Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Why Is Liverpool’s Season Disintegrating? by Paul Tomkins

http://tomkinstimes.com/2014/09/why-is-liverpools-season-disintegrating/

By Paul Tomkins.
Liverpool’s results have been mixed this season, but perhaps the biggest worry has been the nature of the performances. The game at Spurs allowed me to dream that last season’s miracle could be carried over to this, and it looked like the Reds actually had a better XI. But the other four league performances, plus the nervy, scrappy win against Ludogorets, have been substandard.
Last season Liverpool had Suarez and Sturridge, or they had Suarez or Sturridge. I can’t think of many games where neither played. Suarez has now been sold (but remains suspended anyway, lest we forget), and Sturridge is injured. In 2013/14 the strike-force was the one world-class area of the team. (And if Sturridge isn’t yet a world-class player in his own right, his goalscoring record at Liverpool is as good as, if not better than, virtually all the world-class strikers to grace this league in the past 20 years).
Mario Balotelli, Suarez’s replacement of sorts, has been getting some criticism, but I thought he played well at West Ham, and has offered something positive in every match whilst keeping his cool; in the last two league games he has been kicked by an opposition player, off the ball, no fewer than three times without reacting. His movement remains a flaw – he prefers to drop deep rather than run in behind – but heis tracking back to help out, and the quality of his control has led to both of Liverpool’s goals this week. On top of his midweek strike, which was a peach, he’s also forced some good saves. But he’ll never match Luis Suarez’s Kuyt-like drive and stamina.
Meanwhile, the limited Fabio Borini was working hard in the Suarez/Kuyt mould, and stretching the West Ham defence. He took a couple of shots that clearly looked the wrong option – although let’s not forget how many times Luis Suarez shot from stupid angles, with one of those only occasionally sailing in. Borini’s passing wasn’t great either, but as soon as he was replaced by Lambert the attacks dried up. The little Italian may not be the most talented striker at the club, but he’s the hardest working, and a better foil for Balotelli than Lambert.
Troubles
Rodgers now has the bigger squad he wanted. He also seems to have the players he wanted, assuming that he had more of a say in signing them than last summer. (With the transfer committee there will always be suspicions about who bought who.)
But having been introducing the new signings sensibly – two or three at a time – he’s witnessed a mini injury crisis and had to throw in five or six at once.
Perhaps understandably, given the aggression of a Sam Allardyce team (which yet again overstepped the mark with some of their X-rated tackling), Rodgers went with the more durable Lucas and Borini at Upton Park, rather than the flair of Coutinho and the hitherto rusty Lallana; although the latter, who’d looked like he was running in treacle against Villa, came on to improve the Reds this time. It hasn’t helped that in the absence of Suarez, Coutinho hasn’t provided his usual magic, and Sturridge’s skill – and not just his goals – has been missed.
So yes, Liverpool without Suarez, Sturridge and an in-form Coutinho aren’t as good as they were last season. The replacements who have hit the ground running have been the full-backs, signed from outside of the Premier League.
Compromises
Lucas and Gerrard as a pair remain problematic, but it seems selections are an issue of compromises right now. Lucas knows how to defend in front of the back four, he’s just not got the same zip since the serious injuries, and now looks painfully one-paced. (If the team was more compact, as it was under all four previous managers, he’d have shorter distances to cover. But of course, Liverpool did well last season by not being compact.) Alongside him, Gerrard, at 34, was playing 90 minutes for the third time in eight days. If anyone in claret and blue ran past him, they stayed past him; and yet that was the case even after he’d had a fortnight’s rest, when Villa wore those colours (albeit only in their socks) at Anfield last week. Sometimes the Liverpool captain wasn’t aware of the runners; other times he looked, and just ignored them. Occasionally he gave chase, but it was in vain.
A top-class, mobile holding midfielder looked like a key summer recruitment objective, and maybe in Emre Can there’s a future star in waiting. The German does not appear super-quick, but he’s a powerful unit, once he gets moving, who can also play at centre-back. Alas, he got injured on international duty, as did Joe Allen; the two main deeper central midfield alternatives to Lucas and Gerrard.
And even if they were fit, Rodgers seems to have built his system around Gerrard’s passing from just in front of the back four. The problem with that is that teams seem to have figured this out and are effectively nullifying his threat. The impact of the title collapse being (wrongly) put on the captain’s shoulders may not be helping either, as his superpowers wane and he tries to get over what he describes as the worst months of his career.
