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Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

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Old 07-02-2012, 11:44 AM   #1
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Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

Founded in 1892 Liverpool F.C. is arguably the most successful club in the history of British football. They've won 18 league titles, 5 European Cups, 7 F.A. Cups, 7 League Cups, 3 UEFA Cups, and 3 UEFA Super Cups, all of them however prior to 2006. Therein lies the rub, for all of their success Liverpool Football Club have not won a trophy for quite some time, this dynasty aims to change all that. Before we get started I lay down some facts that I hope to change....quickly.

Last First Division Title: 1989-90
Last F.A. Cup Title: 2005-06
Last League Cup: 2002-03(this year doesn't count!)
Last Champions League Cup: 2004-05

Manager: Brendan Rodgers(A year early I know, so I cheated a little)

Philosophy: Much like Swansea this year, a pass and move system to be implemented gradually

(Legendary)Board Demands: Qualify For Champions League

Budget: £15 million pounds, weekly wage allotment £1,370,000

Current season plans: To start off I plan on hiring a very good scout in order to begin signing youth talent. I'm not expecting to make a big splash in this transfer window, I plan on playing it out with the squad I have then maybe tinker in January.
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Old 07-02-2012, 12:12 PM   #2
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

Here's a great article on Brendan Rodgers' overall philosophy, it's very insightful and will serve as the blueprint for how I manage the club. Here's the link:http://thepathismadebywalking.wordpr...taka-football/
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Old 07-02-2012, 03:28 PM   #3
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

LIIIIVERPOOL!

Good luck mate!
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Old 07-02-2012, 04:06 PM   #4
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

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Originally Posted by rhysyboy
LIIIIVERPOOL!

Good luck mate!
Thanks bud! Hopefully I can do a little better than 8th place!
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Old 07-02-2012, 07:09 PM   #5
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth


August 10th, 2011

A Season At The Crossroads

Full of intrigue, but by no means vintage in quality, would seem an accurate summation of the 2010-11 Premier League season. Allegations that this was the worst Manchester United title-winning side of all the eleven since the reformation of English football persist, though their winning margin of nine points was their best in a decade. It barely said much for their rivals.


• A summer bereft of a major tournament for the European nations gave rise to a vacuum into which rabid transfer speculation was only too glad to step. Some of the purported major deals remain undone at time of writing but names like Sergio Aguero, Gervinho, Romelu Lukaku, and David De Gea have arrived from Europe, though the majority of deals have been intra-mural in the Premier League.

Manchester United
and Liverpool have kept their business largely homespun with the latter the most parochial in their recruitment. Phil Jones and Ashley Young were coveted by both but chose Old Trafford, while Jordan Henderson, Stewart Downing and Charlie Adam arrived at Liverpool with similarly high prices but also a lot to prove, and with less leeway in which to achieve it.

Liverpool's stated target, according to their owner, is the Champions League for 2012-13, by finishing fourth or better. Brendan Rodgers, in his first full season at the Anfield helm has set his sights higher, with a tilt at the title his expectation.

The champions themselves have a new look, as veterans in Paul Scholes, Gary Neville, Edwin Van Der Sar, Wes Brown and John O'Shea - almost half a team - take their leave after thousands of games of service. De Gea, Young and Jones take their place alongside another group of young players in Danny Welbeck, Tom Cleverley, Chris Smalling, Jonny Evans, Rafael and Fabio who are already familiar with life under Sir Alex Ferguson. A manager approaching 70 begins yet another process of reinvention from a position of strength.

Chelsea's summer spend largely went on a 33-year-old, but this was no veteran campaigner to add nous to their on-field playing staff. Andre Villas-Boas is Europe's hottest coaching property, recruited from FC Porto in a retreading of history, though comparisons to his predecessor and one-time mentor Jose Mourinho look trite already. Lukaku and Oriol Romeu share their manager's gift of youth, though Villas-Boas must solve an age-old problem in that the spine of his team retains a Mourinho-era look to it, with the added conundrum of getting the best from Fernando Torres, a £50 million striker in danger of misfit status.

