Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Tomkins: Season starts now


http://www.liverpoolfc.com/news/latest-news/tomkins-season-starts-now

Tomkins: Season starts now

24th Sep 2012 - Latest News

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Merseyside united: Classy Everton's show of solidarity encapsulated by Moyes' tribute


By ALEX HORLOCK


They were scenes that proved there are far more important things in life than football.
Before a ball had even been kicked between Newcastle and Everton at Goodison Park, the blue side of Liverpool had already shown their class. 
In a moving show of solidarity, two mascots, one young girl in Everton blue and one small boy in the red of Liverpool, led the players on to the pitch. 
Solidarity: The two mascots' numbers combined to read 96, the number of those who lost their lives in 1989
Solidarity: The two mascots' numbers combined to read 96, the number of those who lost their lives in 1989
The Everton team linked arms to pay their respects and show support to the victims' families
The Everton team linked arms to pay their respects and show support to the victims' families
As they emerged in front of the teams from the tunnel, the numbers on the back of the shirts became visible, the girl’s was the number 9, and the boy had the number 6.
This neat touch was, of course, implemented for Everton to show their support to the families of the 96 victims of the Hillsborough disaster.
The players and mascots assembled on the centre circle before The Hollies’ He Ain’t Heavy was belted out of the speakers accompanied by a photo collage of the 96 victims of the disaster.
The players, the staff, the officials and the fans inside the stadium, among them Trevor Hicks and Margaret Aspinall, applauded throughout the song as the faces of those who lost their lives in 1989 poignantly lingered on the screen.
Last week, an independent panel revealed that the police had attempted to blame the fans inside the stadium for the tragedy, which cost 96 lives and changed the landscape of football forever.
Rival support: Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson (right) and Mike Phelan were at the game
Rival support: Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson (right) and Mike Phelan were at the game
Everyone in the stadium applauded before the game began
Everyone in the stadium applauded before the game began
Everyone in the stadium applauded before the game began
Everton manager David Moyes expressed his support for the victims’ families in the form of strongly-worded, yet emotive, programme notes.
Moyes said: 'I, and everybody at Everton, stand alongside the families who have challenged the authorities over what has been proved a travesty. 
‘I'm a football manager, a supporter and a father, and I applauded the families who continued to fight for the ones they loved. I believe everybody in the world of football will have been shocked by the wrongdoings surrounding Hillsborough which were exposed last week. 
Solidarity: Last week it was revealed that the police had attempted to incorrectly blame the fans for the incident
Solidarity: Last week it was revealed that the police had attempted to incorrectly blame the fans for the incident
Them too: Newcastle's players joined in before the match
Them too: Newcastle's players joined in before the match
‘As part of the football family, I, and everybody at Everton, stand alongside the families who for so long have challenged the authorities over what has now been proved a travesty. I am not only a football manager, I'm a football supporter and a father, and I applaud the families who continued to fight for the ones they loved.
‘The outcome was nothing short of disgraceful. We have all been brought up to believe and trust in authority. The authorities who were responsible for ensuring the safety of supporters that afternoon let themselves down, as have the government parties who have been in power since. 
‘Praise must go to Andy Burnham and the families for getting disclosure.'
For everyone to see: Fans were proud to be associated with banners more commonly seen at Anfield
For everyone to see: Fans were proud to be associated with banners more commonly seen at Anfield
For everyone to see: Fans were proud to be associated with banners more commonly seen at Anfield


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2204704/Hillsborough-Everton-Merseysides-united.html#ixzz26nJt8nQB

Thursday, September 13, 2012

草莓族,或被犧牲的一代?──台灣的案例


http://mhperng.blogspot.com/2012/09/blog-post_3509.html

2012年9月11日星期二

最近媒體大肆宣傳各種就業機會,製造一種印象:工作機會很多,是年輕人期望太高。名嘴則大談自己當年如何艱苦地不計較待遇,陳鳳馨乾脆希望學校要教學生「正確的工作態度」。所以,年輕一代是草莓族?咎由自取?

