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Anfield Road (64 unread)

  • Kenny Dalglish leaves a rudderless Liverpool

    Posted: May 16, 2012, 7:12 pm by Jim Boardman

    Liverpool football club are looking for a new manager after Kenny Dalglish left the club for the second time. The manager didn’t leave by mutual consent and didn’t resign, he was sacked.

    In a statement, current owners FSG said:

    Fenway Sports Group (FSG) and Liverpool Football Club announced that Kenny Dalglish is to leave his post today as Manager after having his contract terminated.

    After a careful and deliberative review of the season, the Club came to the decision that a change was appropriate. It is not a decision that was reached lightly or hastily.

    The search for a new Manager will begin immediately.

    The statement continued with some hollow words of a corporate nature, before including some words from Kenny:

    Dalglish said he is proud to have served such a great Club.

    “It has been an honour and a privilege to have had the chance to come back to Liverpool Football Club as Manager. I greatly appreciate the work that Steve, Kevin, the players and all of the staff put in during my time and feel proud that we delivered the Club’s first trophy in six years winning the Carling Cup and came close to a second trophy in the FA Cup Final. Of course I am disappointed with results in the league, but I would not have swapped the Carling Cup win for anything as I know how much it meant to our fans and the Club to be back winning trophies.

    “Whilst I am obviously disappointed to be leaving the football club, I can say that the matter has been handled by the owners and all concerned in an honourable, respectful and dignified way and reflects on the quality of the people involved and their continued desire to move the football club forward in the same way as when they arrived here.

    “I would like to thank all of the staff at the Club for their effort and loyalty. I said when first approached about coming back as Manager that I would always be of help if I can at any time and that offer remains the same.

    “Finally, I want to put on record my heartfelt gratitude to Liverpool’s fans, who have always given me and the Club their unwavering support. Without them neither the Club nor I would have achieved anything.”

    Dalglish had been manager for 18 months since coming in to replace Roy Hodgson, whose six months in charge had seen Liverpool looking in serious threat of relegation. Dalglish won the Carling Cup in his first – and only – full season back as well as getting the Reds to Wembley for another final, his side coming runners-up in the FA Cup to Chelsea. Liverpool’s league season seemed to come to a halt soon after that Carling Cup win – with European football assured and Champions League football out of reach Liverpool struggled in the league and eventually finished eighth.

    It’s less than two years since Rafael Benitez left the club (officially by ‘mutual consent’), The club, then owned by Tom Hicks and George Gillett but being run, effectively on behalf of the banks by Martin Broughton and Christian Purslow, brought in Roy Hodgson, who lasted six months before the real threat of relegation saw him moved out. Hodgson is now England manager.

    Worryingly, although it may only be corporate-speak, FSG’s statement suggests they haven’t even started looking for a new manager.

    The Reds are run by owners who rarely visit the UK and the club is now without a Chief Executive, a Director of Football, a Director of Communications, a Manager and the new stadium it has been waiting for since the early years of this millennium.

    Sacking the manager does not cure all the ills at Anfield, even if it distracts from them, and FSG have a massive task in front of them now if they are to retain the goodwill of supporters they have benefited from so far.

  • Would it hurt LFC to consult all Hillsborough families? #LFCKIT

    Posted: May 11, 2012, 1:42 pm by Jim Boardman

    AT midnight last night the deal that saw Adidas as official kit supplier to Liverpool FC came to an end as the new contract with Warrior Sports kicked-in. After much build-up and expectation the new home shirt for the 2012-13 season was revealed by the club.

    The contract is lucrative for the club – and includes for the first time an agreement to produce a new home kit every season rather than every other season – and although many fans would buy the new shirt regardless of how it looked it’s of course important to make sure it will appeal to as many supporters as possible.

    Liverpool’s badge – or logo if you prefer – was changed some years back to incorporate not only the Liverbird but also the Shankly Gates and more significantly the eternal flame in memory of the 96 supporters who died as a result of the 1989 Hillsborough disaster. The new shirts have gone back to a variation on the previous badge – the Liverbird with the lettering “L.F.C.” underneath and no eternal flame.

    Instead of having the flames on the front of the shirt in the club’s crest they are now on the back of the shirt, two flames either side of the number “96″.

    Whether this change is good, bad or otherwise is of course an individual choice and on the whole the change seems to have been well received. What hasn’t been well received is the way the change was communicated to those who matter most – the families of the victims.

    Some of the families are represented by The Hillsborough Family Support Group (HFSG), the group set up first in the aftermath of the disaster. Others are represented by The Hillsborough Justice Campaign (HJC), a group set up later by some families who felt a different approach was needed in terms of the fight for justice for the victims – and survivors – of that day in 1989. Some time after this another group was set up, Hope For Hillsborough, by Anne Williams, the mother of Kevin Williams. As well as these three groups there are some individual family members who have chosen, for their own reasons, not to be a part of any of the groups.
    LFC's home kit for 2012-13, with the badge from the 2010-12 kit bottom right

    LFC's 2012-13 home kit, with new badge and flames on rear. Bottom right: Badge from the 2010-12 kit.

    When there was only one group the club had one point of contact when it needed to discuss any issues that might be of concern or importance to the families. However it was perhaps inevitable that with such a large number of bereaved families there would come a time when some of those families would see things differently to others, that divisions could start to form and that sooner or later a split would take place.

    To those of us who aren’t bereaved family members or survivors of the disaster it should not matter a great deal why those splits took place. There is always more than one side to a story and given the unthinkable grief and anguish those people have been through it isn’t our place to judge their actions. If the authorities had seen fit to meet their responsibilities instead of continually trying to cover up the failings of others we would never have been in a position where that fight for the truth was still going on a year after the disaster, let alone almost a quarter of a century later.

    Each of those family members is an individual, as is each survivor. They have their own feelings and opinions and deserve equal respect for what they have been through. That said, it would be difficult for the club to maintain close contact with every individual family member. There were 96 who died. Children with a mum and dad as well as brothers or sisters. Older victims who had a spouse and children of their own as well as their own parents and siblings. A lot of individuals had their lives shattered by that disaster.

    But the club doesn’t need to contact every one of those individual family members. It just needs to contact the three groups that represent the vast majority of them.

    Would it be difficult?

    Rumours of the change to the badge were floating around the internet for some time, as rumours about new kits usually do. The first official hint at this rumour being true came in the minutes of the Supporters’ Committee meeting in March. The club clearly understood the importance of contacting the families about the change, yet chose to contact only one of the three groups.

    We’ll never know if the club would have changed their plans in the face of opposition from family members, we don’t really know if the family members would have felt the need to show any opposition. All of those family members are individuals and that flame in that crest means whatever it means to each of them. But at least if they’re told, before the rest of the world, what’s going to happen to that badge they can deal with it in whatever way it is they need to deal with it.

    By letting the three points of contact know about it, they can be told about it sensitively.

    Had those minutes not been issued, had that question not been raised, some of those family members wouldn’t have even known the flame had gone until today when they saw the pictures of the new kit.

    Would it hurt the club to keep all three groups in the loop?

    The club don’t need to take sides – none of us do. It isn’t taking sides to speak to all three groups about matters of this nature. But by essentially ignoring some of the groups it shows a lack of respect to the individual bereaved family members belonging to those groups.

    If the new stadium ever becomes a reality, or if the difficulties of redeveloping Anfield are ever overcome, a decision needs to be made on what to do about the eternal flame on Anfield Road. Will the club ignore the other families when it comes to making that decision too?

    The HJC issued a statement expressing their thoughts on how the change to the badge was communicated:

    HJC STATEMENT RE: LFC KIT LAUNCH

    The HJC are aware of an amendment to the new 2012/13 kit, which has recently been launched. We have also noted that the Hillsborough flames and “96″ will now appear on the back of the shirt, “after consultation” with “family members”.

    We can confirm that no bereaved families of the HJC were contacted or consulted. Indeed the first we were aware of this was via the Supporters Committee Minutes of their March meeting.

    Once again LFC has chosen to ignore the HJC and their families. The continued refusal of the club to acknowledge the HJC is insensitive, divisive and deplorable. 96 is more than a number. LFC would do well to remember that.

    Some individuals at the club do go out of their way to keep all the groups in the loop and to help publicise campaigns and events relating to those groups. It’s a massive shame that this doesn’t seem to reflect overall club policy, for reasons never satisfactorily explained.

    And as the HJC clarified, via social networks, their issue isn’t with the decision to use a different badge or to move the flames to the back of the shirt: “To clarify: HJC’s issue is not with the design of the shirt. Our concerns are with the fact that, despite LFC stating that families were consulted during the design process, no families within the HJC were ever contacted.”

    By contacting all the groups this feeling some families have of being excluded would be lessened if not removed. It would hurt Liverpool far less to include all the groups than it hurts the individuals who feel ignored.

  • A glimpse of “Our Liverpool: Never Walk Alone”

    Posted: May 4, 2012, 10:01 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE latest accounts from Liverpool FC show how important the commercial side of the club’s operations are to the club’s future, with a new stadium still as far away from being reality as it’s ever been following what looks to have been little more than a confidence trick from the club’s former owners.

    The club have binned the plans for the stadium Tom Hicks promised he’d build and without the extra money coming in from all those extra seats – the whole reason the club was sold in the first place – Liverpool need to find other ways to compete with the rest of the sides looking for top four football, itself a good way to bring in extra income.  The accounts show that commercial income is going up but with football reaching more and more people there’s still plenty of potential to keep it going that way.

    One territory that the club and its new owners want to exploit is the US – and as well as sending the side out to play some football there in the summer the club have granted Fox Soccer unprecedented behind-the-scenes access for a new six-part documentary series.

    “Our Liverpool: Never Walk Alone” will be produced by multi Emmy award winner Scott Boggins  and will be available to watch globally in the autumn.  If the series works as well as Fox and the club are hoping it won’t just attract new supporters, maybe it will attract new commercial partners – maybe even naming rights partners.

    For us it’s about what we get to see in terms of the goings-on behind the scenes at the club, something that raised eyebrows when the announcement was first made. Our dirty laundry was far too public during the difficult days of the last regime and we wouldn’t want this to bring more of it out in the open again for the sake of ratings. And the announcement came a few days after an offshoot of the owners’ company in the US embarrassingly referred to “Liverpool’s world famous griffin.”

    These fears seem to be unfounded, the people behind the documentary come highly recommended and LFC TV people will be around to provide guidance where needed. This isn’t going to be a half-hearted effort from a disinterested distant outlet.

    The first promo for the documentary is now available, a teaser of what’s to come, and if that’s anything to go by it looks like it’s going to be something special:

    Filming will get underway in earnest with tomorrow’s cup final and will continue into the summer and those games in the States. Here’s hoping that first episode shows Steven Gerrard lifting that FA Cup.

  • Hodgson for England. With our blessing.

    Posted: April 29, 2012, 3:38 am by Jim Boardman

    HAD a brief snooze. Saw Torres score a hat-trick. Chelsea’s Torres. Was I still asleep? Went out. The car said it was three degrees and flashed its warning about ice. There were bits of tree all over the road, at least in the bits of road that weren’t under water, and it’s May in a couple of days. Maybe I was still asleep.

    No, a face-stinging walk in that horizontal freezing cold rain would wake anyone up. Water looked choppy, sky was dark, like it was the middle of winter. Everything’s strange. Back home, groggy again, phone out of earshot, computer out of reach, something boring on the telly and none of it news. No idea how Spurs went on, but otherwise not expecting much to have happened in the world of football. Eventually, the computer goes on, the email gets checked. And still everything’s strange.

    Slap bang in the middle of an email that started off so normally is this:

    “Hodgson for England”

    What? Haven’t we done that already? He had a predictable draw yesterday didn’t he?

    “Madness from the FA?”

    Come on, it’s the wrong end of April for that kind of joke.

    Wait; what? They’ve not. Have they?

    I checked. “England have been granted permission to talk to Roy Hodgson.”

    They had. They really had.

    They’d taken sarcastic calls from Liverpool fans, “Hodgson for England”, as if they were serious words of advice. Well, ok, they’ve not listened to Liverpool fans because listening to Liverpool fans isn’t something The FA particularly like to do. “That bit of noise up there is off again,” they probably say, closing the windows of that expensive pad they had built where Wembley used to be.

    Not that we want them to listen to us on England matters, because England doesn’t really matter to us. It only matters to us when they do something that matters to our club. We don’t want them to break our players, as we keep telling them, but they break them anyway. They’ve never really known how to look after our players though.

    They use our players for meaningless friendlies when their club (our club) would have thought twice about using them for a match that actually mattered. They use them out of position and make good players look like ordinary players. Their fans, when they’re borrowing our players (like, for example, when one of the best wingers ever to be eligible to play for them is turning out in their shirt), boo those players.

    They boo their own players.

    England – the FA, the parts of the media that still think it’s 1966 and the fans that still think it’s 1944 – is something we struggle to relate to. But to be fair, the feeling is probably mutual.

    Their cheerleaders still believe Roy Hodgson was good enough for Liverpool and that he was just a victim of impatient fans. The same Liverpool who had gone through just four managers in the twenty years prior to his appointment.

    Some of them will probably be a little worried now, deep down, but probably not too worried. England’s problems, after all, are mainly down to having had that foreigner in charge. Much the same as they said it was the problem at Anfield when Liverpool were underachieving with second in the league and only getting to the final of the Champions League. No need to question Roy’s CV because the only word that matters is “English”.

    And he’s media friendly. As long as you aren’t a member of the press from Scandinavia. Or north of Croydon. Or mention formations.

    Roy is ideal at a club where draws will do and entertainment is an afterthought. That’s probably enough to keep him at Club Wembley for a long time. England’s expectations have been way too high for way too long – and there’s few better than Roy for removing, never mind lowering, expectations.

    One of the enduring images of Steve McLaren’s ill-fated reign as England manager is that of him with that umbrella in the tipping down rain as England failed to qualify for the Euros. One strong memory of Roy (putting the face rub to one side) also involved heavy rain and an embarrassing hope-destroying defeat. Roy didn’t bother with a brolly and was soaked to the skin watching his side fail to overcome the “formidable challenge” (his words) of Northampton from Division Four (in old money) in the league cup.

    That on its own could have been forgiven but there was always more. When it wasn’t going bad on the field he was making it bad in the press room. He became a parody of himself in the end.

    Those who know why Roy was wrong for Liverpool know why Roy will struggle to be what England expects their manager to be.

    Those who don’t, well they’re welcome to him.

    Utopia awaits.

  • “Pro” gets into bother on Twitter, needs a bit of help

    Posted: April 25, 2012, 12:55 pm by Jim Boardman

    “PRO”, a short film about a fictional professional footballer and the impact social media has on his life, is set for its first screening in Liverpool shortly.

    The footballer, Thomas Ryder, uses Twitter but gets himself into a bit of trouble when using it – and is also being quietly stalked by a small boy. Co-written by (The Anfield Wrap presenter) Neil Atkinson and Daniel Fitzsimmons, who were also producer and director respectively, the movie’s cast includes Joe Macaulay, Lee Fenwick, Joshua French and Kelly Forshaw.

    Neil explains what the film is about: “We wanted to look at the strange status footballers now have in society and in the way in which we interact with them. We switch them easily from hero to villain in terms of what they do both on and off the pitch and especially so as they share more of themselves on social media such as Twitter.

    “There are those of us who want their approval and get irritated when we don’t get it. Those of us who get annoyed when they don’t acknowledge they have our approval and infuriated if they don’t seek our approval.

    “At times we have more access to them than ever but at the same time we dehumanise them more and more. What we see are footballers as owned by society, club and agent, struggling to break out of those chains but with ultimately quite a dull, cosseted existence.”

    As Neil points out, it seems to be a no-win situation for the players: “We criticise them for being dull and then criticise them for being interesting. We bestow upon them something of a godlike status but instead of the gods creating the rules, we expect them to live by ours: never give the ball away, never stop running, never go out, never stay in, be complete humans, live only for football.”

    The film promises to be good and has come about largely thanks to a lot of hard work and also a lot of good will. “Our crew were excellent and experienced professionals,” says Neil, “and gave their time over to work upon it. We’re very grateful to them.”

    “We also had people just helping us out – TAW’s John Gibbons and TAW listener Robert Lawson helped the crew and TAW’s Rob Gutmann and Steve Graves did some voiceover work for us.

    “What was most pleasing was everyone coming together and working on the project and giving it everything they had.

    Despite all the good will there were still costs to be covered (and more costs to come) and now Neil and Daniel are looking for help to meet this by crowdsourcing the funding.

    “We’re happy for any help we can get but I’d love to share the piece and the screening with listeners/readers insofar as that’s possible – we’ll have a bit of a Q&A afterwards.”

    For those based outside Liverpool there’ll still be an opportunity to view the finished piece: “We’ll get it on the internet over the summer for everyone to see. We’re well aware that not everyone feels in a position to contribute to a short film in the current climate, even more so with 17 visits to Wembley in 3 weeks going on.”

    Over the past few months The Anfield Wrap has been a pleasure to be involved with and has received some tremendous feedback. Neil says the film, “feels part of our universe and because we hope we’ve been successful we think it can be part of yours too. So you just eventually watching it will do us. But if you could help then please do have a look at the Sponsume link, see Dan’s video and we’ll see you all in the next few weeks with it on the big screen.”

    That Sponsume link, where you can donate as little or as much as you feel you can stretch to, is here:

    www.sponsume.com/project/pro.

    And Dan’s video is below:

    Neil and Dan are on Twitter: @knox_harrington (Neil) / @DanielJFitz.

  • Reds need tweaks, not scapegoats

    Posted: April 23, 2012, 6:55 pm by Jim Boardman

    A DEFEAT at home is disappointing, a defeat at home to the manager you wanted gone in place of the current one is even more disappointing. Even if you try to console yourself, deep down, that it might just help his England chances.

    Liverpool’s league season ended, really, a week after winning the Carling Cup. Six days after, if we’re being accurate. Arsenal played like a team who’d have been happy with a draw and Liverpool played them off the park. But Arsenal had a bang-on-form van Persie and Liverpool were still struggling with penalties. Arsenal got all three points.

    They weren’t the first ‘big’ team to come to Anfield this season looking like they’d be happy to go back home with a point; a sign of the respect, maybe, that opposing managers have for this Liverpool side and its manager. Respect that, sadly, some Liverpool fans just don’t have for this side or its manager. This side isn’t without its faults – far from it – but maybe those opposing managers have more of an idea of Liverpool’s qualities than the tabloid headline writers that some of Liverpool’s supporters seem to gravitate towards.

