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Wednesday, 21 May 2014
Aik sorang ja ka Lallana ?? Meh la sembang dengan Gerrard .. sembang pasal masa...
Steven Gerrard dan Wayne Rooney beramah mesra selepas tamat sesi latihan skuad E...
Roy Hudgson memberi galakan kepada Liverpool untuk mendapatkan Lallana dan Man U...
Salam...Petang tadi punya celitaa Cuba cipta dialog antara 2 pemain ini. Contoh:...
Aksi Steven Gerrard ketika sesi latihan pasukan England harini. Like kalau smar...
Red Machine: Liverpool FC in the 80s The Player’s Stories – Simon Hughes, Mainstream Publishing (2013)
Red Machine is available from Amazon in Hardcover and for Kindle.
We all lead busy lives. TV shows want us to tear apart the careers of scarily tearful singers or dancers with the click of our mobile phone. Some of us are trying to pick up the pieces of yesterday, today. So, if you do not have time to read any more of this article, be assured that my thoughts on this book could be easily summed up in one sentence.
This book is one of the best books that I have read about Liverpool FC this year.
Rather than cutting and pasting a series of anecdotes gathered together from newspapers and programmes, taking words and feelings out of context, this book tries to tell a story about the Club during one of the most successful periods of the club’s history through a series of interesting interviews with former players.
This book does not quite say that everything was great in the 80s. The book is objective and sensitive. It tries to link the Club with what was going on in Merseyside around thirty years ago. Unlike certain other clubs in the UK, you cannot really talk about Liverpool FC without talking about the city of Liverpool.
Regardless of the internal boardroom changes that have taken place at Anfield down the years, and the changing international dimension of football, I like to think that the city and the club are closely linked. This book will stoke a few memories and shows that the link was particularly strong whether through triumph or tragedy.
I could be a bit biased. The 80s remains my decade of choice. I was born thirty three days into the decade, three months before Steven Gerrard. It is sad to say that I do not have much in common with the Liverpool Captain, apart from a fairly similar haircut, but after reading the book’s introduction, it was refreshing to think that I was not the only person to grow up with one of my earliest football memories being the 1986 FA Cup Final.
Throughout my childhood days, when my Dad used to do the football pools on a Wednesday night, I quickly began to realise that there was not much choosing a game involving Liverpool. It seemed that a team’s coach could merely turn off the M62 towards Anfield and they had lost already.
Without even checking the pictures and the film of May 10th 1986, I could tell you it was a sunny day. It was also sunny on 15th April 1989; another football day that is etched in my memory for totally different reasons. It is weird how the weather can form your memories throughout your life.
For an impressionable nine year old, asking questions about things that I should not have asked question about Hillsborough remains vivid, with the next day newspaper coverage of fans rammed up against the steel fences still stuck in mind. At the age of four and five, I was probably in bed for the 1984 European Cup Final as well as Heysel.
Coupled with Brookside, the Beatles, The Farm’s “Altogether Now,” Cilla Black and Blind Date, and Derek Hatton, Liverpool strongly featured in my early days of life. Then, and now, I just wish that I had scored in front of the Kop.
I am not sure if the players that are featured in this book had the same memories of entering Liverpool as me. The first time that I actually made it to Merseyside for a football game was on 30th September 2000. Leaving the bright yellow clad Moorfields station, over the 80s bubble flooring that seemed to be the flooring of choice for every 80s built swimming pool across the land, Liverpool was everything that I thought it would be.
For those featured players in this book, coming to this City to ply their football trade made them feel that they had reached the very top of their game. Anxiousness is a common them through the book. Anxiousness to satisfy the ultra-high demands of Anfield’s extremely demanding management. Anxiousness to play with footballing staffs. Anxiousness not to get injured in the experience and many players make reference that player injury was seen as a sign of potentially contagious weakness rather than a medical reality.
Some of the players, who are featured in this book, are brutally honest about their own shortcomings. For Michael Robinson, it was the ultimate dream to play for Liverpool. The reality of playing for the reds was quite different. With new players coming through the doors of Melwood, Robinson realised his days were numbered. That particular interview seems to be the one that gave the most for the author of this book and although Robinson is a particularly big star in the Spanish football media, his days at Anfield seem to be a bit of a regret for him.