Manchester City's development continues, with twin objectives achieved of a trophy win after 35 years of waiting and the Champions League welcomed to Eastlands, or the Etihad Campus if you will. Roberto Mancini's team look likely to remain methodical, with the playing shackles remaining tight, perhaps too tight for a club that has spent £500 million or so.

Aguero is a galactico signing, though is likely to replace Carlos Tevez, whose usual two-year cycle at his club is at an end. City's squad depth has been augmented further, yet there remain too many residual players from previous eras. The presence - for now - of Tevez, Emmanuel Adebayor, Craig Bellamy and Roque Santa Cruz remind of a club that buys high and struggles to re-sell on the same level, with potential ramifications for Financial Fairplay regulations being eased in by UEFA. For now, City remain the big spenders, with further recruits to follow and expectations climbing. Of all of the aforementioned managers, it is Mancini whose employment prospects look most in danger should his team falter.


Arsene Wenger: End of days?




Arsene Wenger could hardly be said to be at risk of the axe at Arsenal yet his reign is at a definite crossroads. A trophy drought has extended to such a length that it barely needs mention for fear of lapsing into cliché, while a top-four position looks as precarious as it has since his arrival in 1996. The non-addition - so far - of an experienced goalkeeper, a hardman defender, a midfielder of grit and a clinical finisher are either evidence of brinkmanship or misplaced faith in a group that has not yet delivered. In Arsene, the trust is slipping. The additions of Gervinho and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, two players in positions already blessed with personnel, do not look the solution to problems not addressed for years on end. With Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri now gone to Barcelona and Manchester City respectively, a teenager in Jack Wilshere already looks over-burdened with responsibility.

Across North London, Tottenham Hotspur are another in a summer of stasis, with their efforts concentrated on retention rather than recruitment. The Champions League adventure was cherished last season, but will need to be revisited if the likes of Luka Modric and Gareth Bale are to stay on. A strikeforce that failed them does not look enough for a return to the top four.

The ambitions of that six are matched by a wealth of resources that the hopefuls cannot match. David Moyes' Everton ceiling looks seventh place, with little fresh blood coming in, and inconsistency ever the enemy. Sunderland have added experience to their squad , spending the Jordan Henderson money on ten players in an attempt to arrest the second-half slump that has blighted both seasons under Steve Bruce, a manager whose constant need for recruitment may cost him his job if that pattern is repeated.

Aston Villa's last season was wrecked before it even began, a fate further deepened by the ill-advised appointment of Gerard Houllier. Alex McLeish, despite a Carling Cup win, is a man tarred with a Blue brush and a relegation to boot. Should his team begin slowly, then he is sure to be under heavy fan pressure, if supported by Randy Lerner, a man now learning that owning a football club is a poor guarantee of popularity.


Mike Ashley: Mr Popularity himself



Mike Ashley could perhaps offer advice there, though his detachment from Newcastle United supporters seems wilful. The core of a team who won promotion and smashed Sunderland 5-1 is gone, with only pseudo-philosopher Joey Barton remaining (for now) as a dissenter. Alan Pardew's summer arrivals have a Gallic air to them, but a whiff of cheapness too.

Stoke City will remember last season as special, despite the disappointment of losing the FA Cup final. Their efforts in the Europa League may drain them, should the group stage be reached, but Tony Pulis will hope to continue his establishment of a Premier League force who are difficult to face at the best of times. Bolton Wanderers' Owen Coyle is flush with confidence in his abilities yet may be robbed of a spine for his team when Gary Cahill makes his expected departure to follow Johan Elmander out of the door, while Stuart Holden and Lee Chung-Yung remain victims to long-term injury.