    Remember, Liverpool’s league season was over after that defeat at home to Arsenal. European qualification was already assured, Champions League qualification was now out of the question. The transfer window was closed too. Internally the club would be looking at what changes were needed for next season’s league campaign – and Damien Comolli was clearly one of the changes identified. Externally that’s more or less all we know about any changes that were identified and which of those will be implemented. The transfer window is still closed.

    Defeat to West Brom – the first one at home since a time long before Roy Hodgson became anybody’s manager – looks bad. In reality Liverpool were far from bad, it was a performance that would win most games for most teams. But it wasn’t the first time this season that Liverpool’s chances haven’t been turned into goals and, like the last game that followed a Wembley victory, missed chances cost the Reds all three points.

    Two of those missed chances hit the woodwork, making it 30 times now in the league this season that the frame of the goal has foiled Kenny’s side. All in all Liverpool have got 40 goals in the league this season – four of them own goals – from a total of 594 shots. 354 of those shots were either on target, blocked or hit the woodwork, only 36 of them went in.

    Earlier on in the season, to paraphrase him slightly, Kenny Dalglish said that if Liverpool play like this every game they’ll win more than they lose. And he was right too. But at times this season Liverpool haven’t played like that for all ninety minutes or – in some cases – at all. Liverpool need to hold their nerve now and play like that for the rest of the season. The law of averages will overcome sod’s law sooner or later.

    Liverpool need tweaking, a bit of rubbing out and adding to, not screwing up and starting again.

    It’s a side that can win – once it works out how to get the ball the right side of the woodwork.

    The Twitter Blame Wave

    As for the angry minority on Twitter, it didn’t take long for the blame wave to start flooding timelines. Disappointment becomes anger and that anger needs a focus. Some of it isn’t anger and a lot of it is understandable but maybe, just maybe, it’s better not to look for scapegoats but to look for small things that can make the kind of difference that matters.

    Here’s a selection:

    Kenny brought three attacking subs on, but:

    Anyone for Raheem????? 2 x unused CBs and a FB on bench

    Mocking Hodgson before the game

    slating hodgson haha ur a w****r look at kenny u clueless f***,listen to anfield wrap u making joke of woy.were midtable

    Liverpool can still be relegated? (They can’t)

    Don’t worry Jim, we’re heading towards the bottom half of the table.

    Sacking Hodgson in the first place?

    what an irony the manager who was shown the door has done one over us.

    (a minute later) has woy done us over twice this season? (no)

    well RH couldn’t have asked for a better return and two finger salute to those that wanted him out!!!

    Blame one of the subs?

    bellers stunk the place out since hes come on, player we should be relying, looking unable to move ball with ne purpose 25yds!

    Sack this manager?

    if we don’t win daglish should go. Worse than woy? (At least spell his name right).

    must be kenny fault we (We what?)

    Today is not about luck. This has been happening all season. Its poor finishing/coaching. Admit it

    We are a joke mate,and to lose to this b***** is painful. yes we created a lot today,but look at the table,its not bd lck ffs

    If we can’t blame luck who can we blame? Let’s blame Jim:

    happy with that then ?

    “@JimBoardman: Oh no, here comes the Twitter blame wave.” come off it, it’s not undeserved is it?!

    “@JimBoardman: Oh no, here comes the Twitter blame wave.” and rightfully so.

    your hero dalglish getting stick is he

    that’s ok jim, everythings just rosy. Its only the 20th time its hsppened this season. You uber fans keep your chin up though.

    Someone is to blame?!? Who do you think should take the rap?!

    But we have to blame someone surely?

    so should everyone just remain silent and forget about it?

    what wrong with that I support them on the pitch .. We ard entitled to an opinion not just use experts

    All clubs have the same resources of course:

    Never mind mentality, the players are mediocre & nearer to the level of WBA than the likes of united, city etc

    Should every1 be ok with being nearly 40pts behind the Mancs?? The #blamewave is deserved!

    Simple?

    Sh** strikers

    we missed easy chances, we missed chances professional top class footballers should score, then they missed them again…

    This next one is constructive isn’t it? It says it is anyway:

    Am not goin to moan at LFC but constructive criticism is a must. Sell Hendo, JonJoke and Spearing! They wudnt get a game on Stanley Park!!!!

    I think we’ve established we can’t get relegated and that European qualification is assured, but…

    time to stop blaming bad Luck and start blaming bad finishing, 4 games left and counting

    The owners sack the director of football, but:

    in Kenny we trust but at what cost if he didn’t see that this team need a goal scorer in Jan that’s down 2 him blind faith

    Since that director of football left Liverpool have played twice, winning one and losing the other. But…

    think the uncertainty re coaching staff, DoF etc hurting the team. Has to be on players minds.

    Remember, it has to be somebody’s fault. And if it’s not the players it must be…

    so players immune to blame now? Shocking result. Everytime lfc let fans down its fans fault?

    That’s not what I said. But it’s what someone else said, sort of:

    not blaming anyone but don’t you think from the start fans inside Anfield could have offered more support

    Piety:

    the results are unacceptable. No amount of piety can disguise that.

    Definitely Jim’s fault:

    do you actually watch the game? Instead of tweeting a blade of grass has grown another inch

    The best one of all, someone with a sense of humour and a touch of perspective:

    If I catch the f***wit who keeps rubbing the post with the leather magnet., he’s getting a Chinese burn

    These are obviously the worst examples of what Twitter can be like – it’s generally a good place to talk about the Reds, as long as you remember you need a sense of humour in the hours following anything less than a two-nil win. And yes, that means a sense of humour has been needed a lot this season.

    Next up for the Reds are Norwich, whose biggest threat is to kids who post photos of their new kit online a few hours before launch. They are also one of those teams who got points at Anfield this season with a bit of help (twice) from the woodwork in a 1-1 draw in October. Whatever happens, injuries and red cards aside, it won’t make much of a difference to Liverpool’s season or the work needed in the summer.

  • Remembering the ninety six

    Posted: April 15, 2012, 9:55 am by Jim Boardman

    On April 15th 1989 an FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest was, like yesterday, like any semi-final, the cause of much anticipation and excitement for supporters of the two teams involved.

    It wasn’t quite as much of an early start as yesterday – instead of heading 200 miles to Wembley for a 12.30 kick-off the 1989 semi was a 3pm kick-off 70 miles away in Sheffield.

    By 3.06pm the game had been abandoned. There was no celebration afterwards, no disappointment at a defeat. The day ended in tragedy.

    Behind Bruce Grobelaar’s goal people were dying.

    In all ninety-six Liverpool supporters would die because of the events of that day at Sheffield Wednesday’s Hillsborough stadium.

    96 needless deaths. 96 people who will never be forgotten.

    23 years later we are still waiting for justice to be done.

    23 years later we are still waiting for the cover-ups to be uncovered and the liars to be exposed.

    23 years later and we still have to educate people about what really happened because the lies told in 1989 persist.

    Today we remember those 96 victims. Today we think of all those who survived the horrors of that day and continued to suffer long afterwards as a result. Today we offer our support, as always, to the families of those who died and to anyone else still hurting from the consequences of a disaster that could – and should – have been so easily avoided.

    We also thank those people across the world, irrespective of who they support or where they are from, who take time to show their respects and send their support.

    The 96 who died were Liverpool fans, but they could have been fans of any club, they could have been anyone’s son, daughter, brother, sister, dad, granddad. They are all missed.

    In memory of the ninety-six.

    John Alfred Anderson (62)
    Colin Mark Ashcroft (19)
    James Gary Aspinall (18)
    Kester Roger Marcus Ball (16)
    Gerard Bernard Patrick Baron (67)
    Simon Bell (17)
    Barry Sidney Bennett (26)
    David John Benson (22)
    David William Birtle (22)
    Tony Bland (22)
    Paul David Brady (21)
    Andrew Mark Brookes (26)
    Carl Brown (18)
    David Steven Brown (25)
    Henry Thomas Burke (47)
    Peter Andrew Burkett (24)
    Paul William Carlile (19)
    Raymond Thomas Chapman (50)
    Gary Christopher Church (19)
    Joseph Clark (29)
    Paul Clark (18)
    Gary Collins (22)
    Stephen Paul Copoc (20)
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    You’ll Never Walk Alone. Rest in Peace.

  • Brad Jones on Wembley derby win: “I didn’t have a lot to do.”

    Posted: April 14, 2012, 12:35 am by Jim Boardman

    PEPE REINA ran to Brad Jones to congratulate him at the end of today’s FA Cup Semi-final, one of many signs of the obvious camaraderie on display at Anfield, not to mention the popularity the Australian international has with his team mates. Jones was in between the sticks for Liverpool as Reina served the last of his three-match suspension and did all that was asked of him as the Reds booked a third trip to Wembley with a 2-1 win over Everton.

    After the game Brad spoke to ESPN but was modest about his own part in a win that might be talked about as much as the final in years to come: “We knew that the game was going to be fairly even,” Brad said, “and we know that they have a lot of quality players and a good front-line, so we just had to deal with it.

    “The boys at the back are fantastic players and I think they dealt with it well. I didn’t have a lot to do.”

    The Reds went in a goal down at half time and seemed low on self belief. The second half saw Liverpool take control of the game with Everton retreating into their shells. At one point the possession stats showed the Reds on 85%. So what changed from that first half? “We knew we had to pick it up, half time,” Jones said, “we all spoke and we knew we had to step up a gear, we knew we had a half left to play. We were confident but we knew we had to put the work in.”

    The work paid off with Luis Suarez capitalising on a mistake from Distin to give Liverpool the equaliser. Then with three minutes on the clock Andy Carroll capped a fine performance with the winner and a place in Reds folklore. Brad Jones was full of praise for him: “He’s fantastic. The media knock him but as a guy he’s a top man at the club. He works hard, he stays back, he does extra training, he deserves this goal at Wembley.”

    Jones knows he’s only there until Reina’s back: “In the end, Pepe is the main man. We don’t dispute that, he’s been top drawer for the last five or six years so I’m hoping he’ll be proud of it. I’m hoping he’s got the chance to come back here as we all do and hopefully pick up the trophy.”

    Brad Jones wears gloves featuring the Anthony Nolan. Consider registering with the organisation as a stem cell donor – you could save a life: anthonynolan.org

  • FA Cup semi-final: Agger, Carra and Skrtel start – Maxi on the bench

    Posted: April 14, 2012, 1:59 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE FA Cup semi-final derby sees Liverpool start with their third-choice keeper protected by a strong back-four.

    That’s assuming it lines up as a back four – with Daniel Agger in for Jose Enrique there’s a possibility of three at the back but Agger did play at left-back in his recent games coming back from injury. Brad Jones is the goalkeeper, Peter Gulacsi on the bench if the Reds have yet more goalkeeping issues. Jay Spearing is also on from the off providing more protection for that defence.

    Suarez and Carroll both start, something of a surprise perhaps, but Carroll certainly earned a start with his performance – and winner – against Blackburn on Tuesday.

    That leaves question marks as to who plays where in the rest of the midfield. Gerrard, Downing and Henderson all start.

    There’s a bit of a cavalry on the bench for Liverpool should it be needed, Maxi Rodriguez, Dirk Kuyt and Craig Bellamy amongst those raring to go if the 11 on the pitch don’t get going.

    Everton have built themselves up as the underdogs for this match but after the run Liverpool have had and the red cards between the sticks that isn’t necessarily the case, particularly with the blues having been on a good run of their own. The blues rested a number of players on Monday but still managed a 4-0 win.

    Both sides have players capable of being the stars of the show – let’s just hope referee Howard Webb hasn’t got his own eye on that particular title.

    There will be a minute’s silence in memory of Hillsborough before today’s game. Tomorrow is the 23rd anniversary of the disaster that saw 96 Liverpool fans lose their lives. Supporters are also going to be handed posters – blue or red as appropriate – telling the world: “Don’t Buy The Sun”.


    Liverpool: Jones, Johnson, Carragher, Skrtel, Agger, Gerrard, Spearing, Henderson, Downing, Carroll, Suarez.
    Subs: Gulacsi, Kelly, Enrique, Shelvey, Maxi, Kuyt, Bellamy.

    Everton: Howard, Baines, Gibson, Heitinga, Jelavic, Distin, Cahill, Neville, Gueye, Osman, Fellaini.
    Subs: Hahnemann, Hibbert, Jagielka, Stracqualursi, McFadden, Coleman, Anichebe.

    Referee: Howard Webb

    Today’s match is being shown live on ESPN in the UK. Kick-off is 12:30pm BST.

  • FA Cup Semi-final: Reds release Merseyside rap song

    Posted: April 13, 2012, 1:42 pm by Anfield Road

    IT might only be the semi-final but tomorrow’s FA Cup semi-final has already got the feel of being a final in its own right. Liverpool against Everton at Wembley, no cup to lift but no better way of lifting the spirits of whichever side wins. And this is not time to talk about what it will do the side that doesn’t.

    It’s not just a trophy that’s missing from this ‘final’. There aren’t any cup final songs. Or at least there weren’t.

    Robbie Fowler, Bill Shankly, Rhys Jones, Gary Ablett and the Hillsborough 96 all get namechecked in a new hip-hop song released by LFC and local rapper Jamie Broad ahead of tomorrow’s match.

    Twenty eight years ago, Liverpool and Everton met in the League Cup final at Wembley. Supporters from the two best teams in the country travelled down to the capital together and ended up chanting ‘Merseyside, Merseyside’ as both sets of players completed a lap of honour.

    Five years later and Wembley was again the setting for another final – the Hillsborough final. On that day, in 1989, Everton fans stood side by side with their Liverpool counterparts as they remembered the 96 fans who went to a semi-final and never returned.

    There’s a lot of romanticising about just how friendly the ‘friendly’ derby actually was – even back then – but one thing’s for sure, it was a lot more innocent and good-natured than it has been in recent times. But, as the Hillsborough memorial service proves every year, when Evertonians turn up in their blue shirts to remember the loved ones this city lost 23 years ago this weekend, the mutual respect between the two club’s supporters hasn’t totally disappeared.

    It was certainly there inside Anfield on the night when ‘Z-Cars’ replaced ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ in memory of Rhys Jones and it was there at the funeral for Gary Ablett earlier this year.

    Reds release Merseyside rap

    On Saturday, just like on every other occasion the two teams have met, there will be families on Merseyside split in terms of who they’ll be supporting. Reds and Blues have always co-existed in households across the city and that’s very much the case where rapper Jamie Broad lives. A big Blue, Jamie’s parents both pledge allegiance to the Red of Liverpool.

    His great nan even had LFC tattooed on her arm.

    With the clock ticking down to kick-off of the most important derby for over 20 years, LFC has teamed up with Jamie, one of the most promising young rappers in the city, to record ‘Scousers on Wembley Way (Knock-A-Door Dash remix)’ – a track that celebrates both clubs and, in doing so, lists some of the things that unite us all, including a quest for Justice for the 96.

    Jamie Broad may be a Blue, we’re most definitely Reds but if we can help a young lad from Liverpool realise his rap dream and remind a few fans from both sides of Stanley Park about just what makes Merseyside football so special, we’ll be more than happy.

    Watch the video created by LFC TV now (and you can join in, lyrics are below).

    ‘Scousers on Wembley Way (Knock-A-Door Dash Remix)’ by Jamie Broad

    I remember back when I was growing up before my rap days
    I could hear Goodison from my house on match days
    It was so Iconic
    So of course I’m a Blue, my first kit had Ferguson number 9 on it
    Everton my team – I didn’t care for the rest
    But then – I’m a Blue but my parents are Reds
    We’re split across family lines whatever team we choose to be ours
    My great Nan had LFC tattooed on her arms
    I remember playin in the street as kids we watched
    An some wore everton shirts and some wore liverpool tops
    Before spitting them hot bars
    I only started rapping cos of the Anfield rap and John Barnes
    Now you could never change me
    Been growin my hair for years now and tryna make it look like Fellaini’s
    I’m a fan first, just another character
    I’m the next Jamie after Redknapp and Carragher
    I’m talkin my roots
    I remember Liverpool turning up for a final dressed in white suits
    I’m talkin the Spice Boys, how could I not?
    When McManaman ran the flanks and Fowler was god
    I was at David Moyes’ first game, it was heaven
    Unsworth scored a goal after 27 seconds
    And I had a new hero I was aware of that
    Cos he’s got red hair but like we don’t care and that
    When Liverpool came around I could hardly wait
    Back when I used to look forward to derby days
    Now I’m almost too nervous to see it
    Cos I still remember McAllisters free-kick
    I thought I could never watch the rest
    Then Pepe Reina threw the ball at Andy Johnson’s head
    I almost find derby’s too stressful to watch
    Hopin the ball don’t fall to Gerrard on the edge of the box
    I spend the game with my eyes covered by my hands
    Hopin that Tim Cahill will be punchin the flag
    Cos when the Blues and Reds play
    If you lose it’s horrible seein your mates the next day
    The friendly derby of blue shirts, red shirts and red cards
    Whether it’s You’ll never walk alone or Z-Cars
    But when it’s one of ours we’ve always been close
    Like when Zcars played at Anfield for Rhys Jones
    I’m talking Gary Ablett – mersey pride
    At Wembley after Hillsborough, both fans chanting Merseyside
    Cos it’s right we did
    As a city all were askin for is Justice for the 96
    So expose the lies and open wide
    All the files the government has chose to hide
    Cos there were lies about Liver daughters, Liver sons
    And that’s why we don’t ever buy The Sun
    Cos we lost some of our own but we survive when we crash
    The Liver Bird was phoenix to rise from the ash
    So remember the hour
    When we stuck a Liver Bird on each of the Wembley towers
    It’s a Scouse occasion – Merseyside you know this
    Both sets of Fans will travel down together on the coaches
    The country will notice we’ll bring it back
    They’ll see the greatest footballin city England has
    The city of Shankly and Kendall or even just
    Dalglish and Moyes, Dixie Dean, Ian Rush
    Cos in my Liverpool home, hand on heart
    We’re only really separated by Stanley Park
    So it reminds me
    Whether its YNWA or COYB
    And the country will remember the days
    When the Scousers took over the capital and Wembley Way

    Reds release Merseyside rap

    Follow Jamie Broad on Twitter [https:]]

    Jamie Broad Bandcamp page: [jamiebroad.bandcamp.com]

    Follow The Hillsborough Justice Campaign on Twitter: [https:]]

  • Comolli should be the first change of many at Anfield

    Posted: April 12, 2012, 5:29 pm by Jim Boardman

    THERE was a sense that something had to change before too long but Damien Comolli’s departure wasn’t expected today, two days before the FA Cup semi-final, and Comolli’s departure wasn’t necessarily seen by all as the change that needed to be made or the one that would be made.