Howard Gayle’s account was also extremely interesting. Gayle is a Scouser born and bred, trying to find himself amongst the inner city gangs of Merseyside. Gayle talks about the 1981 Toxteth riots; the vivid backdrop to Charles and Diana’s wedding. It is a scary account that means you can not put the pages down. He tries to use Liverpool Football Club as a way of trying to keep himself together. It is questionable whether it quite works or not for Gayle, but you do get a sense of the state of Merseyside in the early eighties through that particular chapter.
The players that are interviewed in this book are also not the usual subjects. Bruce Grobbelaar and John Barnes are interviewed for this book, and it is difficult to think of a back story that is quite as eventful and down-right shocking as the Zimbabwean born goalkeeper. It was also welcome to read about John Barnes – the person, and his development through the London footballing scene, through Watford FC to Anfield.
The book climaxes with some recollections from Ronnie Moran – a figure that regularly features in this book as a driven, slightly fearsome creature of the bootroom. He is the last surviving member of the Liverpool dynasty, like to Royal Family, who ruled Merseyside football for nearly forty years.
Moran’s interview concludes a well written account of a time on Merseyside, where the City was fighting for economic and social survival, and turning to the local football clubs for some sort of salvation. The power of the writing and the recollections will keep you interested from beginning to end.
Red Machine is available from Amazon in Hardcover and for Kindle.
Tim is a contributor to This Is Anfield, although not an ardent Liverpool fan he offers perspective on LFC issues from a nuetral's eye.
petikan dari Liverpool FC, This is Anfield, Teamtalk
Book Review: Red Machine – Liverpool FC in the 80s
Red Machine: Liverpool FC in the 80s The Player’s Stories – Simon Hughes, Mainstream Publishing (2013)
Red Machine is available from Amazon in Hardcover and for Kindle.
We all lead busy lives. TV shows want us to tear apart the careers of scarily tearful singers or dancers with the click of our mobile phone. Some of us are trying to pick up the pieces of yesterday, today. So, if you do not have time to read any more of this article, be assured that my thoughts on this book could be easily summed up in one sentence.
This book is one of the best books that I have read about Liverpool FC this year.
Rather than cutting and pasting a series of anecdotes gathered together from newspapers and programmes, taking words and feelings out of context, this book tries to tell a story about the Club during one of the most successful periods of the club’s history through a series of interesting interviews with former players.
This book does not quite say that everything was great in the 80s. The book is objective and sensitive. It tries to link the Club with what was going on in Merseyside around thirty years ago. Unlike certain other clubs in the UK, you cannot really talk about Liverpool FC without talking about the city of Liverpool.
Regardless of the internal boardroom changes that have taken place at Anfield down the years, and the changing international dimension of football, I like to think that the city and the club are closely linked. This book will stoke a few memories and shows that the link was particularly strong whether through triumph or tragedy.
I could be a bit biased. The 80s remains my decade of choice. I was born thirty three days into the decade, three months before Steven Gerrard. It is sad to say that I do not have much in common with the Liverpool Captain, apart from a fairly similar haircut, but after reading the book’s introduction, it was refreshing to think that I was not the only person to grow up with one of my earliest football memories being the 1986 FA Cup Final.
Throughout my childhood days, when my Dad used to do the football pools on a Wednesday night, I quickly began to realise that there was not much choosing a game involving Liverpool. It seemed that a team’s coach could merely turn off the M62 towards Anfield and they had lost already.
Without even checking the pictures and the film of May 10th 1986, I could tell you it was a sunny day. It was also sunny on 15th April 1989; another football day that is etched in my memory for totally different reasons. It is weird how the weather can form your memories throughout your life.
For an impressionable nine year old, asking questions about things that I should not have asked question about Hillsborough remains vivid, with the next day newspaper coverage of fans rammed up against the steel fences still stuck in mind. At the age of four and five, I was probably in bed for the 1984 European Cup Final as well as Heysel.
Coupled with Brookside, the Beatles, The Farm’s “Altogether Now,” Cilla Black and Blind Date, and Derek Hatton, Liverpool strongly featured in my early days of life. Then, and now, I just wish that I had scored in front of the Kop.
I am not sure if the players that are featured in this book had the same memories of entering Liverpool as me. The first time that I actually made it to Merseyside for a football game was on 30th September 2000. Leaving the bright yellow clad Moorfields station, over the 80s bubble flooring that seemed to be the flooring of choice for every 80s built swimming pool across the land, Liverpool was everything that I thought it would be.