我在上一篇文章「我們被騙了三十年!談全球性的青年困境」裡用美國為例說明過去三十年的新自由主義要為全球性的青年困境負起主要責任。現在這一篇文章要用台灣的社會狀況說明這一代的年輕人是如何被上一代犧牲掉的。

四、五年級的會用自己年輕時的狀況質問六、七年級的說:我們年輕時當黑手、水電工、廚房小工都願意,你們現在為什麼不願意?這個問題是嚴重忽略了兩個世代許多社會與經濟背景的差異,問題出在忽視了「問題脈絡的差異性」。

二、三十年前房價沒有炒到這麼離譜,年輕人所要擔負的儲蓄能力沒有這麼高,名嘴當人會比較容易看到未來。而把房價炒高的正是名嘴的世代和他們的學長姐(四、五年級的),所以說六、七年級看不到未來是因為被四、五年級的陷害。

二、三十年前沒有紅豆食府和連鎖餐廳,任何人當了廚房小工或端盤子的,出師之後就有機會自己當老闆──他們願意吃苦,因為只要努力就可以出頭天。現在連鎖餐飲林立,中高價位餐廳競爭激烈,四、五年級的霸佔了餐飲業最肥的一塊,年輕人當過廚房小工之後要想自立門戶的話,只能跟已經快要倒店的其他自助餐店競爭,或者永遠在餐廳當被苦勞,永遠沒有出頭的日子。

二、三十年前沒有大賣場和全國電子,水電工出師後可以自己做水電行或者電器行,自己當老闆。他們願意吃苦,因為有一天可以出頭天。現在有了大賣場和全國電子,水電工只能當一輩子奴工,看不到前景,不敢想像能靠自己的積蓄買房子。

三十年來台灣所有的產業規模都在大吃小的過程中擴大,使得利潤和控制權迅速地集中在少數人手中,使得年輕人失去了往上流動的管道,成為永遠的奴工;而得利的少數人又通過政商勾結把得到的財富拿去炒作房地產,使得年輕人更加看不到未來。

對於年輕一代而言,買房子要靠爸媽,創業要靠爸媽的資本和人脈;政府部門的服務愈少,各種資源的世襲現象愈嚴重;連黑道的民代席次都已經是世襲的了。過去三十年來台灣從「所有人都可以出頭」的社會變成今天「不靠爸媽買不起房子」,台灣社會不幸地從「政權世襲而資本不世襲」退化成「政權空洞化的資本獨裁世襲制」,我們其實是在往新封建主義的路上一路走了三十年,社會是退步而非進步的。

這叫做新封建制度:四、五年級的霸佔了市場上最豐厚的利潤,霸佔了產官學研的最高決策與資源;甚至相互勾結成產官學研的利益共犯集團,壟斷掉所有的政經資源和發言權而成為絕對的統治階級;而六、七年級的只能在底下當一輩子奴工,不但無法出頭天,還要被媒體抹黑成草莓族,把一切的責任當賴到他們頭上。

如果這樣的社會叫做公平,哲學系、政治系和社會系的教授都可以去跳海了!

但是哲學系、政治系和社會系的教授如果認為這樣的社會不公平,就不該佔著毛坑不拉屎,而要大聲站出來說話!大學教授的首要責任不是發表 SSCI 論文或拿國科會傑出獎,而是要說出社會哪裡有問題,要如何解決!

