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Saturday, 26 September 2015

Liverpool welcome Aston Villa to Anfield on Saturday afternoon, with manager Brendan Rodgers knowing only a win will do. We’re live to bring you the latest.

Football - FA Premier League - Liverpool FC v AFC Bournemouth FC

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26 September 2015; 3pm BST
Anfield
Premier League

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa is not available on live TV for UK viewers. Our live coverage updates automatically and is brought to you by Jack Lusby. Have your say on Twitter using @thisisanfield and @jacklusby_.

Teams

Liverpool: Mignolet; Can, Skrtel, Sakho; Clyne, Milner, Lucas, Moreno; Coutinho; Sturridge, Ings

Substitutes: Bogdan, Toure, Gomez, Lallana, Allen, Ibe, Origi

Carlisle United: Guzan; Hutton, Richards, Lescott, Amavi; Sanchez, Gana, Westwood; Sinclair, Gestede, Grealish

Substitutes: Bunn, Clark, Bacuna, Veretout, Ayew, Traore, Gil

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LIVE: Liverpool vs. Aston Villa – Follow the Reds’ must-win league clash here

Unknown   at  22:29  No comments

Liverpool welcome Aston Villa to Anfield on Saturday afternoon, with manager Brendan Rodgers knowing only a win will do. We’re live to bring you the latest.

Football - FA Premier League - Liverpool FC v AFC Bournemouth FC

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26 September 2015; 3pm BST
Anfield
Premier League

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa is not available on live TV for UK viewers. Our live coverage updates automatically and is brought to you by Jack Lusby. Have your say on Twitter using @thisisanfield and @jacklusby_.

Teams

Liverpool: Mignolet; Can, Skrtel, Sakho; Clyne, Milner, Lucas, Moreno; Coutinho; Sturridge, Ings

Substitutes: Bogdan, Toure, Gomez, Lallana, Allen, Ibe, Origi

Carlisle United: Guzan; Hutton, Richards, Lescott, Amavi; Sanchez, Gana, Westwood; Sinclair, Gestede, Grealish

Substitutes: Bunn, Clark, Bacuna, Veretout, Ayew, Traore, Gil

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Liverpool host Aston Villa at Anfield this afternoon (3pm BST kick-off), looking for their first win in seven games.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 26, 2015: Liverpool's Mamadou Sakho and Emre Can arrive at Anfield before the Premier League match against Aston Villa. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)Sakho and Emre Can arrive for today’s game.

Follow and discuss today’s match in our live matchday blog here

Brendan Rodgers is under pressure after six games without a win in all competitions and he’s named his strongest available side for the visit of a team who haven’t lost at Anfield since 2010.

Rodgers is without the injured quarter of Jordan Henderson, Christian Benteke, Dejan Lovren and Roberto Firmino, making his team selection relatively straight forward.

As expected, Danny Ings keeps his place after two goals in his last two appearances, starting alongside Daniel Sturridge. The English duo looked good together in partnership vs. Norwich City last week, albeit very briefly at the start of the second half only – they’ll be looking to continue that today.

The back three is the same as vs. Norwich, with Emre Can and Mamadou Sakho either side of Martin Skrtel.

James Milner continues in midfield, with Lucas Leiva replacing Joe Allen from the side that started against Carlisle. Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno continue as the wing-backs.

Follow and discuss today’s match in our live matchday blog here

Liverpool: Mignolet – Can, Skrtel, Sakho – Clyne, Milner, Lucas, Moreno – Coutinho – Ings, Sturridge.

Subs: Bogdan, Toure, Gomez, Lallana, Allen, Origi, Ibe.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 26, 2015: Liverpool's Main Stand at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)Anfield ahead of today’s game.

Aston Villa: Guzan, Hutton, Richards, Lescott, Amavi, Sanchez, Gana, Westwood, Gestede, Grealish, Sinclair.

Subs: Bunn, Clark, Bacuna, Adama, Veretout, Gil, Ayew.

PRE-MATCH READING: The Kop Magazine Match Preview

Referee: Jonathan Moss.

This game last season: Liverpool 0-1 Aston Villa

Our live match coverage will start at 2.30pm.

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Confirmed Liverpool lineup vs. Aston Villa – Sturridge and Ings start up front

Unknown   at  22:29  No comments

Liverpool host Aston Villa at Anfield this afternoon (3pm BST kick-off), looking for their first win in seven games.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 26, 2015: Liverpool's Mamadou Sakho and Emre Can arrive at Anfield before the Premier League match against Aston Villa. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)Sakho and Emre Can arrive for today’s game.

Follow and discuss today’s match in our live matchday blog here

Brendan Rodgers is under pressure after six games without a win in all competitions and he’s named his strongest available side for the visit of a team who haven’t lost at Anfield since 2010.

Rodgers is without the injured quarter of Jordan Henderson, Christian Benteke, Dejan Lovren and Roberto Firmino, making his team selection relatively straight forward.

As expected, Danny Ings keeps his place after two goals in his last two appearances, starting alongside Daniel Sturridge. The English duo looked good together in partnership vs. Norwich City last week, albeit very briefly at the start of the second half only – they’ll be looking to continue that today.

The back three is the same as vs. Norwich, with Emre Can and Mamadou Sakho either side of Martin Skrtel.

James Milner continues in midfield, with Lucas Leiva replacing Joe Allen from the side that started against Carlisle. Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno continue as the wing-backs.

Follow and discuss today’s match in our live matchday blog here

Liverpool: Mignolet – Can, Skrtel, Sakho – Clyne, Milner, Lucas, Moreno – Coutinho – Ings, Sturridge.

Subs: Bogdan, Toure, Gomez, Lallana, Allen, Origi, Ibe.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 26, 2015: Liverpool's Main Stand at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)Anfield ahead of today’s game.

Aston Villa: Guzan, Hutton, Richards, Lescott, Amavi, Sanchez, Gana, Westwood, Gestede, Grealish, Sinclair.

Subs: Bunn, Clark, Bacuna, Adama, Veretout, Gil, Ayew.

PRE-MATCH READING: The Kop Magazine Match Preview

Referee: Jonathan Moss.

This game last season: Liverpool 0-1 Aston Villa

Our live match coverage will start at 2.30pm.

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With so much discussion over Brendan Rodgers‘ Liverpool future and his three years in charge of the club, statistician Andrew Beasley has compiled this table showing Rodgers’ complete record as LFC manager.

brendan-rodgers-complete-liverpool-record

Graphic by @basstunedtored.

Among the standout things in the graphic, we can see:

  • Rodgers has managed 5 wins from 25 attempts against the top 4 sides of City, Arsenal, Chelsea and United
  • Rodgers’ best record is against the 5 teams no longer in the Premier League
  • Hull City and Crystal Palace have been Rodgers’ bogey sides, beating each just once
  • Rodgers has never won against Chelsea
  • Rodgers has enjoyed success against Spurs – beating them in 5 out of 6 fixtures

Overall, you could argue that the image shows how Rodgers has been able to defeat the mid-to-lower sides, but consistently struggled to outmanoeuvre the top teams.

For more statistical analysis from Andrew, check out his blog.

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa Previews

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Graphic: Brendan Rodgers’ Complete Liverpool Record

Unknown   at  11:28  No comments

With so much discussion over Brendan Rodgers‘ Liverpool future and his three years in charge of the club, statistician Andrew Beasley has compiled this table showing Rodgers’ complete record as LFC manager.

brendan-rodgers-complete-liverpool-record

Graphic by @basstunedtored.

Among the standout things in the graphic, we can see:

  • Rodgers has managed 5 wins from 25 attempts against the top 4 sides of City, Arsenal, Chelsea and United
  • Rodgers’ best record is against the 5 teams no longer in the Premier League
  • Hull City and Crystal Palace have been Rodgers’ bogey sides, beating each just once
  • Rodgers has never won against Chelsea
  • Rodgers has enjoyed success against Spurs – beating them in 5 out of 6 fixtures

Overall, you could argue that the image shows how Rodgers has been able to defeat the mid-to-lower sides, but consistently struggled to outmanoeuvre the top teams.

For more statistical analysis from Andrew, check out his blog.

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa Previews

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There’s a horrible sense of inevitability about Brendan Rodgers’ departure, writes Paul McCabe

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers taking notes during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

We’ve been here before and it looks as though the end is drawing near. The signs are there: the fanbase turning against the manager, most of the team underperforming and results continuing to embarrass and underwhelm. Rodgers looks and sounds like a resigned man. Desperation and uncertainty has crept into the team.

Instead of the backbiting, recriminations and bitterness, however, this is the ideal time for Liverpool to move forward as a club, to learn from perceived mistakes and build properly for the future. Even if it doesn’t work out for Rodgers, the owners can put steps in place to build for a much brighter future.

Rodgers’ position is not untenable, but recent results, performances and unrest have all served to make it extremely precarious. In truth, top-flight management is, by its very nature, precarious. Fans are customers and, as that role has shifted and as it costs more now to support Liverpool than it ever has (a small fortune for those fans who travel home, away and overseas to support the Reds), this has fostered a great deal of impatience in many quarters.