For those featured players in this book, coming to this City to ply their football trade made them feel that they had reached the very top of their game. Anxiousness is a common them through the book. Anxiousness to satisfy the ultra-high demands of Anfield’s extremely demanding management. Anxiousness to play with footballing staffs. Anxiousness not to get injured in the experience and many players make reference that player injury was seen as a sign of potentially contagious weakness rather than a medical reality.
Some of the players, who are featured in this book, are brutally honest about their own shortcomings. For Michael Robinson, it was the ultimate dream to play for Liverpool. The reality of playing for the reds was quite different. With new players coming through the doors of Melwood, Robinson realised his days were numbered. That particular interview seems to be the one that gave the most for the author of this book and although Robinson is a particularly big star in the Spanish football media, his days at Anfield seem to be a bit of a regret for him.
Howard Gayle’s account was also extremely interesting. Gayle is a Scouser born and bred, trying to find himself amongst the inner city gangs of Merseyside. Gayle talks about the 1981 Toxteth riots; the vivid backdrop to Charles and Diana’s wedding. It is a scary account that means you can not put the pages down. He tries to use Liverpool Football Club as a way of trying to keep himself together. It is questionable whether it quite works or not for Gayle, but you do get a sense of the state of Merseyside in the early eighties through that particular chapter.
The players that are interviewed in this book are also not the usual subjects. Bruce Grobbelaar and John Barnes are interviewed for this book, and it is difficult to think of a back story that is quite as eventful and down-right shocking as the Zimbabwean born goalkeeper. It was also welcome to read about John Barnes – the person, and his development through the London footballing scene, through Watford FC to Anfield.
The book climaxes with some recollections from Ronnie Moran – a figure that regularly features in this book as a driven, slightly fearsome creature of the bootroom. He is the last surviving member of the Liverpool dynasty, like to Royal Family, who ruled Merseyside football for nearly forty years.
Moran’s interview concludes a well written account of a time on Merseyside, where the City was fighting for economic and social survival, and turning to the local football clubs for some sort of salvation. The power of the writing and the recollections will keep you interested from beginning to end.
Red Machine is available from Amazon in Hardcover and for Kindle.
Tim is a contributor to This Is Anfield, although not an ardent Liverpool fan he offers perspective on LFC issues from a nuetral's eye.
petikan dari Liverpool FC, This is Anfield, Teamtalk
The Reds telah mengemukakan tawaran sebanyak £20juta pada awal bulan lalu tetapi Southampton mahukan £25juta. Rundingan antara kedua-dua kelab sedang berjalan dan dijangka akan berterusan untuk beberapa hari yang akan datang.
hafiz
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Liverpool masih berharap untuk menandatangani pemain Southampton, Adam Lallana m...
The Reds telah mengemukakan tawaran sebanyak £20juta pada awal bulan lalu tetapi Southampton mahukan £25juta. Rundingan antara kedua-dua kelab sedang berjalan dan dijangka akan berterusan untuk beberapa hari yang akan datang.
hafiz
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Arsenal :-Yaya Toure boleh mjadikn Arsenal sperti &039;the invisible&039; semula dmana die boleh memainkn peranan Patrick Viera..dgn pnambahn sorg pnyerang xmustahil arsenal bole mgganas musim dpn n mengakhiri badi juara liga mereka
Chelsea :-Memungkinkn Chelsea lg sombong n bongkak dgn penambahan Yaya Toure.....bayangkn gandingan Yaya-Ramires.....seolah2 bas lama lepas inspection mdapat enjin turbo....
Liverpool :-maka akan bmula semula zaman gemilang Liverpool...gerrard-hendo-yaya-sterling.....tmbah coutinho-suarez-sturridge...anda sndiri nilai kt mane Liverpool dok klu dpt abam itam manis ni.....mgkin gaji yg mjadi phalang liverpool huhu..... :(
Manchester United :-myelesaikn kpingan trakhir &039;jigsaw puzzle&039; bhagian midfield menyu yg alek pergusen pun xdpt carik gnti mgkin paul pogba boleh tp menyu kayu g jual pogba kt juventus...pngganti roy keane,eric cantona, paul scholes yg dcari2 slama ini?
Amacam abam itam manis ni? Admin akhiri dgn srangkp pntun
Itam-itam si patrick viera
Biarpun itam klu dpt jd juara....
kplm
-farah-
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Yaya Toure dkatakn mahu mninggalkn Manchester City....die kecewa dgn pihak pguru...