Martin Jol's brand of Dutch bonhomie is back in the Premier League, with some Europa venturing of his own to do, but he must do so with a Fulham team that looks rather familiar. Roy Hodgson, once the manager of that group, meanwhile, will hope to continue the revival of both West Bromwich Albion and his own career, after that ill-starred few months at Liverpool.

West Brom look set fair to consolidate this season, as a group of contenders for relegation look far less equipped to escape a dogfight. Wolverhampton Wanderers have added defensive class in Roger Johnson but goals need to be found if a last-day escape is not to be required again. How long can Roberto Martinez and Wigan Athletic retain their status? Every season sees a star depart, and Charles N'Zogbia is the latest mainstay to lessen the depth of an already shallow squad.


Steve Kean: Unconvincing





As in previous seasons, Wigan may be saved by a lack of quality among their immediate peers, with Lancastrian rivals Blackburn Rovers looking the most endangered of the previous incumbents. The near-£20 million banked for Phil Jones has not been reinvested, with Indian owners Venky's publicly admitting that the finances of the club are parlous. Steve Kean's first showings as a Premier League manager were unpromising at best, his media utterances unconvincing and his statements about aiming his team at the Champions League frankly laughable.

Rovers may provide an escape hatch for one of the three promoted teams who would seem to lack stickability. Queen's Park Rangers may have wealthy owners and eye-watering ticket prices but seemingly little interest in furnishing their 'boutique club' with guaranteed talent. Of Neil Warnock's recruits, DJ Campbell proved his striking class in Blackpool's losing battle last term but Kieron Dyer and Danny Gabbidon have the ailing appearance of drinkers in the last-chance saloon.

Swansea City's return to the top flight after nearly 30 years adds romance, and a rare visitation to the Principality of Wales, but Michael Laudrup's clear self-confidence faces a very tough test of resolve. Norwich City are a welcome return to a division in which they were a force in its infancy but Paul Lambert arrives with a squad that has conquered League One and the Championship in successive seasons. Their summer recruits have the look of players who may flourish in either of those divisions while Premier class may evade them.

It all adds up to a division with questions to be answered about all its protagonists, from the champions' bedding-in of a rookie goalkeeper and replacing of the old guard to Swansea's carrying of the hopes of the Welsh nation. The summer may not have seen an influx to guarantee an increase in quality across the board but the intrigue is sure to continue.



ESPNsoccernet's Predictions
John Brewin
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Liverpool, Man City, Chelsea
Premier League relegation: Blackburn, Wigan, Swansea
FA Cup: Man City
Carling Cup: Arsenal
Europa League: FC Porto
Champions League: Real Madrid
Player of the Year: Wayne Rooney
Young Player of the Year: Chris Smalling

Martin Williamson
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Liverpool
Premier League relegation: Blackburn, Norwich, Swansea
FA Cup: Man Utd
Carling Cup: Chelsea
Europa League: Lottery
Champions League: Real Madrid
Player of the Year: Wayne Rooney
Young Player of the Year: Jack Wilshere

Jon Carter
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal
Premier League relegation: Wolves, Wigan, Swansea
FA Cup: Chelsea
Carling Cup: Man City
Europa League: Benfica
Champions League: Barcelona
Player of the Year: David Silva
Young Player of the Year: Jack Wilshere

Dale Johnson
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Liverpool
Premier League relegation: Bolton, Blackburn, Swansea
FA Cup: Liverpool
Carling Cup: Tottenham
Europa League: Paris Saint-Germain
Champions League: Chelsea
Player of the Year: Wayne Rooney
Young Player of the Year: Tom Cleverley


Dom Raynor
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Liverpool
Premier League relegation: Wigan, Swansea, Norwich
FA Cup: Arsenal
Carling Cup: Tottenham
Europa League: PSG
Champions League: Barcelona
Player of the Year: Wayne Rooney
Young Player of the Year: Seamus Coleman


Robin Hackett
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Liverpool
Premier League relegation: Wigan, Blackburn, Norwich
FA Cup: Chelsea
Carling Cup: Arsenal
Europa League: Roma
Champions League: Barcelona
Player of the Year: David Silva
Young Player of the Year: Jack Wilshere