It’s certainly not a cheap hobby and, with Liverpool, it’s come bundled with a lot of disappointment. If you’re a customer, you expect to be delivered a good product. On the whole, this season has not delivered much in the way of entertainment and joy. The “product” has so far fallen below the standards the owners have invested in it. At the moment, the product (or the “project”, to use modern football parlance) is not working.

It seems unlikely that Rodgers will be able to claw back support. It’s a slippery slope from here and, as discontent escalates to uncomfortable levels, he’s very much living on the volcano – that’s also the name of a recently-released book, where he contributed his views on the intense pressures of modern football management.

It hasn’t been an easy few years for Rodgers, as he acknowledged in Michael Calvin’s book. He’s lost both of his parents, his marriage ended and his son was involved in a high-profile legal case. That’s genuine stress, genuine trauma and it surely takes a genuine toll. We sometimes forget that, on that pitch and in the dugout, human beings are dealing with real-life problems and it’s not always easy to compartmentalise these.

That’s not an excuse for Rodgers or a suggestion that things may be working out differently if those issues weren’t in the background, but it offers a context to the situation in which he’s been working. He’s human and he’s clearly made mistakes, yet there are sometimes other issues bubbling under the surface.

STOKE-ON-TRENT, ENGLAND - Sunday, May 24, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers in a post-match press conference after his side's 6-1 defeat to Stoke City during the Premier League match at the Britannia Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

I’ve never met nor spoken with Brendan Rodgers, I can only get the sense of him from watching his interviews, reading his thoughts on football matters and hearing/reading what other people who’ve met him think of him. I get the sense that he’s a sensitive and self-aware sort of man who’s desperate to be a success in management. I understand that he can be guilty of double talk, hubris, of alienating certain players and exaggerating his team’s performance. We’ve heard all the stories, and people interpret these differently depending on their view of the manager. Like all of us, he’ll divide opinions, but crucially: he loves Liverpool Football Club and wants to be loved back.

Unfortunately, he’s not getting a lot of love at the moment and the dislike of the manager is intense in some quarters. It’s at a level that I feel is undeserved and unnecessarily vicious and personal. I don’t think it helps the team, the manager or the fans who engage in this. I understand that there’s a market for it and it can be a coping strategy, yet it’s not helpful in the long run. Maybe Rodgers isn’t up to the job, or has made mistakes, or has become swamped, or rubbed too many people up the wrong way when things after results started to go well. Few of us know for sure.

This doesn’t apply to everyone, but there’s a difference between blind loyalty and respect. I respect what Rodgers has tried to do at the club and support him and the team. You can be constructive, of course, but outright ridiculing a Liverpool manager who’s given his all is harsh. I think we’d all like to see a proven world class manager leading the club, but that’s neither a guarantee of success nor a reason to denigrate the incumbent manager.

The sentiment has turned very nasty on Rodgers – one of the perceptions being that he’s out of his depth, another being that he believed his own hype too much after the 2013/14 season. There are other insinuations, of course, and I bristle at the way the manager of Liverpool has been discussed by some supporters. Between the memes, the mocked up pictures, and the mockery, I believe he deserves better. All Liverpool managers do (whether the next one ends up being Ancelotti, Klopp or, most likely, Monk or Howe), as it’s the toughest job in top-level football management, and he’s given three years of his life to the cause – even if ultimately it looks like it’ll be trophy-less and personally damaging to his career.

It’s one thing to criticise a tactical decision or a signing, or to poke fun at the numbers of times he says “outstanding”, but quite another to be so vitriolic in assessing the manager. There’s banter, which can be a great laugh and well-intentioned, and then there’s being snide. He hasn’t failed through spite, or lack of effort.

The barometer has moved too much in the snide direction, and I find it all quite unsavoury. Rodgers clearly isn’t doing well at the moment, but he’s never come out to criticise the fans a la Hodgson, and I don’t think he needs to be lambasted as “fraud”, “small time Charlie”, “clueless” amongst the many other knee-jerk reactions I’ve read. If he goes, let him go with a bit of dignity and a show of support. “You’ll Never Walk Alone” should continue to mean something when supporting the team, but right now it seems that the knife is being plunged into Rodgers.

Let’s have this right: he did a brilliant job in 2013/14 – better than anyone reasonably could have predicted. It was 38 games and he managed expectations very well. To claim this was all down to one player not only diminishes the manager, it diminishes the contributions of the rest of the team. It diminishes the season. One great season is not enough, clearly, and Rodgers hasn’t been able to draw on the emotional attachment of an Istanbul or a league title. He hasn’t got that in the “goodwill bank.”

SOUTHAMPTON, ENGLAND - Saturday, March 1, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers salutes the travelling supporters as his side beat Southampton 3-0 during the Premiership match at St Mary's Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

When people look at Rodgers, the pain of what nearly was is linked with the team’s subsequent stagnation. It’s a double whammy and, to compound matters, he doesn’t have the track record in terms of trophies or objective transfer success (the real “credit in the bank”) to fall back on, the way Rafa, Kenny, Klopp or Mourinho would. He nearly did it two seasons ago, but that’s not enough of an attachment.

Obviously, having a footballing genius like Luis Suarez in your team is a tremendous advantage. The same could be said of having Ronaldo, Aguero, Hazard and Drogba in your team in years gone by. Yet, even despite other managers having players like that in their squad, their achievements were not or have not been diminished because of this.

We all accept that, no matter how talented a manager is, it’s a very competitive industry at the moment. Generally, you need to have a relaxed attitude to spending and a comparatively high net spend. I think FSG need to be realistic too – they’ve spent a lot, recouped a lot, made some good progress at the club, but have they given enough of a platform to ANY manager to go and win the league?

Mourinho and Ancelotti have spent a lot more than Rodgers ever has, inherited strong teams at some free-spending clubs, but no-one would fairly claim they were “lucky” managers simply because they effectively managed some great players. That’s what Rodgers did in 2013/13 – he effectively managed the season and got the best out of the team and a great striker (even though he wasn’t “lucky” in the end). Isn’t that what great football management is about?

The truth is, there are mitigating circumstances, but Rodgers hasn’t managed the loss of Suarez, identifying his replacement or the long-term absence of Sturridge as well as maybe he could have done. We can only speculate as to whether another manager, inheriting the same circumstances, could have done much better last season. Could Ronaldo or Messi be replaced at their respective clubs? It’s never an exact science.

I do feel that, as the pressure mounts, with the stress seeming to be clouding his judgement, as opposed to bolstering it, it might be best for all concerned for Rodgers to be replaced sooner rather than later. He looks defeated. It would take a dramatic upturn in fortune – not just in results, but in keeping key players off the treatment table – to weather the storm and dramatically reverse what seems to be a depressingly familiar outcome. It’s a stretch.

BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND - Saturday, January 25, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers during a post-match press conference following his side's 2-0 victory over Bournemouth during the FA Cup 4th Round match at Dean Court. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

So I just want to say thank you to Brendan Rodgers. I don’t want to put him down or slight him. Thanks to him for making US dream again, even if it all seems a bit nightmarish at the moment. Thanks to him and his team of 2013/14 for making us forget all the bullshit that goes with being a football fan. Thanks to him for creating an exceptional team, playing an amazing brand of attacking football, and for bringing the club so close to the Promised Land.

He’s given it his best shot. I’m sorry that, ultimately, it doesn’t seem as though it’ll work out. I’m sorry that, despite getting within touching distance of the title, we didn’t quite get there. It was a cruel way to lose out. That team deserved better, and the fans deserved better.

Even though it does seem like the end is looming for Rodgers, with increasing media attention directed to his tenure (a sure sign they smell blood), it’s a chance for everyone who cares about the club to take stock. Some fans, in the emotion of defeat, need to support better or support differently, and mostly need to support in times of doubt and when things don’t do so well.

Instead of blaming, analyse. Instead of the getting embroiled in the tribal nature of “us vs them” and arguing with other Liverpool fans, listen. Being hostile is not my own way, but I don’t think I’m better for not doing that. It’s a different way of approaching things, but it serves me better and I think it’s generally a better way to behave.

This is also a time for the owners to acknowledge those fans with well-articulated criticisms and work with them to make a redeveloped Anfield the loud and intimidating atmosphere it can and ought to be. There are causes for concern off the pitch, of course, but success on the pitch can put that right: we’re not that complicated really. If anything, we’re very easily pleased.

Maybe a new manager will take charge and, if he’s more proven, that’ll make a positive impact on the fanbase, galvanise the team, buy him some time, whilst improving the overall mood and the quality of player the club can attract. Maybe it could be that simple; we’ve seen it before. Maybe this change won’t have the intended turnaround effect – 25 years of evidence suggests it’s not all down to the manager, or the owners, but a series of circumstances that just have to go in your favour (a bit of luck, really). That little bit of luck has eluded Liverpool in the League for 25 years.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Sunday, March 16, 2014: Liverpool supporters' banner 'Make Us Dream' before the Premiership match against Manchester United at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Whether it’s Rodgers or the next manager, he’ll need to become an absolute miracle worker: not only will he have to say the rights things at the right time to increase the morale, be perfect tactically, be adored by every player, live like a monk, and win the League (or crack the top 4 every season), he’ll also need to do it with a relatively low net spend.