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Benitez blames Hicks and Gillett for Liverpool's failure to win Premier League


By SPORTSMAIL REPORTER


    Rafa Benitez has hit out at former Liverpool owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett for denying him funds to strengthen his squad for a Premier League title challenge.
    The Spaniard spent six years at the Anfield club, winning the FA Cup and Champions League, before leaving two years ago.
    And the 52-year-old has revealed he was not given the support to mount a title challenge in his final season at the club.
    Lashing out: Rafa Benitez claims he was not supported in the transfer market
    Lashing out: Rafa Benitez claims he was not supported in the transfer market
    ‘Attempting to work in the transfer market that summer was almost impossible,’ Benitez said in his new book being serialised in the Daily Mirror.
    ‘We knew we would need cover and support for Fernando Torres, as David Ngog was still developing, and we had raised the cash to find it.
    ‘The player we identified to fill that role was Stevan Jovetic, a young Montenegro forward playing for Fiorentina in Italy.
    ‘The funds we thought we had available would also have stretched to another central defender, to provide cover for Jamie Carragher, Martin Skrtel and Daniel Agger.
    Matthew Upson Sylvain Distin
    Missing links: Matthew Upson (left) and Sylvain Distin were targets for Benitez  
    ‘The two players we had identified were Sylvain Distin, then with Portsmouth, and West Ham’s Matthew Upson, both boasting abundant Premier League experience.
    ‘Signing one of those two, plus the tall, powerful, intelligent Jovetic, would have given Liverpool the squad we needed to build on the previous year’s title challenge, when we had run Manchester United so close.
    ‘Liverpool, though, was no longer a football club. It was a business.
    ‘The money, which we wanted to use to take Liverpool on to the next level, was all gone.
    Main man: Stevan Jovetic (right) was highlighted as a top target
    Main man: Stevan Jovetic (right) was highlighted as a top target
     
    ‘We would be punished for the disappearance of that money - and our failure to sign Jovetic - again and again that season.
    ‘That was supposed to be our year, the season it all came together. Instead it was a long, hard campaign, a battle from start to finish.’
    Benitez paid the price for Liverpool’s seventh-place finish in the Premier League when he left the club by mutual consent.
    And he lays the blame for the club’s demise squarely at the door of Hicks and Gillett.
    ‘For five years I had been a football manager at Liverpool. By the start of my sixth, it was clear I had become something else entirely. I was suddenly supposed to be a bank manager.
    ‘Decisions were being made to appease the banks, not the fans. That is how serious the situation with the owners, Tom Hicks and George Gillett, had become.
    ‘At the end of April, Tom Hicks and George Gillett at long last agreed to put Liverpool up for sale to end their involvement with the club altogether.
    ‘They had been forced by the banks, as a condition of their latest loan, to appoint Martin Broughton, a Chelsea fan and the chairman of British Airways, to the same position at Anfield.
    ‘As the season drew to a close, I was informed on three occasions that I would have a meeting with Mr Broughton.
    Blame game: Former Liverpool owners George Gillett (left) and Tom Hicks
    Blame game: Former Liverpool owners George Gillett (left) and Tom Hicks
    ‘When we did eventually meet, after the final game of our campaign, it was clear that we did not share the same vision for the future of the club.
    ‘It was at that point that it became evident what was about to happen. It was obvious that they had decided that my time at Anfield was up and wanted to come to an arrangement as quickly as possible.
    ‘I was not in a hurry to leave Liverpool - quite the opposite, I wanted to stay.
    ‘It was while I was on holiday in Italy that I next heard from the club.
    ‘Their lawyers had contacted mine to offer me a settlement.
    ‘It was confirmation that the directors of the team I had worked so hard to turn into a force at home and abroad no longer wanted my services.
    ‘I was disappointed, hurt and sad. I would not be given the chance to try to solve the problems that had arisen during the season, to complete the six years of work I had put into the club.’