Mark Lomas
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal
Premier League relegation: QPR, Swansea, Blackburn
FA Cup: Tottenham
Carling Cup: Chelsea
Europa League: Lille
Champions League: Real Madrid
Player of the Year: Nani
Young Player of the Year: Daniel Sturridge

James Dall
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Chelsea, Manchester City, Arsenal.
Premier League relegation: Swansea, Blackburn, Newcastle.
FA Cup: Chelsea.
Carling Cup: Arsenal.
Europa League: Paris Saint-Germain.
Champions League: Barcelona.
Player of the Year: Sergio Aguero.
Young Player of the Year: Daniel Sturridge.

Rob Brooks
Premier League top four: Man City, Man Utd, Chelsea, Arsenal
Premier League relegation: Swansea, Blackburn, Norwich
FA Cup: Manchester United
Carling Cup: Arsenal
Europa League: Paris Saint-Germain
Champions League: Real Madrid
Player of the Year: Sergio Aguero
Young Player of the Year: Jack Wilshere


Richard Jolly
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal.
Premier League relegation: Swansea, QPR, Blackburn.
FA Cup: Chelsea.
Carling Cup: Liverpool.
Europa League: Roma.
Champions League: Real Madrid.
Player of the Year: Wayne Rooney.
Young Player of the Year: Josh McEachran.

Kevin Palmer
Premier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Spurs
Premier League relegation: Swansea, Norwich,Wigan
FA Cup: Liverpool
Carling Cup: Man City
Europa League: Arsenal
Champions League: Real Madrid
Player of the Year: Sergio Aguero
Young Player of the Year: David De Gea

Chris MurphyPremier League top four: Man Utd, Man City, Chelsea, Arsenal.
Premier League relegation: Swansea, Norwich, Wigan.
FA Cup: Liverpool
Carling Cup: Tottenham
Europa League: Sevilla.
Champions League: Barcelona.
Player of the Year: Nani.
Young Player of the Year: Chris Smalling.





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Old 07-02-2012, 10:30 PM   #6
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth


1 August 2011

Injury To Carroll May Force Rodgers' Hand

Liverpool- Following an undefeated preseason in which his club did not concede a goal, Reds Manager Brendan Rodgers was served his first crisis at Anfield, and it came in the form of an injury, a huge one. 23 year old target man Andy Carroll suffered a torn ACL during a training session and will be out of the lineup until at least the new year. This leaves Liverpool with just two viable options at striker, Luis Suarez and Craig Bellamy, and with Suarez looking very dangerous out wide in Rodgers' loosely termed 4-3-3, he really has no choice but to obtain a replacement. Expected to go young, Rodgers target list may include Twente's Luuk de Jong, Palermo's Abel Hernandez, Fabio Borini from Roma, or Emmanuel Emenike from Spartak Moskva. In some other preseason notes of interest, Liverpool have loaned out five youngsters across Europe and even Australia, the list is:

CB Andre Wisdom has been loaned to Adelaide United(Australia)
CB Conor Coady has been loaned to Coventry City(England)
ST Michael Ngoo has been loaned to Heracles Almelo(Netherlands)
CB Emmanuel Mendy has been loaned to VV Venlo(Netherlands)
CB Jack Robinson has been loaned to AS Monaco(France)

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Old 07-03-2012, 07:08 AM   #7
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

Good to see you've got an eye on the young players, and hopefully you can sign a striker before the start of the season!
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Old 07-03-2012, 07:20 AM   #8
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Re: Liverpool Football Club: Rebirth

Quote:
Originally Posted by rhysyboy
Good to see you've got an eye on the young players, and hopefully you can sign a striker before the start of the season!
Truthfully I'm worried about Carroll working out once he does get on the pitch, so I figured I may as well sign a young striker that way if I have to sell the big guy come next Summer I'm already a step ahead.
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