Five Questions Left to Answer

By: Ed | August 10th, 2010
   

Even with things going relatively well, there’s still a few unknowns.

The avalanche of optimism has taken me by surprise—after a season largely spent whining, complaining, and contemplating the merits of nihilism, I fully expected the summer to follow suit. And for a few weeks, it did. Nothing happened on the ownership front, speculation ran wild about the big names leaving, and the club were without a manager after mutually kicking Rafa’s ass out the door.

But starting with the appointment of Roy Hodgson, things started to slowly turn for the better. Hodgson got to work retaining the top talent, the club finalized a few buys that were in the works prior to his arrival (including the capture of Danny Wilson), Joe Cole arrived, Fabio Aurelio re-signed, the deal for Emiliano Insua fell through, and, in news that shouldn’t have been news, both Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres committed their futures to Liverpool. All this was followed closely by reports that there were no less than five or six serious bidders for the club. In a matter of weeks, everything seemed to be righting itself, and it only got better with confident and flashy displays against an admittedly overmatched Rabotnicki side in the opening round of Liverpool’s Europa League campaign.

If we learned anything last season as Liverpool fans, though, it’s that things are rarely as simple as they seem. So the optimism and positivity are more than welcome—I’ve barely got two feet on the ground ahead of the league opener. But there’s also a good chunk of business that needs dealing with in both the short- and long-term, and it’s got to be seen as a little worrisome.

I hope this isn’t seen as more fear-mongering; rather, I think these are importnant (if not obvious) questions that the club will be facing in the coming season. If you disagree, or, even better, have an answer, let me know.

In no particular order:

1) What’s going to happen with ownership?

As noted, plenty of rumored bidders, all on the spectrum of shady (ranging from “quiet guy in the corner at Starbucks shady” to “watching you sleep in a dark room while wearing only tighty-whities shady”). The implications of who buys and for how much are going to reach far beyond the boardroom, and hopefully return the attention back to the pitch. Oh, and hopefully they’re not in cahoots with H/G.

2) What’s going to happen with the personnel in squad?

Mascherano wants away, Christian POULSEN (thanks Grubb) is rumored to be joining soon, and the big names have committed to the club for now. If they’re able to string together decent results from now until January, it’ll be interesting to see if any additions are made on the heels of an expected change in ownership. At present Liverpool almost seem deep, and an injection of cash could shake things up. And there’s plenty of young talent, too, in addition to those that might be pushed out of the first team. Keeping everyone happy would be a nice problem to have, but potentially a problem nonetheless.

3) What will “Roy Hodgson’s Liverpool” look like?

We know he’s an ardent 4-4-2 man, and so far he hasn’t strayed far from that formula. The 4-4-1-1 with Joe Cole just off a striker is the best for my money, but there’s also plenty of adaptability in the side, particularly from the midfield forward. More than anything, my hope is the Hodgson’s Liverpool will play a passionate brand of football—they don’t need to be Arsenal or Barcelona or Shaolin Soccer. They just need to act like they give a shit, and do so consistently. A few wins wouldn’t hurt either.

4) Is Peter Brukner a wizard?

Silly question for a very serious topic. As it stands, Liverpool’s attack relies on two very talented, very gifted, very injury-prone forward men. Joe Cole’s no stranger to the training room, and Fernando Torres has been frustrated by one injury after another in the past year. There’s also problems for Steven Gerrard, Fabio Aurelio, Daniel Agger, and Alberto Aquilani, among others, that’ll need constant attention. If Brukner keeps the squad near something resembling full fitness, it’d have to be classified as a success.

5) Can the football make Liverpool relevant again?

Maybe harsh, but I’d be lying if I said I believed Liverpool were a club who’s been known for their on-pitch action in the past year. The failures, yes. But the calamity in the board room, the rumors about everyone wanting away, the Rafa Benitez mutually consensual firing—it’s all made Liverpool into a soap opera where the football is secondary. With some sort of respite on the horizon for many of the off-pitch struggles, it’s going to be up to the staff and the squad on the pitch to turn attentions to the true purpose, which is working their way towards another title. The title might not happen this year, but they can do plenty of work towards respectability regardless.