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2201463/Rafa-Benitez-blames-Tom-Hicks-George-Gillett-Liverpool-decline.html#ixzz26DDVDonR

    Tuesday, September 11, 2012

    Benitez admits surprise at being overlooked for vacant Liverpool manager's job in the summer



    Surprise: Rafa Benitez has admitted his disappointment at being overlooked for the Liverpool manager's post following the dismissal of Kenny Dalglish in the summer
    Surprise: Rafa Benitez has admitted his disappointment at being overlooked for the Liverpool manager's post following the dismissal of Kenny Dalglish in the summer
    Rafa Benitez has told of his surprise that he was not approached about the Liverpool job in the summer.
    The Spaniard, who managed the Anfield club between 2004 and 2010, was not considered for the role left vacant when Kenny Dalglish was sacked in May despite knowing the club inside out.
    Launching a new book called ‘Champions League Dreams’, which recalls how Liverpool challenged for European honours during his time there, Benitez, who is currently without a club, said it was ‘strange’ to be overlooked in favour of Brendan Rodgers. 
    Talking to the Irish Independent, he said: ‘It was strange. We know the club, the players, the Academy and we have even more experience now.
    ‘The fans were positive about the idea and if you read the book you will understand why. So it was strange not to be approached.’
    During his tenure, Liverpool regularly competed in the Champions League and won the competition in 2005, his first season in charge. They also reached the final in 2007 and won the FA Cup in 2006, alongside a succession of top four league finishes.
    ‘Some people were taking these great games for granted,’ he said. ‘We used to play so many important games that it seemed it was normal and it wasn’t.’
    Following a patchy start to the season, as Rodgers tries to introduce a philosophy of attractive, attacking football, some sections of the Liverpool support have suggested owner John W Henry may be as bad as former American chiefs Tom Hicks and George Gillett. 
    Looking for work: Benitez has been without a managerial role for nearly two years after being sacked by Inter Milan
    Looking for work: Benitez has been without a managerial role for nearly two years after being sacked by Inter Milan
    Benitez remembers those days only too well: ‘I was working three years under Hicks and Gillett and it was quite difficult, especially the last year.
    ‘Ian Ayre [the club’s Managing Director] said Liverpool was close to administration and still we were performing on the pitch. I don’t know how it us under the new owners so I can’t compare.’
    Benitez hasn’t been in managerial work since an ill-fated spell at Inter Milan in 2010, but he says ‘it’s a question of time’ before he is on the touchline again. He did, however, refuse to comment on how close he came to the Chelsea job after Andre Villas-Boas was dismissed.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2200994/Rafa-Benitez-surprised-considered-Liverpool-job.html#ixzz2670NSWse