Switching Henderson deeper would give the team more running power in front of the back four, but when he played there recently, his energy was missed further upfield – where it was also urgently required (given that Balotelli, for all his skill, isn’t going to make surprising runs). From being the club’s whipping boy, Liverpool now need four or five Hendersons, with Joe Allen the closest in terms of harrying and carrying. While Allen has found life tough at Liverpool, he can certainly run, and protect the ball (even if he’s yet to use it with any great imagination), but he’s injured.
And at the back, Lovren, for all his impressively meaty tackles and brave headers, looks as lost as any other centre-back that has played for Liverpool under Rodgers, in that an absence of protection leaves them all exposed. Under previous Liverpool managers the defence was much more reliable, but then the midfield was often much deeper, and those teams certainly never scored 100 league goals in a season. As ever, it’s about balance, and right now the Reds don’t have it. Last season it was there, on account of scoring twice as many goals as they conceded.
My suspicion is that even prime years Sami Hyypia would look poor in this team, because he’d have too many runners to cope with, and running was never his strong suit. You have to be quick, powerful and strong to defend without much midfield protection, and as it stands, perhaps only Vincent Kompany, out of the entire Premier League, could handle such a task. And even he might look exposed.
I feel that Sakho, while still not as settled and commanding as he is in the French national side, has been better than Lovren this season. Of course, neither has played that many games for Liverpool, and Sakho, who joined in 2013, was playing with entirely different defenders last season.
I have some sympathy with the Frenchman over his infield header that cost the killer late goal; he was trying to keep the ball ‘live’ rather than head out, and he obviously didn’t expect none of his midfield to actually be in midfield. In hindsight it would obviously have been better to play the percentages and head down the line, or out for a West Ham throw, but it was the last minute of normal time (which also perhaps excuses why the entire midfield was caught upfield).
Whenever Skrtel plays, goals seem to be conceded. I’m not sure that ‘with and without’ comparison stats are especially reliable, given the varying circumstances involved in different games, but if there’s something in them they don’t seem to favour the Slovakian. But as with Sakho, when he’s played this season he’s often had three new buys alongside him.
Behind the defence, Simon Mignolet is not filling anyone with confidence. For the first half of last season his shot-stopping was perhaps the main reason Liverpool had so many points, but since a bad turn of the year he’s lost his confidence, and with goalkeepers you can find that it never fully comes back. Jerzy Dudek had his self-belief for a year, then struggled thereafter (bar the one-off of Istanbul). Pepe Reina had strong mojo for five years, but it never fully returned once he started to make too many mistakes. And Mignolet just doesn’t look commanding enough; something Rodgers seems aware of.
Last season the Reds were often scoring four, five or six when conceding two or three. Now the goals are no longer flowing as freely – the clear-cut chance creation stats are massively down – but the defence seems just as shambolic, if not more so. Again, we have to allow time for the unit to develop understanding, but with the midfield issues it probably won’t look totally solid unless specialist holders (who can also start attacks) are found.
What Liverpool do have this season, that wasn’t present until the December of the last campaign, is Raheem Sterling not only in top form, but scoring goals. The 19-year-old, plus the attacking verve of Alberto Moreno, are the two biggest bright spots of the nascent season. (Javier Manquillo’s defending, West Ham aside, has been hugely promising, and Balotelli has been good on the ball, if not so good off it. And Lallana looked better now he’s fitter). But around Sterling, Rodgers is searching for the balance, and struggling without Sturridge’s pace and movement.
Age
Liverpool also have the 2nd-youngest team in the Premier League based on the games so far, with Aston Villa generally improving having added some experience, and therefore moved off the bottom of last season’s rankings. (Newcastle have taken their place as the youngest side, and are struggling.) The Reds needed a bigger squad, and adding young, promising and already fairly proven players is almost always a sensible strategy (the Henderson Model), given the transfer fees and wages involved in higher-end deals. But if you end up with too many youngsters in the side it can show; for all the talk of United’s kids in 1996, they had Cantona, Bruce, Pallister, Schmeichel, Keane, Irwin and others. It had young players, but it wasn’t a young side.