    Comolli arrived shortly after FSG took the club over and was appointed as Director of Football Strategy. In a matter of a couple of months Roy Hodgson, never a popular choice, was replaced as manager on a temporary basis by Kenny Dalglish – the popular choice by some distance. When Kenny’s role was made permanent towards the end of last season Comolli’s job title was also changed and he got what seemed to be a promotion to Director of Football.

    The change of manager happened when the January transfer window was already open and by the end of it Fernando Torres and Ryan Babel had left, with Luis Suárez and Andy Carroll coming in.

    With Dalglish still only a caretaker boss at the time those signings were bold ones and although it always seemed unlikely that Comolli would buy a player a manager didn’t want it was also unlikely he’d buy players he thought the next manager – if Dalglish didn’t stay on – wouldn’t see as valuable members of the squad.

    The statement from the club about Comolli’s departure gave the usual vague “mutual consent” reason for the separating of ways but mutual consent usually means an agreement on a severance package regardless of who made the decision to end the relationship – or why they made that decision.

    LFC Statement:

    Fenway Sports Group and Liverpool FC confirmed today that Director of Football Damien Comolli has left the Club by mutual consent.

    Principal Owner John Henry said: “We are grateful for all of Damien’s efforts on behalf of Liverpool and wish him all the best for the future.”

    Liverpool Chairman Tom Werner added: “The Club needs to move forward and we now have a huge game on Saturday. It is important that everyone joins us in supporting the manager and gets behind Kenny and the team and focuses on a strong finish to the season.”

    Damien Comolli commented: “I am grateful to have been given the opportunity to work at Liverpool and am happy to move on from the Club and back to France for family reasons. I wish the Club all the best for the future.”

    It isn’t clear from the statement if it was family reasons that prompted the departure or if Comolli decided that he’d go back to France after being told he was no longer required at Liverpool. However, it’s understood that it’s the latter, that Liverpool decided to make some changes and Comolli didn’t fit in with those changes.

    Kenny Dalglish was quick to tell the media that the signings made since his own return weren’t made against his wishes: “I had a fantastic working and personal relationship with Damien, since he came in he was really helpful in every transfer target we went for.

    “Everybody that has come into the club since Damien has been here has been my choice. Whoever I wanted, Damien went away and did a fantastic job in bringing them in. “

    Kenny was hardly like to list players he didn’t really want or even hint that there were any he wasn’t happy about being signed. But a large part of the criticism of Liverpool’s signings hasn’t so much been their abilities; it’s been more about the price paid for those abilities. Had Liverpool paid £8m a piece for the likes of Carroll, Henderson and Downing it’s unlikely there’d be as much criticism – although that wasn’t the case with Charlie Adam, who cost much less and has been criticised on and off over the course of the season.

    When Rafa Benítez was Liverpool boss it was clear that the manager was not getting what he’d asked for in terms of transfers. Although the latter days of his reign saw promises broken (and plans messed up) the issues earlier on were with the way the money allocated was being spent.  Delays in moving for players saw bargain buys turned into overpriced signings and although Rafa was not entirely blameless in terms of the success of his signings it was clearly not the best way to work. And many of Rafa’s signings were hugely successful, both in terms of what they did on the pitch and what they earned the club if sold.

    Whatever blame might be apportioned outside of the club what matters more is who is responsible for transfer strategy inside the club. Calls have been made for Liverpool to have the same philosophy on football at all levels, something Rafa Benítez started to implement, meaning the academy would be far more likely to produce the kind of players the first team needed. Coaches from Barcelona were brought in to help start this policy, but that project wasn’t seen through to the first team because before it had really got going Benítez was sacked and Hodgson arrived as boss.

    By the time Kenny arrived the dust hadn’t really settled on the events of the previous 18 months and perhaps Liverpool were still unsure of exactly what they needed. Purchases made haven’t been used in the way observers would expect – Andy Carroll rarely starting, Stewart Downing rarely playing with Carroll, Suárez and Carroll not getting many opportunities to form a partnership. All of this makes Carroll – a last minute signing to replace Torres in that first transfer window under FSG – look like a signing made in haste.

    In the summer Liverpool made a bid in excess of £20m for a defender who ultimately chose to join another club – but that wasn’t followed up with the pursuit of an alternative of the same kind of quality. Coates is seen as one for the future – as shown by his limited appearances – so why didn’t Liverpool buy a defender ready to go straight into the first team after failing with their first attempt?

    Lucas went out with a long term injury halfway through the season and Liverpool did not bring in cover for him during the January transfer window. Since then the Reds have struggled to find a central midfield that works, with any number of combinations of players used.

    Kenny isn’t the type to say publicly if he did have any problems with Comolli, but he made it clear there were no hard feelings between the two as far as he was concerned: “It is sad to see anyone leave the football club. He goes with my best wishes and I hope it is not long before we can meet up again. For me, we had a good relationship.”

    Asked if it was disappointing to see Comolli leave he said: “It is disappointing – but I suppose nothing much surprises me in football.”

    The news was announced as Liverpool were making their final preparations for Saturday’s cup semi-final and Dalglish was asked if it would mess their plans up: “We are having a meeting with the players this morning so it may have delayed that a bit. It is a big game on Saturday. It is a cup semi-final with more added to it because it is a local derby.”

    More added to it perhaps because of how much it means to Liverpool to get into that final and then to get their hands on a second trophy.

    More added to it perhaps because Comolli’s departure isn’t necessarily a sign that the owners have full faith in Kenny Dalglish.

    In the eyes of the more impatient fan the Carling Cup isn’t enough, but the FA Cup alongside it isn’t enough either. The more considered supporters – as frustrated as they’ve been by Liverpool’s performances and results in the league – know that it takes time to fix a problem as big as the one Roy Hodgson left behind and know that mistakes are going to be made along the way.

    It’s not just on the pitch where mistakes have been made and there have been questions asked about who is actually steering the club at the higher levels.

    The owners are obviously in touch long distance and keep an eye on things from the States – but is that enough for what Liverpool need? Ian Ayre has been MD since FSG came in, temporarily at first and then permanently, but the club have never filled the vacancy of CEO. Efforts were made and Liverpool were reportedly close to bringing in José Ángel Sánchez for the role but the search would prove fruitless.

    A question that also needs to be asked is if the club is being steered in the same direction at all levels. Is the ‘unity’ Ian Ayre spoke of recently still there? As the dust settles on that turbulent period the new owners walked into some of the other underlying problems and bad decisions of, particularly, that last six months under Hicks, Gillett and Purslow, might just be standing out like a sore thumb.

    Also imminent are the club’s first accounts since the owners took over, due by the end of this month.

    Short of some genuine personal crisis hastening his departure Liverpool would be highly unlikely to remove Comolli without having someone lined up to at least take over some parts of his job.

    A new CEO – of the right kind – would be able to negotiate transfers and contracts, a role that doesn’t seem to be one that Ian Ayre would relish, but that would still leave a requirement for someone to take charge of the scouting part of the role Comolli was doing.

    A new CEO might just help out in other ways. Liverpool lack the influence other clubs have at The FA and The Premier League, another issue that needs to be addressed.

    A new CEO – of the right kind – would also be able to share some of the load heaped on the manager by the press. Despite Comolli playing a large part in what would ultimately lead to Luis Suárez losing his case with the FA he wasn’t heard speaking out in support of either the player or his manager. The MD and the owners also kept very quiet throughout and despite denials of leaving Kenny ‘out to dry’ there was a lot of anger from fans at the silence from everyone at the club from Kenny upwards.

    Communications from the club aren’t the best, especially with the press, and something definitely needs to be done. Changes already made in the area of press relations haven’t improved those relations.

    It’s no surprise the club are suspicious about some media, but when they’re acting suspicious towards those who actually have the club’s best interests at heart perhaps it’s time for a change there too.

    Comolli leaving should be the first of a number of changes – but not just of personnel. The club’s structure needs to be looked at again.

    A new CEO wouldn’t necessarily leave Ian Ayre out of a job but it might lead to him shifting his focus full time back to the commercial side. The boardroom would be a little cluttered with a CEO, an MD and a Director of Football all treading on each other’s toes.  A CEO, a commercial director and someone acting as the bridge between the boardroom and the manager and the academy and the manager (not necessarily given the title of Director of Football) might give each member the room to do what they do best.

    For now Kenny Dalglish has to get his players focussed on what comes next, which is what he does best. And what comes next is that FA Cup semi-final, a game Liverpool really need to win.

  • Alan Davies can offer something worth more than £1000

    Posted: April 11, 2012, 11:48 am by Jim Boardman

    STEPHEN FRY’S QI sidekick, former star of Jonathan Creek, Arsenal fan. Alan Davies is probably known for more than that but without getting Wikipedia out that’s enough to introduce him. The reason he’s getting mentioned on here in the first place is because of comments he made on a podcast he does, “The Tuesday Club”.

    The podcast is by – and aimed at – Arsenal fans and consists mostly of cackling about lots of clubs that aren’t Arsenal – as well as passing comment about lots of people unconnected to the podcast. It’s a bit like being stuck near a few lads sitting round a table on the train with a row of empty cans and a fit of the giggles at their own in-jokes. If you’re an Arsenal fan you’ll probably be joining in with the tittering and maybe even emptying a few cans of your own. If you’re not it’ll probably get on your tits – at which point you need to ask yourself why you’re listening to it in the first place.

    This could be a completely unfair assessment of the podcast because it’s only based on listening to the large part of two episodes. And the reason for listening was to hear first-hand the comments made by Alan Davies about Hillsborough.

    The podcast turned to Chelsea’s FA Cup semi-final game against Spurs being played on the Sunday evening before Chelsea play their midweek semi-final first leg against Barcelona in the Champions League. It was pointed out that Liverpool’s FA Cup semi-final, against Everton, was to be played on the Saturday to avoid it clashing with the anniversary of Hillsborough on the Sunday.

    Davies launched himself into a rant about this: “Liverpool and the 15th – that gets on my tits that sh*t. What are you talking about, ‘We won’t play on the day,’ why can’t they?”

    Another voice on the podcast said “Because it’s too sad a memory.”

    Davies still wasn’t happy and continued his outburst: “Do they play on the date of the Heysel Stadium disaster? How many dates do they not play on?

    “Do Man United play on the date of Munich? Do Rangers play on the date when all their fans died in that disaster… whatever year that was… 1971?”

    The two episodes listened to were pretty much wall-to-wall bitching about everyone but Arsenal, accompanied by the giggles of whoever wasn’t speaking at the time. Kenny Dalglish was one of the targets on both episodes – but he was far from being the only target on a podcast that basically tries to be satirical but, to an outsider at least, isn’t really funny enough to sound anything but bitter.

    Had he started his rant about Liverpool by complaining about something other than a situation related to Hillsborough the chances are the audience for the podcast would remain restricted to the type of Arsenal fan that finds it enjoyable. If he was just talking about Andy Carroll’s booking at Newcastle or Luis Suárez’s against Villa he’d be able to launch into his little bit about his hatred for Dalglish without it really going any further than the walls of the studio and the headphones of its listeners.

    But his rant started with a heartfelt moan about Liverpool’s long-standing determination not to play on April 15th. It made it sound, perhaps, far worse than it was: “Every interview [Dalglish] has given this season he looks like he wants to head-butt the interviewer. This tight-mouthed, furious, frowning, leaning forward, bitter Glaswegian ranting, ‘Liverpool FC do not play on April 15th.’”

    He’d tried to do that bit in a Glaswegian accent but failed miserably admitting it was “terrible because I hate him.”

    There are lots of reasons why Davies could hate Dalglish and Liverpool. The way Kenny responded to an angry Arsene Wenger at The Emirates last season is one of the most recent examples – and back in the eighties Liverpool and Arsenal were regular title rivals, Liverpool never finishing outside the top two when Kenny was in charge. In between times we’ve had that comeback in 2001 at Cardiff which saw Liverpool lift the FA Cup at Arsenal’s expense and Jamie Carragher’s red card for returning a £1 donation to the general area of the Arsenal fan who’d thrown it at him. Even so, Arsenal have had their fair share of joy at Liverpool’s expense and it seems odd that Davies would be so bitter.

    Whatever the cause of his bitterness towards Liverpool – and It’s always possible, of course, that it’s part of an act – it became a problem for him when he basically linked Hillsborough with that hatred.

    He’s since apologised on Twitter for the outburst and whilst the Hillsborough Justice Campaign have accepted his apology they’ve not accepted the £1000 donation that he made at the same time:

    “The HJC has not accepted the £1,000 paid into its paypal account by Alan Davies. Whilst we accept his apology, we would prefer that he genuinely tried to understand why the decision never to play on the anniversary of the Hillsborough Disaster is so important.”

    In addition to the apology and the donation Davies tried to explain what he’d really meant: “I’m getting tweets from Liverpool fans who have been given the impression that I was disrespectful to those who lost their lives on 15/4/89.

    “Many disagree but I feel that the Liverpool v Everton semi-final could be played on Apr 15. Apologies to those upset by that suggestion.

    “I said the Hillsborough disaster was the worst event in modern peacetime history. I was on a terrace listening to a radio as it happened.

    “I agree that there must be a full enquiry into Hillsborough but not playing on the 15th doesn’t change anything. It’s not fair on Chelsea.”

    Having listened to Davies on his podcast it’s hard not read that “it’s not fair” comment without thinking of Harry Enfield’s spoiled teenage brat character. Enfield didn’t just do Scousers.

    The comments show how ignorant Davies is to the reasons behind the club’s long-term decision to resist playing on that date.

    For one thing it’s hardly a great hardship for football to make these kinds of considerations. It’s the first time Liverpool have been involved in an FA Cup semi-final since The FA put the ties into hock for thirty years to help pay for their stadium. Liverpool and Everton shouldn’t really be travelling all the way down to London, fans getting on their coaches at 4am, for a semi-final that could have been played at Old Trafford.

    And maybe, just maybe, it would have shown more sensitivity if the FA didn’t schedule any semi-finals for that date. Would it hurt to move them to the weekend before or after if the 15th fell on a weekend?

    Even UEFA made it clear they would do all they could to accommodate Liverpool’s request not to play a Champions League tie on that date, even though it may have messed up agreements with the TV companies that make the tournament so lucrative.

    Part of the complaint from Davies was that the Chelsea-Spurs game was kicking off at 6pm. Liverpool’s game kicks off the day before at lunchtime. Was it Liverpool’s fault that the Chelsea game kicks off so late in the day? Should he not be livid with The FA for allowing ITV to dictate the kick-off time? Should he not be ranting at ITV?

    One point he seems to gloss over is that Chelsea’s Champions League match is at home, not in Barcelona, and their FA Cup semi-final is in their home city too.

    He also doesn’t really mention that this Champions League semi-final is being played on the Wednesday, not the Tuesday.

    Luck gave Chelsea their first leg on the Wednesday rather than the Tuesday and at home rather than away.

    Who would everyone be complaining about if Chelsea’s two semis were set for 6pm Saturday (at the behest of TV) and 8pm Tuesday?

    It was “not fair” in 1989 when The FA decided how to allocate ends of the stadium, giving the side with the far larger average home gate far less tickets than the other. It was “not fair” in 1989 when the authorities ignored the fact that many fans were delayed getting to the stadium because of problems on the motorways. It was “not fair” that 96 football fans never went back home to their mums and dads and sons and daughters because people who were supposed to look after them treated them like scum.

    And those bereaved mums, dads, sons and daughters remember that day every minute of every day. All they ask is that one day out of every year they can remember it with everybody else who wants to remember it with them.

    One day.

    If we’d given each victim one day, one victim every year, we’d still have 63 years to go before they’d all had that day.

    Every year we do remember them there’s a good chance it’s the last time individual mums or dads will be there to do so. Twenty-three years is a long time and many of those parents will never see justice done in their own lifetimes, although we’ll carry the fight on until it’s won.

    A service is held at Anfield. It’s attended by Liverpool players, by Liverpool staff of all levels, by families, by survivors, by fans, by fans of other clubs, by people who have no connection to football whatsoever but feel a connection to what happened.

    Why would anyone want to stop them from being able to remember what happened for that one day every year?

    On the 20th anniversary maybe 30,000 people went to the service. This year might be the same – not everyone can make it on the 15th if it falls on a working day.

    As well as the service at Anfield there are services held elsewhere, including Sheffield. People have their own ways of remembering, their own places to go to.

    It’s for the families and the survivors to decide, one day, if there is no longer a need to avoid playing on the 15th.

    Liverpool always ask not to play on that day and so far have always been granted that request. It’s difficult to imagine a situation where that couldn’t possibly be accommodated.

    As for the question about Liverpool playing on the anniversary of Heysel, Liverpool FC has only played on that day once in all of its 120 year history. And that was the day the disaster happened.

    Other clubs who have suffered tragedies have their own ways of dealing with their loss and take their own amount of time to come to terms with it – if they ever do. But isn’t that the same for all of us when we’re hit by tragedy? We deal with it in our own way – and it takes a real lowlife to interfere with that just because it might spoil their fun a bit.

    For Liverpool April 15th isn’t about football, it’s about remembering 96 people no longer with us and thinking about the hundreds of survivors who still suffer the after-effects of what they went through.

    It’s also about reminding football what happens when priorities are wrong.

    Alan Davies has had plenty of time to reflect on what he said and the response he got. He should know better than to give the Twitter trolls any attention and to focus on what the more reasonable people have said to him.

    He has something more powerful and helpful to the campaign for justice than that £1000 the HJC turned down. He’s a well-known public figure. He can help spread the word, help to get the truth out there. He doesn’t have to be an ‘enemy’ and his apology has been accepted.

    Maybe he should try and arrange a quiet meeting with the HJC so they can help him to help them.

    It doesn’t have to be on Sunday. Any day will do.

    But is one day too much to ask?

  • Reds v Villa: Hendo and Kuyt start, Agger back on the bench

    Posted: April 7, 2012, 4:11 pm by Jim Boardman

    Fans might claim to be embarrassed by Liverpool’s recent form but supporters are more likely to be unhappy and thinking of whatever ways they can to help get behind the team and bring about a return to winning ways. Liverpool play host to Aston Villa today and Kenny Dalglish has made a number of changes to the side that lost 2-0 away to Newcastle last week.