Arsenal :-Yaya Toure boleh mjadikn Arsenal sperti &039;the invisible&039; semula dmana die boleh memainkn peranan Patrick Viera..dgn pnambahn sorg pnyerang xmustahil arsenal bole mgganas musim dpn n mengakhiri badi juara liga mereka
Chelsea :-Memungkinkn Chelsea lg sombong n bongkak dgn penambahan Yaya Toure.....bayangkn gandingan Yaya-Ramires.....seolah2 bas lama lepas inspection mdapat enjin turbo....
Liverpool :-maka akan bmula semula zaman gemilang Liverpool...gerrard-hendo-yaya-sterling.....tmbah coutinho-suarez-sturridge...anda sndiri nilai kt mane Liverpool dok klu dpt abam itam manis ni.....mgkin gaji yg mjadi phalang liverpool huhu..... :(
Manchester United :-myelesaikn kpingan trakhir &039;jigsaw puzzle&039; bhagian midfield menyu yg alek pergusen pun xdpt carik gnti mgkin paul pogba boleh tp menyu kayu g jual pogba kt juventus...pngganti roy keane,eric cantona, paul scholes yg dcari2 slama ini?
Amacam abam itam manis ni? Admin akhiri dgn srangkp pntun
Itam-itam si patrick viera
Biarpun itam klu dpt jd juara....
kplm
-farah-
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
"Hi... Aku monitor kau je... " *Gambar dari fan lfc di Twitter yang mula marah...
DAMN
AkeyKPLM
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Louis van Gaal berminat untuk mendapatkan pemain sayap Dnipro, Yevhen Konoplyank...
DAMN
AkeyKPLM
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
BsSport ni buat kajian terperinci ttg performances player dan club sepanjang musim berdasarkan kriteria2 tertentu...anyway, Congratulations Suarez! Messi pn jatuh no2 dh.. Well done!
Zarm LMFC
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Luis Suarez No1 dlm ranking yg dikeluarkan oleh BsSport...mantap suarez season n...
BsSport ni buat kajian terperinci ttg performances player dan club sepanjang musim berdasarkan kriteria2 tertentu...anyway, Congratulations Suarez! Messi pn jatuh no2 dh.. Well done!
Zarm LMFC
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Pemain sasaran Liverpool, Alberto Moreno (LB) memberi bayangan bahawa dia tidak...
Legenda Bob Paisley merupakan satu-satunya pengurus yang menang European Cups sebanyak 3 kali.
(Liverpool 1977, 1978, 1981)
Carlo Ancelotti akan menyusul sebagai pengurus kedua sekiranya Real Madrid menang final UCL awal pagi Ahad nanti.
(AC Milan 2003, 2007)
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Tahukah anda? Legenda Bob Paisley merupakan satu-satunya pengurus yang menang E...
Legenda Bob Paisley merupakan satu-satunya pengurus yang menang European Cups sebanyak 3 kali.
(Liverpool 1977, 1978, 1981)
Carlo Ancelotti akan menyusul sebagai pengurus kedua sekiranya Real Madrid menang final UCL awal pagi Ahad nanti.
(AC Milan 2003, 2007)
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Rob McCarthy continues the 2014 TEAMtalk Soccers awards ceremony by presenting the gong for the Premier League's Young Player of the Season.
Firstly, let's make clear what the parameters are for this award.
We decided the nominees had to be 21 or younger when the campaign kicked off last August, which means that PFA nominees Eden Hazard, Aaron Ramsey and Daniel Sturridge were not considered.
This is always a highly-contested award and there were certainly no shortage of candidates, but it's the following quintet that stood out for our readers as we reveal the Young Player of the Season.
5. Adnan Januzaj:
There wasn't much good, if anything, that came out of the David Moyes era at Old Trafford but the emergence of Adnan Januzaj under the Scot was certainly something that United fans can take from his reign.
The 19-year-old announced himself on the Premier League stage with a superb brace in the 2-1 win at Sunderland back in October and added further goals against West Ham and Newcastle.
At a time when many of United's big guns were playing well below par, Januzaj appeared on the scene with a swagger and maturity that was beyond his years.
England came a calling but Januzaj opted to play for the country of his birth - Belgium - instead, and such has been his meteoric rise that he was named in their provisional squad for this summer's World Cup.