You rarely get successful sides with an average age as young as Liverpool’s, but it suggests that, in time, it will improve with time and experience. The down side of this policy is that you can find yourself with a constant turnover of players before the team gets to ‘come of age’; replacing experience with yet more sensible potential.
The young average age is perhaps another reason to keep Gerrard in the team (if not necessarily in the same position), and maybe a reason to pick Skrtel over Sakho. But Gerrard is now much slower than in his pomp, and Skrtel, while no slouch, isn’t as fast as Sakho. So getting the age/experience balance right throws out the “legs” balance. The same applies to the inclusion of Lucas, who can no longer run like before. Put Rickie Lambert and you add experience, but Liverpool, so rapier-like last season, then look slow and cumbersome. Rodgers had the electric Lazar Markovic on the bench yesterday but failed to use him (although perhaps, for humanitarian reasons, he wanted to spare the young winger the trauma of Allardcyian football.)
On paper, this summer’s signings appeared much better than those from 2013, but at the time, those from 2013 seemed sensible enough. Integrating so many players at once is never easy.
Southampton appear to have managed it, but with so many sales they were being tipped for relegation, removing a lot of the pressure of repeating last season’s heroics; it’s always easier when you’re written off. (And  By contrast, Liverpool were under the microscope. Perhaps this poor run will remove the pressure of outsized expectations, but if the Reds aren’t careful, it will be replaced with the pressure of needing to win games to avoid a sense of catastrophe.
Looked at in terms of what else Rodgers could have done, I have some sympathy for his plight when facing the issues outlined in this piece. He didn’t choose for Suarez to bite someone again, and to be sold, or to have his players injured when on international duty, and for all I know he may not have chosen all the signings. But as I noted last Christmas, his Liverpool sides seem to play poorly when facing a fixture pile-up, and therefore the Champions League was likely to present a challenge. And if there’s one thing you don’t want after a midweek game, it’s an Allardycian dogfight. Big Sam’s tactics may be fairly prehistoric at times, but his sports science has always seemed on the money, and he knows how to take advantage of tired teams (in his case, mix tempo with snarling aggression).
In fairness, Liverpool have often found life harder after internationals and European games. On the whole Rodgers tries to keep a fairly unchanged side, which can help with team understanding, but at the expense of energy. The problem right now is that the understanding seems absent, too. (Again, most likely due, in part, to the new signings.)
I wouldn’t panic, because there were performances like this in 2013/14, such as away at Hull, and the stodgy form (if not results) at the start of last season. But clearly things need to turn around quickly, and the defence simply has to be protected better if not as many goals are going to be scored at the other end. My expectations for this season were always around the mid-70s in terms of points, with the aim of securing a top-four finish whilst enjoying the demanding, but exciting, Champions League games. I still see that as achievable, providing back-to-back league defeats do not turn into a major slump.
The one thing that might be in Rodgers’ favour is that this is a Win or Lose side; it doesn’t really do draws. There will always be times when a draw is a good result (it’s preferable to losing, obviously), but in 2013/14 his side won over four times as manygames as it drew. In the two seasons prior to finishing second, the Reds were drawing almost as many games as they were winning. That was a remarkable improvement.
In six competitive games this season, there have been three victories and three defeats. No draws. Hypothetically, the team could be unbeaten on five points with five draws, which would be worse than now, having lost three matches. Six points is still not good enough, but it seems a high risk/high reward strategy which, overall, worked last season, in taking a team that looked capable of 70 points up to 84. At 2-1 down yesterday, Liverpool were going for it in the 90th minute, and as a result of that gamble the defeat was made worse. On Wednesday, despite Ludogorets’ ludicrous late equaliser, the Reds were able to push forward again to seal the win.
Winning only half your games isn’t disastrous, but maybe that’s where the draws come in handy, to eke out those extra points. Either way, Liverpool have to improve, and improve fast. Getting Sturridge fit would be a huge start.
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Balo
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Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Liverpool Wake Up, Smell Some Coffee, By Paul Tomkins