So, yes, the fans should know that the miracle worker isn’t there (in the hot seat now or perhaps in the very near future), and therefore there will still be difficult challenges at Liverpool for even “top, top managers” to overcome. FSG should know that their model (well-intentioned though it is) really needs to be modified in the current climate of relaxed “Financial Fair Play.”

A different approach is nice, but it’s not making a top 4 finish any more likely and the title seems to be a pipe dream. There doesn’t seem to be a shortcut to winning this league – other than spending like a Sheikh. If the club’s owners really do want enduring and measurable success in this league, it will come at a great cost and some more risks. Whether they have the will and, more importantly, the funds to make that dream more of a possibility means that the next manager is hampered before he even sets out foot through the door.

Do you agree with Paul? Let us know in the comments below.

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Rodgers’ inevitable departure will leave Liverpool searching for a miracle worker

Unknown   at  11:28  No comments

There’s a horrible sense of inevitability about Brendan Rodgers’ departure, writes Paul McCabe

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers taking notes during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

We’ve been here before and it looks as though the end is drawing near. The signs are there: the fanbase turning against the manager, most of the team underperforming and results continuing to embarrass and underwhelm. Rodgers looks and sounds like a resigned man. Desperation and uncertainty has crept into the team.

Instead of the backbiting, recriminations and bitterness, however, this is the ideal time for Liverpool to move forward as a club, to learn from perceived mistakes and build properly for the future. Even if it doesn’t work out for Rodgers, the owners can put steps in place to build for a much brighter future.

Rodgers’ position is not untenable, but recent results, performances and unrest have all served to make it extremely precarious. In truth, top-flight management is, by its very nature, precarious. Fans are customers and, as that role has shifted and as it costs more now to support Liverpool than it ever has (a small fortune for those fans who travel home, away and overseas to support the Reds), this has fostered a great deal of impatience in many quarters.

It’s certainly not a cheap hobby and, with Liverpool, it’s come bundled with a lot of disappointment. If you’re a customer, you expect to be delivered a good product. On the whole, this season has not delivered much in the way of entertainment and joy. The “product” has so far fallen below the standards the owners have invested in it. At the moment, the product (or the “project”, to use modern football parlance) is not working.

It seems unlikely that Rodgers will be able to claw back support. It’s a slippery slope from here and, as discontent escalates to uncomfortable levels, he’s very much living on the volcano – that’s also the name of a recently-released book, where he contributed his views on the intense pressures of modern football management.

It hasn’t been an easy few years for Rodgers, as he acknowledged in Michael Calvin’s book. He’s lost both of his parents, his marriage ended and his son was involved in a high-profile legal case. That’s genuine stress, genuine trauma and it surely takes a genuine toll. We sometimes forget that, on that pitch and in the dugout, human beings are dealing with real-life problems and it’s not always easy to compartmentalise these.

That’s not an excuse for Rodgers or a suggestion that things may be working out differently if those issues weren’t in the background, but it offers a context to the situation in which he’s been working. He’s human and he’s clearly made mistakes, yet there are sometimes other issues bubbling under the surface.

STOKE-ON-TRENT, ENGLAND - Sunday, May 24, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers in a post-match press conference after his side's 6-1 defeat to Stoke City during the Premier League match at the Britannia Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

I’ve never met nor spoken with Brendan Rodgers, I can only get the sense of him from watching his interviews, reading his thoughts on football matters and hearing/reading what other people who’ve met him think of him. I get the sense that he’s a sensitive and self-aware sort of man who’s desperate to be a success in management. I understand that he can be guilty of double talk, hubris, of alienating certain players and exaggerating his team’s performance. We’ve heard all the stories, and people interpret these differently depending on their view of the manager. Like all of us, he’ll divide opinions, but crucially: he loves Liverpool Football Club and wants to be loved back.

Unfortunately, he’s not getting a lot of love at the moment and the dislike of the manager is intense in some quarters. It’s at a level that I feel is undeserved and unnecessarily vicious and personal. I don’t think it helps the team, the manager or the fans who engage in this. I understand that there’s a market for it and it can be a coping strategy, yet it’s not helpful in the long run. Maybe Rodgers isn’t up to the job, or has made mistakes, or has become swamped, or rubbed too many people up the wrong way when things after results started to go well. Few of us know for sure.

This doesn’t apply to everyone, but there’s a difference between blind loyalty and respect. I respect what Rodgers has tried to do at the club and support him and the team. You can be constructive, of course, but outright ridiculing a Liverpool manager who’s given his all is harsh. I think we’d all like to see a proven world class manager leading the club, but that’s neither a guarantee of success nor a reason to denigrate the incumbent manager.

The sentiment has turned very nasty on Rodgers – one of the perceptions being that he’s out of his depth, another being that he believed his own hype too much after the 2013/14 season. There are other insinuations, of course, and I bristle at the way the manager of Liverpool has been discussed by some supporters. Between the memes, the mocked up pictures, and the mockery, I believe he deserves better. All Liverpool managers do (whether the next one ends up being Ancelotti, Klopp or, most likely, Monk or Howe), as it’s the toughest job in top-level football management, and he’s given three years of his life to the cause – even if ultimately it looks like it’ll be trophy-less and personally damaging to his career.

It’s one thing to criticise a tactical decision or a signing, or to poke fun at the numbers of times he says “outstanding”, but quite another to be so vitriolic in assessing the manager. There’s banter, which can be a great laugh and well-intentioned, and then there’s being snide. He hasn’t failed through spite, or lack of effort.

The barometer has moved too much in the snide direction, and I find it all quite unsavoury. Rodgers clearly isn’t doing well at the moment, but he’s never come out to criticise the fans a la Hodgson, and I don’t think he needs to be lambasted as “fraud”, “small time Charlie”, “clueless” amongst the many other knee-jerk reactions I’ve read. If he goes, let him go with a bit of dignity and a show of support. “You’ll Never Walk Alone” should continue to mean something when supporting the team, but right now it seems that the knife is being plunged into Rodgers.

Let’s have this right: he did a brilliant job in 2013/14 – better than anyone reasonably could have predicted. It was 38 games and he managed expectations very well. To claim this was all down to one player not only diminishes the manager, it diminishes the contributions of the rest of the team. It diminishes the season. One great season is not enough, clearly, and Rodgers hasn’t been able to draw on the emotional attachment of an Istanbul or a league title. He hasn’t got that in the “goodwill bank.”

SOUTHAMPTON, ENGLAND - Saturday, March 1, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers salutes the travelling supporters as his side beat Southampton 3-0 during the Premiership match at St Mary's Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

When people look at Rodgers, the pain of what nearly was is linked with the team’s subsequent stagnation. It’s a double whammy and, to compound matters, he doesn’t have the track record in terms of trophies or objective transfer success (the real “credit in the bank”) to fall back on, the way Rafa, Kenny, Klopp or Mourinho would. He nearly did it two seasons ago, but that’s not enough of an attachment.

Obviously, having a footballing genius like Luis Suarez in your team is a tremendous advantage. The same could be said of having Ronaldo, Aguero, Hazard and Drogba in your team in years gone by. Yet, even despite other managers having players like that in their squad, their achievements were not or have not been diminished because of this.

We all accept that, no matter how talented a manager is, it’s a very competitive industry at the moment. Generally, you need to have a relaxed attitude to spending and a comparatively high net spend. I think FSG need to be realistic too – they’ve spent a lot, recouped a lot, made some good progress at the club, but have they given enough of a platform to ANY manager to go and win the league?

Mourinho and Ancelotti have spent a lot more than Rodgers ever has, inherited strong teams at some free-spending clubs, but no-one would fairly claim they were “lucky” managers simply because they effectively managed some great players. That’s what Rodgers did in 2013/13 – he effectively managed the season and got the best out of the team and a great striker (even though he wasn’t “lucky” in the end). Isn’t that what great football management is about?

The truth is, there are mitigating circumstances, but Rodgers hasn’t managed the loss of Suarez, identifying his replacement or the long-term absence of Sturridge as well as maybe he could have done. We can only speculate as to whether another manager, inheriting the same circumstances, could have done much better last season. Could Ronaldo or Messi be replaced at their respective clubs? It’s never an exact science.

I do feel that, as the pressure mounts, with the stress seeming to be clouding his judgement, as opposed to bolstering it, it might be best for all concerned for Rodgers to be replaced sooner rather than later. He looks defeated. It would take a dramatic upturn in fortune – not just in results, but in keeping key players off the treatment table – to weather the storm and dramatically reverse what seems to be a depressingly familiar outcome. It’s a stretch.

BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND - Saturday, January 25, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers during a post-match press conference following his side's 2-0 victory over Bournemouth during the FA Cup 4th Round match at Dean Court. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

So I just want to say thank you to Brendan Rodgers. I don’t want to put him down or slight him. Thanks to him for making US dream again, even if it all seems a bit nightmarish at the moment. Thanks to him and his team of 2013/14 for making us forget all the bullshit that goes with being a football fan. Thanks to him for creating an exceptional team, playing an amazing brand of attacking football, and for bringing the club so close to the Promised Land.

He’s given it his best shot. I’m sorry that, ultimately, it doesn’t seem as though it’ll work out. I’m sorry that, despite getting within touching distance of the title, we didn’t quite get there. It was a cruel way to lose out. That team deserved better, and the fans deserved better.

