest ever fee for a striker)
Masch (our highest ever fee for a midfield player)
Agger (Our highest ever fee for a defender at the time)
Reina (Our highest ever fee for a Goalkeeper)
Alonso(Our highest ever fee for a midfield player at the time)
Crouch(Not in the same league as the above but nonetheless still a success for me.)

As I have said when he spashes the cash and buys quality he does extremely well, its the cheap gambles and too many average players that don't improve the team thats the problem.

Far too many comings and goings which not only unsettles the team, but must make it much more difficult to bond them together and get a good fighting teamspirit going.

That hits nail in the head saint.

To many in and out , that cant help any team.

Fergi never brings in more then 2-3 each season to first team unless he feels things really need big change.

Wenger is same , but must be more to our poor performances then just to many new faces , I still think we are not agressive in league games.

Question is would you either like rafa to go all out in every game this season or to keep same tactics as yester years.

I would personaly have him be more agressive go for that 2nd and 3rd goal when we go 1 up.

I think team almost get stressed when we go 1 up and tend to get nervous and sit back.

Is it just a trend they got into or part of rafas personality rubbing of on them or does he just tell them to sit back ?

Either way i feel that plays a massive role in how come we fall short each year by 10-20 points.
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Postby faldo » Sat Jul 26, 2008 9:16 pm

i know people in the betting shops who spend the same amount of money as the next guy,but he spreads it over many bets. sometimes he wins other times he does not.when he does win its not a great amount because his stake was not very big. the other guy sometimes win and other times does not.....but his winnings are substantially big, because of the size of the stake.

all those years we wasted money on buying 5 or six average players who gave us little back in return.yet we struck it lucky spending big on torres.....if only we could travel back in time .
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Postby bigmick » Sat Jul 26, 2008 11:55 pm

Penguins wrote:
bigmick wrote:I got as far as the bit where you said you can't just concentrate on the first team and have rubbish as back up 'not if you want to challenge'. Well we haven't challenged. Ever. Even a little bit. So it is therefore reasonable to assume that if our goal was all along to at some point to mount a challenge, that we have failed so to do. If on the other hand our transfer and team selection policy was set out without the ultimate objective that at some point we would try and win the league, then it has broadly done what it says on the tin.

For my part, call me a wild optimist/a bullsh!tter/a cocktail barman/a wool or whatever else, I'd quite like to see us have a go sometime. Soon would be good.






I am concerned mostly about both the prestent and the long term future of the club. Unless you and me go to the states and force the yanks to actually spend money of their own on 3-4 15 million players, so we can get to where our rivals are, the quick fix just is not going to work.
And playing 11 players 10 months in 60+ games, no injuries touch wood, will just kill the team in February.
And no, skipping all other competitions is not an option since we need them at least financially and winning the CL improves our rep in europe.
I don't want to stand there in February with a league lead and then have 3-4 players injured and the rest fatigued and see our season fall to pieces when the reserve team players try to do the business.

For just about the millionth time, I am not saying we should play the same team in every single game. I have never said we should play the same team in every single game. Nobody has ever said to the best of my knowledge that we should play the same team in every single game. No Liverpool team in any era played the same team in every single game, indeed to the best of my knowledge no football team ever, played the same team in every single game.

We made 75 changes to the first team in the first 15 matches last season. The alternative to that isn't necessarily zero changes to the team, there are 74 other numbers which would represent a reduction, which is what I advocate.
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Postby LFC2007 » Sun Jul 27, 2008 12:00 am

bigmick wrote:
Penguins wrote:
bigmick wrote:I got as far as the bit where you said you can't just concentrate on the first team and have rubbish as back up 'not if you want to challenge'. Well we haven't challenged. Ever. Even a little bit. So it is therefore reasonable to assume that if our goal was all along to at some point to mount a challenge, that we have failed so to do. If on the other hand our transfer and team selection policy was set out without the ultimate objective that at some point we would try and win the league, then it has broadly done what it says on the tin.

For my part, call me a wild optimist/a bullsh!tter/a cocktail barman/a wool or whatever else, I'd quite like to see us have a go sometime. Soon would be good.






I am concerned mostly about both the prestent and the long term future of the club. Unless you and me go to the states and force the yanks to actually spend money of their own on 3-4 15 million players, so we can get to where our rivals are, the quick fix just is not going to work.
And playing 11 players 10 months in 60+ games, no injuries touch wood, will just kill the team in February.
And no, skipping all other competitions is not an option since we need them at least financially and winning the CL improves our rep in europe.
I don't want to stand there in February with a league lead and then have 3-4 players injured and the rest fatigued and see our season fall to pieces when the reserve team players try to do the business.

For just about the millionth time, I am not saying we should play the same team in every single game. I have never said we should play the same team in every single game. Nobody has ever said to the best of my knowledge that we should play the same team in every single game. No Liverpool team in any era played the same team in every single game, indeed to the best of my knowledge no football team ever, played the same team in every single game.

We made 75 changes to the first team in the first 15 matches last season. The alternative to that isn't necessarily zero changes to the team, there are 74 other numbers which would represent a reduction, which is what I advocate.

:laugh:  It was only a matter of time really   :D
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Postby bigmick » Sun Jul 27, 2008 12:01 am

Just putting him straight :cool:
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