http://tomkinstimes.com/2014/09/liverpool-wake-up-smell-some-coffee/
Five years ago Liverpool FC, having finished 2nd, started the following season with two early defeats, including one at home to Aston Villa (having already visited White Hart Lane). The campaign never really got going after that, and it proved to be Rafa Benítez’s last. As with Hodgson’s entire tenure, and the season David Moyes spent at United, there were good results, but things never recovered from a bad start.
Anyone who thought this season was going to be a smooth continuation of the last has some coffee to consume this morning.
Coffee
Of course, a bad start doesn’t automatically make for a bad season. And losing a game that you shouldn’t on paper be losing doesn’t automatically make for a bad season. Brendan Rodgers’ side were fairly woeful against Villa – it was lacklustre and disjointed – but it would be dangerous to read too much into it, especially as the other defeat from the first four games was away at Manchester City (who, on their way to winning the title last season, had at least five dreadful results).
Liverpool won their first three games last season, but the first two victories were scrappy, with no real finesse. The Reds then drew the fourth game, away at Swansea, and lost the fifth, at home to Southampton.
Rodgers’ men actually have more points from the four corresponding fixtures last season, but of course, results are also affected by timing – things like international breaks and injuries crises, and how much rest both teams have had at the time of meeting. If  you lose just four games one season, then lose those same four fixtures when they happen to run consecutively at the start of the next season, then you have a very different situation on your hands. You are suddenly in trouble, and unlikely to go unbeaten for the remaining 34 matches. That said, you can still improve and enjoy better form; you just have less leeway for errors, and it’s harder when under that kind of pressure.
International football hasn’t been kind to Liverpool in the past few months. First Luis Suarez was banned until October, for an incident that had nothing to do with club football; as such, the need to sell arguably increased. He’d probably have left anyway, but it meant that, one way or another, the Reds would definitely start the season without him (and his transfer value was slightly depreciated due to being damaged goods after the World Cup).
Then Daniel Sturridge and Raheem Sterling were both kept on until the last minute in a meaningless England friendly against Norway just days after the win at Spurs, and days before the Euro 2016 qualifier; no protection for the teenage Sterling, and a whopping one minute’s rest for Sturridge. The latter was then injured in what seems a needlessly strenuous training exercise, and the former had to be rested by the club that pays his wages to spare him from potential burnout.
Rodgers has helped develop Sturridge and Sterling into regular internationals, and in return received no consideration from Hodgson when it came to that particular friendly. Rooney, Wilshire and Oxlade-Chamberlain had all been taken off against Norway by the 70th minute, but Henderson, Sturridge and Sterling were kept on right until the end. Cheers, Roy. Of that trio, only Henderson could be relied on to cope physically with frequent games, given his age (he’s no longer developing into a man; he now is one) and fitness record. (Indeed, Henderson opts against taking the team bus home after away games, choosing to run down to the motorway.) On top of this, Emre Can and Joe Allen returned from their games with injuries.
Injuries happen, but it’s not good if clubs are investing in the best medical care available, only to hand the players over to the Druids for a fortnight. Players now have specially-tailored fitness plans, but it seems that when it came to Sturridge, Roy Hodgson was not following the player’s best interests. There’s a lot of good that comes from international football in general – I don’t want to be elitist about this – but it must drive club managers barmy. Man United have the best record after international breaks, possibly because Alex Ferguson had the power to keep his players away. (Nicky Butt admitted this week that he was never told to fake an injury, just that he wasn’t fucking going. And that’s Nicky Butt, who he didn’t really need anyway.)
Having said all that, Rodgers has to shoulder the majority of the blame for this weekend’s defeat, as his side played poorly. It looked like a team of strangers, and maybe that’s what you get with six new signings in the outfield ten. Until this game, Rodgers had been able to gradually introduce the new boys, but this was perhaps a situation where he had little choice, given the aforementioned injury issues and the game this Tuesday. Sterling could have started the Villa game – he was physically “fit” enough – but starting would have increased the chances of muscle injury after a busy schedule.
Fluke?
Let’s be clear: last season wasn’t a fluke. But it was a team playing to the top of its ability without any great expectations (until the last few weeks of the season); much like the trio of summer signings from Southampton were able to do on the south coast. NowLiverpool are expected to not only win games but do so in style, and two of those Southampton players, hitherto unburdened by big fees, are expected to play like £20m stars (while the other has to prove himself in 10 minute cameos). The dynamics have changed.