Look for Januzaj to develop further under Louis van Gaal next season.
4. John Stones:
The boy from Barnsley is another who has come from seemingly nowhere to become an integral part of Roberto Martinez's back four at Everton, and is on standby for England's World Cup squad - despite winning only eight U-21 caps so far.
Signed from the Tykes in January 2013, the 19-year-old made his Premier League debut for the Toffees in September against Chelsea.
It wasn't until January 1 this year against Stoke that Stones made his first league start for the club and he has certainly made a name for himself since, forming an excellent partnership with Sylvain Distin in the absence of Phil Jagielka.
Composed on the ball and a good reader of the game, despite his tender years, Stones can struggle with more physical forwards but he will only get stronger and we could well be looking at an England captain of the future.
3. Ross Barkley:
The Toffees playmaker seems to have been around for a while but is still just 20 and has now firmly established himself as a regular for the Toffees.
Barkley won his first senior England cap against Moldova in September last year and has clearly impressed Roy Hodgson enough for the England coach to hand him a place on the plane for Brazil.
The midfielder, who can also play in the hole, made 38 appearance for Everton last season, scoring seven times - including stunning strikes against Newcastle and Manchester City.
It's pretty rare these days for England to produce a footballer capable of producing Gascoigne-like runs, but Barkley also shows terrific composure and this has certainly been a breakthrough year for the former Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds loanee.
2. Raheem Sterling:
The real beauty about Raheem Sterling is that he can play anywhere and still have an impact on the game; that's how good of a footballer is he.
Originally starring as a wide man at Anfield, the 19-year-old has also played centrally and in the hole this season. His pace and trickery are key facets to his game but not enough credit is given to how good a passer of the ball he is too.
Nine goals and five assists in 33 league appearances tells you how important Sterling has become to Liverpool and he is certain to be one of the Premier League's outstanding attacking talents for years to come.
1. Luke Shaw:
The young man that arguably forced one of the world's best left-backs into international retirement, Luke Shaw is the deserving winner of this season's Young Player of the Year award.
When Ashley Cole called time on his England career, the reality will surely have struck Shaw that he was on his way to Brazil this summer.
At 18 years of age - he'll turn 19 in July - Shaw really is a freak of nature, standing at 6ft 1in and being built like the proverbial brick outhouse.
Some critics have pointed out that his defending is not at the top level but he's only 18 and will learn the more he plays at the top level.
Going forward, however, there can be no denying that Shaw is pure class. Powerful, quick, dynamic and with quality on his final ball to go with it, this is the reason why this lad is being linked with a number of the top clubs in England.
Shaw is fortunate that he is playing in an era when full-backs are given more freedom to get forward, but few could argue that he is already one of the outstanding talents in the game.
So take a bow Luke as you are TEAMtalk's Young Player of the Season.
petikan dari LiverpoolTeamTalk
TT Soccers: Young Player of the Season
Rob McCarthy continues the 2014 TEAMtalk Soccers awards ceremony by presenting the gong for the Premier League's Young Player of the Season.
Firstly, let's make clear what the parameters are for this award.
We decided the nominees had to be 21 or younger when the campaign kicked off last August, which means that PFA nominees Eden Hazard, Aaron Ramsey and Daniel Sturridge were not considered.
This is always a highly-contested award and there were certainly no shortage of candidates, but it's the following quintet that stood out for our readers as we reveal the Young Player of the Season.
5. Adnan Januzaj:
There wasn't much good, if anything, that came out of the David Moyes era at Old Trafford but the emergence of Adnan Januzaj under the Scot was certainly something that United fans can take from his reign.
The 19-year-old announced himself on the Premier League stage with a superb brace in the 2-1 win at Sunderland back in October and added further goals against West Ham and Newcastle.
At a time when many of United's big guns were playing well below par, Januzaj appeared on the scene with a swagger and maturity that was beyond his years.
England came a calling but Januzaj opted to play for the country of his birth - Belgium - instead, and such has been his meteoric rise that he was named in their provisional squad for this summer's World Cup.
Look for Januzaj to develop further under Louis van Gaal next season.
4. John Stones:
The boy from Barnsley is another who has come from seemingly nowhere to become an integral part of Roberto Martinez's back four at Everton, and is on standby for England's World Cup squad - despite winning only eight U-21 caps so far.