    The difference between ‘fans’ and ‘supporters’ was highlighted by a man that just about all of Liverpool’s followers were glad to see go. Roy Hodgson had been put forward for the England job by the Liverpool crowd, a sarcastic way of asking for The FA to take him off the club’s hands after a half season where he’d publicly criticised some of the club’s best players (what was left of them), employed hoof and hope tactics, dropped far too many points, gone out of cups at first stages and lowered expectations to the point where he seemed to be hoping the end of season celebrations would be for having avoided relegation.

    Roy was unlucky in some ways, perhaps the first mistake he made being the one where he believed the hype from the owners and back pages about how Liverpool supporters really felt about Rafael Benitez. The hardcore who wanted Rafa out even when he was leading the club to a second-placed finish (only the second time the club has managed it since Graeme Souness resigned) were happy to see Roy get the job – after all, their mantra was pretty much “anyone would be better than Benitez”. But fans who’d decided for different reasons that the relationship between Benitez and the boardroom was too damaged for it to work weren’t expecting a downgrade and it was up to Roy to prove he wasn’t. Even those who were against the departure of Rafa accepted that he had to be given a chance.

    All Roy had to do was show he was doing his best, that he cared, that he wanted the support of those fans. Instead he gave the impression of someone expecting to lose most games, not caring if he did, not interested in how the fans felt. Why that was the case no longer matters, he’s gone, but we need to remember those differences before we succumb to the views of the kind of Liverpool fan who thinks its okay to call Kenny Dalglish a “c***”.

    Every time Kenny has been linked with a return to the club in any capacity he’s made it clear that he’s there to do his best for the club, to help it in any way he can, to stay until he’s no longer needed. If Kenny thought the job was beyond him, that the critics had a point, he’d step down quietly.

    There was a time when the atmosphere at Anfield was such that any benefit of the doubt an official could give would go Liverpool’s way. The Kop would claim for every corner, every throw-in, every hint of a penalty. It wasn’t a conscious effort to cheat, it wasn’t a subconscious instinct to be 100% behind every single player in a red shirt and the men peeping out of the dugout.

    Nowadays there are far too many fans who think it’s more helpful to the team to scream abuse at the players from their expensive seats at the ground, usually punctuated with rounded-up versions of the transfer fee reportedly paid for that player.

    The kind of fan who used to shout help to his team’s players is harder to find now. The help might have been misguided but it always came from people with their hearts in the right place. New players, or players drafted in during times injury problems, would be encouraged, not screamed at for failing to be Lionel Messi.

    Liverpool’s league season isn’t that important now, but winning today is. It’s more important than it should be, but nowhere near as important as the hysterical elements of the support are making it out to be.

    Pepe Reina is out for three games meaning Brad Jones is back in the squad but it’s Alexander Doni who starts, making his first competitive appearance for the Reds since signing last summer.

    Injuries in defence include Martin Kelly and Glen Johnson but there’s the welcome sight of Daniel Agger amongst the subs. Today’s back four is the same as last week’s.

    Bellamy and Carroll are back on the bench, Jay Spearing also drops out of the starting line-up, with Henderson and Downing likely to play out wide of a midfield including Steven Gerrard and Jonjo Shelvey.

    Kuyt and Suarez are up front.

    The Villa side includes two former Reds – Stephen Warnock and Emile Heskey. Villa fans will also be paying tribute to their captain, Stiliyan Petrov, at the nineteen minute mark and have asked Liverpool fans to do the same.

    Liverpool: Doni, Flanagan, Carra, Skrtel, Enrique, Henderson, Shelvey, Gerrard, Downing, Suarez, Kuyt.
    Subs: Jones, Agger, Coates, Maxi, Spearing, Bellamy, Carroll.

    Aston Villa: Given, Hutton, Warnock, Collins, Baker, Ireland, Bannan, Lichaj, Herd, Agbonlahor, Heskey.
    Subs: Guzan, Stevens, Williams, Johnson, Gardner, Carruthers, Weimann.

    The game is being shown live on TV in Ireland on Setanta. In the US it’s being shown online on FoxSoccer.TV. In the UK the game isn’t being shown live.

    To watch the game live in the UK (and anywhere else it isn’t on live) you need a Fox Soccer To Go subscription with a US IP address – you can get a US IP address here.

  • Message to Liverpool Fans from Villa Fans

    Posted: April 7, 2012, 1:24 pm by Jim Boardman

    ASTON VILLA fan site “My Old Man Said” has asked Liverpool fans join them in a tribute to their captain, Stiliyan Petrov, who is fighting recently diagnosed acute leukaemia.

    The illness was found after the Villa number 19 was being tested after feeling the effects of what was thought to be a virus last month. He has been to a London hospital for the first stage of treatment and his chemotherapy treatment is due to begin next week.

    Villa are the visitors at Anfield today and details are below of their idea for a tribute for their captain, applause in the 19th minute for the man who wears their number 19 shirt.

    In short – Today, at Anfield, Aston Villa fans would be honoured if Liverpool fans would join us in a 19th minute tribute to our captain.

    But please read on:

    Please join us in the 19th minute at Anfield for Stan

    Please join us in the 19th minute at Anfield for Stan

    It’s a great shame Stiliyan ‘Stan’ Petrov won’t be shaking hands with Steven Gerrard in the centre-circle at Anfield today.

    Stan is truly one of the decent gents of the game and was one of the last players who’d deserve the tragic news of being diagnosed with acute leukemia last week.

    The other night, I was discussing the Villa vs Liverpool game with a big Liverpool fan friend of mine and talk turned to Petrov.

    My friend told me  he’d heard once on BBC Radio Five, veteran commentator Pat Murphy and ex-player Pat Nevin confessing they would sometimes spend their down time in the media room at football games picking various footballing 11?s. The kind of game fans play down pubs, where you pick 11?s, such as:  ‘Bearded players 11?, ‘Alice Bands 11?, ‘Italians that played in England 11?, Horrible Person 11?, ‘Genuine nice guys 11?…etc, etc

    While the two Pats wouldn’t name and shame their ‘Horrible Person 11? on air for obvious reasons, when it came to the ‘Genuinely Good Guys 11?, Pat Murphy (who has spent decades in the game meeting players) said, “Stiliyian Petrov would be the captain of the ‘Nice Guys 11?, every time”.

    The Captains

    The Captains

     

    The reaction of Villa supporters, Celtic supporters (who gave him a YNWA tribute last week) and the outpouring of emotion from Stan’s  native Bulgaria, was absolutely due to Stan being considered one of the good guys in the game.

    As a result, My Old Man Said supporters group along with other Villa and Celtic fans launched the initiative to get Aston Villa and Celtic to play a charity tribute between the two teams for Stan, which we got widespread press coverage for this week.

    [www.myoldmansaid.com]

    Again, Aston Villa fans would be honoured if Liverpool fans would join us in a 19th minute tribute to our captain.

    We wouldn’t neccesarily reach out to any club, but we regard Liverpool FC as one of the great bastions of tradition within the English league, and a club that has known tragedy in football, more than any other in recent years.

    Last year, My Old Man Said actively encouraged followers to sign the online petition to get the government to release the files and re-open the investigation into the Hillsborough ’96.

    In light of this, as a few Liverpool fans have requested, we would be happy to make today’s game a double-date for football fan power – Support Stan and Justice for the 96.

    Many thanks for reading this.

    MOMS

    #SUPPORTSTAN & #JFT96

     

    The original request can be found here: http://www.myoldmansaid.com/liverpool-request/

  • Reds and Blues join forces to tell the world: Don’t Buy The Sun

    Posted: April 5, 2012, 1:08 am by Jim Boardman

    FOR Liverpool’s second visit to Wembley this season the Reds are joining forces with blues for a second time to spread the word on the boycott of The Sun. In February it was the Carling Cup final and Cardiff City were the blues. In nine days it’s the FA Cup semi-final and the blues are Everton. Cardiff City fans held up blue “Don’t Buy The Sun” posters in the stadium in February and Everton fans are being asked to do the same for the semi-final.

    Everton supporters are well aware of the boycott of The Sun and have joined Liverpool fans in boycotting it for the last 23 years. Recent initiatives, like the Justice Tonight tour, have seen an increase in awareness of the boycott, and of the campaign for Hillsborough justice.

    With both sets of fans holding up “Don’t Buy The Sun” posters (specially printed for the occasion by The Hillsborough Justice Campaign) before and during the game the campaign got more attention and more people learned not only that there was a boycott but the reasons behind it.

    As well as supporting the existing boycott Cardiff City supporters had their own reasons to ask people not to buy the paper, as the HJC’s Sheila Coleman explained before the game: “The Cardiff fans will hold their posters up because of the awful piece that The Sun printed about Mike Dye. He was a genuine football fan who died, but the paper decided to make him out as a hooligan.” A banner was also on show, with badges relating to both clubs, proclaiming: “The Birds Don’t Buy The Sun.”

    These birds Don't Buy the Sun - Carling Cup Final 2012

    "These birds Don't Buy the Sun" - Carling Cup Final 2012

    The semi-final is being held on Saturday April 14th, the day before the 23rd anniversary of Hillsborough, a time of year that is very difficult for supporters of both of Merseyside’s Premier League clubs. The fight for justice has been hindered for a long list of reasons over the past 23 years but the Sun’s decision to print lies about the conduct of supporters – survivors of the disaster who had in many cases saved or tried to save lives of their fellow supporters – continues to this day to cloud the opinions of people who took their word for it and believed those lies.

    New people learn “The Truth” about those lies on a regular basis which is why continuing to draw attention to it is so important for so many reasons.

    Don't Buy The Sun Poster - the Blue version for Everton fans

    Don't Buy The Sun Poster - the Blue version for Everton fans

    Liverpool and Everton supporters who are going down to Wembley next week are being asked to help with the distribution and display of the posters for the semi-final

    Details follow from The Hillsborough Justice Campaign. If you can help, please do so and please let them know:

    After the success of our “Don’t Buy The S*n” poster day at Wembley in February, we can confirm that we will again be distributing posters before the FA Cup Semi-Final on 14th April.

    There will be 20,000 posters available in red and 10,000 in blue, and these will be handed out around Wembley stadium on the day. We would ask supporters from both teams to show support and unity by spreading the word amongst fellow fans via websites, forums, social networks, supporters clubs and word of mouth, as well as holding up their posters inside the stadium prior to kick-off on the day.

    We are also looking again for volunteers to hand out posters on the day, to all supporters. Please email us at hillsboroughjusticecampaign@hotmail.co.uk if you can assist.

    Wembley officials and the Met Police have been extremely helpful for a second time by giving permission to distribute and display. This is a fantastic opportunity for the two Merseyside clubs to come together on a showpiece platform to get the message across. Don’t Buy The S*n.

    Liverpool supporters at the Carling Cup final - "Don't buy the S*n"

    Liverpool supporters at the Carling Cup final - "Don't buy the S*n"

    * Ben Williams is cycling 260 miles from his home in South Norfolk to Anfield, stopping off at Hillsborough on the way, in memory of the 96 who died and to raise awareness of the fight for justice.

    Funds are being raised (via The Community Foundation for Merseyside / The Jamie Caragher 23 Foundation) for the Hillsborough Family Support Group, the Hillsborough Justice Campaign and other Merseyside based charities and initiatives.

    You can sponsor Ben (aka Subsy) by:

    • visiting this page:  [https:]] or
    • texting RYGJ60 £5 to 70070 (replace £5 with your donation amount – texts are free!)

    As well as asking for sponsorship Ben would also appreciate some support on the ride itself. Visit the site he’s set up for the ride more details and for updates as he gets nearer to the start date for the 3-day journey: rideforthe96.co.uk.

    Ride for The 96

    Ride for The 96

  • Perch denies diving, Kenny says it’s forgotten

    Posted: April 5, 2012, 7:25 pm by Jim Boardman

    Newcastle utility player James Perch has claimed he didn’t dive in the incident that led to Liverpool’s Pepe Reina getting sent off on Sunday, despite television replays showing there was no contact from Reina’s head.

    Liverpool were 2-0 down and chasing the game and after making a save Reina was running through his area with the ball in a hurry to get Liverpool going forward again. To stop him doing this Perch brought him down – and was booked for doing so – but Reina’s reaction saw him sent off.

    Described in the article as “one of the most honest professionals in the game”, there have been suggestions it would be very much out of character for him to fake contact and try to get an opponent sent off. Yet that honesty is surely under question given his claims in The Journal.

    One camera angle in particular showed a side-on view of the two players as Reina moved towards Perch. It couldn’t have been any clearer: Reina’s head did not touch Perch’s head. Yet Perch threw himself back as if he’d got caught up with Yozzer Hughes on a particularly bad day.

    To be fair to Perch nobody would really expect him to come out and apologise for play-acting in these circumstances, particularly when it was so clear from the replay. Footballers are quick to condemn others who dive or feign injury in order to “get a fellow pro sent off”, especially when it happens off the ball as in this instance. The usual response from players doing this is to keep quiet about it.

    Perch probably would have been better off keeping quiet. Instead, ignoring those replays, he carried his on-field acting into the interview: “If someone makes contact with you, someone makes contact with you. That’s it.”

    If Reina had made contact, Perch would have a point.

    This wasn’t one of those occasions where contact was made but the player is being accused of exaggerating how strong the contact was. In those cases, however unlikely it seems, there’s always a possibility it really did hurt. The player could say, for example, that it got him right on a spot he’d been having trouble with previously. The player could say – as controversial as it is – that he was making sure the referee knew there’d been contact.

    This was a case of a player acting like he’d been head-butted when replays showed the heads didn’t touch. There was no contact. But Perch, “one of the most honest professionals in the game”, wants us to believe what the replays showed didn’t actually happen.

    The fact the paper interviewing him is happy to let him, without pointing out what anyone else watching it saw, possibly says a lot about how local media outlets have to become outpost PR departments for their local sides if they want to retain the access to players and staff they need to keep sales up.

    Perch seems to have missed most of the coverage of the incident after the match and if he watched the game back on TV must have fast-forwarded through the replays. Either that or he hopes everyone else did. In fact he suggests it was only Liverpool fans criticising him for trying to con the officials: “I wasn’t really surprised by some of the things that were said,” he claimed, “It’s Liverpool fans and all that.”

    It wasn’t Liverpool supporters showing the lack of contact on the numerous replays they showed of the incident, it wasn’t just Liverpool supporters discussing it elsewhere in the media. Numerous commentators, without necessarily going overboard and condemning him as a scourge of the modern game,  have pointed out what Perch did and called it for what it was. Former referee Graham Poll pointed out what he’d done, saying Liverpool should appeal (they decided not to), but Perch must have missed that too.

    People who have commented on the incident, whatever comments they might have passed on Pepe’s decision to walk over to Perch in that manner, have generally said Perch took a dive.

    But Perch has only heard it from Liverpool fans.

    Not that he cares: “They can say what they want, it’s water off a duck’s back,” he claimed.

    Probably caring more than he let on, Perch continued: “I’m not bothered, I don’t really read too much into it. I’m not a diver. People who have seen me play know what kind of player I am. I’m not going to go and dive about and act silly and the rest of it.” See – he’s not that kind of player.

    Perch got something right: “He [Reina] shouldn’t have done it really and I know deep down he’ll think ‘I shouldn’t have done that’ because it’s cost them at the end of the day. It’s his actions that have caused it.

    “He was probably frustrated at the way it was going. I’m not going to blame him for doing it because he’s frustrated and he wanted them to do well. Things happen; I bet he regrets it now.”

    Pepe will regret because he knows he gave an opponent the opportunity to deceive the referee. He knows because it’s happened before to him.

    The Spanish keeper had only been sent off once for Liverpool before Sunday and that was in a similar kind of situation after he raised his hands to Arjen Robben, then of Chelsea, and the Dutch player threw himself to the floor as if Reina had secretly hidden a stun gun in his gloves.

    Players like Perch, and Robben, know that the chances of being caught “making the most of it” are slim – and that the penalties are far from harsh when they are caught.

    At the same time players like Pepe know how harsh the punishment is if they let themselves fall into the trap of reacting. Of course Reina knows he shouldn’t have reacted.

    If Perch was worthy of the “honest” tag in the past it seems to be far from accurate now. “There’s no need for all the talk really,” he complains, “you just need to look at the telly to see he’s in the wrong.” People looked at the telly James. They saw what you did. Honestly.

    How much Pepe, and Liverpool, come to regret it remains to be seen. In terms of the fixture itself it made no difference, the game was already over for Liverpool who looked less like scoring the longer the game went on.

    The red card of course means Reina misses three games for Liverpool. Alexander Doni and new dad Brad Jones will provide cover until the Spaniard returns, but in the grand scheme of things the first two games of the ban aren’t particularly important. Liverpool’s league season, despite the hysteria, is really no further off track than it was after losing to Arsenal a week after qualifying for Europe by winning the Carling Cup final. Liverpool do need to win some league games though, not so much for the points as the opportunity to restore some pride and silence the critics.

    The players also need to build some confidence for the third game of Pepe’s ban, the one that is the biggest blow to have him missing for, the FA Cup semi-final at Wembley against Everton.

    That’s the game that could yet leave James Perch as the player with regrets about the incident. If Everton win the FA Cup there won’t be a place in Europe for the team that finishes sixth in the league. Even if Everton finish as runners-up in the cup they could take that European place – as long as their opponents qualify for the Champions League.

    Should Liverpool make the final the top six will all qualify for Europe – barring an unexpected and heavy collapse from the current top six – and that means Newcastle will be rewarded for their results over the course of the season. Their victory on Sunday wasn’t down to Pepe Reina being sent off.

    Liverpool have moved on from that game now though, according to manager Kenny Dalglish. The frustrations were aired and dealt with after the match and forgotten the following day: “We’re fine,” he told reporters. “Everything that happened on Sunday was addressed on Sunday. The doors are closed now, we’ve learnt our lessons from it. The players came in on Monday and trained.”

    Kenny is happy with the hard work he’s seen his players put in this week: “The training has been very impressive. Obviously there was a disappointment amongst everybody with the recent run of results but the only way we’re going to address that is to work as hard as we have done.”

    Perhaps hinting at that dive, or thinking back to the handball on the line the officials missed that would have seen an early penalty for Liverpool and Newcastle down to ten men, Kenny pointed out that the focus is on curing Liverpool’s own problems, not dwelling on where others have got it wrong: “We can change to our benefit things that are in our jurisdiction. There are other things that have happened that we can’t change because they’re out of our jurisdiction so there’s no point looking at it.”

    Some of those things maybe can be changed though. Liverpool have struggled to respond well to injustices – or perceived injustices – from referees this season. Referees get things wrong – we’d never notice them otherwise – and alongside hitting posts, conceding fluky goals and other incidents that can be classed as unlucky it’s all part of the game. What Liverpool’s players desperately need to improve is how to react to games that seem to be going away from them in those circumstances.