While finishing within the top three is the only way a team has gone on to win the Premier League title the following year – and therefore could be seen as a staging post – teams overreach and fall back all the time. The greater the overachievement, the more is unrealistically expected the following season. This leads to greater pressure, which is why managers constantly talk down their team’s chances if they sense too much optimism. Jose Mourinho did it all last season (almost to perverse levels), and Louis van Gaal spent the first weeks of this season getting his excuses in first. By contrast, Liverpool didn’t have high expectations last season, so it was Rodgers’ job to talk his team up; to instil belief.
A kind of apathy had washed over the Kop after four largely disappointing seasons, but it found its voice again in 2013/14, as a positive feedback loop between players and fans developed. Against Villa, there was neither an atmosphere nor a performance; neither fed the other. Any group of fans will develop a sense of entitlement, because they only ever want improvement, with standing still a form of stagnation; and this season the Kop feels entitled to entertainment. And victories. It’s not a conscious decision by those seated within Anfield; merely how our brains work. We need an improved ‘fix’ to keep us high. But last season we were supplied with some serious shit.
Sports psychology appears to be a constant battle between handling pressure (which debilitates) and instilling confidence (which elevates), whilst avoiding overconfidence (which leads to complacency). My biggest objection with Roy Hodgson’s godforsaken time on Merseyside remains how he began his tenure by hoping that Liverpool didn’t get beat heavily by a lowly Middle-Eastern team in preseason, and by going to City to avoid getting beaten 6-0. There’s talking your chances down a bit, and being pleased if you’re 19th, because it’s one place above the bottom. England were able be good against Switzerland because the pressure was off: they officially couldn’t be any worse than in Brazil, and they were away from the paying Wembley public.
Moods and mindsets change. Thinking time in football – in terms of imagining future glories, or dwelling on past mistakes – can be dangerous. It’s why half-time intervals can see a massive switch in fortunes, as players just do during the unfolding action; whereas at half-time they can take a breath and think about how it’s going. The summer is like one big thinking session, as hopes are envisaged, dreams born. Things change markedly over that period of time. Momentum can be maintained only in short bursts, and the longer the interval, the greater the chance to lose that mojo. Sometimes it only needs one single minute of injury stoppage to kill a team’s sense of self-belief. By contrast, three months is an eternity. Rarely do terms start one season how they ended the previous one.
Newcastle were deservedly 5th a few seasons ago, but were 16th a season later. In truth, their talent should have seen been somewhere in between; closer to the 10th they achieved last season. They weren’t the 5th-best “team” in the division in 2011/12, but they performed to a level that earned them that spot. Similarly, a year later they didn’t suddenly have the 16th-worst “team” in the Premier League – it’s not like it was a totally different collection of players – but when more is expected defeats hit harder.
If you go into a season feeling like you have to win every game because you must win the title (and some Liverpool fans have already complained of as much to me on Twitter), then every setback will be magnified. When you get good again, losing hurts more. Whilst being shit sucks, you drift into a state of numbness.
In both 2002 and 2009 Liverpool followed 2nd-place finishes with big new signings who didn’t work out, and they slipped out of the top four. That doesn’t mean it will therefore happen this time, but it’s possibly indicative of raised hopes leading more quickly to despair when things go awry. Also, the prospect of a big game on Tuesday – the first Champions League football for five years (albeit against mere European minnows) – is a new “problem” that didn’t exist last season.
Liverpool didn’t finish 2nd purely because they had no such games last year, but league games before and after European matches add another layer of complication when it comes to fitness and selection. Players who have waited a long time to play in the competition may hold back a bit in the game before, just as they often do when they’re about to play a cup final or a game against a footballing superpower.
In 2009 Liverpool had just racked up 86 points, which was more than anyone expected, but with the owners refusing the back the manager over a striker, and with Xabi Alonso departing, were weaker going into the next season. Unlike then, Liverpool appear to have a better squad for the season after finishing 2nd, but without Suarez, Sturridge and Sterling in the starting line-up on Saturday, the incredible attacking understanding of 2013/14 was absent.
If it took Rodgers time to get one group of players playing his way, then six new ones aren’t going to knit in as seamlessly as the others. After drinking that strong coffee, there’s no need to panic, but this is a season of new challenges.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

