In light of a few of the articles posted on this site recently, I felt that I should cast a spotlight upon the inevitable discussion of Liverpool’s strength in depth. We all know that we don’t have any. Many fans would probably rate this as our largest problem. But who is truly to blame?
During the transfer windows, the priority is the first team. The large portion of your funding should go into tweaking the starting line-up. Ideally you would replace a few of your starting 11 with a better player, which would move the previous starter to the bench and allow you to sell his old replacement.
The point was made that money is not the be all and end all. This is certainly true when it comes to the first team, but for the squad it most definitely isn’t! When you have cash at your disposal then its up to you to spend it responsibly (ala not blowing 30 mil on Berbatov). I dealt with the money that we have spent in my two recent articles though, so I won’t go into detail here.
Now here’s a look at Rafa’s net spend by year since he arrived at LFC:
Year……………Bought………………Sold………………Net……
04/05……………39.75………………10.50……………29.25…
05/06……………26.29………………12.00……………14.29…
06…………..……23.70………………11.13……………12.57…
Yanks arrive! (06/02/2007)
07………………..20.60………………2.70………………17.90
07/08……………43.00………………33.20………………9.80…
08/09……………39.00………………32.75………………6.25…
09/10……………40.00………………35.50………………4.50…
Here’s the problem. If you are selling 30 mil in players every season and only buying 40 mil, then that means that the players who should be moving to your bench are instead being sold to fund their replacements. The biggest problem that the Yanks have thrust upon us is the lack of squad depth.
Letting players go on a free is a different story (Finnan, Sami and others), but Cisse, Bellamy, Garcia, Gonzalez, Sissoko, Crouch, Guthrie, Carson, Riise, Keane, Alonso and Arbeloa all had to be sold (for a total of 90 mil) in order for us to buy the quality we needed for the first team. All of these players (with a few exceptions eg. Alonso and Keane) would be sitting on our bench right now if we had the cash to buy without selling first.
Note that the players mentioned above were all sold after the yanks arrived. Before the yanks our biggest sale was Baros for 6.5 mil (excluding Owen for 8 mil since that was organised before Rafa) and the second biggest was Kirkland for 3.5 mil. After the yanks arrived we have sold 8 players for more than Kirkland, 5 of which were even higher than Baros.
Because of this Rafa has been forced to bring in players on free transfers and cheap buys to try and fill the holes left by his enforced sales. Enter Voronin, Degen and Kyrgiakos. This is now our squad. Players who were deemed not good enough to warrant new contracts at the clubs they were serving before. Yes, they are bad, but they could have been oh so much worse.
In terms of the squad, the yanks are to blame, not Rafa. In terms of the strength of the players that have been through our club, that is on Rafa’s head (and even that’s up for debate sometimes, ala Robbie Keane).
The other side of the coin revolves around pushing young talent through. After all, Arsene Wenger has been performing miracles on a very small budget hasn’t he?
Indeed he has. A look at Arsenal’s recent transfer activity shows a net gain of 17.95 mil (56.65 mil in and 74.6 mil out) in the last 4 years. Incredible. Remember though that Arsene Wenger already had his entire team and squad at the start of these 4 years.
Looking at Rafa’s side we see 7 very promising youngsters (including Nemeth, N’Gog, Insua, Plessis, and El Zhar) arriving at our club in the last 3 years for a grand total of 1.5 mil, all of which was spent on N’Gog. Now I will confess that my source is not complete and not all of the youngsters are accounted for, but that’s pretty impressive going.
But having the young talent available and truly utilising it are two different things. This is one of the real debating points about Rafa in recent times. Personally I think we’re doing fine (especially as far as N’Gog and Insua are concerned). Rafa has never really had youngsters of this calibre available to him before, so I won’t judge him until I see the fruits. Insua looks good (though he needs to stop ball watching) and N’Gog is just getting better and better. So far so good then.
In conclusion: Yes we lack strength in depth, yes we have some players in our squad who simply aren’t good enough, but at the same time there are a few great prospects on the horizon. While I gave Rafa a thumbs up for his transfer dealings in both of my last articles, here I give him no thumbs at all but one pointing way, way down to our beloved owners. Cough up the goods you promised!