Signed from the Tykes in January 2013, the 19-year-old made his Premier League debut for the Toffees in September against Chelsea.
It wasn't until January 1 this year against Stoke that Stones made his first league start for the club and he has certainly made a name for himself since, forming an excellent partnership with Sylvain Distin in the absence of Phil Jagielka.
Composed on the ball and a good reader of the game, despite his tender years, Stones can struggle with more physical forwards but he will only get stronger and we could well be looking at an England captain of the future.
3. Ross Barkley:
The Toffees playmaker seems to have been around for a while but is still just 20 and has now firmly established himself as a regular for the Toffees.
Barkley won his first senior England cap against Moldova in September last year and has clearly impressed Roy Hodgson enough for the England coach to hand him a place on the plane for Brazil.
The midfielder, who can also play in the hole, made 38 appearance for Everton last season, scoring seven times - including stunning strikes against Newcastle and Manchester City.
It's pretty rare these days for England to produce a footballer capable of producing Gascoigne-like runs, but Barkley also shows terrific composure and this has certainly been a breakthrough year for the former Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds loanee.
2. Raheem Sterling:
The real beauty about Raheem Sterling is that he can play anywhere and still have an impact on the game; that's how good of a footballer is he.
Originally starring as a wide man at Anfield, the 19-year-old has also played centrally and in the hole this season. His pace and trickery are key facets to his game but not enough credit is given to how good a passer of the ball he is too.
Nine goals and five assists in 33 league appearances tells you how important Sterling has become to Liverpool and he is certain to be one of the Premier League's outstanding attacking talents for years to come.
1. Luke Shaw:
The young man that arguably forced one of the world's best left-backs into international retirement, Luke Shaw is the deserving winner of this season's Young Player of the Year award.
When Ashley Cole called time on his England career, the reality will surely have struck Shaw that he was on his way to Brazil this summer.
At 18 years of age - he'll turn 19 in July - Shaw really is a freak of nature, standing at 6ft 1in and being built like the proverbial brick outhouse.
Some critics have pointed out that his defending is not at the top level but he's only 18 and will learn the more he plays at the top level.
Going forward, however, there can be no denying that Shaw is pure class. Powerful, quick, dynamic and with quality on his final ball to go with it, this is the reason why this lad is being linked with a number of the top clubs in England.
Shaw is fortunate that he is playing in an era when full-backs are given more freedom to get forward, but few could argue that he is already one of the outstanding talents in the game.
So take a bow Luke as you are TEAMtalk's Young Player of the Season.
petikan dari LiverpoolTeamTalk
-European Team of the Season- Setuju tak kalau kita borong semua player dalam i...
Rob McCarthy continues the 2014 TEAMtalk Soccers awards ceremony by presenting the gong for the Premier League's Young Player of the Season.
Firstly, let's make clear what the parameters are for this award.
We decided the nominees had to be 21 or younger when the campaign kicked off last August, which means that PFA nominees Eden Hazard, Aaron Ramsey and Daniel Sturridge were not considered.
This is always a highly-contested award and there were certainly no shortage of candidates, but it's the following quintet that stood out for our readers as we reveal the Young Player of the Season.
5. Adnan Januzaj:
There wasn't much good, if anything, that came out of the David Moyes era at Old Trafford but the emergence of Adnan Januzaj under the Scot was certainly something that United fans can take from his reign.
The 19-year-old announced himself on the Premier League stage with a superb brace in the 2-1 win at Sunderland back in October and added further goals against West Ham and Newcastle.
At a time when many of United's big guns were playing well below par, Januzaj appeared on the scene with a swagger and maturity that was beyond his years.
England came a calling but Januzaj opted to play for the country of his birth - Belgium - instead, and such has been his meteoric rise that he was named in their provisional squad for this summer's World Cup.
Look for Januzaj to develop further under Louis van Gaal next season.
4. John Stones:
The boy from Barnsley is another who has come from seemingly nowhere to become an integral part of Roberto Martinez's back four at Everton, and is on standby for England's World Cup squad - despite winning only eight U-21 caps so far.
Signed from the Tykes in January 2013, the 19-year-old made his Premier League debut for the Toffees in September against Chelsea.
It wasn't until January 1 this year against Stoke that Stones made his first league start for the club and he has certainly made a name for himself since, forming an excellent partnership with Sylvain Distin in the absence of Phil Jagielka.