    Thursday, September 6, 2012

    FSG's learning process at Liverpool


    By Norman Hubbard
    (Archive)
    Think of the power and the prestige. Imagine the chance to put your plans into action. For the vast majority who are neither qualified nor talented enough to manage or play for a football club, owning one is the next best thing. For many a predatory businessman, it is also a money-making opportunity.
    John Henry
    PA PhotosJohn Henry has said Brendan Rodgers will not be sacked if Liverpool fail to finish in the top four
    But sometimes it is hard to be an owner. And for Fenway Sports Group, this is one of those times. Liverpool's American directors have been criticised for what they didn't manage to achieve - signing a striker on transfer deadline day - and then for their reaction, releasing an open letter to supporters, restating their ambition and reiterating their philosophy.
    It also kept Liverpool in the news, offered hints of a disagreement with manager Brendan Rodgers and did not address every concern fans raised. Honesty and humility brought some censure and condemnation. And, at times like these, it feels that FSG are damned for whatever they do and whatever they don't.
    Clearly Friday was a disaster. Quite how costly a failure it proves to be will become apparent over the next four months. It looks a false economy not to sign the 29-year-old Clint Dempsey for around £6 million and an additional error not to have a secondary striking option.
    Yet anyone expecting an in-depth explanation of who said what to whom on Friday, when and why is deluding themselves - partly because some things ought to remain confidential, not least because they could expose greater divisions, and partly because it wouldn't happen anywhere else. Liverpool's owners are more open than many of their counterparts; compared to some others, they do not deserve to have their motives questioned. They are not the Glazers. They are not Venky's. Most importantly, they are not Tom Hicks and George Gillett.
    After their 2010 takeover, FSG inherited a far greater mess than they expected and, while there should be a statute of limitations about attributing problems to Messrs Hicks and Gillett, John W Henry and Tom Werner are nowhere near it yet. In many ways, including communicating with the fanbase, they are the opposite of their secretive predecessors, not to mention Manchester United's reclusive directors, who have lumped debt on the club and taken money out of it.
    It is not enough to satisfy some of the Liverpool support, but it is a level of transparency that would make Sir Alex Ferguson turn puce with rage. FSG have been truthful enough to admit to mistakes, and diplomatic not to name them, which might have reflected rather poorly on Southport's most prominent golfer and his most expensive signings.
    Kenny Dalglish is a reason FSG have long been in a no-win situation. The awkward decision to dismiss the Anfield icon came at a cost to Henry's popularity with a section of fans, yet the alternative was to risk another league season like last and, perhaps worse, another summer signing spree like the last.
    During the Scot's reign, Dalglish's loyalists criticised FSG for not offering the Scot enough support. Yet it was not advice that he needed - he needed to be overruled. When apologies were dictated from Boston during the Luis Suarez affair, it was a belated reaction to a situation that had escalated out of control.
    Fulham's Clint Dempsey celebrates scoring against West Brom
    PA PhotosClint Dempsey has not featured for Fulham this season having refused to play
    The problem was not that Dalglish had too little power, but too much. Yet had FSG parachuted someone in from America to run the club, the interpretation would be that they were interfering. Now the call from the pressure group Spirit of Shankly is for them to appoint a Merseyside-based chief executive. They are sentiments many share but, were FSG to accede, it may lead to a militant faction making demand after demand.
    As it is, apart from vetoing a deal for Dempsey, FSG have given their appointments licence to act as they will and room for manoeuvre. At Rodgers' wish, their plans to install a director of football this summer were shelved. He, too, is largely able to run the club his way. But if Henry takes advice from others on players' valuations, is it any wonder given the way Dalglish and Damien Comolli paid over the odds for average talents?
    Yet while Rodgers has not been granted the spending power afforded to his predecessor, the demands are also lower. A top-four finish was the principal objective last season but Henry has said that failure to secure Champions League football will not be grounds for dismissal for Rodgers. This is entirely reasonable.
    Their broader principles, of assembling a young group of players, with an intelligent recruitment policy focused on identifying talent and a manager with the skill to turn them into a competitive, attractive team, make sense. In the case of Dempsey, FSG should have been more flexible.
    But, as Henry said in his letter, it is a learning process for them. In particular, they are learning that they can't please all of the people all of the time. Or even a majority of the people most of the time.

    Wednesday, September 5, 2012

    Do Liverpool Have Enough Goals In Them?