Even though it does seem like the end is looming for Rodgers, with increasing media attention directed to his tenure (a sure sign they smell blood), it’s a chance for everyone who cares about the club to take stock. Some fans, in the emotion of defeat, need to support better or support differently, and mostly need to support in times of doubt and when things don’t do so well.

Instead of blaming, analyse. Instead of the getting embroiled in the tribal nature of “us vs them” and arguing with other Liverpool fans, listen. Being hostile is not my own way, but I don’t think I’m better for not doing that. It’s a different way of approaching things, but it serves me better and I think it’s generally a better way to behave.

This is also a time for the owners to acknowledge those fans with well-articulated criticisms and work with them to make a redeveloped Anfield the loud and intimidating atmosphere it can and ought to be. There are causes for concern off the pitch, of course, but success on the pitch can put that right: we’re not that complicated really. If anything, we’re very easily pleased.

Maybe a new manager will take charge and, if he’s more proven, that’ll make a positive impact on the fanbase, galvanise the team, buy him some time, whilst improving the overall mood and the quality of player the club can attract. Maybe it could be that simple; we’ve seen it before. Maybe this change won’t have the intended turnaround effect – 25 years of evidence suggests it’s not all down to the manager, or the owners, but a series of circumstances that just have to go in your favour (a bit of luck, really). That little bit of luck has eluded Liverpool in the League for 25 years.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Sunday, March 16, 2014: Liverpool supporters' banner 'Make Us Dream' before the Premiership match against Manchester United at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Whether it’s Rodgers or the next manager, he’ll need to become an absolute miracle worker: not only will he have to say the rights things at the right time to increase the morale, be perfect tactically, be adored by every player, live like a monk, and win the League (or crack the top 4 every season), he’ll also need to do it with a relatively low net spend.

So, yes, the fans should know that the miracle worker isn’t there (in the hot seat now or perhaps in the very near future), and therefore there will still be difficult challenges at Liverpool for even “top, top managers” to overcome. FSG should know that their model (well-intentioned though it is) really needs to be modified in the current climate of relaxed “Financial Fair Play.”

A different approach is nice, but it’s not making a top 4 finish any more likely and the title seems to be a pipe dream. There doesn’t seem to be a shortcut to winning this league – other than spending like a Sheikh. If the club’s owners really do want enduring and measurable success in this league, it will come at a great cost and some more risks. Whether they have the will and, more importantly, the funds to make that dream more of a possibility means that the next manager is hampered before he even sets out foot through the door.

Do you agree with Paul? Let us know in the comments below.

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Liverpool return to Premier league action at Anfield on Saturday when they take on Aston Villa in a game of huge importance for Brendan Rodgers. We preview the clash and take a look at how the Reds could line up for the game.

LONDON, ENGLAND - Sunday, April 19, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers and Aston Villa's manager Tim Sherwood during the FA Cup Semi-Final match at Wembley Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

LIVERPOOL vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26th September 2015 (3pm)
Premier League

After a dreadful League Cup performance and result in midweek, Brendan Rodgers and his struggling Reds host Tim Sherwood’s Villa for their third game in a week at Anfield.

Liverpool have won neither of the previous two clashes in L4 thus far, drawing with Norwich and suffering an embarrassing night against League Two Carlisle United last time out, and with pressure on Rodgers now at an all-time high, nothing but a win will do for the under-fire Northern Irishman in what is reported to be the first of three games he has to save his job.

It is now a woeful six games without a win in all competitions (penalty shoot-out’s aside) for Rodgers’ side and time is ticking against the Liverpool boss who must begin the start of a turnaround with immediate effect on Saturday, against a side unbeaten at Anfield since 2010 and who haven’t won in the league since the opening weekend of the season.

Rodgers is yet to register a win in a home fixture over the Villains, who have won on two of their last three visits to L4, and at a time when he is fighting for his job, the Ulsterman simply cannot afford for a similar outcome to materialise with a negative result doing nothing but increasing the likelihood of a departure in the very near future.

Team News

  • Lovren, Benteke, Firmino, Henderson all ruled out
  • Sturridge expected to start
  • Lallana or Ings appears the main question

Injuries are beginning to pile up for Rodgers, who has lost Dejan Lovren for two months with ankle ligament damage and Roberto Firmino who may have cracked a bone in his back for a number of weeks.

The duo’s absence adds to that of Jon Flanagan, the much-missed Jordan Henderson, and Christian Benteke – who will miss the chance for a reunion against his old club with a hamstring problem which he is expected to be out for two-to-three weeks with.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 12, 2015: Liverpool's Christian Benteke celebrates scoring the first goal against Manchester United during the Premier League match at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

The squad available to Rodgers is certainly lighter following the loss of four senior players in quick succession, but the Ulsterman could bring Joe Allen back into the Premier League fold after a tidy first game on return from injury in midweek.

Mamadou Sakho is likely to return to the starting side after sitting out the League Cup clash on Wednesday, with Lucas Leiva too likely to come back into his defensive midfield role, while Philippe Coutinho is set to resume his attacking midfield duties after being benched against the Cumbrians.

The Liverpool boss has confirmed Daniel Sturridge will return to the side after being rested in midweek, but Rodgers faces the decision of whether the 25-year-old leads the line with a supporting cast of Coutinho and Adam Lallana, or partners the impressive Danny Ings up front.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge in action during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Liverpool’s Starting XI

Having reverted to the shape for the last three consecutive games, Rodgers looks set once again to line his side up with a three man defensive line at Anfield, as he recalls some key players to the team.

But Rodgers has a decision to make over the set-up of his attack with goals of paramount importance as he desperately searches for a win, with the choice of playing a two man attacking midfield and one striker, or a one man attacking midfield in support of two strikers.

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Friday, July 24, 2015: Liverpool's Adam Lallana in action against a Malaysia XI during a friendly match at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium on day twelve of the club's preseason tour. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

With Ings in form and Sturridge set to return, the latter of those two options looks more likely, allowing for Coutinho to play in support of the strike-duo.

The rest of the side certainly picks itself in most positions.

Despite his shoot-out heroics, Adam Bogdan will drop back to the bench for Simon Mignolet, while Sakho looks nailed on to come back in to play alongside Emre Can and Martin Skrtel in defence.

With Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno the certain picks at wing-back again, Vice-captain James Milner is likely to be partnered by Lucas in central midfield, with the experienced duo operating behind the three man attack of Coutinho, Ings and Sturridge.

The changes of personnel to the team would see Liverpool line up looking like this on Saturday afternoon:

Villa 3-4-1-2

While finishing and ruthlessness in front of goal is unquestionably a problem, so too remains creating clear cut chances for the Reds’ front-men to finish.

With that in mind and Liverpool’s main striker back, Rodgers could decide to opt for extra creativity to ensure Sturridge is provided with the chances to finish off, by keeping Lallana in the starting XI alongside Coutinho in attacking midfield.

That would see a slight switch of system with two ‘technicians’ behind Sturridge and with the rest of the side keeping the same look, Liverpool’s XI could look like this come 3pm kick-off time.

Villa 3-4-2-1

Rodgers spoke pre-match of his desire to remain as long-term manager at Anfield – the only way he will make that happen is by winning games quickly and consistently. Saturday simply must be the first.

SELECT YOUR XI:

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Predicted Liverpool lineup vs Aston Villa: Ings and Sturridge to lead Reds attack

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Liverpool return to Premier league action at Anfield on Saturday when they take on Aston Villa in a game of huge importance for Brendan Rodgers. We preview the clash and take a look at how the Reds could line up for the game.

LONDON, ENGLAND - Sunday, April 19, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers and Aston Villa's manager Tim Sherwood during the FA Cup Semi-Final match at Wembley Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

LIVERPOOL vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26th September 2015 (3pm)
Premier League

After a dreadful League Cup performance and result in midweek, Brendan Rodgers and his struggling Reds host Tim Sherwood’s Villa for their third game in a week at Anfield.

Liverpool have won neither of the previous two clashes in L4 thus far, drawing with Norwich and suffering an embarrassing night against League Two Carlisle United last time out, and with pressure on Rodgers now at an all-time high, nothing but a win will do for the under-fire Northern Irishman in what is reported to be the first of three games he has to save his job.

It is now a woeful six games without a win in all competitions (penalty shoot-out’s aside) for Rodgers’ side and time is ticking against the Liverpool boss who must begin the start of a turnaround with immediate effect on Saturday, against a side unbeaten at Anfield since 2010 and who haven’t won in the league since the opening weekend of the season.

Rodgers is yet to register a win in a home fixture over the Villains, who have won on two of their last three visits to L4, and at a time when he is fighting for his job, the Ulsterman simply cannot afford for a similar outcome to materialise with a negative result doing nothing but increasing the likelihood of a departure in the very near future.

Team News

  • Lovren, Benteke, Firmino, Henderson all ruled out
  • Sturridge expected to start
  • Lallana or Ings appears the main question

Injuries are beginning to pile up for Rodgers, who has lost Dejan Lovren for two months with ankle ligament damage and Roberto Firmino who may have cracked a bone in his back for a number of weeks.