Composed on the ball and a good reader of the game, despite his tender years, Stones can struggle with more physical forwards but he will only get stronger and we could well be looking at an England captain of the future.
3. Ross Barkley:
The Toffees playmaker seems to have been around for a while but is still just 20 and has now firmly established himself as a regular for the Toffees.
Barkley won his first senior England cap against Moldova in September last year and has clearly impressed Roy Hodgson enough for the England coach to hand him a place on the plane for Brazil.
The midfielder, who can also play in the hole, made 38 appearance for Everton last season, scoring seven times - including stunning strikes against Newcastle and Manchester City.
It's pretty rare these days for England to produce a footballer capable of producing Gascoigne-like runs, but Barkley also shows terrific composure and this has certainly been a breakthrough year for the former Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds loanee.
2. Raheem Sterling:
The real beauty about Raheem Sterling is that he can play anywhere and still have an impact on the game; that's how good of a footballer is he.
Originally starring as a wide man at Anfield, the 19-year-old has also played centrally and in the hole this season. His pace and trickery are key facets to his game but not enough credit is given to how good a passer of the ball he is too.
Nine goals and five assists in 33 league appearances tells you how important Sterling has become to Liverpool and he is certain to be one of the Premier League's outstanding attacking talents for years to come.
1. Luke Shaw:
The young man that arguably forced one of the world's best left-backs into international retirement, Luke Shaw is the deserving winner of this season's Young Player of the Year award.
When Ashley Cole called time on his England career, the reality will surely have struck Shaw that he was on his way to Brazil this summer.
At 18 years of age - he'll turn 19 in July - Shaw really is a freak of nature, standing at 6ft 1in and being built like the proverbial brick outhouse.
Some critics have pointed out that his defending is not at the top level but he's only 18 and will learn the more he plays at the top level.
Going forward, however, there can be no denying that Shaw is pure class. Powerful, quick, dynamic and with quality on his final ball to go with it, this is the reason why this lad is being linked with a number of the top clubs in England.
Shaw is fortunate that he is playing in an era when full-backs are given more freedom to get forward, but few could argue that he is already one of the outstanding talents in the game.
So take a bow Luke as you are TEAMtalk's Young Player of the Season.
petikan dari LiverpoolTeamTalk
TT Soccers: Young Player of the Season
Rob McCarthy continues the 2014 TEAMtalk Soccers awards ceremony by presenting the gong for the Premier League's Young Player of the Season.
Firstly, let's make clear what the parameters are for this award.
We decided the nominees had to be 21 or younger when the campaign kicked off last August, which means that PFA nominees Eden Hazard, Aaron Ramsey and Daniel Sturridge were not considered.
This is always a highly-contested award and there were certainly no shortage of candidates, but it's the following quintet that stood out for our readers as we reveal the Young Player of the Season.
5. Adnan Januzaj:
There wasn't much good, if anything, that came out of the David Moyes era at Old Trafford but the emergence of Adnan Januzaj under the Scot was certainly something that United fans can take from his reign.
The 19-year-old announced himself on the Premier League stage with a superb brace in the 2-1 win at Sunderland back in October and added further goals against West Ham and Newcastle.
At a time when many of United's big guns were playing well below par, Januzaj appeared on the scene with a swagger and maturity that was beyond his years.
England came a calling but Januzaj opted to play for the country of his birth - Belgium - instead, and such has been his meteoric rise that he was named in their provisional squad for this summer's World Cup.
Look for Januzaj to develop further under Louis van Gaal next season.
4. John Stones:
The boy from Barnsley is another who has come from seemingly nowhere to become an integral part of Roberto Martinez's back four at Everton, and is on standby for England's World Cup squad - despite winning only eight U-21 caps so far.
Signed from the Tykes in January 2013, the 19-year-old made his Premier League debut for the Toffees in September against Chelsea.
It wasn't until January 1 this year against Stoke that Stones made his first league start for the club and he has certainly made a name for himself since, forming an excellent partnership with Sylvain Distin in the absence of Phil Jagielka.
Composed on the ball and a good reader of the game, despite his tender years, Stones can struggle with more physical forwards but he will only get stronger and we could well be looking at an England captain of the future.
3. Ross Barkley:
The Toffees playmaker seems to have been around for a while but is still just 20 and has now firmly established himself as a regular for the Toffees.