    http://tomkinstimes.com/2012/08/do-liverpool-have-enough-goals-in-them/


    Posted on August 31st, 2012
    Posted by by Paul Tomkins
    By Paul Tomkins.
    It’s been a fairly fascinating transfer window all round, with surprising action across the top clubs, but for Reds it ends on a bum note: no new striker. Thankfully, it also ends with Daniel Agger still at the club, so it’s not been all bad. Indeed, in terms of the players actually brought in, Liverpool appear to have spent well.
    But have they sold well? And have they made a mistake in terms of selling before buying, and failing to bring in a new striker? No one wants deficit spending, but when the manager says he needs a striker and then one doesn’t arrive, questions will be asked.
    First of all, it’s worth pointing out that with Brendan Rodgers’ philosophy differing slightly from previous Liverpool managers, some players have been sold or loaned out not because they aren’t good footballers, but because they’re not the right type of footballer.
    For instance, Andy Carroll is not the most mobile, and likes a certain kind of service; Rodgers wants a more patient approach. Carroll will almost certainly flourish under the far more direct approach of Sam Allardyce, who also spends a lot of time on set-pieces, when Rodgers’ training methods revolve more about honing passing movements.
    Then there’s Charlie Adam, who does indeed possess a sweet left foot, is deceptively fit, deceptively good at dribbling, and also deceptively tall (6’2”). But he is prone to showing off, with silly passes, and though the stats show that he covers a lot of ground, is fairly slow, and just bundles into opposition players. (Also, how many times did he make a forward central run with the ball, with runners left and right, and just blast a shot into the opposition defenders?)
    He probably needs to feel like the midfield alpha male, whereas at Liverpool he was merely gamma. His famed set-pieces only work when he’s confident enough to beat the first man, and at Liverpool it’s easy to lose your mojo due to expectations. Also, at Stoke, Tony Pulis will obviously spend a lot more time organising the taking of corners, given their dead-ball mindset.
    Both Carroll and Adam will now be at clubs that value their strengths, and where their weaknesses will not be as obvious. In purchasing them, Liverpool had sought to utilise their strengths, but a) the players had found it harder to replicate them under the harsher spotlight, and b) the approach has since changed.
    Jay Spearing has also left, on a season-long loan to Bolton. He’s a decent, hard-working player, but not really Liverpool FC first-team standard; particularly as the Reds are once again tapping the market for top-rate players in central midfield. Spearing got overhyped a few years back because it was seen that the “rubbish” foreigner (Lucas) was holding him back. Thankfully common sense soon prevailed.
    In many ways, FSG have fallen into many of the traps they consciously set out to avoid. They knew at the outset that sacking managers was a costly business, and that’s why the wanted to hold on to Roy Hodgson until the summer of 2011, and replace him at a more convenient time. (Alas, results, and attendances, started getting catastrophic.)
    Dalglish, seen only as a temporary measure 18 months ago, initially did so well with the players he inherited (plus Luis Suarez) that it would have been impossible to not give him the full-time job; and yet, with a couple of minor exceptions, the players he and Comolli bought last summer proved to be poor value for money, and the league form slipped back to just a fraction better than it was under Hodgson (pro rata 48 points; last season 52 points).
    This is the clean slate FSG dreamed of, but it’s come by falling foul to the “new managers waste money” section of Soccernomics. Every time you change the boss, new ideas mean new players. No manager sets out to waste money, but it’s a byproduct of the process.
    This is Liverpool’s fourth new direction in four years (one of which, under Hodgson, was hard reverse), although the shape and tactics – central midfield three, attacking full-backs, high pressing – are now closer to where we were when Benítez was in charge. It’s been four years getting back to where the team was, albeit a lot still needs to be proven in terms quality and returning to the top four.
    On the surface, Rodgers hasn’t wasted any money as yet; the players bought, and the fees paid this summer, seem pretty sensible. But a side effect is that his ideas have arguably wiped value off players who do not fit his system. His style of play is so well known, and so inflexible (not in and of itself, but in his adherence to it), that people were talking about a “Rodgers type of player” and, of course, those who weren’t.
    The one big benefit from loaning Andy Carroll is that he’s in the shop window, playing regular football in a team that suits his style. Instead of his value diminishing on the Liverpool bench, he has the chance to score 20 goals and be valued at £20m in 2013. If that happens, that’s money to reinvest. In the meantime, it saves about £4m in wages and brings in a £1m loan fee.
