Tony BArrett on Benteke:
Liverpool knew what they were getting when they signed Benteke last summer. Did they think they could fix his weaknesses? asks Tony Barrett
The scorpion wants to cross a river, but he can’t swim. He goes to the frog, who can, and asks for a ride. Frog says, “If I give you a ride on my back, you’ll go and sting me.” Scorpion replies, “It would not be in my interest to sting you since as I’ll be on your back we both would drown.” Frog thinks about this logic for a while and accepts the deal. He takes the scorpion on his back. He braves the waters. Halfway over he feels a burning spear in his side and realizes the scorpion has stung him after all. And as they both sink beneath the waves the frog cries out, “Why did you sting me, Mr Scorpion, for now we both will drown?” Scorpion replies, “I can’t help it, it’s in my nature.”
The above scene from The Crying Game came to mind this weekend as Christian Benteke’s performance for Liverpool against West Ham United was scrutinised, dissected, criticised and questioned. Not only did the forward not move enough, but when he did, he moved to the wrong places at the wrong times and in a way that was all too often at odds with his team-mates.
All of these criticisms were wholly valid but like the scorpion who stung the frog, Benteke is only doing what comes naturally to him. Culpability for his failings, therefore, belongs to the frog for giving him a ride on his back and then being surprised at the consequences when nature takes its course.
Liverpool knew what they were getting when they signed Benteke for £32.5 million last summer. If they didn’t, if they believed him to be a forward who thrived because of his own movement rather than one who is reliant on the service of others, particularly from wide areas, then there has been a serious breakdown in their scouting operation.
Benteke’s strengths and weaknesses are there for all to see, so it is easier to buy into the idea that they believed the shortcomings in his game that many felt made him an unnatural fit for Liverpool could be put right.
What brought them to this conclusion remains unclear. No wingers were signed to provide for him and the creative players on Liverpool’s books – Philippe Coutinho, Roberto Firmino and Adam Lallana – all require clever, speedy movement in front of them in order to be effective. Aside from Jordan Henderson, who operates too centrally to become a foil for Benteke from wide areas regardless of injuries, Liverpool do not have the kind of expert crosser of the ball that would make the Belgium international’s aerial prowess as great a threat as it can be. They have a target man up front but those behind him have different aims.
It is not as if Liverpool have not been here before. Twenty years ago, another forward was signed from a Midlands club for an extravagant fee only for the player to complain subsequently that they had no plan for how to utilise him. In the case of Stan Collymore, an £8.5 million acquisition from Nottingham Forest, a way of playing that suited both him and his new team mates was eventually settled upon by Roy Evans, the manager, and it was one that turned Liverpool into one of the most exciting attacking teams in the country. As things stand, it is hard to see that happening with Benteke unless drastic changes are made to the way Liverpool play and players more compatible with him are recruited.
That Liverpool are in this situation is as predictable as it is unfathomable. Having spent much of last season ruing the lack of movement in his attack due to the laboured efforts of Mario Balotelli and Rickie Lambert, Brendan Rodgers’s priority during the summer was to sign a forward who could add the very qualities that had been missing. With a major problem identified, Rodgers informed his employers that the best available solution was Benteke and urged them to trigger the release clause that would force Villa to sell him.
Despite the pressure that Rodgers was under at that time and the possibility that it would only intensify if Liverpool struggled in the following season, the club’s owners, Fenway Sports Group, backed his judgement. Had they not done so, it might have made his position untenable, but that they did so created a new problem as it left them with a manager who would be replaced within months, a costly forward who does not fit with his new team and a new bout of soul searching centred on how Liverpool operate in the transfer market.
None of which is the fault of Benteke. All he is guilty of is doing what comes naturally to him, of playing football the way he did at Villa and looking to others to help make it work.
In their role as the frog, Liverpool must fear that the greatest sting is still to come, if the mismatch between the second most expensive signing in the club’s history and the players around him continues to undermine their efforts to improve under Jürgen Klopp.
As things stand, they must either change the way they play to suit Benteke or else accept that he is becoming a scorpion that they need to get off their back.