    And from what Kenny says, it’s already being looked at: “They don’t like coming off the pitch having lost a game. That disappointment is a virtue in some ways if we can control it.”

    And the key to getting back to winning ways? “We just stick together – players, fans, staff, owners – everybody sticking together.

    “As we’ve always said, we’ve got a better chance of getting through it if we stick together.”

    That needs to start now, and has to be loud and clear on Saturday against Aston Villa.

  • Bellamy, Carroll and Suarez start

    Posted: April 1, 2012, 3:09 pm by Jim Boardman

    MORE changes for Liverpool today as Kenny Dalglish bids to get his side back to winning ways in the league. Agger, Johnson, Kelly, Lucas and Adam are amongst those missing from today’s Liverpool side due to injury, but Craig Bellamy makes a welcome return to the starting line-up.

    Flanagan continues at right-back, with Jamie Carragher retaining his place in the continued absence of Agger.  Henderson and Downing are on the bench for their return to the North East but Andy Carroll starts against his old club.

    There’s also a start for Jonjo Shelvey and Maxi Rodriguez is back in the 18.

    Liverpool’s final league position stopped mattering in real terms after Arsenal won the league match at Anfield, ending Liverpool’s hopes of a Champions League place six days after winning the Carling Cup and ensuring qualification for next season’s Europa League. But with five defeats in the last six in the league there’s a need to boost morale amongst the squad and the supporters and to maybe silence the critics who are looking for a story that might not really be there.

    Newcastle: Krul, Simpson, Williamson, Perch, Cabaye, Guthrie, Ben Arfa, Gutierrez, Tiote, Cisse, Ba
    Subs: Elliot, Santon, R Taylor, Ferguson, Gosling, Vuckic, Sh Ameobi

    Liverpool: Reina, Flanagan, Carragher, Skrtel, Enrique, Spearing, Gerrard, Shelvey, Suarez, Carroll, Bellamy.
    Subs: Doni, Aurelio, Coates, Downing, Maxi, Henderson, Kuyt.

    Kick-off: 1:30pm BST

  • Kenny reminds Reds players of all ages they have to earn their shirt

    Posted: March 24, 2012, 3:00 pm by Jim Boardman

    SOMEONE close to Raheem Sterling seems to be pushing for him to get a move out of Anfield and back to London – but that person might just be messing up the player’s hopes of developing into the kind of player he was showing the potential to be. There is a world of difference between the reserve league and the first team and clubs have got to be careful about how they manage the transition for each youngster.

    Fourth might well be out of reach for Liverpool but Kenny Dalglish says he still wants his side to battle for every point. Kenny wouldn’t, publicly at least, give up on fourth until it was mathematically out of reach and always avoids giving the kind of answers the reporters want when asked if a game is a “must win” or if a defeat means “season over”. But it is out of reach now, in real terms, and that has led to calls for the boss to blood some youngsters.

    Liverpool’s injury problems seem to be starting to mount now – Charlie Adam could be out for the season, alongside Lucas Leiva, with Craig Bellamy, Glen Johnson and Daniel Agger definite absentees for today’s visit of Wigan and Martin Kelly a doubt. Injury problems can often force a manager’s hand when it comes to trying out the youngsters – it’s either that or play a more experienced man out of position. But injury problems can also make it more difficult for a manager to consider risking a youngster, particularly if that youngster plays where someone more experienced is already available.

    If Liverpool were about to go into a period of experimentation and everybody was fit the priorities might be to give some playing time to those players already close to being first team players. Sebastian Coates is one example of a player definitely considered part of Liverpool’s future who is still some way from forcing his way into the side on a regular basis. The more games he plays between now and the end of the season the easier it will be to assess his abilities where it matters – in that Liverpool shirt – and that also gives him much-needed experience. He was brought on for Kelly on Wednesday after the full-back was injured, a choice that will have been more than a little disappoint for Jon Flanagan, the right-back amongst the subs that night.

    Perhaps Flanagan should get a start today – assuming Kelly is still injured – leaving Kenny to then decide who gets Agger’s place in the centre of defence. If Liverpool are experimenting then Coates should get that place, but that would represent quite a risk in that two of the back four would be relatively inexperienced in the Premier League at a time when a third one, Jose Enrique, isn’t in the best form of his Liverpool career. Wigan’s form in front of goal of late means that the risk is lessened – but sod’s law likes that kind of thinking.

    The more experimentation that goes on at the back the more difficult it is to experiment where necessity isn’t calling for it elsewhere. In some ways Suarez and Carroll up front is an experimental front line given the few occasions they’ve lined up together and unless one of them is definitely leaving in the summer it’s long overdue for them to get some time to form a decent partnership that could be put to good use next season.

    In the centre of midfield Liverpool’s options are starting to look limited but perhaps now is the time to give Jordan Henderson a run in the kind of role he’s more suited to, a more central role rather than out wide on the right. Stewart Downing has taken his time to settle in at Anfield but has shown a lot more of what Liverpool expect from him in recent games – for his sake it would be better for him to get a run in the side now his confidence is back – but Kenny will be more concerned with what is better for Liverpool’s sake.

    That’s where Sterling’s family, friend or advisors – whoever it was – have miscalculated their decision to go to the press with gripes about him not getting a chance in the first team. Kenny watches most of the games at the Academy and of course has good links with the coaches working there. If Sterling is ready for the first team Kenny will know he is. If Sterling is ready to be considered for the first team Kenny will know he is. Armed with that knowledge he’ll put Sterling on the bench at what he thinks is the right time and on the pitch when he thinks it’s the right time.

    The stuff that went into the press didn’t include any quotes but papers rarely go into that kind of detail without a conversation having taken place. What went in the Mirror this week was basically a confirmation of what went in another paper just before the NextGen semi-final against Ajax. How much poetic licence the journalist added to whatever he’d been told is open to debate, but the language was emotive to say the least.

    “Liverpool are facing a fight to keep wonderkid Raheem Sterling as Kenny Dalglish continues to ignore calls for the teenager to be handed a first-team role,” it began. And, interestingly, “Tottenham plan to pounce on the uncertainty… with a shock summer move.”

    And the customary “sources close to the forward” reckoned he was “struggling to settle in Merseyside and is now said to be considering his future.”

    Spurs may well be interested in the player (their name cropped up in the reports this week too) but there’s a lot of naivety on show from the unnamed source: “The source also added that Liverpool have broken promises made to Sterling over his level of first-team involvement this season. However, he is still to make his full debut despite being told he would be given chances.” It’s highly unlikely that Spurs would be any different to Liverpool when it comes to that kind of promise – any chances will depend on the state of the first team but, importantly, the form of the player in the reserves or youth team.

    Dalglish was asked about the speculation yesterday and sent out a message to this source close to the player: “Whether someone is 17 or 27, it doesn’t make any difference, whether you want to be involved doesn’t mean to say you should be involved. You have to deserve to be involved.”

    Blabbing to the press – directly or indirectly – probably knocks a couple of points off your score when it comes to saying how much you deserve your chance and if Sterling was close to some involvement he might just find these reports have moved him further away from that. While Kenny will be glad that a player is desperate to play for the first team he’ll not be happy at the idea he thinks he knows better than the coaching staff.

    “The deserving bit is the most important thing,” said Kenny, “and we will decide if anyone deserves to be involved, not anybody else. You earn the right to a run out by what you do on the pitch, not by what’s said in newspapers.”

    As far as Kenny is concerned Sterling isn’t the only talent the Academy has and he dropped a hint that call-ups could be forthcoming if injuries continue to occur the way they have so far: “Raheem has progressed the same as a lot of young players have progressed and that’s testimony to the people at the Academy as well as the individuals. Our circumstances might dictate they have to be involved.”

    Last season Jack Robinson and Jon Flanagan figured as injuries took their toll towards the end of the season: “We had Robbo and Flanno come through last year and then there’s Jonjo [Shelvey] and Kells [Martin Kelly] as well.  Their development has happened because they were looked after.”

    Shelvey was out on loan until Lucas got injured and although he has rarely figured since he’s been on the sidelines ready to step in should injuries continue. Today may see him get a chance.

    The injuries mean Liverpool have been reluctant to send players out on loan that they may need to call on for the first team: “If we were in a better position we would maybe have allowed a few of the boys to go out on loan somewhere, but we’re not in a position like that because we don’t have the players available to cover for them to go out on loan.”

    Kenny knows that there’s more to first-team experience than getting on the pitch and recognises the value of sending youngsters elsewhere to be part of a senior set-up: “That would have been part of their development and part of the progress for us to have them back as good professional footballers. They had to stay here because of the position we are in with injuries. We hope it doesn’t stunt their development.”

    The underlying condition for a player getting on that pitch in Liverpool’s first team is that it’s for the good of the club, in the long-term or short-term: “If it’s right for someone to play and they deserve to play then they will have a game but only if it’s right for us. There comes a time when you have to take the nappies off them and see if they have got it.”

    Wigan are battling for survival and are likely to be missing striker Hugo Rodallega with a knee injury. Midfielder David Jones and keeper Mike Pollitt are definitely out. With Wigan determined to avoid the drop and Liverpool’s league season all but over this could be another embarrassing day for the Reds, at least where pride’s concerned.

    A draw today would be the fourth in a row between the two sides, Liverpool’s last victory coming in Rafa Benítez’s last season at Anfield. Wigan have never won at Anfield in the Premier League, losing four and drawing two of their six visits. That means nothing once the whistle goes for kick-off, although it will be weighing heavily on the minds of the Reds that they’ve lost four of their last five league games, winning only two of their last ten. Wigan have only won one of their last 14 league matches but they have won more games away than at home.

    It’s scoring goals that has been Liverpool’s problem this season, their defensive record at home is second only to Manchester City (10 conceded by Liverpool, seven by Manchester City). That’s thanks in a great part to Pepe Reina who will make his 250th league appearance for the Reds today.  If Steven Gerrard finds the net it would be his 150th goal in all competitions for Liverpool.

    Whatever team Kenny picks, he’ll pick it for the good of the club. For the good of the players he chooses they might want to put in the performance of their lives.

  • Great expectations

    Posted: March 23, 2012, 5:57 pm by Jim Boardman

    A FEW short weeks ago Liverpool won the Carling Cup, not the most prestigious trophy in the world but a trophy nonetheless and the first bit of silverware of this decade. Something to build on, something to look back on, something to please all those who said the club only exists to win trophies when they were complaining at the club being runners up in the two biggest competitions it can win in 2007 and 2009.

    The game itself, the Carling Cup Final, wasn’t the best Liverpool performance in history, it was against a team from a division below and it went to penalties – but it was enough to win the cup. And in getting to that final Liverpool had defeated three Premier League sides, including both Chelsea and Manchester City.

    As fans celebrated and spent a couple of days recovering and getting their voices back the players had no such luxuries, in some cases not even getting enough time to fully recover from the exertions of playing for over two hours at Wembley. Some of them went off to join up with international squads the next day and in some cases were injured when they got back to their club later that week. Steven Gerrard and Glen Johnson were two of Liverpool’s casualties and with Daniel Agger breaking a rib in the final itself they were watching from the sidelines with Lucas Leiva for the club’s next league match, six days after the final.

    That match was against Arsenal and by the end of it Liverpool felt like they’d been ambushed. Despite missing so many key players they’d made Arsenal struggle, but as seems to have been the case so often this season the words “missed a penalty” and “hit the post” were being written into the day’s match reports. Liverpool didn’t take their chances, Arsenal did – both of them taken by Robin van Persie.

    By the end of the match Liverpool’s slim hopes of a top-four finish were gone but the damage to those hopes had been already been done, bit by bit, over the course of the season.

    A week later Liverpool travelled to Sunderland for what was probably the most boring game of football the Premier League will see this season. Neither side deserved a point; Sunderland got three because of a goal that was as much of a fluke as that beachball goal from a couple of years back, although at least the referee was right to award this one.

    This wasn’t a performance from a side who thought the game meant much. It was played like it was an end-of-season affair with both sides’ league fates long since decided and from Liverpool’s perspective it was – that Carling Cup win meant they already had one of the Europa League places and the defeat to Arsenal meant they were unlikely to get anything more. If Bolton, Everton or Sunderland make it to the FA Cup final there’ll only be one Europa League place up for grabs based on league position and the only advantage to Liverpool for getting it would be a later start in next season’s competition.

    Of course if Liverpool had beaten Sunderland and QPR they’d be in sixth place now, one point behind fifth-placed Chelsea and only six points from fourth. Getting fourth wouldn’t have been impossible but it also wouldn’t have been very likely. Spurs’ recent form isn’t much better than Liverpool’s but for the Reds to get fourth Spurs would need to carry on with that poor form, with Arsenal and Chelsea joining them in doing the same. In reality Liverpool would still just be playing for pride.

    A few days later and Liverpool showed against Everton what they can do when the motivation is there, Steven Gerrard’s return to the starting line-up bringing him a hat-trick against the old rivals in their cup-final. That 3-0 win wasn’t enough for Liverpool to emulate their opponents by bringing it out on DVD but it was enjoyable for the Reds all the same and made sure the blues stayed below them in the league.

    Then it was back to the FA Cup and Liverpool knocked Stoke out of a cup for the second time this season. That win gives Liverpool another date at Wembley, for a semi-final this time, with Sunderland or Everton the opposition. It’s far too early to say if that will be followed up by a third trip to the FA’s stadium but even being there is something that it’s far too easy to take for granted.

    There are those who take it for granted though. 18 months ago Liverpool were staring administration in the face with a manager in charge who thought fourth division Northampton were formidable opponents and derby wins were Utopia. Some of those fans had booed not long before this when Liverpool went top of the league (albeit with a goalless draw) or when Lucas Leiva came on the pitch. They wanted a manager sacked for only finishing second in the league and applauded the man who forced him out and opened the door for the arrival of a replacement who’d been quite successful in part-time football decades before. There are many echoes of that attitude this season.

    Expectations for this season weren’t exactly helped by quotes in pre-season from the new owners about the importance of finishing fourth. They don’t seem so keen on talking about the importance of building a new stadium to increase match-day revenue, a new stadium that was already long overdue when Hicks and Gillett said it would be ready for summer 2010.  The earliest a new stadium would be ready now would be for the start of the 2015-16 season.

    Since 2009 when Liverpool finished second and were part of a “big four” other clubs have moved forward in terms of improving their squads. Liverpool moved backwards – and that means there has been far more ground to make up than perhaps is acknowledged. It’s a “big five” now – and Liverpool aren’t one of the five at this moment in time.

    In terms of net transfer spend the figure is somewhere in the region of £35m since the new owners came in. That will reduce if fees come in for players currently on loan. Wages have been reduced substantially too, which is also significant. Offering a player an extra £40k a week for five years means a club is committing to an extra £10m in wages. Claiming Kenny’s had £150m to spend on players is helpful to nobody but the club’s rivals.

    Realistic expectations at the start of the season should have been to qualify for Europe and to have a good crack at the top four. Five clubs were already fighting for four places and Liverpool, as a sixth, could only be expected to try to break into that group.

    After the Carling Cup final the first target – European qualification – had been achieved. The second target was an on-going one and was still on up until that defeat to Arsenal. After that it was never going to be about fighting for fourth place, no matter how well Liverpool did. After that it could only ever be about keeping the gap between Liverpool and fourth place as low as possible, about a league position that had no real relevance to The Reds than looking better in history books. In effect the expectation had been reached, but reached with a feeling that it could have gone on a lot longer than it did.

    When Liverpool lost to Sunderland it was frustrating and the performance an insult to those who spent good money and a lot of time travelling up there to see it. But the result wasn’t all that important any more.

    Against Everton and Stoke, two games where there was something to play for, it was more than a little enjoyable. But when Liverpool went to London to play QPR it was back to being as important as that Sunderland game had been. It’s nice to win, especially for those who spent that time and money on being there, but a long way from the end of the world to lose, even if it is disappointing.

    It was embarrassing to be 2-0 up with a quarter of an hour left and then to lose but the response from some on Twitter was far more embarrassing. Kenny isn’t immune to criticism, nor are his players, and lessons have to be learned from the way certain victory became a shock defeat. Perhaps the first lesson to be learned is that Liverpool have, at times, played with the same kind of attitude when the score did matter. Perhaps the lesson to be learned is that, at times, Liverpool haven’t wanted the victory as much as their opponents. That was certainly the case on Wednesday, understandable now but not so acceptable in November or December.

    If supporters can accept the league season is done with then maybe it’s time to give some of those youngsters a chance in the first team. But only if Rodolfo Borrell and Kenny Dalglish think they’re ready for it. And only if it’s accepted that they are taking a big step to move up from reserve team football to first team football. It’s a huge step, taking it too lightly could backfire in style.

    Maybe it’s more important to see if Andy Carroll or Charlie Adam have futures at the club. Perhaps that was why Charlie got back into the starting line-up on Wednesday. Perhaps Andy was on the bench because Kenny wanted to try Charlie Adam out in a certain formation. Maybe those who were calling for Kenny’s head 13 days after winning the club’s first silverware for five years will be proven to have been right – although they’ll never be right about the way they’ve gone about calling for his head.

    I was fortunate to be at Wembley, but unfortunate to be in front of that type of fan. Before kick-off the line-up was ‘a disgrace’. Within seconds of kick-off a young midfielder was ‘dogsh*t’ and this fan was doing all he can to try and let this player, from the team he was there to see, know about it. Few players avoided being called a ‘lazy c***’ by this ‘supporter’, or ‘dogsh*t’ for that matter. Even the captain and the manager were subjects of his apparent hatred. I like to think that this ‘supporter’ slipped in a big pile of ‘dogsh*t’ on his way back home and still hasn’t managed to rid his memory of the smell. Before that though he was singing and cheering and celebrating the winning of a cup.

    He’d probably argue that he’d paid his money so he had every right to be so critical, scathing and insulting. Is this what people mean when they talk about the “Sky generation” supporter? If you pay top prices to watch an opera you expect the singing to be spot-on. If you splash out on an expensive meal at a highly-recommended restaurant you expect it to be far better than the local fast-food place. Football isn’t like that. It never has been. And it shouldn’t ever be.

    It’s the same kind of attitude, perhaps, that the owner of one London side has towards his team. He always knows better than his manager and he goes mad when his money doesn’t getting him exactly what he wants. Except the owner of the club actually gets to change the manager or even pick the players he brings in. It’s not worked very well so far, but it’s not stopped him from doing it time after time.