    However, in other ways, letting Andy Carroll go out on loan is an incredibly strange one, especially without a replacement. It leaves a bloody big hole in the striking roster. Loaning out an expensive international striker without first having secured – even if only in principle – a replacement seems somewhat reckless from the outside; especially as goalscoring proficiency was the major flaw last season. Liverpool have also lost a plan B in the process.
    While Carroll is flawed, and clearly not everyone’s cup of tea, he is, at least, aPremier League-class forward. He can do some type of job. Beyond that, there’s Adam Morgan and Samed Yesil – two 18-year-olds who, to date, have proved nothing beyond getting one start in professional football.
    Kuyt’s default role was as a striker, and so too was Bellamy’s. Both have left. Now Carroll has, too. That’s three international strikers offloaded in a short space of time. Kuyt, at 32, and Bellamy, at 33, would only have represented short-term cover, but with Kuyt free to leave for £1m (and unlikely to get the kind of three-year contract at Liverpool that he received from Fenerbahce), and Bellamy desperate to be at home with his family, it wasn’t as if the Reds had complete control of these situations. But could more have been done to replace them?
    Losing Maxi under similar circumstances meant three players capable of 10+ goals a season were lost. While it’s almost certain that not all three would have been retained, one or two might have been kept on. Liverpool will now be without the scorers of more than half of their goals over the past two seasons.
    The signing of young striker Samed Yesil is a promising one, making him the second Turkish-descended German to sign this summer, after Nuri Sahin. (In a minor coup, Yesil’s deal was highlighted on TTT the day before it broke in the media.) He has an excellent youth pedigree; the 18-year-old, who played for the Bayer Leverkusen first team aged 17, is a wiry, mobile front-man with an eye for goal. But it could be a good 12 months before he’s pushing for a place in the side.
    By contrast, Sahin is a shoo-in. TTT’s Andrew Beasley makes several good points on the young midfielder:
    We’ve already seen that Joe Allen is in the Maschareno mould of the busy, diminutive, harrying midfielder – with perhaps a bit less bite, but a better passing accuracy. Under Benítez it was the strongest area of the team (and squad), and now it’s fair to say that with Allen, Lucas, Gerrard and Sahin, Liverpool have four top-class performers, plus Jordan Henderson in reserve. But the weakest area under Rafa was often strength in depth up front, and that looks the case now.
    Raheem Sterling’s rapid ascent means that that’s one less attacking position to worry about, but as a youngster he’ll most likely blow hot and cold; right now, despite his great talent, he’s running on adrenaline. He has a good goalscoring record for a winger at youth level, but it often takes players a good couple of years to replicate their youth form, given the big step-up involved.
    The pursuit of Clint Dempsey made sense, providing the fee was in keeping with his age. (Our TPI rule of thumb is that the transfer value of a player aged 29 is roughly half of someone aged 27 or 28. Value diminishes sharply at that point.) Having said that, once Liverpool had arguably offloaded too many strikers, then the individual fee for a single player is not the issue; it becomes the cost of what he might otherwise have brought. The day seemed set up to be all about Dempsey, but in the end it was a damp squib.
    The excellent Fulham writer Richard Allen discusses the rise of the American here. The attacking midfielder-cum-striker has scored 50 goals for Fulham: “10 with his left; 25 with his right, 12 with his head and, entirely summing the man up, three with ‘other’.”
    According to some, Dempsey is a bit arrogant, but depending on how that’s channelled (is it simply supreme confidence or an ego out of control?), it can be good at a big club, where being shy and retiring can suggest an ability to be overwhelmed. Self belief is needed, but within reason.
    The most interesting thing is how his Premier League goals’ tally has moved from 7 to 12 to 17 in the space of three seasons (and from 9 to 12 to 23 in all competitions), each time having played between 42 and 46 games. That suggests a player on the rise, and also, one who has barely missed a game since arriving in 2007. His international scoring record has also improved, with nine goals in his last 18 games, having taken 35 games to net his first nine, and with the 32 games in the middle resulting in 10 goals.
    According to Allen on The Craven Cottage Newsround, Dempsey has simply become more efficient, wasting fewer shots in the hunt for goals. (Maybe there’s hope for Suarez yet? – mind you, he’d get 60 a season if he could shoot straight.) Dempsey has also stopped shooting from miles outside the box, although, as Allen notes, 58% of his long shots were on target.