转载 - 九句真言

http://jalong.blogspot.com/2014/09/blog-post_16.html



学会给与
第一句:不要奢望别人给你经济上的任何帮助,钱对任何人都是不够用的。

学会理解
第二句:朋友帮你是善事,是道义;朋友不帮你也无可厚非,不该心怀怨尤,人家不欠你的!

学会坚强
第三句:要知道没有人必须在你需要的时候帮你,只有你自己,所以让自己独立、坚强、快乐、幸福,才是你需要做的,毕竟只有自己必须和你生死与共,休戚相关。明白?

学会分辨
第四句:不要看贫富交朋友,他有亿万家财跟你一毛钱关系都没有,别把自己弄成哈巴狗。他也许一无所有却可以把唯一的馒头分给你。

学会自重
第五句:不要为了经济富有的朋友疏远了精神富有的朋友,慢慢你会明白,经济上富裕的朋友可以带你吃喝玩乐,也可以带给你复杂纷乱的世俗烦恼,精神富有的朋友也许只能带你去田野里,去溪流畔,没有美酒佳肴,没有香槟、咖啡、没有舞池,可是她能陪你一起奔跑、一起笑得像傻子。

学会珍惜
第六句:可以相信世上真的有美好坚贞的爱情,但是它只属于牛郎织女、梁山伯祝英台、还有外国的罗密欧和朱丽叶。因为他们都没有活很久,而我们是要活很久的。

学会承担
第七句:不管你因为什么结婚,只要你有了孩子,你就要爱这个家,不管它多么简陋多么寒冷,你都有义务让它温馨起来,因为你是父母!

学会成长
第八句:我们的青春眨眼间就没有了,皱纹一条一条的爬到眼角,我们阻止不了岁月破坏我们的容颜,可是我们可以让心在岁月中慢慢磨砺,如蚌中的沙,慢慢的光润起来,等到我们发苍齿摇、步履蹒跚的时候,还可以让珍珠的光泽晕红最后的行程,不是吗?

学会放下
第九句:不要执着,人生有很多不如意,世界不会迎合你,地球不是为你转的,所以不要执着于拥有,连我们都只是红尘的过客,生是赤条条的来,死又能带走什么呢?


Friday, September 12, 2014

转载 - 点唱


一个小女孩打电话到电台想给妈妈点首歌。

主持人:为什么要给妈妈点歌?

小女孩:妈妈每天上班都很辛苦,礼拜天还不能好好休息,要找各种练习本给我。

主持人很感动说她很懂事,是妈妈的好孩子,
于是就问要点什么歌呢?
小女孩:女人何苦为难女人。


Wednesday, September 10, 2014

转 - 至理名言


女人为心事找上老和尚开解,被帶到一座高山前。老和尚问:此山如何?

女人说:雄伟,高大,挺拔,秀美。

老和尚说:跟我上山吧。一路上山无语。走著走著,女人累了,乏了,路不好走,女人诸多抱怨。 等到了山头,老和尚问:你刚才看到的山现在感觉如何?

女人说:这座山不好,都是碎石路,树也沒长好。不过,远远望去,对面的山更美啊。

老和尚笑笑说:当你认识一个人时,就是远看高山,眼中满是崇拜;了解了,就是上山,你看到的都是普通细节;到了山顶,你眼中也只是看到另外一座山而已。

山沒有变,是你的心变了。你的心变了,眼神就变了。沒有了崇拜,山就不再雄伟。你抱怨越多,伤害就越多。 你为什么能在山顶看到其他的高山?是因为你脚下踩的山提升了你的眼光而已。 一个人只有懂得珍惜现在所拥有的才会真正幸福!

以下八句话句句精辟!

  1.不懂珍惜,给你座金山也不会快乐。
  2.不懂宽容,再多的朋友也终将离去。
  3.不懂感恩,再优秀也难以成功。
  4.不懂行动,再聪明也难以圆梦。
  5.不懂合作,再拼搏也难以大成。
  6.不懂积累,再挣钱也难以大富。
  7.不懂满足,再富有也难以幸福。
  8.不懂养生,再治疗也难以长寿。


Tuesday, September 9, 2014

转:校长对考生说的话

校长的话:

走到今日,辛苦你们了……….

成绩好的同学,保持水准,能考取A的尽量考A,不要客气。

其他同学,至少取个B或及格,对六年来所受的教育有个交待。

自认成绩不理想的同学,没关系,只要身体健康,勇敢走进考场,有问必答,不交白卷,尽了力,你们就是最棒了!