There’s likely to be many more before season’s end—there’s probably plenty that will arise before season’s beginning. But for me, if Liverpool can have some sort of workable solution to each of the above, they’re headed in the right direction.


Some Related Liverpool Posts:


Tags

   
  • I thought that I was just incredibly deluded to feel optimistic about this season, but I'm glad that I'm in good company!

    I hope that Liverpool are fun and exciting to watch this year, that is the main thing. "They just need to act like they give a shit" doesn't seem like a lot to ask, but we didn't see much of that last year.

  • Ed

    Let the optimism run wild, Katie--just think, they could try hard for a whole 90 minutes. Heart, be still!

    Fun and exciting would be nice, wouldn't it? I'll still take giving a shit over fun and exciting, at least until we can finally take for granted that they are, in fact, giving a shit. How we measure that, I'm unsure--likely by the number of times we catch Fernando compulsively adjusting his Alice band.

  • Grubb

    Umm, update Ed. Fernando cut his hair pre-World Cup remember? He had one of those pseudo-mohawks if I remember rightly. Even Aqua has trimmed his girly locks and now only Soto has long hair as far as I know. I wouldn't be commenting to him on his hair though, infidel. After ruling all the others out though it's just struck me Poulsen might even wear an alice band

    On Poulsen - I know what I said the other day but... If he ends up wearing a Liverpool shirt and fighting for the cause, I'll love him like all the others. Even if he's not as good as Masch he might be less chirpy with the referees (something I abhor about Mascher's game).

  • Ed

    You expose me as a fraud yet again...but I still say we see Alice band on Torres by December. And for what it's worth, my wife wasn't happy with the haircut.

    I don't think you're alone in having concerns about Poulsen and his relative thuggery--hard to embrace if that's going to be the case, but the folks at Juventus Offside painted a picture of a more benign Poulsen than butt rock-themed videos would have us believe. Interesting to see where things go after things are wrapped up today for the internationals.

  • Pyro

    Holy shit I just saw Ganso and Neymar and Pato castrate the U.S World cup squad, We need to snap up ganso or neymar. Patinho is too expensive

  • Rosco

    Damn. I was getting comfy under the sand aswell!

  • Ed

    Mine's straight back in the sand after this article, don't worry. Joe Cole is better than Messi, remember?

  • Suppose that explains why Gerrard and Torres would want to stick around, then.

  • what the hell is a Messi?

  • Kai

    Some say, he heads the ball with his eyes wide open. And that he executes bicycle kicks without falling on his back...

  • Tom Foolery

    Good questions, but in my opinion, you kinda came up with the most important answer too, "They just need to act like they give a shit". You didn't see this last year, and it was so frustrating. Last season we saw players looking to not make mistakes, i.e. pass the ball back to Carra and let him hoof it to a pissed off Spaniard. Gerrard was disinterested, Masch wanted out, Yossi wasn't played enough, and Babel started to focus more on his rhymes. Rodge's appointment is exciting because he presents something new, fresh. This will hopefully bring the players attentions back to the pitch, and hopefully the rest follows. As we've said before, the squad isn't half bad (what was it, 14 players in S.Africa?), all we need is for them to give one...maybe two shits about their on-field performances and we might just see something special. Here's to hope.

  • Ed

    The "freshness" is I think what's got me most excited--I wasn't too pumped about the way Rafa was dismissed, but the opportunity for something new has to be seen as positive (at least for now). It'll take some doing to get rid of the "failure" tag, but I think this squad is more than capable of giving two shits. Like David said, it's always better than one.

  • David

    Two shits are better than one!

  • Denismalikoski

    please liverpoolfc buy neymar ou ganso brazil

blog comments powered by Disqus

Follow Us

           




England National Team News

Search The Offside


 




Related Links


Categories


Send Your Tips!

Found a great story, photo or video that's perfect for The Offside?
Email liverpool[at]theoffside[dot]com

Write for The Offside

Archives