    All this, and definite interest from Liverpool, but not enough to push them over the edge to pay a fee that it seems Aston Villa and Spurs were prepared to meet. Liverpool were burned 18 months ago by paying too much on deadline day, but this time they arguably paid too little. Having lost out to Spurs with a goalscoring midfield in Gylfi Sigurðsson, this time Liverpool appear to have handed them Dempsey on a plate over an apparent quibble of £1m, and been left empty handed in terms of striking reinforcements. (Quite whose fault this is, I have no idea. FSG? Ian Ayre? Brendan Rodgers?).
    Goals
    So, with the failure to land Dempsey, have Liverpool got enough goals in them? It’s possible, but it looks far from certain. The good news is that I’d be shocked if Suarez doesn’t get 20 goals this season; for all his missed chances, he’s scored in each of his last two games, and he creates so much for himself that the law of averages suggests a better return.
    Fabio Borini should be capable of reaching 15, given his movement and the positions he takes up, and also the ruthlessness of his finishing at Swansea and Roma. But right now, despite timing his runs really well, he can hover a bit too far from the box at times, and is grappling with the kind of uncertainty new strikers can suffer in front of goal. He didn’t score for Roma until October, then had to wait until January, from which point he scored eight goals in ten games.
    A great unknown is just how many goals Steven Gerrard has left in him. At his peak, between 2007 and 2009, he was scoring a goal virtually every two games, and was around the same ratio in 2005/06. However, in his last three seasons, plus adding the start of this, it’s down to a goal every 3.8 games. He’ll probably take the penalties, and that will guarantee at least five or six goals, but will he add 15 more from open play, in the way he used to? It seems highly unlikely. At this stage, 10-15 in a whole season, including penalties, seems realistic.
    If he plays enough minutes, Sterling should be able to add five as he feels he way around first team football (although he seems to have the potential of someone who’ll average 15-20 in a few years’ time). Sahin averaged around five a season in his last two years at Dortmund, which is decent enough for a deep-lying playmaker.
    Given that he has even more licence to get forward, Glen Johnson should also be capable of five. Wherever he plays, Stewart Downing should be registering three-to-five; at least he already has one. Between them Skrtel and Agger (with maybe a nod from Coates) should be able to notch six in all competitions. (With it being around 200 games since Jamie Carragher’s last goal, it’s fair to say that he won’t be relied upon.)
    Like Lucas, Joe Allen might be on for one or two if the wind is right. Elsewhere in the squad, Joe Cole (if he’s ever fit), Jordan Henderson and Jonjo Shelvey are capable of weighing in with at least five or six between them, with the two youngsters likely to translate their lower-level scoring feats to a higher level as they mature.
    (Henderson scored four in 21 England U21 games; Shelvey managed nine goals in 26 Championship games spread across Charlton and Blackpool as a teenager, and notched eight in 17 games for England youth teams. They can score goals, but as yet, not enough to bank on. And of course, they may barely play.)
    All in all I make it, at best, around 70-80 goals from the first XI in all competitions, and possibly only 50 in the league. That’s not a massive amount, and is perhaps being very generous (although players can always surprise us, and improve upon previous tallies). But beyond that XI, there’s probably not a lot to rely on. The rest might add 10-15 goals, but in all likelihood, one of the first XI will under-deliver in the box.
    Oussama Assaidi could be key; he is the unknown quantity in terms of scoring goals in England. He might be a revelation; but frankly, unless others start hitting their targets, he may need to be.
    While there doesn’t appear to be enough goals, it needn’t be too big a problem if the team keeps clean sheets and the Reds score just enough to win games. Right now, however, the playing style is leading to numerous errors at the back, although hopefully that’s merely symptomatic of teething problems, and no more.
    It’s important to remember that this is a long-term project. Brendan Rodgers does not look the type to panic, and he will try to bring in hungry players. He knows how to get the best out of young players, although the pressure at Liverpool may make it harder than it was at Swansea, especially if results don’t go his way.
    But if the Reds fail to score enough goals, questions will rightly be asked (even if we’ve no way of knowing whether or not the players who weren’t brought inwould have done better). Transitions can be made all the harder if certain components of the team aren’t functioning correctly, and if the team remains too distant from the top four, then attracting players down the line can become harder. It becomes catch-22.
    However, if all goes well – with Liverpool controlling games with style from the centre of the park and turning possession into points – then everyone at the club will believe that they got most decisions right this summer. As ever, no-one knows in advance exactly how it will play out….