The duo’s absence adds to that of Jon Flanagan, the much-missed Jordan Henderson, and Christian Benteke – who will miss the chance for a reunion against his old club with a hamstring problem which he is expected to be out for two-to-three weeks with.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 12, 2015: Liverpool's Christian Benteke celebrates scoring the first goal against Manchester United during the Premier League match at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

The squad available to Rodgers is certainly lighter following the loss of four senior players in quick succession, but the Ulsterman could bring Joe Allen back into the Premier League fold after a tidy first game on return from injury in midweek.

Mamadou Sakho is likely to return to the starting side after sitting out the League Cup clash on Wednesday, with Lucas Leiva too likely to come back into his defensive midfield role, while Philippe Coutinho is set to resume his attacking midfield duties after being benched against the Cumbrians.

The Liverpool boss has confirmed Daniel Sturridge will return to the side after being rested in midweek, but Rodgers faces the decision of whether the 25-year-old leads the line with a supporting cast of Coutinho and Adam Lallana, or partners the impressive Danny Ings up front.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge in action during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Liverpool’s Starting XI

Having reverted to the shape for the last three consecutive games, Rodgers looks set once again to line his side up with a three man defensive line at Anfield, as he recalls some key players to the team.

But Rodgers has a decision to make over the set-up of his attack with goals of paramount importance as he desperately searches for a win, with the choice of playing a two man attacking midfield and one striker, or a one man attacking midfield in support of two strikers.

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Friday, July 24, 2015: Liverpool's Adam Lallana in action against a Malaysia XI during a friendly match at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium on day twelve of the club's preseason tour. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

With Ings in form and Sturridge set to return, the latter of those two options looks more likely, allowing for Coutinho to play in support of the strike-duo.

The rest of the side certainly picks itself in most positions.

Despite his shoot-out heroics, Adam Bogdan will drop back to the bench for Simon Mignolet, while Sakho looks nailed on to come back in to play alongside Emre Can and Martin Skrtel in defence.

With Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno the certain picks at wing-back again, Vice-captain James Milner is likely to be partnered by Lucas in central midfield, with the experienced duo operating behind the three man attack of Coutinho, Ings and Sturridge.

The changes of personnel to the team would see Liverpool line up looking like this on Saturday afternoon:

Villa 3-4-1-2

While finishing and ruthlessness in front of goal is unquestionably a problem, so too remains creating clear cut chances for the Reds’ front-men to finish.

With that in mind and Liverpool’s main striker back, Rodgers could decide to opt for extra creativity to ensure Sturridge is provided with the chances to finish off, by keeping Lallana in the starting XI alongside Coutinho in attacking midfield.

That would see a slight switch of system with two ‘technicians’ behind Sturridge and with the rest of the side keeping the same look, Liverpool’s XI could look like this come 3pm kick-off time.

Villa 3-4-2-1

Rodgers spoke pre-match of his desire to remain as long-term manager at Anfield – the only way he will make that happen is by winning games quickly and consistently. Saturday simply must be the first.

SELECT YOUR XI:

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With so much discussion over Brendan Rodgers‘ Liverpool future and his three years in charge of the club, statistician Andrew Beasley has compiled this table showing Rodgers’ complete record as LFC manager.

brendan-rodgers-complete-liverpool-record

Graphic by @basstunedtored.

Among the standout things in the graphic, we can see:

  • Rodgers has managed 5 wins from 25 attempts against the top 4 sides of City, Arsenal, Chelsea and United
  • Rodgers’ best record is against the 5 teams no longer in the Premier League
  • Hull City and Crystal Palace have been Rodgers’ bogey sides, beating each just once
  • Rodgers has never won against Chelsea
  • Rodgers has enjoyed success against Spurs – beating them in 5 out of 6 fixtures

Overall, you could argue that the image shows how Rodgers has been able to defeat the mid-to-lower sides, but consistently struggled to outmanoeuvre the top teams.

For more statistical analysis from Andrew, check out his blog.

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa Previews

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Graphic: Brendan Rodgers’ Complete Liverpool Record

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With so much discussion over Brendan Rodgers‘ Liverpool future and his three years in charge of the club, statistician Andrew Beasley has compiled this table showing Rodgers’ complete record as LFC manager.

brendan-rodgers-complete-liverpool-record

Graphic by @basstunedtored.

Among the standout things in the graphic, we can see:

  • Rodgers has managed 5 wins from 25 attempts against the top 4 sides of City, Arsenal, Chelsea and United
  • Rodgers’ best record is against the 5 teams no longer in the Premier League
  • Hull City and Crystal Palace have been Rodgers’ bogey sides, beating each just once
  • Rodgers has never won against Chelsea
  • Rodgers has enjoyed success against Spurs – beating them in 5 out of 6 fixtures

Overall, you could argue that the image shows how Rodgers has been able to defeat the mid-to-lower sides, but consistently struggled to outmanoeuvre the top teams.

For more statistical analysis from Andrew, check out his blog.

Liverpool vs. Aston Villa Previews

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There’s a horrible sense of inevitability about Brendan Rodgers’ departure, writes Paul McCabe

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers taking notes during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

We’ve been here before and it looks as though the end is drawing near. The signs are there: the fanbase turning against the manager, most of the team underperforming and results continuing to embarrass and underwhelm. Rodgers looks and sounds like a resigned man. Desperation and uncertainty has crept into the team.

Instead of the backbiting, recriminations and bitterness, however, this is the ideal time for Liverpool to move forward as a club, to learn from perceived mistakes and build properly for the future. Even if it doesn’t work out for Rodgers, the owners can put steps in place to build for a much brighter future.

Rodgers’ position is not untenable, but recent results, performances and unrest have all served to make it extremely precarious. In truth, top-flight management is, by its very nature, precarious. Fans are customers and, as that role has shifted and as it costs more now to support Liverpool than it ever has (a small fortune for those fans who travel home, away and overseas to support the Reds), this has fostered a great deal of impatience in many quarters.

It’s certainly not a cheap hobby and, with Liverpool, it’s come bundled with a lot of disappointment. If you’re a customer, you expect to be delivered a good product. On the whole, this season has not delivered much in the way of entertainment and joy. The “product” has so far fallen below the standards the owners have invested in it. At the moment, the product (or the “project”, to use modern football parlance) is not working.

It seems unlikely that Rodgers will be able to claw back support. It’s a slippery slope from here and, as discontent escalates to uncomfortable levels, he’s very much living on the volcano – that’s also the name of a recently-released book, where he contributed his views on the intense pressures of modern football management.

It hasn’t been an easy few years for Rodgers, as he acknowledged in Michael Calvin’s book. He’s lost both of his parents, his marriage ended and his son was involved in a high-profile legal case. That’s genuine stress, genuine trauma and it surely takes a genuine toll. We sometimes forget that, on that pitch and in the dugout, human beings are dealing with real-life problems and it’s not always easy to compartmentalise these.

That’s not an excuse for Rodgers or a suggestion that things may be working out differently if those issues weren’t in the background, but it offers a context to the situation in which he’s been working. He’s human and he’s clearly made mistakes, yet there are sometimes other issues bubbling under the surface.

STOKE-ON-TRENT, ENGLAND - Sunday, May 24, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers in a post-match press conference after his side's 6-1 defeat to Stoke City during the Premier League match at the Britannia Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

I’ve never met nor spoken with Brendan Rodgers, I can only get the sense of him from watching his interviews, reading his thoughts on football matters and hearing/reading what other people who’ve met him think of him. I get the sense that he’s a sensitive and self-aware sort of man who’s desperate to be a success in management. I understand that he can be guilty of double talk, hubris, of alienating certain players and exaggerating his team’s performance. We’ve heard all the stories, and people interpret these differently depending on their view of the manager. Like all of us, he’ll divide opinions, but crucially: he loves Liverpool Football Club and wants to be loved back.

Unfortunately, he’s not getting a lot of love at the moment and the dislike of the manager is intense in some quarters. It’s at a level that I feel is undeserved and unnecessarily vicious and personal. I don’t think it helps the team, the manager or the fans who engage in this. I understand that there’s a market for it and it can be a coping strategy, yet it’s not helpful in the long run. Maybe Rodgers isn’t up to the job, or has made mistakes, or has become swamped, or rubbed too many people up the wrong way when things after results started to go well. Few of us know for sure.

This doesn’t apply to everyone, but there’s a difference between blind loyalty and respect. I respect what Rodgers has tried to do at the club and support him and the team. You can be constructive, of course, but outright ridiculing a Liverpool manager who’s given his all is harsh. I think we’d all like to see a proven world class manager leading the club, but that’s neither a guarantee of success nor a reason to denigrate the incumbent manager.

The sentiment has turned very nasty on Rodgers – one of the perceptions being that he’s out of his depth, another being that he believed his own hype too much after the 2013/14 season. There are other insinuations, of course, and I bristle at the way the manager of Liverpool has been discussed by some supporters. Between the memes, the mocked up pictures, and the mockery, I believe he deserves better. All Liverpool managers do (whether the next one ends up being Ancelotti, Klopp or, most likely, Monk or Howe), as it’s the toughest job in top-level football management, and he’s given three years of his life to the cause – even if ultimately it looks like it’ll be trophy-less and personally damaging to his career.