    It would be a surprise if Liverpool’s owners were remotely that way inclined, meaning that Kenny will still be here next season regardless of the final league position. He’s brought one trophy this season; he’s still in with a chance of making that two.  Exactly how calling for his head, calling him ‘a clown’ or ‘clueless’, is supposed to help him – or his players – to do that is difficult to work out.

    Changes are needed to the squad. Something needs to be done about the conversion of chances whether that’s getting players better at taking them or getting players capable of making better chances. With more matches to play next season (should the Reds not slip up during qualifying rounds of the Europa League) there’s a need for more depth to the squad too.

    Liverpool can definitely make more progress next season, but how much they make also depends on what the other “big five” teams do over the summer. Damien Comolli also has to ensure that he brings players in because they fit in with whatever Kenny’s plans might be, not because they seem to be good buys individually. The owners need to get closer to bringing us those extra seats too.

    It’s highly doubtful that Kenny is completely happy with how things have gone or that he thinks he’s got everything right. He’ll have identified areas that need improvement. It’s unlikely that the players got away without criticism from him after giving that two-goal lead away on Wednesday. But turning, unreasonably, on the manager is a big part of what set Liverpool on its way out of the “big four” and kept it out of the “big five”. The last thing the club needs now is for that poison to return.

    There’s a cup semi-final to win in a few weeks’ time and if that doesn’t excite you then maybe football isn’t for you. Liverpool FC certainly isn’t.

  • Reds drawn against Blues – if they beat Sunderland

    Posted: March 18, 2012, 9:13 pm by Jim Boardman

    GOALS from Luis Suarez and Stewart Downing gave Liverpool a 2-1 win and a place at Wembley for the second time this season as they made the FA Cup semi-final with victory over Stoke City. Peter Crouch scored Stoke’s goal.

    The draw was made immediately after the game and Liverpool were drawn against the winners of the replay between Sunderland and Everton.

    Everton were held at home yesterday but knowing they face a possible Merseyside derby next month might just give them the extra incentive to get victory in the North East. David Moyes spoke out a few times in the lead-up to the derby this week about how much importance he places on trying to beat the Reds. Liverpool won 3-0 on Tuesday.

    The other semi-final is between Tottenham or Bolton and Chelsea. The Tottenham and Bolton match was abandoned yesterday after Bolton’s Fabrice Muamba collapsed shortly before half-time. Muamba is currently critical in hospital.

    The semi-finals are scheduled for the weekend of April 14th and 15th, which means Liverpool would be expecting their semi-final to be held on the Saturday. April 15th is the 23 anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster.

  • No charges against Reds fan accused of abusing Adeyemi

    Posted: March 12, 2012, 6:43 pm by Jim Boardman

    IT WAS revealed today that the Liverpool fan arrested following an incident involved Oldham’s Tom Adeyemi will not be prosecuted. Adeyemi, on loan from Norwich City, alleged that he’d heard the fan shout racial abuse at him towards the end of Liverpool’s 5-1 win in the FA Cup tie. The 20-year-old fan, from Aintree, denied the accusations and after reviewing the evidence the CPS made their decision not to bring charges.

    The decision was made by Jane Roden, Head of the Complex Casework Unit at CPS Mersey-Cheshire. She was quoted today outlining her reasons:

    “I have considered a file of evidence submitted by Merseyside Police, relating to an incident which occurred on January 6 when Liverpool and Oldham Athletic met in the FA Cup.

    “In the 79th minute of the game, Oldham Athletic player Tom Adeyemi alleged that a fan had shouted a racially abusive comment at him, after he retrieved the ball from near the crowd. “Mr Adeyemi reported the incident to the referee. The referee notified the fourth official, who then notified the police.

    “No action was taken until after the final whistle. Mr Adeyemi spoke to officers after the match and gave a statement to the police on January 8.

    “A suspect was identified and arrested. During interview he admitted shouting at the player, but denied it was of a racial nature. He was released on police bail pending a decision from the CPS.

    “I have viewed the extensive CCTV footage available, which has been enhanced to isolate and improve the sound. I have also read statements from Mr Adeyemi, the match officials and the many independent witnesses to the incident, many of whom came forward after the game to offer their evidence after hearing media reports of the incident.

    “There are two important factors I have relied upon when making my decision: the enhanced CCTV footage and the high proportion of witness statements which tend to support the suspect’s version of events.

    “On the balance of all of the evidence, I have therefore concluded that there is insufficient evidence to bring any criminal charges in this case and I have advised Merseyside Police of my decision.”

    Liverpool announced after the match that they would provide all available footage to the police, including CCTV footage and footage recorded or broadcast by their own TV cameras. Television footage showed Adeyemi shouting at a fan on the Kop from the pitch, before his team-mates led him away. He appeared to be in tears at what he thought he’d heard.

    After the incident Adeyemi sent thanks to all of those fans who’d shown him support:

    “I would like to thank everybody who has sent messages of support — they haven’t only been from Latics and Liverpool fans but from all over the country.

    “I have received lots of e-mails as well as hand-written letters and it has been brilliant to know such a lot of people are supporting me. It is for others to deal with and all I want to do is to concentrate on my football and make sure it doesn’t affect my game.”

    Adeyemi clearly made the allegations based on what he genuinely thought he had heard but it seems he might well have heard wrong.  The climate at the time of the incident was such, however, that this would be no surprise. Certain anti-discrimination campaigners and members of the press were whipping up a storm as part of a campaign that had long since lost its way.

    Reports immediately after the incident suggested the alleged abuse had come from two fans wearing Luis Suarez t-shirts, a ‘fact’ soon discovered to be untrue.

    Piara Powar, head of FARE, said at the time:

    “I’m afraid there is no question that the club’s approach has stoked this affair, and there is now a highly charged atmosphere around the issue. The Suarez T-shirts surely no longer have a place at Anfield.”

    “This has done a lot of damage to Liverpool FC and in many people’s eyes to English football. We have a young footballer in Tom Adeyemi who was abused quite badly at Anfield. Young footballers do not get that upset without due cause. The abuser has been charged and it is for the courts to decide the context of it.”

    Powar also tweeted, long before any facts were known:

    “The obvious thing for LFC today must be to come out as a club – owner, manager, captain – and start to undo some of the damage, including addressing their fans.

    “Go onto the LFC website and there is not a single expression of regret about what happened last night.

    “Are LFC fans going to do this at every game, support the mistakes made by their own man [Luis Suárez] by abusing others?

    “25% of PL players are black. That’s a lot of players to abuse.”

    Powar seemed unconcerned that a fair percentage of Liverpool supporters aren’t white and seemed to be suggesting that the majority – if not all – of Liverpool fans were racist.  However, as Powar is yet to apologise for calling an Asian supporter a “coconut” (after the Asian fan had expressed support for Suarez), he’s unlikely to apologise for his ill-advised scathing attacks on Liverpool supporters as a whole over the past few months.

    The FA, initially, refused to comment on Powar’s “coconut” jibe, instead pointing out that he worked for FARE. Later on, after more correspondence was exchanged, the Respect Team at the FA sent the following response:

    “This email when received was passed onto the relevant people at The FA.

    “The Discipline Manager has stated that the matter is in hand.”

    That was on 15th February, we are yet to hear any more from that Discipline Manager.

    The response from Richard Bates of Kick It Out  suggested that organisation had washed its hands of Powar:

    “Please resend this message to the following address – info@farenet.org”

    Show Racism the Red Card didn’t reply.

    The only comment we were able to get from FARE about Powar’s insult came after asking a number of times, in an email from someone there called Claudia:

    “Thank you for your email. My apology for not getting back to you earlier.

    “We take note of your concerns. However I have to inform you that we are unable to make any comments on this issue.”

    Powar (and his organisation) is still taken seriously by certain news outlets, presumably unaware of his alarming personal views on the issue of racism. Perhaps now is the time to take a different approach to selecting mouthpieces for quotes after incidents of alleged racial abuse in football. The problem needs to be dealt with properly, not used as a means to shift papers or childishly score points over others.

  • SAFC v LFC: Coates in for Carra, Gerrard on bench

    Posted: March 10, 2012, 4:31 pm by Jim Boardman

    AFTER dominating but losing last weekend against Arsenal the Carling Cup holders Liverpool are in desperate need of a win today at Sunderland. They start the second game in a row without Gerrard, Johnson or Agger, although the captain does at least make the bench today.

    Martin Kelly keeps his place at right back in Johnson’s absence but Jamie Carragher has been dropped to the bench. Sebastian Coates starts in Carra’s place, allowing Skrtel to play on the right side of central defence, the position he usually takes up when Agger is fit.

    Jordon Henderson starts at his old ground, joined in midfield by Charlie Adam and Jay Spearing. We’ll have to wait and see where Bellamy and Kuyt start, but Luis Suarez is up front against a team he’s scored against on both occasions he’s played against them.

    Former Reds centre-back Soto Kyrgiakos is on the bench for home side who have had a change of manager since the Anfield meeting at the start of the season. Martin O’Neill replaced Steve Bruce, who was manager in 2009 when the beachball goal was scored.

    Sunderland are missing captain Steve Cattermole and Stephane Sessegnon, both red-carded last weekend in the local derby with Newcastle.

    John O’Shea, who is expected to play with a protective cast on his hand, takes the Sunderland arm-band. Pepe Reina is Liverpool’s captain for the day, at least as long as Carra and Gerrard stay on the bench.

    Sunderland: Mignolet, Bardsley, Bridge, Turner, O’Shea (c), Larsson, McClean, Colback, Gardner, Campbell, Bendtner.

    Subs: Kyrgiakos, Kilgallon, Vaughan, Meyler, Wickham, Elmohamady, Gordon.

    Liverpool: Reina (c), Kelly, Skrtel, Coates, Enrique, Henderson, Spearing, Adam, Bellamy, Kuyt, Suarez.
    Subs: Gerrard, Carroll, Rodriguez, Downing, Carragher, Flanagan, Doni.

    Referee: Anthony Taylor (Manchester)

    Kick-off: 3pm

    TV coverage:
    UK: Not being shown live.
    Ireland: Setanta.
    US: FoxSoccer.TV (online, sub required *).

    Radio: City Talk 105.9 (UK only).

    * To watch FoxSoccer.TV from outside the US you will need to use a VPN or Proxy Server to give you US IP address. Visit usaproxyserver.com for details.

  • Johnson and McGrath entitled to their opinions

    Posted: March 8, 2012, 4:03 pm by Jim Boardman

    GLEN JOHNSON’s interview with the Daily Mail has seen him come in for some criticism from the usual types. He spoke out in response to questions he was asked and gave his honest opinions. He’s entitled to do both, especially if it’s in response to criticism from others.

    Paul McGrath was critical of Glen Johnson after Johnson joined his team mates and wore a Suarez t-shirt before the match. McGrath said at the time: “If I was in Glen Johnson’s position, I would have thrown the shirt to the floor,’ said McGrath.”

    Johnson’s response to that, in today’s article, basically suggest McGrath needs to look at himself before commenting on others: “The McGrath thing… that’s actually racist. Saying what he said is racist. He is only saying that to me because I was the only black lad wearing the T-shirt. He’s targeting me because of my colour.

    “I haven’t spoken to Paul McGrath about it. I don’t care what he thinks, really. I don’t know anything about him. But for someone to say that, it sums them up. It’s their problem.”

    McGrath has since responded, tweeting: “It saddens me that Glen Johnson has called me a racist, but he is entitled to his opinion.”

    He’s right. Both players are entitled to their opinions and both players should be entitled to a fair response to any airing of their opinions.

    McGrath made assumptions about Johnson’s opinions when he made the comments Johnson referred to.

    But McGrath seems to have inconsistent views about racism anyway.

    The following was written on this site on Christmas Eve, after the Suarez verdict but before the written reasons were released:

    MUCH has been written and said about the Suarez-Evra case, particularly in the few days since The FA announced the verdict, and it’s safe to say that little new can be added, at least until the written reasons for the verdict are made public.

    Opinions vary on how right or wrong the verdict was, how suitable the punishment was and how appropriate the response has been. People have opinions on people’s opinions and it’s practically impossible to find an impartial opinion.

    Yet these opinions are all based on ‘facts’ that are still rather vague, few of which are actually on record anywhere. Words like “negro”, “negrita” and “sudaca” are getting mentioned almost everywhere as being part of the exchange between the two players – but haven’t been mentioned anywhere on the record, in public, by any of those remotely involved in the case.

    The opinions being voiced now may well change when, eventually, the full facts of the case are known. The opinions may still be polarised even then, but at least by then it will be possible for those who really care to base their opinions on something other than speculation, sensationalised snippets and spin. There will always be those who struggle to see beyond club v club and those who see no issues in using a situation like this to suit their own needs in some other way – but this spiteful debate could actually become positive if it was based on fact and not innuendo. Individuals normally critical of decisions made by football’s officialdom are suddenly blind to any possibility that there could be a problem – minor or major – with the verdict.

    Kenny Dalglish said, yesterday, “It would be helpful to everyone if someone gave us some guidelines about what you can and cannot say.” Whether that would be helpful or not (again, opinions will vary) it would be far more helpful to hear what was or wasn’t said.

    Not that any of this bothers the people with an eye on viewing figures and circulation numbers. It’s controversial, it sells, it brings in the punters. And to keep it going they need people who can speak from experience to throw their opinions out there, to help promote even more debate.

    Thankfully for them Twitter provides ideal candidates and eases the need to explain in the awkward early part of the phone call why they think that person’s opinion might be relevant.  Instead they see the person’s opinion in 140 characters or less and there’s their excuse to call.

    One of the people with an opinion on the issue is former Manchester United player Paul McGrath.  He’s not seen the written reasons for the verdict either, but he’s clearly satisfied that there are no problems with it. His mind’s made up and he thinks it’s shameful that Liverpool – and one of Liverpool’s players in particular – is willing to even consider there could be a problem with the verdict. It hasn’t crossed his mind that the player he singles out is entitled to his own opinion.

    McGrath was speaking about the Liverpool players wearing t-shirts showing their support for Suarez: “It puts the anti-racism campaign back to the beginning as far as I’m concerned.  Maybe Kenny is trying to make a statement to the FA but I just think it is in bad taste that he sent them out in those T-shirts.”

    It was Liverpool’s right-back he singled out: “If I was in Glen Johnson’s situation, I’d have thrown the shirt to the floor. If that had been someone in my time and I’d heard the comments or even suspect he was guilty, then I would not wear a T-shirt with his name on it, saying all is well and good here.”

    We’ll come back to that in a moment. He went on: “It would have been much better for Liverpool if they’d have worn anti-racism shirts. It’s about respect. There’s this issue going on about respecting your opponents. It is actually a game. The game itself has gone too big; it’s about winning and the money.  The actual element of football being a game has long since gone; it is all about protecting your interest, protecting your best players.

    “A lot of children watch these games and to have done what they did, doing their warm-up in T-shirts with his smiling face on it, having just been done for a supposedly racist comment to one of his opponents, is shameful for football.”

    Johnson wore a Luis Suarez t-shirt, he didn’t go into details about his opinions on the case or what he based those unaired opinions on. He clearly knows more about the case (at least Suarez’s side of it) than most, but for various reasons he’s not in a position to actually go on record to elaborate, not yet anyway.

    One incident of racial abuse in football that hit the headlines happened off the field in 2004. It was Manchester United’s former manager Ron Atkinson, working for TV, who was heard making comments about Marcel Desailly from the commentary box: “He’s what is known in some schools as a f*****g lazy thick ni****.”

    The “n” word used by Atkinson was far stronger than the variations Suarez is speculated to have used and it wasn’t a case of his word against that of an accuser. It was all on tape, there for anyone who wanted to hear it with their own ears to do so. If that was what Suarez had said, unprovoked, and if that had been caught on tape, this debate wouldn’t be taking place this week. There wouldn’t be a grey area and Liverpool would probably have started a self-imposed ban on their own player from the off.

    Nobody would be able to defend Suarez for that, absolutely nobody. Yet Atkinson was defended when he came out with that slur. He lost his job and he lost his status in the game but he was still defended by some. He was defended by one in particular. Mr Paul McGrath.

    McGrath’s defence of Atkinson was astounding, even more so in the wake of his comments about Glen Johnson and Kenny Dalglish: “Well, Ron’s old school, I have to say that.”

    What does that mean? Does “old school” mean old-fashioned, from an era where using words like “n****r” would be acceptable? Did he think Ron maybe just needed educating that the culture of the olden days wasn’t the same as culture of modern-day England. In other words, let it go with an apology?

    He didn’t say, he just said the man who called a player a “n****r” wasn’t a racist. “Jesus, he’s one of the furthest men away from being a racist. He might say the odd word that makes you think ‘Jesus, what’s happening here?’ He had this thing in training, where he’d say ‘it’s the c**ns against the rest’.”

    How did McGrath, now so annoyed with Johnson about a t-shirt, react to Atkinson’s alleged use of insulting racial words in training? “We’d just laugh about it.”

    Really? “And the so-called c**ns had a good team – me, Yorkie, Dalian Atkinson, Cyrille Regis – so we were delighted. Never once would any of us have taken exception.”

    These comments were made around three years after Atkinson’s, he’d had plenty of time to reflect on it, he still wasn’t willing to show the same contempt to Atkinson that he would later be showing to Kenny Dalglish.

    Dalglish wore a t-shirt with a player’s name number and image on. Atkinson called a player one of the most objectionable racist words known. “What he said about Desailly, that’s something you shouldn’t be saying,” said McGrath.

    Paul McGrath is entitled to his opinion, but people reading it are entitled to see it in context. He can’t be right both times, can he?

    Context doesn’t sell papers, sensationalism does. Far too many people claiming to care about racism have it further down their priorities than they would care to admit.

  • Glen Johnson gets the chance to explain

    Posted: March 8, 2012, 3:50 pm by Jim Boardman

    GLEN JOHNSON was doing some promo work as part of one of his commercial deals and that work included making himself available for interviews with the media. Ian Ladyman of the Daily Mail interviewed him and asked him about the Luis Suarez saga, in particular the t-shirts the players wore with Suarez’s face on them and the handshakes before the league match at Old Trafford.

    The options are pretty limited when it comes to dealing that situation. Liverpool aren’t going to send their own press officers with every player doing work as part of his own commercial deals so there isn’t going to be someone there interrupting on the player’s behalf to deflect questions on certain topics. Even so, deflecting those questions, whether by a press officer or the player himself, isn’t always going to look good in print. It’s not hard to imagine a story talking about the player looking uncomfortable or embarrassed as he tried to deflect the questions on that particular topic.