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Liverpool: a Better Team than Last Season by Paul Tomkins

http://tomkinstimes.com/2014/08/liverpool-a-better-team-than-last-season/

By Paul Tomkins.
Three tough fixtures, all against last season’s top eight, and with two of them away to top six sides (including champions City) … and six points racked up. If Southampton weren’t quite as good on paper as last season, Spurs were better. So to be where the Reds are right now is very encouraging, especially when they haven’t had to face cannon fodder such as Burnley or Sunderland, or to go to the MK Dons for a confidence booster in the cup. (Man United fans, are you still reading this site so avidly? No mocking reviews of our book lately, I notice. Still, you won the pre-season, right?)
Even without Suarez, Liverpool already look a better team. There’s no one who can quite magic something up from nothing as brilliantly as he could, and that will be a talent that’s missed in some games. But the money appears to have been very wisely reinvested: just £12m for Moreno? Just £16m for Balotelli? Just £10m for Can? Manquillo on a two year loan deal? A proven Premier League goalscorer like Lambert for £4m? And in time, I’m confident that £20m for Markovic will look like another bargain, even if you can never say for sure.
You can even throw in the premium paid on Adam Lallana and Dejan Lovren and still have it look like sensible spending overall.
Liverpool have lost Suarez’s genius and work-rate, but the addition of Balotelli – who looks motivated, and happy (this part only in training and warm-ups) – makes for a front three possibly as quick as the game has ever seen, with Markovic, when he plays, adding a fourth whippet to the ranks. Sturridge’s goal-rate is unremarkable so far this season, with just one in three, but he seems to be creating more, and both he and Sterling appear freed up to take possession when before they’d defer to the Uruguayan. Sterling, aged 19, is miles better than he was a mere 12 months ago, and he can, in part, fill the void left by the departure of the top scorer.
Raheem
Balotelli is still a downgrade on Suarez, albeit one where those who’ve played with him believe he has the same kind of potential (and is still only 24, three years younger). There was never going to be a replacement of the same quality and consistency, because if there was, Barcelona would have bought him instead. Funnily enough, Balotelli was actually quite like Suarez today: working hard, great use of his body, and wild shots into row Z. It was a promising debut, and he bit no one.
But already Manquillo and, in particular, Moreno, look like exceptional young full-backs: real Spanish pedigree. If you sell your best player you must get the kind of fee that enables you to improve two or three positions, maybe more. Also, Lovren’s aggression at the back could prove of great benefit, even if, initially at least, he’s diving in all the time, as if to prove a point. It will take time for a young defence, three of whom are new to the club, to get onto the same wavelength. None of the back four was even in English football just over 12 months ago, although maybe that’s an overstated requirement, as I pointed out here.
If you look at the bench, in a squad that didn’t include Lallana, Skrtel, Flanagan, Coates and Glen Johnson (who, in theory at least, remains a quality footballer, even if he appears to have forgotten that fact), Rodgers could still turn to Enrique, Toure, Lambert, Coutinho, Can and Markovic as subs. This after selling Agger, who admitted that he was struggling to cope with the pace of the Premier League, and not picking Lucas and Borini; two more who may be leaving, but who would, at worst, make for reliable squad players. Given his performances for Stoke, you might even say the same of Assaidi, though that might be stretching the point. I can also count at least four youngsters out on loan at good clubs toimprove them, and not because they’re surplus to requirements (the latter being known as The Aspas Loan).
The squad is undoubtedly better. But the XI appears stronger, too. I think it was in the same fixture last year where Suarez squeezed one in at the far post, and now there’s a brand-new left-back doing the same thing, in only his second game. Also, Can was impressive when he came on – he’s a huge lad and hard to stop once he gets motoring – and Markovic will be given plenty of time to settle into English football (at worst in his first season he will be an outlet as a sub with his searing pace).
As ever, the season starts with a flurry of games, but then after all the foreplay turns real, it’s time to bring proceedings to an abrupt halt. But after the painfully dull “I’ve got a headache” of Roy Hodgson’s England – or perhaps it’s more like “fumble away if you must, but please turn off the lights” – there’s the tantric joys of the Champions League group games: the reigning European Cup holders, for the glitter, and two sides from whom 12 points might be possible. The season was always going to feel like it only really got going after these first three games, but to go into this break with six points is a big relief. Liverpool now seem to have a squad to cope, assuming that the injuries don’t mount up.
Coutinho now goes off to play for Brazil, which he deserves after last season, as well as his preseason form; although the first two games of 2014/15 passed him by. But what an option to have! Gerrard gets to put his feet up, and presumably Balotelli, who is banned for one of Italy’s games, is being allowed time to relocate his life to Merseyside with his omission from the national set-up.
The main worry is what physical (and psychological) state Henderson, Sterling and Sturridge return in. But as important as they are for Liverpool, there are now alternatives. That can only bode well.