Barkley won his first senior England cap against Moldova in September last year and has clearly impressed Roy Hodgson enough for the England coach to hand him a place on the plane for Brazil.
The midfielder, who can also play in the hole, made 38 appearance for Everton last season, scoring seven times - including stunning strikes against Newcastle and Manchester City.
It's pretty rare these days for England to produce a footballer capable of producing Gascoigne-like runs, but Barkley also shows terrific composure and this has certainly been a breakthrough year for the former Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds loanee.
2. Raheem Sterling:
The real beauty about Raheem Sterling is that he can play anywhere and still have an impact on the game; that's how good of a footballer is he.
Originally starring as a wide man at Anfield, the 19-year-old has also played centrally and in the hole this season. His pace and trickery are key facets to his game but not enough credit is given to how good a passer of the ball he is too.
Nine goals and five assists in 33 league appearances tells you how important Sterling has become to Liverpool and he is certain to be one of the Premier League's outstanding attacking talents for years to come.
1. Luke Shaw:
The young man that arguably forced one of the world's best left-backs into international retirement, Luke Shaw is the deserving winner of this season's Young Player of the Year award.
When Ashley Cole called time on his England career, the reality will surely have struck Shaw that he was on his way to Brazil this summer.
At 18 years of age - he'll turn 19 in July - Shaw really is a freak of nature, standing at 6ft 1in and being built like the proverbial brick outhouse.
Some critics have pointed out that his defending is not at the top level but he's only 18 and will learn the more he plays at the top level.
Going forward, however, there can be no denying that Shaw is pure class. Powerful, quick, dynamic and with quality on his final ball to go with it, this is the reason why this lad is being linked with a number of the top clubs in England.
Shaw is fortunate that he is playing in an era when full-backs are given more freedom to get forward, but few could argue that he is already one of the outstanding talents in the game.
So take a bow Luke as you are TEAMtalk's Young Player of the Season.
petikan dari LiverpoolTeamTalk
100 pemain terbaik didunia. Luis Suarez menduduki tempat pertama menewaskan Lion...
Persoalan yang bermain di fikiran saya ketika ini adakah Daniel Agger akan di le...
Baru ku tahu ..... Wreaking ball molek ... Adeq_suarez
Sedikit kata-kata dari penolong kapten, Daniel Agger yang kecewa kerap menjadi pilihan ketiga untuk posisi CB.
Apakah ada harapan untuk Dagger berjersi Liverpool dalam suasana seperti dalam gambar untuk musim hadapan?
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
"Biarkan saya bermain atau biarkan saya pergi" Sedikit kata-kata dari penolong...
Sedikit kata-kata dari penolong kapten, Daniel Agger yang kecewa kerap menjadi pilihan ketiga untuk posisi CB.
Apakah ada harapan untuk Dagger berjersi Liverpool dalam suasana seperti dalam gambar untuk musim hadapan?
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Mulakan langkah anda dengan penuh keyakinan Liverpool ucl season 2015 KPLM -r...
Jumlah perlawanan dimainkan: 31
Jumlah minit dimainkan: 2,964
Jumlah gol dijaringan: 31
Jumlah percubaan: 152
Percubaan tepat: 81
Minit per gol: 95.61
Gol dari dalam kotak penalti: 24
Gol dari luar kotak penalti: 7
Gol tandukan: 3
Gol kaki kanan: 20
Gol kaki kiri: 8
Jumlah hantaran: 1,264
Jumlah mencipta peluang gol: 87
Assists: 12
Jumlah Kad kuning: 6
Jumlah titisan air mata ketika vs Crystanbul Palace: 7 :p
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
Statistik Luis Suarez musim 2013-14: Jumlah perlawanan dimainkan: 31 Jumlah min...
Jumlah perlawanan dimainkan: 31
Jumlah minit dimainkan: 2,964
Jumlah gol dijaringan: 31
Jumlah percubaan: 152
Percubaan tepat: 81
Minit per gol: 95.61
Gol dari dalam kotak penalti: 24
Gol dari luar kotak penalti: 7
Gol tandukan: 3
Gol kaki kanan: 20
Gol kaki kiri: 8
Jumlah hantaran: 1,264
Jumlah mencipta peluang gol: 87
Assists: 12
Jumlah Kad kuning: 6
Jumlah titisan air mata ketika vs Crystanbul Palace: 7 :p
petikan dari Laman Web/FB Kelab/Penyokong LFC Malaysia
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