    Should the club be banning players from answering questions on that topic anyway? Johnson has more reason than most in the Reds squad to talk about the story – he’s been on the receiving end of abuse about his own part in the whole circus ever since he joined his team-mates in wearing those t-shirts in December. He was mentioned in the written reasons issued by the FA for the Suarez decision – not for what he said but for what he might have had said to him – and got abuse for that too.

    He had a rugby player calling him an “Uncle Tom”, an insult that has racial connotations much like Piara Powar’s “coconut” jibe.  (Powar, incidentally, is still to apologise for that insult and the FA, Kick It Out, Show Racism The Red Card and FARE seem intent on brushing it under the carpet.) He also got some criticism from Paul McGrath, criticism that was not only hypocritical but ill-informed.

    Sooner or later Glen Johnson was going to be asked about this topic and given what’s been said about him it was always going to involve him explaining his own actions and sharing his own opinions on the story. If he’d not answered them today he’d have probably found himself having to answer them on England duty in the summer.

    The criticism Glen is getting today isn’t so much about what he’s said – but that he’s said it. One news agency headlines a short report on his comments as “Johnson reignites Suarez row” – yet Johnson was merely answering the questions he’d been asked. If anyone reignited it then it was the reporter who asked the questions and printed the answers.

    The report itself points out that Johnson was answering questions he’d been asked, but those having a go at the player seem to have missed that. Maybe they didn’t read it all. Where have we heard that before?

    It makes sense to express a desire for everyone to move on from the whole event but that’s not going to be as easy for some as it is for others. Suarez might have decided he’ll put it all in a book some day, Evra may feel the same – both players probably have enough material to be able to do that with it.

    Johnson has said his bit now and the chances are that he’s not got anything more to add to that.

    It’s not just those involved who feel it’s impossible to just ‘move on’ from what happened but maybe that won’t be seen until the  outcome of the Terry case is known or the next time an incident of this nature happens in the game.

    Daily Mail and PA

    Daily Mail and PA's headlines and captions

    There are far too many attention-seeking anti-discrimination campaigners, who seem to be looking for publicity more than equality, who are stirring up trouble that seems to do the opposite of what they claim to be trying to do. The non-story about a Spanish TV advert was laughable and embarrassing.

    The focus for some of the outlets who have take Johnson’s quotes is on what he said about the handshake, and for others it’s on what he said about Paul McGrath. What none of the focus seems to be on is trying to keep racism out of football.

    The author of the article in the Mail isn’t responsible for the captions under the photos it was accompanied by. Whoever was seems to find it worthwhile to make a pun out of the word “race” in one of the captions, in much the same way as someone working at the Daily Mirror did ahead of the game where the handshake row kicked off.

    The author does make the mistake many have of assuming the word Suarez used was “negrito”, which of course wasn’t the case, the word only getting a mention in the written reasons when discussing the evidence given by one of the Manchester United players, but the article itself is otherwise very fair to Johnson. It’s given him the chance to say what he no doubt feels needed to be said.

    What’s interesting to note about initial reaction to the article by those critical of Johnson is which issues seem to concern them most. It’s not the words Suarez was alleged to have used or that he admitted to using (they often don’t actually know what those words were). It’s not the issue of racism itself.

    It’s the wearing of a t-shirt and the shaking of a hand.

    Johnson explained why he wore the t-shirt: “The reason I wore the T-shirt is because I know 100 per cent Luis Suarez is not racist. With the media these days and the way it was going to be blown up, maybe the T-shirts thing wasn’t the right thing to do. How should I say this? We wore them to show our support for Luis. It wasn’t to send a message to everyone else. It was just for him.”

    So he wore the t-shirt because he thought his team mate hadn’t done what he was accused of doing and because he felt it showed him – not the world – that his team mates felt this way. All they knew at the time was that they had seen nothing, certainly no written reasons, that made them think their team mate was in the wrong. They wanted to show him they were still behind him so they wore a t-shirt.

    No big deal, it’s just a t-shirt.

    He now recognises, having seen the backlash, that the way things get blown up by the media (and certain types of individual) in this country it doesn’t take much for a gesture of that nature to be taken the wrong way. He’s got no regrets about being supportive of Suarez and doesn’t think there’s anything wrong with wearing a t-shirt showing that support – other than it giving the more sensationalist types the opportunity to criticise.

    Also less of a big deal than it’s made out to be is the shaking of a hand. Where Suarez went wrong by not shaking Evra’s hand is that he must have known what the reaction would be if he didn’t. It’s no big deal – but it was always going to be turned into one.

    Johnson feels that Evra was reluctant to shake Suarez’s hand and if it was as important as it was made out to be it would be worth debating whether Johnson’s reasons are valid or not. But it’s just a handshake, a handshake that should never have been made into such a big issue.

    Suarez was charged on the day the English media attacked Sepp Blatter for suggesting incident of racial abuse on a football field could be solved with a simple handshake. Suarez was attacked by the English media because – for whatever reason – he chose not to try and solve the issues he has with Evra with a simple handshake.

    The time for handshakes was somewhere else, in private, at some point before the day of the match. The animosity between the two clubs (despite claims that there’s no animosity between the two boardrooms) was too great to expect a simple handshake to sort things out. As Sepp Blatter, no doubt, now knows.

    The British participants for this year’s Olympics have reportedly been advised not to shake hands with participants from other nations due to the risk of picking up infections. If they take that advice there’ll be many a big deal to be made from it all this summer – especially if the football team decide to go along with it.

    What won’t be a big deal in the coming months, unless there’s a change of attitude, is exactly how to deal with real examples of racism. What won’t be a big deal is how important it is to just educate people about the issue of racism, to show people why one phrase might be offensive and another might not. What won’t be a big deal is the underlying issues that all these little deals are being nailed onto.

    Expecting Liverpool and its players to keep quiet isn’t going to fix that underlying issue. Education doesn’t come from keeping quiet. Education doesn’t come from not listening.

    Everyone can learn something from what happened with Suarez and Evra.

  • The Anfield Wrap on the radio with City Talk 105.9.

    Posted: March 7, 2012, 8:39 pm by Jim Boardman

    JUST seven months after launching as a weekly football podcast The Anfield Wrap today announced their take on LFC will now also be available on the radio in Liverpool via City Talk 105.9.

    Since its first episode at the start of the season the show has featured guests like former Liverpool boss Rafa Benitez and former Reds midfielder Dietmar Hamann and a string of journalists from national and local media but it’s the insight and passion of the regular guests that has made it so popular for many.

    The Anfield WrapThat popularity led to a NOPA award – the people’s choice award – and also to a regular spot in the higher reaches of the iTunes Sports and Recreation podcast chart. City Talk liked what they heard and approached The Anfield Wrap with a view to bringing the show to radio.

    The new show will make its debut on Thursday March 15th, presented as always by Neil Atkinson, and will be in addition to the existing show that comes out for download every Monday. The new show will also be made available for download after broadcast to ensure existing listeners around the world can get their extra fix of TAW.

    City Talk is on FM on 105.9 and also on DAB. In addition to this it can be heard online at radioplayer.citytalk.fm. The TAW show will also be repeated on Saturday at 7am.

    City Talk 105.9City Talk’s Head of Sport Steve Hothersall commented: “We’re delighted to be able to bring The Anfield Wrap to City Talk 105.9. It’s rightly gained a reputation as one of the best football podcasts out there – it’s incisive, passionate and a must listen for all Liverpool fans.”

    One of The Anfield Wrap’s co-founders, Andy Heaton echoed the views of the rest of the TAW team: “We are extremely excited to be taking the TAW project to the airwaves and incredibly flattered to be offered the opportunity by City Talk. If you had said to any of us 12 months ago when we began putting TAW together that we would be broadcasting from the iconic Radio City Tower within a year we would have laughed our heads off.”

    You can listen to the latest TAW podcast here: TAW Episode 32.

    The new show will be available to download from both The Anfield Wrap website and the City Talk 105.9 website after broadcast on the radio.

  • Train chaos for Reds

    Posted: February 26, 2012, 10:28 am by Jim Boardman

    A TRAIN derailment in the early hours of the morning means there is serious disruption for Liverpool fans heading south for the Carling Cup final at Wembley today.

    More details are available from National Rail who published the following information earlier today:

    No trains between Preston / Liverpool Lime Street and Crewe until further notice 07:54 – 26/02/2012

    Route affected: Carlisle, Lancaster, Preston, Winsford, Crewe and London Euston; Liverpool Lime Street, Runcorn, Winsford, Crewe, Stafford and Birmingham New Street / London Euston

    Train operators affected: London Midland , Virgin Trains

    Description: An engineering train has derailed at Winsford.

    Because of this, the following alterations will apply until further notice:

    Trains are currently unable to run between Preston / Liverpool Lime Street and Crewe

    Passengers travelling between Liverpool Lime Street and Crewe / London Euston should travel via Chester or Manchester Piccadilly.

    Passengers travelling between Runcorn and Crewe / London Euston should travel by replacement bus service to Crewe

    Passengers travelling between Wigan North Western or Warrington Bank Quay and Crewe / London Euston should travel via Manchester Piccadilly.

    Ticket acceptance: Passengers may use:

    Merseyrail services between Liverpool and Chester

    First TransPennine Express and Northern Rail services between Liverpool and Manchester

    Arriva Trains Wales services between Chester and Crewe

    Virgin Trains advise that passengers travelling to Wembley Stadium for the Carling Cup Final should consider driving to Crewe, Stafford or Stoke-on-Trent and using alternative services from those stations.

    To find out whether this will impact your journey and to get alternative options planned for you, please use the National Rail Enquiries real time Journey Planner, or call TrainTracker on 0871 200 49 50.

    National Rail updates.

  • Sixth round draw: Reds or Brighton v Stoke City

    Posted: February 19, 2012, 6:14 pm by Jim Boardman

    LIVERPOOL face Brighton and Hove Albion in today’s fifth round at Anfield but football being what it is these days the draw for the sixth round took place before that game has even kicked off.

    The winners of Liverpool’s match will be at home, against Stoke City.

    If Liverpool do make it through to the next round it will be fourth round in a row that both Merseyside teams are to play at home in the cup in the same weekend. The blues drew Sunderland.

    If Chelsea beat Birmingham in their replay they’ll host Leicester. Meanwhile Bolton Wanderers will travel to play Stevenage or Spurs.

    The games are set to be played over the weekend of March 17th and 18th.

  • Carra, Carroll and Charlie back: LFC v Brighton

    Posted: February 19, 2012, 6:01 pm by Jim Boardman

    AFTER last weekend’s league defeat it’s back to the cup today for Liverpool and Jamie Carragher makes a his first start since the last round. Daniel Agger makes way, the Dane dropping out of the 18-man squad completely.

    It’s Luis Suarez’s first appearance since coming back from his ban – and for this one the manager has chosen to go with Suarez and Andy Carroll. Dirk Kuyt drops to the bench, as does Jay Spearing who makes way for Charlie Adam.

    With one eye on next weekend’s trip to Wembley Liverpool have to take care not to take a result in this tie for granted. Gus Poyet’s side will be fired up and one of the reasons the game was chosen for TV was for the potential for an upset.

    This is the first Liverpool game Andre Marriner has officiated on since the game in October which ultimately led to Suarez’s suspension.

    Liverpool: 25 Reina, 2 Johnson, 23 Carragher, 37 Skrtel, 3 Jose Enrique, 14 Henderson, 8 Gerrard, 26 Adam, 19 Downing, 7 Suarez, 9 Carroll
    Substitutes: 32 Doni, 16 Coates, 34 Kelly, 11 Maxi, 20 Spearing, 33 Shelvey, 18 Kuyt

    Brighton & Hove Albion: 1 Brezovan, 3 Greer, 5 Dunk, 6 El-Abd, 14 Calderon, 8 Navarro, 25 LuaLua, 26 Bridcutt, 30 Buckley, 9 Barnes, 24 Vokes
    Substitutes: 16 Ankergren, 20 Vincelot, 11 Noone, 15 Vicente, 17 Harley, 12 Mackail-Smith, 23 Agdestein,

    Referee: Andre Marriner

  • Fake Plastic Respect

    Posted: February 12, 2012, 10:41 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE DAY Luis Suárez was charged by the FA for the incident with Patrice Evra the media had fallen over each other in a race to condemn Sepp Blatter for a comment he made about handshakes. What he’d said seemed to be along the lines of endorsing racism on a football pitch during a game – as long as the players involved shake hands afterwards.

    It was a stupid thing to say and one that he’ll never live down, but if football was the kind of game the authorities want it to be – and that includes the English FA – the comment wouldn’t be completely without merit. But football isn’t a nice pleasant game played by people full of ‘respect’ for each other. It’s a regularly depressing game watched, played, run and reported on by far too large a proportion of selfish individuals. Respect in football is as fake as the outrage from the hacks who change their principles every time there’s a new line to go for to earn their crust.

    Liverpool fans find it difficult to look at Alex Ferguson and see any good in him. Maybe there is some good in him – after all most Liverpool fans would have thought the same of Gary Neville but many now find themselves agreeing with a painfully high amount of his punditry – but it’s hard to see it.

    It’s hard to imagine Manchester United fans would think any differently about Kenny Dalglish, certainly if the Man U opinion formers are anything to go by.

    This applied long before Suárez and Evra had their disputed conversation and it will probably go on long after both players have hung up their boots or taken them elsewhere.

    With that in mind it goes without saying that the two managers will think much the same of each other. Ferguson’s hatred of Dalglish goes back a long way and whilst many of Kenny detractors were laughing at his return in place of their beloved Roy Hodgson it’s unlikely there was much laughter from the more elderly Glaswegian.

    Whatever really went on between Evra and Suárez, there still isn’t enough evidence to be completely certain. That’s something that’s been discussed at length by numerous people – and of course ignored by those who don’t like to sully their agenda with truth or questions about what the truth might be.

    Sadly for football, and the fight against racism, the case has done nothing to make it easier to work out the truth of any future incident along those lines that takes place.

    The FA’s independent panel seem to think there’s a good chance of it happening again – this is an extract from their lengthy report on the Suárez-Evra incident:

    “We took into account the fact that it is a real albeit unattractive trait of human nature that we all act from time to time, to greater or lesser degrees, in ways which may be out of character. This is especially so when we feel under pressure, or challenged, or provoked, or pushed into a corner. We do and say things that we are not proud of and regret, and that we might try and deny, sometimes even to ourselves. We occasionally things that we would be embarrassed to admit to family or friends. It is not inconsistent to have black colleagues and friends and relatives, and yet say things to strangers or acquaintances about race or colour that we would not say directly to those closer to us.”

    Quite an admission from the panel (imagine if Blatter had said that stuff in the last sentence) but the general point is fairly obvious. People do things they shouldn’t do, and wouldn’t normally do, in the heat of the moment if feeling under pressure.

    And this is where the handshake comes in, or where it would come in if football was the kind of game the authorities like to pretend it is. If two players, on opposing sides, are angry with each other for some reason, the two managers, from the two opposing sides, should be able to sort it out. That ‘sorting out’ might still lead to action from The FA, it might lead to one or both clubs disciplining their own players, but if football’s the kind of respect-filled game the authorities want us to believe it is then that handshake idea works perfectly every time.

    Even if the managers are at loggerheads there’s still – in this idyllic version of the game – plenty of respect between the officials higher up at both clubs. A director of football at one club can chat to a director at the other club. They get the handshakes started, the dialogue underway, the problems ironed out at least to a point where punishment is for something that happened, not an extreme playground argument version of what happened.

    Football isn’t that kind of idyllic game though, not in its current guise, certainly not in England under the ‘control’ of The FA with a greedy Premier League atop the league structure, fair to itself but dismissive of the league that feeds into it.

    The Premier League isn’t even fair to the punter. The price of tickets is astronomical, as is the cost of the tacky shirts the clubs throw out three versions of each season. The FA doesn’t care, it has its own tacky shirts to sell and as long as it gets the use of those players whose wages make those tickets so expensive why would they care? There’s always the option of watching on the TV – but even that’s out of reach of more and more people as the sport leaves its past behind and heads for a place that the people who made the game what it is would never recognise.

    Handshakes used to be something that happened before cup finals and internationals. The players would line up, some dignitary would shake their hands, then the tracky tops would be ditched and some football would be played. Nowadays it costs so much to go to a bog-standard league game that maybe the powers-that-be feel they need to try and pretend it’s as good as a cup final. Handshakes you can hardly see anyway when you’re at the game, crap anthems you don’t want to listen to, football so poor that the talking points aren’t even football any more. And you pay a fortune to watch that.

    A fortune to watch fake football.

    And when the football is as fake as this you might as well just offer a fake handshake. If you don’t you’ll only get fake outrage.

    Fake outrage like that from Patrick Barclay. Supposedly a respected writer, days after using Heysel as a stick to beat some prat on Twitter with, insulting and offending countless others in the process, he uses the word “immoral” to describe Kenny Dalglish’s answers to questions about a player not offering a fake handshake. A fake handshake Dalglish said he thought had been offered.

    In what kind of world is someone like Patrick Barclay, with his thinly disguised views of Heysel and Hillsborough itching to come out with every spiteful word he says, tweets or writes, respected? And it’s not just Barclay, a man trying to make some money in the last days of his career. It’s a wide range of so-called respected writers who are stirring up trouble so fast that they can’t see their own hypocrisy through the dust they’ve sent flying. Respected writers patting each other on the back, a big circle of hypocrites who can’t praise each other enough for the fakery they’ve worked so hard to make fact. Respected writers?

    It’s that word again. Respect. In football it has a completely different meaning to anywhere else.

    Respect in football is fake.

    Rafa Benítez put it best.

    Football is a lie.

     

  • Time to get back to the football

    Posted: February 11, 2012, 12:11 pm by Jim Boardman

    WITH an FA Cup fifth round tie next weekend and a Carling Cup final the weekend after today sees Liverpool play their last league game until March. Their opponents, Manchester United, were knocked out of the FA Cup by Liverpool and so have next weekend off – but they do have a couple of Thursday night Channel Five games to look forward to in the Europa League.

    Leading into this game the football is hardly getting a word – but that’s hardly unusual. Ferguson always plays his games in his pre-match press conferences against teams he sees as a threat and although his topic this week was something more serious than the usual ref-baiting he knows exactly what he’s doing. The media love to join in with it too, practicing their mock outrage and hoping for some headlines.
    The Daily Mirror front page

    Daily Mirror or NOTW?

    The circus is leaving town but it’s still throwing up a few fliers for its last performance. The Mirror has invested big time to make its website look more upmarket than before – pity those responsible for its dodgy headlines, twisted translations and trouble-stirring Photoshops make its football section and print version look more downmarket than ever. Never mind Murdoch’s reported plans for a Sunday version of The S*n, the Mirror seem to think there’s a market for a daily News of the World.