It’s one thing to criticise a tactical decision or a signing, or to poke fun at the numbers of times he says “outstanding”, but quite another to be so vitriolic in assessing the manager. There’s banter, which can be a great laugh and well-intentioned, and then there’s being snide. He hasn’t failed through spite, or lack of effort.

The barometer has moved too much in the snide direction, and I find it all quite unsavoury. Rodgers clearly isn’t doing well at the moment, but he’s never come out to criticise the fans a la Hodgson, and I don’t think he needs to be lambasted as “fraud”, “small time Charlie”, “clueless” amongst the many other knee-jerk reactions I’ve read. If he goes, let him go with a bit of dignity and a show of support. “You’ll Never Walk Alone” should continue to mean something when supporting the team, but right now it seems that the knife is being plunged into Rodgers.

Let’s have this right: he did a brilliant job in 2013/14 – better than anyone reasonably could have predicted. It was 38 games and he managed expectations very well. To claim this was all down to one player not only diminishes the manager, it diminishes the contributions of the rest of the team. It diminishes the season. One great season is not enough, clearly, and Rodgers hasn’t been able to draw on the emotional attachment of an Istanbul or a league title. He hasn’t got that in the “goodwill bank.”

SOUTHAMPTON, ENGLAND - Saturday, March 1, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers salutes the travelling supporters as his side beat Southampton 3-0 during the Premiership match at St Mary's Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

When people look at Rodgers, the pain of what nearly was is linked with the team’s subsequent stagnation. It’s a double whammy and, to compound matters, he doesn’t have the track record in terms of trophies or objective transfer success (the real “credit in the bank”) to fall back on, the way Rafa, Kenny, Klopp or Mourinho would. He nearly did it two seasons ago, but that’s not enough of an attachment.

Obviously, having a footballing genius like Luis Suarez in your team is a tremendous advantage. The same could be said of having Ronaldo, Aguero, Hazard and Drogba in your team in years gone by. Yet, even despite other managers having players like that in their squad, their achievements were not or have not been diminished because of this.

We all accept that, no matter how talented a manager is, it’s a very competitive industry at the moment. Generally, you need to have a relaxed attitude to spending and a comparatively high net spend. I think FSG need to be realistic too – they’ve spent a lot, recouped a lot, made some good progress at the club, but have they given enough of a platform to ANY manager to go and win the league?

Mourinho and Ancelotti have spent a lot more than Rodgers ever has, inherited strong teams at some free-spending clubs, but no-one would fairly claim they were “lucky” managers simply because they effectively managed some great players. That’s what Rodgers did in 2013/13 – he effectively managed the season and got the best out of the team and a great striker (even though he wasn’t “lucky” in the end). Isn’t that what great football management is about?

The truth is, there are mitigating circumstances, but Rodgers hasn’t managed the loss of Suarez, identifying his replacement or the long-term absence of Sturridge as well as maybe he could have done. We can only speculate as to whether another manager, inheriting the same circumstances, could have done much better last season. Could Ronaldo or Messi be replaced at their respective clubs? It’s never an exact science.

I do feel that, as the pressure mounts, with the stress seeming to be clouding his judgement, as opposed to bolstering it, it might be best for all concerned for Rodgers to be replaced sooner rather than later. He looks defeated. It would take a dramatic upturn in fortune – not just in results, but in keeping key players off the treatment table – to weather the storm and dramatically reverse what seems to be a depressingly familiar outcome. It’s a stretch.

BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND - Saturday, January 25, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers during a post-match press conference following his side's 2-0 victory over Bournemouth during the FA Cup 4th Round match at Dean Court. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

So I just want to say thank you to Brendan Rodgers. I don’t want to put him down or slight him. Thanks to him for making US dream again, even if it all seems a bit nightmarish at the moment. Thanks to him and his team of 2013/14 for making us forget all the bullshit that goes with being a football fan. Thanks to him for creating an exceptional team, playing an amazing brand of attacking football, and for bringing the club so close to the Promised Land.

He’s given it his best shot. I’m sorry that, ultimately, it doesn’t seem as though it’ll work out. I’m sorry that, despite getting within touching distance of the title, we didn’t quite get there. It was a cruel way to lose out. That team deserved better, and the fans deserved better.

Even though it does seem like the end is looming for Rodgers, with increasing media attention directed to his tenure (a sure sign they smell blood), it’s a chance for everyone who cares about the club to take stock. Some fans, in the emotion of defeat, need to support better or support differently, and mostly need to support in times of doubt and when things don’t do so well.

Instead of blaming, analyse. Instead of the getting embroiled in the tribal nature of “us vs them” and arguing with other Liverpool fans, listen. Being hostile is not my own way, but I don’t think I’m better for not doing that. It’s a different way of approaching things, but it serves me better and I think it’s generally a better way to behave.

This is also a time for the owners to acknowledge those fans with well-articulated criticisms and work with them to make a redeveloped Anfield the loud and intimidating atmosphere it can and ought to be. There are causes for concern off the pitch, of course, but success on the pitch can put that right: we’re not that complicated really. If anything, we’re very easily pleased.

Maybe a new manager will take charge and, if he’s more proven, that’ll make a positive impact on the fanbase, galvanise the team, buy him some time, whilst improving the overall mood and the quality of player the club can attract. Maybe it could be that simple; we’ve seen it before. Maybe this change won’t have the intended turnaround effect – 25 years of evidence suggests it’s not all down to the manager, or the owners, but a series of circumstances that just have to go in your favour (a bit of luck, really). That little bit of luck has eluded Liverpool in the League for 25 years.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Sunday, March 16, 2014: Liverpool supporters' banner 'Make Us Dream' before the Premiership match against Manchester United at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Whether it’s Rodgers or the next manager, he’ll need to become an absolute miracle worker: not only will he have to say the rights things at the right time to increase the morale, be perfect tactically, be adored by every player, live like a monk, and win the League (or crack the top 4 every season), he’ll also need to do it with a relatively low net spend.

So, yes, the fans should know that the miracle worker isn’t there (in the hot seat now or perhaps in the very near future), and therefore there will still be difficult challenges at Liverpool for even “top, top managers” to overcome. FSG should know that their model (well-intentioned though it is) really needs to be modified in the current climate of relaxed “Financial Fair Play.”

A different approach is nice, but it’s not making a top 4 finish any more likely and the title seems to be a pipe dream. There doesn’t seem to be a shortcut to winning this league – other than spending like a Sheikh. If the club’s owners really do want enduring and measurable success in this league, it will come at a great cost and some more risks. Whether they have the will and, more importantly, the funds to make that dream more of a possibility means that the next manager is hampered before he even sets out foot through the door.

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Rodgers’ inevitable departure will leave Liverpool searching for a miracle worker

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There’s a horrible sense of inevitability about Brendan Rodgers’ departure, writes Paul McCabe

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers taking notes during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

We’ve been here before and it looks as though the end is drawing near. The signs are there: the fanbase turning against the manager, most of the team underperforming and results continuing to embarrass and underwhelm. Rodgers looks and sounds like a resigned man. Desperation and uncertainty has crept into the team.

Instead of the backbiting, recriminations and bitterness, however, this is the ideal time for Liverpool to move forward as a club, to learn from perceived mistakes and build properly for the future. Even if it doesn’t work out for Rodgers, the owners can put steps in place to build for a much brighter future.

Rodgers’ position is not untenable, but recent results, performances and unrest have all served to make it extremely precarious. In truth, top-flight management is, by its very nature, precarious. Fans are customers and, as that role has shifted and as it costs more now to support Liverpool than it ever has (a small fortune for those fans who travel home, away and overseas to support the Reds), this has fostered a great deal of impatience in many quarters.

It’s certainly not a cheap hobby and, with Liverpool, it’s come bundled with a lot of disappointment. If you’re a customer, you expect to be delivered a good product. On the whole, this season has not delivered much in the way of entertainment and joy. The “product” has so far fallen below the standards the owners have invested in it. At the moment, the product (or the “project”, to use modern football parlance) is not working.

It seems unlikely that Rodgers will be able to claw back support. It’s a slippery slope from here and, as discontent escalates to uncomfortable levels, he’s very much living on the volcano – that’s also the name of a recently-released book, where he contributed his views on the intense pressures of modern football management.

It hasn’t been an easy few years for Rodgers, as he acknowledged in Michael Calvin’s book. He’s lost both of his parents, his marriage ended and his son was involved in a high-profile legal case. That’s genuine stress, genuine trauma and it surely takes a genuine toll. We sometimes forget that, on that pitch and in the dugout, human beings are dealing with real-life problems and it’s not always easy to compartmentalise these.

That’s not an excuse for Rodgers or a suggestion that things may be working out differently if those issues weren’t in the background, but it offers a context to the situation in which he’s been working. He’s human and he’s clearly made mistakes, yet there are sometimes other issues bubbling under the surface.

