The Liverpool Thread

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OH GET IN DIVOCK! Meant cross or shot, you decide. But ******* get in!

Man his confidence is sky high now!
 
Stoke have been woefully bad at the back but this is Klopp football in full flow.

Great pressing, and fantastic one-two interchanges and movement when we have possession. Options all over.

*Edit* Just need to box off the poor defending at the back. Anything like that Thursday you have to think Dortmund won't let us off the hook again.
 
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Excellent afternoon's work Reds.

Rest 7 players for Thursday. Take another look at 2 kids you believe in who repaid the faith. Firmino gets some much needed minutes under his belt before Thursday. Sturridge another 90 minutes under his. And Lucas back. Some dodgy defending from set pieces aside, a very dominant display and a very convincing win.

Onto the biggie now Thursday with confidence sky high.
 
Everytime i see Kevin Stewart play i'm more impressed. Looks like he could be a tidy excellent player for us.
 
Everytime i see Kevin Stewart play i'm more impressed. Looks like he could be a tidy excellent player for us.

Yup. Real good footballing brain on him. Knows where to be positionally. Strong the tackle. Good passer. Ways to go but looks real promising. Defo have him boosted to the first team squad next year.
 
Pierre-Divorick Aurigi is much better.

Lol. Whatever anyone wants to call him currently fits. The change in him over this season from pre Klopp to now has been ridiculous. Many of us, no less myself, had serious doubts he'd ever make a striker. Let alone cut it at this level. He had no confidence and looked like a little kid out there. 'He'll never make a striker so long as he has a hole in his ****' was my (quaint) damnation of him when we finally got to see him pre-season. Then Klopp comes in, and by his own admission the mere fact he had a manager that fully believed in him and wasn't afraid to play him boosted him ten fold, and his game has just steadily developed from that point on. He's apparently been hitting the weights and it's really starting to show with the added strength to his physique. He's gone from fourth choice and not getting a look in to arguably the best we have at leading the line and holding it up with his strength and pace. And now the extra work on the training pitch is starting to pay off with him starting to add goals he looks like he could be a real gem.

Still a LONG way to go in his development. But the progression thus far in 6 short months and the growth left for a kid that turns 21 in a weeks time really excites you. His ceiling is massive. To take his goal, albeit via a deflection, and lead the line like that on by far and away the biggest stage he'd ever played on Thursday and give some top class defenders fits all night was awesome to see.

Utd fans the other thread laughed (thankfully others got it without any bias) when we made the comparison to he and Martial last summer at the respective starts of their careers. And they have brought that up mockingly after the Frenchman's faster start in England than the Belgium. Not too many looking at two super young kids if they're honest would be laughing now.

Personally, VERY happy to hold my hands up and say I was DEAD wrong on Divock.
 
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Liverpool fans and their delusion. Nothing has changed.

19 August 2003 : by Chris Bascombe, Liverpool Echo
Why Le Tallec will be our Ronaldo

In most cases, paying £12m for a teenager would be considered rank stupidity, over-indulgence or, at the very least, a gamble which even Chris Kirkland's dad would shy away from.

When Manchester United do it, it's a stroke of transfer genius.
According to everyone who they make listen, United have just signed the best teenager in the world. By God are we hearing about it.

I'm not doubting Ronaldo's abilities. Clearly he's a talented kid who may be on the threshold of greatness. It just strikes me as rather odd that no-one has given the same attention to Liverpool's equally stunning new teenage recruit.

It seems Gerard Houllier's mistake with Anthony Le Tallec was to buy him early rather than delay until everyone in Europe wanted him. Obviously, Liverpool should have waited until Le Tallec's value was £12m.

Soon enough, the rest of the nation will wake up to the fact Le Tallec and Ronaldo played in the same world youth championships not so long ago and it was the Liverpool new boy who was voted the best player.

No doubt both Gerard and Sir Alex watched those same youth championships in Malaysia a few years back and noticed the same players.

Indeed, Liverpool had already signed Le Tallec by then and were strongly linked with Ronaldo themselves, but can't afford to splash out like United.

Time will tell who's got the better deal, but for value for money I know who I'm backing. It's a bit like Houllier and Ferguson have both dined at the same top class restaurant and had their pick of the best main courses on the menu.

Houllier has managed to get his dish at a quarter of the cost Ferguson has paid, and yet it's his rival who is getting all the praise.

Indeed, I'm getting an eerie sense of deja vu when it comes to the man dubbed TLT who's about to explode onto the Premiership. I remember how slow our London based number one writers were to realise who Steven Gerrard was a few years back.

The Kop Magazine I once wrote even launched a campaign to get him in the England squad, so little attention was he receiving. Then, when the rest of the country noticed a year later, they decided to make him their own property.

It was a similar story with Wayne Rooney at Everton. A friend of mine who works on a national newspaper tried to get a feature on Rooney into his paper in the summer of 2002. They were having none of it. How times changed three months later when "Rooney Opens Crisp Packet" stories were making the front page.

Le Tallec won't get the same attention as Rooney, Gerrard or Michael Owen because he ain't English. But the few glimpses I've had of him remind me so much of the first time I saw Gerrard.

So young, yet so full of class. So clearly ready to play at the highest level and begin the learning curve which will take him to the top of the game.

One of the most encouraging, but sadly overlooked parts of Sunday was Le Tallec's being named a sub. Pity he didn't get on, although Houllier said he was prepared to play the youngster if the circumstances of the game had been different.

The career paths of Le Tallec and Ronaldo are sure to cross regularly over the next decade. Should the French gem prove himself the better player, you never know, maybe the manager who signed him will get a bit of credit.


How awful it was to watch on Sunday, don't you think?

A team flooding the midfield, sitting back, making no effort to take the game to their opponents but content to hit on the break.

I mean? One man up front against one your biggest rivals? What were they thinking? And how they paid a price for their caution when in the late stages their opponents scored a well deserved goal.

Liverpool? Try Chelsea.

Chelsea were impressive, but it seems Claudio Ranieri is allowed to use these counter-attacking tactics while Liverpool are not.

I dare not think of the reaction had Gerard Houllier taken a team to Stamford Bridge and played one striker. Even if his side won!

Last week, I wrote a column saying whatever happened this season, it would be progress to leave Anfield feeling suitably entertained. Well, I was. It was a fine match between two excellent sides and Liverpool contributed to it.

All that was wrong with the performance was the result. Entertaining,
losing football is still better than boring, losing football. The next
trick is to entertain and win, something I'm sure will happen if Liverpool play with the same commitment and attacking intent they showed on Sunday (and have Steven Gerrard in the side),

Of course, the TV and radio bandits had decided Bruno Cheyrou and Igor Biscan were going to be rubbish regardless of what happened. Cheyrou and Biscan had their best games for the club on Sunday. Whether that's still good enough is another matter, but they weren't Liverpool's worst players.

No, that honour went to those beyond criticism whose name is likely to be sung first and loudest.

Liverpool lost because they didn't defend properly when they were called upon. Something which cost them key points last year too but is conveniently overlooked by cowards who pick easy targets.
 
A Liverpool fan and his (in hindsight) incorrect opinion

I would have posted the link to the thread where Liverpool fans discussed the move but shame Liverpool echo were so embarrassed they deleted that particular link.
 
I would have posted the link to the thread where Liverpool fans discussed the move but shame Liverpool echo were so embarrassed they deleted that particular link.

Anyone could do this from anywhere though mate. I bet if I spent 10 mins looking back at old articles and forum posts from United fans I could find stuff like this lol
 
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