STOKE-ON-TRENT, ENGLAND - Sunday, May 24, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers in a post-match press conference after his side's 6-1 defeat to Stoke City during the Premier League match at the Britannia Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

I’ve never met nor spoken with Brendan Rodgers, I can only get the sense of him from watching his interviews, reading his thoughts on football matters and hearing/reading what other people who’ve met him think of him. I get the sense that he’s a sensitive and self-aware sort of man who’s desperate to be a success in management. I understand that he can be guilty of double talk, hubris, of alienating certain players and exaggerating his team’s performance. We’ve heard all the stories, and people interpret these differently depending on their view of the manager. Like all of us, he’ll divide opinions, but crucially: he loves Liverpool Football Club and wants to be loved back.

Unfortunately, he’s not getting a lot of love at the moment and the dislike of the manager is intense in some quarters. It’s at a level that I feel is undeserved and unnecessarily vicious and personal. I don’t think it helps the team, the manager or the fans who engage in this. I understand that there’s a market for it and it can be a coping strategy, yet it’s not helpful in the long run. Maybe Rodgers isn’t up to the job, or has made mistakes, or has become swamped, or rubbed too many people up the wrong way when things after results started to go well. Few of us know for sure.

This doesn’t apply to everyone, but there’s a difference between blind loyalty and respect. I respect what Rodgers has tried to do at the club and support him and the team. You can be constructive, of course, but outright ridiculing a Liverpool manager who’s given his all is harsh. I think we’d all like to see a proven world class manager leading the club, but that’s neither a guarantee of success nor a reason to denigrate the incumbent manager.

The sentiment has turned very nasty on Rodgers – one of the perceptions being that he’s out of his depth, another being that he believed his own hype too much after the 2013/14 season. There are other insinuations, of course, and I bristle at the way the manager of Liverpool has been discussed by some supporters. Between the memes, the mocked up pictures, and the mockery, I believe he deserves better. All Liverpool managers do (whether the next one ends up being Ancelotti, Klopp or, most likely, Monk or Howe), as it’s the toughest job in top-level football management, and he’s given three years of his life to the cause – even if ultimately it looks like it’ll be trophy-less and personally damaging to his career.

It’s one thing to criticise a tactical decision or a signing, or to poke fun at the numbers of times he says “outstanding”, but quite another to be so vitriolic in assessing the manager. There’s banter, which can be a great laugh and well-intentioned, and then there’s being snide. He hasn’t failed through spite, or lack of effort.

The barometer has moved too much in the snide direction, and I find it all quite unsavoury. Rodgers clearly isn’t doing well at the moment, but he’s never come out to criticise the fans a la Hodgson, and I don’t think he needs to be lambasted as “fraud”, “small time Charlie”, “clueless” amongst the many other knee-jerk reactions I’ve read. If he goes, let him go with a bit of dignity and a show of support. “You’ll Never Walk Alone” should continue to mean something when supporting the team, but right now it seems that the knife is being plunged into Rodgers.

Let’s have this right: he did a brilliant job in 2013/14 – better than anyone reasonably could have predicted. It was 38 games and he managed expectations very well. To claim this was all down to one player not only diminishes the manager, it diminishes the contributions of the rest of the team. It diminishes the season. One great season is not enough, clearly, and Rodgers hasn’t been able to draw on the emotional attachment of an Istanbul or a league title. He hasn’t got that in the “goodwill bank.”

SOUTHAMPTON, ENGLAND - Saturday, March 1, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers salutes the travelling supporters as his side beat Southampton 3-0 during the Premiership match at St Mary's Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

When people look at Rodgers, the pain of what nearly was is linked with the team’s subsequent stagnation. It’s a double whammy and, to compound matters, he doesn’t have the track record in terms of trophies or objective transfer success (the real “credit in the bank”) to fall back on, the way Rafa, Kenny, Klopp or Mourinho would. He nearly did it two seasons ago, but that’s not enough of an attachment.

Obviously, having a footballing genius like Luis Suarez in your team is a tremendous advantage. The same could be said of having Ronaldo, Aguero, Hazard and Drogba in your team in years gone by. Yet, even despite other managers having players like that in their squad, their achievements were not or have not been diminished because of this.

We all accept that, no matter how talented a manager is, it’s a very competitive industry at the moment. Generally, you need to have a relaxed attitude to spending and a comparatively high net spend. I think FSG need to be realistic too – they’ve spent a lot, recouped a lot, made some good progress at the club, but have they given enough of a platform to ANY manager to go and win the league?

Mourinho and Ancelotti have spent a lot more than Rodgers ever has, inherited strong teams at some free-spending clubs, but no-one would fairly claim they were “lucky” managers simply because they effectively managed some great players. That’s what Rodgers did in 2013/13 – he effectively managed the season and got the best out of the team and a great striker (even though he wasn’t “lucky” in the end). Isn’t that what great football management is about?

The truth is, there are mitigating circumstances, but Rodgers hasn’t managed the loss of Suarez, identifying his replacement or the long-term absence of Sturridge as well as maybe he could have done. We can only speculate as to whether another manager, inheriting the same circumstances, could have done much better last season. Could Ronaldo or Messi be replaced at their respective clubs? It’s never an exact science.

I do feel that, as the pressure mounts, with the stress seeming to be clouding his judgement, as opposed to bolstering it, it might be best for all concerned for Rodgers to be replaced sooner rather than later. He looks defeated. It would take a dramatic upturn in fortune – not just in results, but in keeping key players off the treatment table – to weather the storm and dramatically reverse what seems to be a depressingly familiar outcome. It’s a stretch.

BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND - Saturday, January 25, 2014: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers during a post-match press conference following his side's 2-0 victory over Bournemouth during the FA Cup 4th Round match at Dean Court. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

So I just want to say thank you to Brendan Rodgers. I don’t want to put him down or slight him. Thanks to him for making US dream again, even if it all seems a bit nightmarish at the moment. Thanks to him and his team of 2013/14 for making us forget all the bullshit that goes with being a football fan. Thanks to him for creating an exceptional team, playing an amazing brand of attacking football, and for bringing the club so close to the Promised Land.

He’s given it his best shot. I’m sorry that, ultimately, it doesn’t seem as though it’ll work out. I’m sorry that, despite getting within touching distance of the title, we didn’t quite get there. It was a cruel way to lose out. That team deserved better, and the fans deserved better.

Even though it does seem like the end is looming for Rodgers, with increasing media attention directed to his tenure (a sure sign they smell blood), it’s a chance for everyone who cares about the club to take stock. Some fans, in the emotion of defeat, need to support better or support differently, and mostly need to support in times of doubt and when things don’t do so well.

Instead of blaming, analyse. Instead of the getting embroiled in the tribal nature of “us vs them” and arguing with other Liverpool fans, listen. Being hostile is not my own way, but I don’t think I’m better for not doing that. It’s a different way of approaching things, but it serves me better and I think it’s generally a better way to behave.

This is also a time for the owners to acknowledge those fans with well-articulated criticisms and work with them to make a redeveloped Anfield the loud and intimidating atmosphere it can and ought to be. There are causes for concern off the pitch, of course, but success on the pitch can put that right: we’re not that complicated really. If anything, we’re very easily pleased.

Maybe a new manager will take charge and, if he’s more proven, that’ll make a positive impact on the fanbase, galvanise the team, buy him some time, whilst improving the overall mood and the quality of player the club can attract. Maybe it could be that simple; we’ve seen it before. Maybe this change won’t have the intended turnaround effect – 25 years of evidence suggests it’s not all down to the manager, or the owners, but a series of circumstances that just have to go in your favour (a bit of luck, really). That little bit of luck has eluded Liverpool in the League for 25 years.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Sunday, March 16, 2014: Liverpool supporters' banner 'Make Us Dream' before the Premiership match against Manchester United at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Whether it’s Rodgers or the next manager, he’ll need to become an absolute miracle worker: not only will he have to say the rights things at the right time to increase the morale, be perfect tactically, be adored by every player, live like a monk, and win the League (or crack the top 4 every season), he’ll also need to do it with a relatively low net spend.

So, yes, the fans should know that the miracle worker isn’t there (in the hot seat now or perhaps in the very near future), and therefore there will still be difficult challenges at Liverpool for even “top, top managers” to overcome. FSG should know that their model (well-intentioned though it is) really needs to be modified in the current climate of relaxed “Financial Fair Play.”

A different approach is nice, but it’s not making a top 4 finish any more likely and the title seems to be a pipe dream. There doesn’t seem to be a shortcut to winning this league – other than spending like a Sheikh. If the club’s owners really do want enduring and measurable success in this league, it will come at a great cost and some more risks. Whether they have the will and, more importantly, the funds to make that dream more of a possibility means that the next manager is hampered before he even sets out foot through the door.

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Liverpool return to Premier league action at Anfield on Saturday when they take on Aston Villa in a game of huge importance for Brendan Rodgers. We preview the clash and take a look at how the Reds could line up for the game.

LONDON, ENGLAND - Sunday, April 19, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers and Aston Villa's manager Tim Sherwood during the FA Cup Semi-Final match at Wembley Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

LIVERPOOL vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26th September 2015 (3pm)
Premier League

After a dreadful League Cup performance and result in midweek, Brendan Rodgers and his struggling Reds host Tim Sherwood’s Villa for their third game in a week at Anfield.

Liverpool have won neither of the previous two clashes in L4 thus far, drawing with Norwich and suffering an embarrassing night against League Two Carlisle United last time out, and with pressure on Rodgers now at an all-time high, nothing but a win will do for the under-fire Northern Irishman in what is reported to be the first of three games he has to save his job.

It is now a woeful six games without a win in all competitions (penalty shoot-out’s aside) for Rodgers’ side and time is ticking against the Liverpool boss who must begin the start of a turnaround with immediate effect on Saturday, against a side unbeaten at Anfield since 2010 and who haven’t won in the league since the opening weekend of the season.

Rodgers is yet to register a win in a home fixture over the Villains, who have won on two of their last three visits to L4, and at a time when he is fighting for his job, the Ulsterman simply cannot afford for a similar outcome to materialise with a negative result doing nothing but increasing the likelihood of a departure in the very near future.

Team News

  • Lovren, Benteke, Firmino, Henderson all ruled out
  • Sturridge expected to start
  • Lallana or Ings appears the main question

Injuries are beginning to pile up for Rodgers, who has lost Dejan Lovren for two months with ankle ligament damage and Roberto Firmino who may have cracked a bone in his back for a number of weeks.

The duo’s absence adds to that of Jon Flanagan, the much-missed Jordan Henderson, and Christian Benteke – who will miss the chance for a reunion against his old club with a hamstring problem which he is expected to be out for two-to-three weeks with.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 12, 2015: Liverpool's Christian Benteke celebrates scoring the first goal against Manchester United during the Premier League match at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

The squad available to Rodgers is certainly lighter following the loss of four senior players in quick succession, but the Ulsterman could bring Joe Allen back into the Premier League fold after a tidy first game on return from injury in midweek.

Mamadou Sakho is likely to return to the starting side after sitting out the League Cup clash on Wednesday, with Lucas Leiva too likely to come back into his defensive midfield role, while Philippe Coutinho is set to resume his attacking midfield duties after being benched against the Cumbrians.

The Liverpool boss has confirmed Daniel Sturridge will return to the side after being rested in midweek, but Rodgers faces the decision of whether the 25-year-old leads the line with a supporting cast of Coutinho and Adam Lallana, or partners the impressive Danny Ings up front.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge in action during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Liverpool’s Starting XI

Having reverted to the shape for the last three consecutive games, Rodgers looks set once again to line his side up with a three man defensive line at Anfield, as he recalls some key players to the team.

But Rodgers has a decision to make over the set-up of his attack with goals of paramount importance as he desperately searches for a win, with the choice of playing a two man attacking midfield and one striker, or a one man attacking midfield in support of two strikers.

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Friday, July 24, 2015: Liverpool's Adam Lallana in action against a Malaysia XI during a friendly match at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium on day twelve of the club's preseason tour. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

With Ings in form and Sturridge set to return, the latter of those two options looks more likely, allowing for Coutinho to play in support of the strike-duo.

The rest of the side certainly picks itself in most positions.

Despite his shoot-out heroics, Adam Bogdan will drop back to the bench for Simon Mignolet, while Sakho looks nailed on to come back in to play alongside Emre Can and Martin Skrtel in defence.

With Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno the certain picks at wing-back again, Vice-captain James Milner is likely to be partnered by Lucas in central midfield, with the experienced duo operating behind the three man attack of Coutinho, Ings and Sturridge.

The changes of personnel to the team would see Liverpool line up looking like this on Saturday afternoon:

Villa 3-4-1-2

While finishing and ruthlessness in front of goal is unquestionably a problem, so too remains creating clear cut chances for the Reds’ front-men to finish.

With that in mind and Liverpool’s main striker back, Rodgers could decide to opt for extra creativity to ensure Sturridge is provided with the chances to finish off, by keeping Lallana in the starting XI alongside Coutinho in attacking midfield.

That would see a slight switch of system with two ‘technicians’ behind Sturridge and with the rest of the side keeping the same look, Liverpool’s XI could look like this come 3pm kick-off time.

Villa 3-4-2-1

Rodgers spoke pre-match of his desire to remain as long-term manager at Anfield – the only way he will make that happen is by winning games quickly and consistently. Saturday simply must be the first.

SELECT YOUR XI:

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Predicted Liverpool lineup vs Aston Villa: Ings and Sturridge to lead Reds attack

Unknown   at  01:26  No comments

Liverpool return to Premier league action at Anfield on Saturday when they take on Aston Villa in a game of huge importance for Brendan Rodgers. We preview the clash and take a look at how the Reds could line up for the game.

LONDON, ENGLAND - Sunday, April 19, 2015: Liverpool's manager Brendan Rodgers and Aston Villa's manager Tim Sherwood during the FA Cup Semi-Final match at Wembley Stadium. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

LIVERPOOL vs. Aston Villa
Saturday, 26th September 2015 (3pm)
Premier League

After a dreadful League Cup performance and result in midweek, Brendan Rodgers and his struggling Reds host Tim Sherwood’s Villa for their third game in a week at Anfield.

Liverpool have won neither of the previous two clashes in L4 thus far, drawing with Norwich and suffering an embarrassing night against League Two Carlisle United last time out, and with pressure on Rodgers now at an all-time high, nothing but a win will do for the under-fire Northern Irishman in what is reported to be the first of three games he has to save his job.

It is now a woeful six games without a win in all competitions (penalty shoot-out’s aside) for Rodgers’ side and time is ticking against the Liverpool boss who must begin the start of a turnaround with immediate effect on Saturday, against a side unbeaten at Anfield since 2010 and who haven’t won in the league since the opening weekend of the season.

Rodgers is yet to register a win in a home fixture over the Villains, who have won on two of their last three visits to L4, and at a time when he is fighting for his job, the Ulsterman simply cannot afford for a similar outcome to materialise with a negative result doing nothing but increasing the likelihood of a departure in the very near future.

Team News

  • Lovren, Benteke, Firmino, Henderson all ruled out
  • Sturridge expected to start
  • Lallana or Ings appears the main question

Injuries are beginning to pile up for Rodgers, who has lost Dejan Lovren for two months with ankle ligament damage and Roberto Firmino who may have cracked a bone in his back for a number of weeks.

The duo’s absence adds to that of Jon Flanagan, the much-missed Jordan Henderson, and Christian Benteke – who will miss the chance for a reunion against his old club with a hamstring problem which he is expected to be out for two-to-three weeks with.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - Saturday, September 12, 2015: Liverpool's Christian Benteke celebrates scoring the first goal against Manchester United during the Premier League match at Old Trafford. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

The squad available to Rodgers is certainly lighter following the loss of four senior players in quick succession, but the Ulsterman could bring Joe Allen back into the Premier League fold after a tidy first game on return from injury in midweek.

Mamadou Sakho is likely to return to the starting side after sitting out the League Cup clash on Wednesday, with Lucas Leiva too likely to come back into his defensive midfield role, while Philippe Coutinho is set to resume his attacking midfield duties after being benched against the Cumbrians.

The Liverpool boss has confirmed Daniel Sturridge will return to the side after being rested in midweek, but Rodgers faces the decision of whether the 25-year-old leads the line with a supporting cast of Coutinho and Adam Lallana, or partners the impressive Danny Ings up front.

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - Sunday, September 20, 2015: Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge in action during the Premier League match against Norwich City at Anfield. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

Liverpool’s Starting XI

Having reverted to the shape for the last three consecutive games, Rodgers looks set once again to line his side up with a three man defensive line at Anfield, as he recalls some key players to the team.

But Rodgers has a decision to make over the set-up of his attack with goals of paramount importance as he desperately searches for a win, with the choice of playing a two man attacking midfield and one striker, or a one man attacking midfield in support of two strikers.

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Friday, July 24, 2015: Liverpool's Adam Lallana in action against a Malaysia XI during a friendly match at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium on day twelve of the club's preseason tour. (Pic by David Rawcliffe/Propaganda)

With Ings in form and Sturridge set to return, the latter of those two options looks more likely, allowing for Coutinho to play in support of the strike-duo.

The rest of the side certainly picks itself in most positions.

Despite his shoot-out heroics, Adam Bogdan will drop back to the bench for Simon Mignolet, while Sakho looks nailed on to come back in to play alongside Emre Can and Martin Skrtel in defence.

With Nathaniel Clyne and Alberto Moreno the certain picks at wing-back again, Vice-captain James Milner is likely to be partnered by Lucas in central midfield, with the experienced duo operating behind the three man attack of Coutinho, Ings and Sturridge.

The changes of personnel to the team would see Liverpool line up looking like this on Saturday afternoon:

Villa 3-4-1-2

While finishing and ruthlessness in front of goal is unquestionably a problem, so too remains creating clear cut chances for the Reds’ front-men to finish.

With that in mind and Liverpool’s main striker back, Rodgers could decide to opt for extra creativity to ensure Sturridge is provided with the chances to finish off, by keeping Lallana in the starting XI alongside Coutinho in attacking midfield.

That would see a slight switch of system with two ‘technicians’ behind Sturridge and with the rest of the side keeping the same look, Liverpool’s XI could look like this come 3pm kick-off time.

Villa 3-4-2-1

Rodgers spoke pre-match of his desire to remain as long-term manager at Anfield – the only way he will make that happen is by winning games quickly and consistently. Saturday simply must be the first.

SELECT YOUR XI:

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