    Liverpool aren’t in the title race, it’s all about fighting for fourth place as far as Liverpool’s league season is concerned. The Mirror know this – so why put “Race for the Title” as a caption under a Photoshopped picture of a Liverpool player and Manchester United player? Simple – because it’s a picture of Suárez and Evra and because their use of “Race” has nothing to do with a run towards top place.

    To be fair to The Mirror there is one reason to read it – Brian Reade. The exception to the Mirror’s new dumbing down rule, he’s written some sense about today’s match – it’s just a pity the people the Mirror is now aimed at won’t see it as sense or as sensational enough. On the website it’s billed as “Brian Reade’s controversial column.” If calling for sense is controversial it tells us a hell of a lot about the Mirror of 2011.

    There won’t be a Daily Mirror tomorrow of course, The Sunday Mirror and Sunday People will be out instead, but by Monday lunchtime the three titles will all have done their worse and, barring any new controversies today, their focus will be on other issues. As they’re doing that a lot of Liverpool supporters will be quietly looking back at how various titles dealt with the Suárez Evra incident over the past few months. Paper boys might find their bags are a little lighter.

    As for the football, Liverpool will put their strongest possible side out, or at least the strongest possible side for the tactics Kenny and his staff choose to go with. Injuries permitting the back four is likely to be Johnson, Skrtel, Agger and Enrique. Dalglish said everyone was fit, but Enrique missed the Spurs match and Kenny wasn’t going into details about how well he’d recovered. If he misses out Kelly will keep his place.

    Spearing is likely to start, as is Steven Gerrard. Where Gerrard plays is open to question, as is the rest of Kenny’s teamsheet.  Suárez will almost certainly start, but will that mean Dirk Kuyt, Craig Bellamy or Andy Carroll step down to the bench? Dalglish may find a way to accommodate all four meaning Charlie Adam, Stewart Downing and Jordan Henderson wouldn’t all be starting. It’s a dilemma Dalglish will be glad to have.

    Manchester United want the win to make the league table look better before leaders and neighbours Manchester City play their own game. In recent visits to Anfield they’ve come looking for a draw but they’ll want all three points today. Liverpool could do with all three points too – having drawn at home to Spurs on Monday they need a win to go temporarily into fifth place above Arsenal and Newcastle and to keep the pressure on fourth-placed Chelsea.

    Evra messed up in the cup match, his mistake helping Liverpool make it 2-1 and ensuring this would be the last meeting of the season between the two sides. Suárez was celebrating that win from the stands but today he’ll be hoping to celebrate on the pitch. If he scores there’ll be no shortage of cameras picking up his reaction – which makes it all the more likely it’ll be another player on the scoresheet should Liverpool win.

    Whatever’s been going on off the field there’s no doubt the two managers have been focussing on preparations for what’s going to off on the field. It should be a good game – let’s hope it is.

  • LFC v Spurs: Suarez is back! (On the bench)

    Posted: February 6, 2012, 9:16 pm by Jim Boardman

    AFTER nine games out Luis Suarez was available for selection again tonight – but he makes his first appearance on a teamsheet in 2012 as one of the subs.

    Liverpool scored three in the last game, against Wolves, and all three scorers start tonight – Kuyt, Bellamy and Carroll. It’s up to those three to perform well enough to keep Suarez on the bench and in turn keep their own places, to leave Kenny Dalglish with a selection dilemma he’ll not mind having.

    Charlie Adam played a big part in those goals last week and also starts, with Steven Gerrard back in the starting line up having been rested for the game at Molyneux.

    Jordan Henderson is left out of the 11, something that hasn’t happened too often this season, and he’s keeping Stewart Downing company on the bench.

    Jose Enrique has picked up an injury meaning Martin Kelly returns to the side, possibly on the right with Glen Johnson switching to the left.

    Liverpool need the points, having seen Arsenal and Newcastle pick up three apiece at the weekend – but Spurs are in the race for the title and need to win this to keep on the tails of the two Manchester sides.

    The fog that was floating around before kick-off has cleared and as long as it stays that way the game is on.

    Liverpool: Reina, Kelly, Skrtel, Agger, Johnson, Spearing, Gerrard, Adam, Kuyt, Carroll, Bellamy
    Subs: Doni, Aurelio, Coates, Carra, Downing, Henderson, Suarez.

    Tottenham: Friedel, Walker, Dawson, King, Assou-Ekotto, Parker, Livermore, Kranjcar, Modric, Bale, Adebayor.
    Subs: Cudicini, Saha, Rose, Nelsen, Khumalo, Luongo, Lancaster.

  • Football Aid 2012 – Play at Anfield!

    Posted: February 6, 2012, 4:28 pm by Anfield Road

    WITH the transfer window closing last week it looked like football squads all over the UK had been finalised for the rest of the season…..however with the first set of Bidding positions closing at www.footballaid.com tomorrow there’s still the chance to book your place in the Liverpool starting 11 for 2012!

    Football Aid promises you a unique opportunity to Live the Dream of an authentic match day experience; gaining exclusive access to the pitch and tunnel areas, pulling on your own personalised shirt in the official changing rooms, walking down the tunnel to the sound of a cheering crowd and ultimately to step out onto the hallowed turf and represent Liverpool in a never to be forgotten football match. And it’s all for charity as well!

    Getting involved couldn’t be easier, just visit www.footballaid.com, select Liverpool and position, then place your bid – it really is that simple. Bidding’s available throughout the month of February with the last available positions closing on Wed 7th March and there promises to be some hugely exciting auction action in the weeks to come.

    John BarnesWeek 1 should appeal to any Midfield Maestros out there, with the 45 min No 6 (CM), 90 min No 7 (RM) and 45 min No 8 (LM) closing on consecutive days between Tue 7th and Thu 9th February.

    Week 2 features the always popular 90 min No 9 (CF), No 10 (CM) and No 11 (CF) positions closing Tue 14th, Wed 15th and Thu 16th.

    Week 3 gives an opportunity for any defensive stalwarts to claim their place at the back with the 45 min No 2 (RB), 90 min No 4 (CH) and 45 min No 5 (CH) closing Tue 21st, Wed 22nd and Thu 23rd.

    Lining up at AnfieldWeek 4 gives a chance for any super subs to claim their place with the No 14 (CM), No 15 (CH), No 16 (RB) and No 17 (LM) closing between Mon 27th Feb and Thu 1st March.

    All that’s left is the last line of the defence, the 90 min No 1 GK position which closes on Fri 2nd. Finally, Wed 7th March sees any remaining positions made available in our always frenetic final day of bidding.

    Home Team positions close at 15:00 pm with the Away Team closing at 16:00 pm. If you’re concerned about losing out in injury time, or won’t be available to monitor your bid for any reason, make sure and use the automated Maximum Bid option and remember you can close an auction early by using the Buy Now option on selected positions.

    So don’t get left on the bench, visit www.footballaid.com now and make your bid to secure a place on your Field of Dreams!

    The Anfield turf

    Football Aid celebrated their 11th anniversary in 2011 and have allowed over 12,225 football fans the chance to ‘Live the Dream’ in more than 460 matches. They are a groundbreaking organisation which generates funds annually by hosting charity football matches at iconic stadiums all over the UK. The unique concept was the brainchild of businessman and Football Aid Chairman Craig Paterson and funds raised from the event will benefit the work of a charitable project nominated by the club, as well as projects nominated by Football Aid’s parent charity Field of Dreams.

  • Powar denies racism after ‘coconut’ jibe sent on Twitter

    Posted: February 5, 2012, 6:18 pm by Jim Boardman

    QUESTIONS are being asked about Piara Powar’s suitability as the figurehead of a European anti-racism body after he was accused of making racially abusive comments towards an Asian football supporter.

    Powar heads up the Football Against Racism in Europe organisation, sometimes referred to as the FARE Network, and has been very outspoken about Luis Suárez, Liverpool FC and Liverpool supporters since the incident with Patrice Evra first came to light.

    Yesterday an Asian Liverpool supporter received a message on Twitter, from @PiaraPowar, calling him “a coconut”.

    @PiaraPowar 'coconut' jibe

    @PiaraPowar's 'coconut' jibe to Asian Liverpool supporter

    The insult came after the supporter had asked why Powar had not made any comment on news that a Manchester United supporter had been charged for alleged racial abuse at their game against Stoke City earlier in the week. Rather than respond publicly, the private message was sent and contained what can be considered to be an example of racial abuse: Don’t be a “coconut.”

    Although Powar is yet to take steps to explain his intended meaning of the term, it is a term used as a way of accusing someone of betraying their own cultural roots and pandering to “white” opinion.  It relates to a coconut being white on the inside and brown on the outside.

    In some contexts – between friends for example – it can be seen as harmless and no offence would be taken. In other contexts it would be taken as a deeply offensive insult, and certainly that would seem to be the case where it is used when addressing a stranger.

    In 2010 Shirley Brown, a Bristol politician, was found guilty of racial harassment after using the term when talking to Jay Jethwa, a fellow politician who had moved to the UK from India 24 years before. The remark was found to be “purely gratuitous” and it was ruled that “there was a potential for, albeit minor, public disorder and stimulation for racial hatred.”

    The victim, Ms Jethwa, explained how upsetting the comment had been: “I was completely shocked and I was numb.  I was very, very upset and distressed.

    “The word is doubly insulting as it insults both me and the white population.”

    The message Powar responded to was perfectly reasonable:

    “@PiaraPowar Interesting how u haven’t given your opinion on the news that a #mufc fan was arrested on Wednesday for alleged racial abuse”

    The response was far from it:

    “Get lost Singh. Have no false consciousness. Don’t be a coconut.”

    After making the comment the Powar locked the Twitter account and blocked a number of others who had asked a similar question.

    For clarity, the arrest of the Manchester United fan was on Tuesday night after a Stoke City fan made a complaint that a spectator was shouting abuse at Stoke players. The Press Association reported the incident on Friday:

    “Howard Hobson, 57, is accused of a racially aggravated public order offence and using threatening words or behaviour to cause harassment, alarm or distress.

    “Hobson, of Weaver Walk, Openshaw, Manchester, was arrested at the Manchester United v Stoke City game on Tuesday.”

    Powar had yet to make any comment whatsoever on the incident and the following morning he was asked why not. A reminder of his comments following the incident at Anfield in January, when Tom Adeyemi was the victim of alleged racial abuse, was also sent to Powar.

    Those comments from Powar came on January 7th:

    “Are LFC fans going to do this at every game, support the mistakes made by their own man by abusing others? 25% of PL [Premier League] players are black.”

    One fan, allegedly, had shouted racial abuse. Powar was now talking like it was part of the fan culture at Anfield.

    The comments – made from the same Twitter account that made the “coconut” jibe – were widely reported in the mass media. His mudslinging was once again hitting the headlines and because of his position his comments were not being questioned. Despite there being very little information available about the structure, funding or accountability of FARE his comments were taken as authoritative by the mass media. His past as the spokesman of Kick It Out perhaps plays a part in that, although it is unclear why he left Kick It Out and the organisation are still to fill the role he left vacant.

    @PiaraPowar was very outspoken after incident at Anfield in January, yet remained silent on Old Trafford incident

    @PiaraPowar outspoken after incident at Anfield, remained silent on Old Trafford incident

    Without going over the reasons many Liverpool supporters (but not all) had for being supportive of Suárez and critical of the process the comments from Powar caused a lot of offence. Fans supportive of Suárez were not supporting racism or racial abuse – they just didn’t believe he was guilty of either.  Fans who commented on the Adeyemi abuse allegations agreed en masse that if the allegations were true they wouldn’t want that supporter inside Anfield again.

    @PiaraPowar says "no chance" he'll let LFC fans follow his tweets

    @PiaraPowar tells LFC fans they've "no chance" of following him on Twitter

    Today, to those who aren’t yet blocked from seeing Powar’s comments on Twitter, he remains defiant in his comments. He was asked if his message was rude:

    “The private messge? Yes it’s very rude. Racist? If sent 2 someone of same ethnic origin, religion, heritage? Try harder.”

    Also, having blocked a number of Liverpool supporters and making the rest of his comments private to his selected audience, he said there was “no chance” he would allow Liverpool fans to see the rest of what he had to say:

    “Wake up to hundreds of LFC fans who want to follow. I wonder why? #nochance”

    Again, assuming all Liverpool fans are the same, he decides none of them should be allowed to hear what he has to say about them.

    @PiaraPowar with another sweeping generalisation

    @PiaraPowar with another sweeping generalisation

    Powar’s ‘coconut’ comment, sent privately, smacks of bullying. If the Asian fan doesn’t go along with Powar’s way of doing things he’s betraying his roots. Powar seems to be suggesting that non-white LFC fans should forget their true feelings and stick with Powar – purely because of skin colour. If Powar feels he’s done no wrong then he needs to explain; instead he carries on slagging people off through Twitter.

    Some will argue that use of the phrase “coconut” is not racist. Indeed Powar has tried to do so himself. But the person he aimed it at, and others who saw it, deem it to be highly offensive. For Powar not to realise that his comment could cause offence – whether any was intended or not – suggests he is in the wrong job. If the offence was intended he certainly shouldn’t be in the job.

    Not that it took this comment from the man for many people to reach this conclusion about him. Powar and FARE have shown no interest whatsoever in engaging with Liverpool FC or its supporters at any time since news first broke of Evra’s allegations about Suarez. Emails from Anfield Road to FARE remain unanswered, and have done so for some time.

    Powar has restricted his opinions to himself and his 347 followers now. In the absence of some credible explanations and some long overdue apologies it’s best it stays that way. And if Lord Ouseley and Kick It Out are happy to be associated with him then that raises serious questions about their credibility too. They need to distance themselves from him or their campaign will suffer – especially when they preach so much about “zero tolerance”.

    Powar has had enough airtime, but if the other anti-discrimination campaigners allow this to be swept under the carpet without explanation then they have also had enough airtime. Time someone else got the cushy jobs.

    Maybe it’s time they listened to John Barnes a bit more too.

  • Reds match moved for TV

    Posted: February 1, 2012, 6:38 pm by Jim Boardman

    ESPN have selected Liverpool’s fifth round tie with Brighton and Hove Albion as one of their live matches meaning the fixture will now be played on Sunday 19 February with a 4.30pm kick-off.

    With Everton also drawn at home for the fifth round the match might have been moved anyway. Everton now get to play their tie, against Blackpool or Sheffield Wednesday, on the Saturday at 3pm.

    Liverpool travel to Wembley the following weekend for the final of the Carling Cup against Cardiff.

    Revised fixtures for 5th round of the Budweiser-sponsored cup are below:

    Saturday 18

    12:30 Chelsea v Birmingham City (Live on ESPN)
    15:00 Everton v Blackpool or Sheffield Wednesday
    15:00 Norwich City v Leicester City
    15:00 Millwall or Southampton v Bolton Wanderers
    17:15 Sunderland AFC or Middlesbrough v Arsenal (Live on ITV)

    Sunday 19

    12:00 Crawley Town v Stoke City (Live on ESPN)
    14:00 Stevenage v Tottenham Hotspur (Live on ITV)
    16:30 Liverpool v Brighton & Hove Albion (Live on ESPN)

  • THE ANFIELD WRAP podcast had former Liverpool ...

    Posted: February 1, 2012, 2:59 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE ANFIELD WRAP podcast had former Liverpool midfielder Dietmar Hamann as guest for Episode 25 of their weekly podcast.  It was a chance for the lads to speak in person to the man who scored a penalty in a European Cup final – that European Cup final – with a broken foot. He scored the last goal at the old Wembley, played in a World Cup final and knows how much of a boost to confidence and morale a League Cup winners’ medal is because he’s picked up a couple of his own.

    Dietmar Hamann and his new book

    The Didi Man will be signing copies of this. (PIC: Propaganda Photo)

    Now you can get the chance to meet him because he’s going to be signing copies of his new book, “The Didi Man – My Love Affair with Liverpool” at a number of locations from today onwards.

    In his book he talks all about why he chose to move from German giants Bayern Munich to Newcastle, why he chose to move on from Anfield after all those years picking up medals (and a Scouse accent) and why he used to go for a pint in boozers associated with the blue half of the city rather than the Red. He gives his opinions on coaches he worked under, including Sven Goran Eriksson, Gerard Houllier and Rafael Benitez.

    Didi’s humour and intelligence pours out of every page of the book and gives him the chance to set the story straight on a number of other points, like Steven Gerrard’s comments after he’d fouled him on international duty in an England-Germany match and why he was hiding in the showers with David Moores one time.

    He talks about the reasons why he called it a day at Anfield after speaking to Rafa Benitez but also explains why he holds him such high regard. The next step for Didi is to continue with the process of picking up all his coaching badges and then, one day, making the move into management himself.

    Get the book, it’s thoroughly recommended, and you can get it signed by going to one of the following events:

    February

    Wed 1st – Waterstones, Leadenhall Market, London. 5pm – 6.30pm.
    Fri 3rd – Waterstones, Birkenhead. 12pm – 2pm.
    Sat 4th – Pritchard’s, Crosby. 11pm – 1pm.
    Sat 4th – LFC Club shop, Anfield. 2pm – 4pm.
    Mon 6th – Waterstones, Southport. 11am – 1pm.
    Mon 6th – Waterstones, Liverpool One. 5pm – 7pm.
    Mon 18th – Easons, Dublin. From 12.30.

    Available now from Amazon – Didi Hamann – My Love Affair With Liverpool.

    To listen again to The Anfield Wrap Episode 25, featuring Didi and also Neil Fitzmaurice, use one of the following links:

    Direct link to Episode Twenty-Five podcast download

    Podcast RSS feed

    iTunes

    More quality Footie, Fashion, Music and Culture content at The Anfield Wrap Website.

     

  • Wolves v Liverpool – Spearing, Bellamy and Kuyt start

    Posted: January 31, 2012, 8:34 pm by Jim Boardman

    It’s Liverpool’s last game without Luis Suarez as the Uruguayan star serves the last of his eight-match ban for that incident we’ll have to stop talking about sooner or later.

    Kenny Dalglish has made a couple of changes from the side that despatched Manchester United from one cup on Saturday, bringing back one or two from the side that despatched Manchester City from another cup on Wednesday.

    Johnson is in for Kelly, Bellamy and Kuyt are back too. The team is a mix of the two from the cups and Dalglish will expect it to perform like those sides did, certainly in terms of effort and commitment. What he won’t stand for is a repeat of how the players approached the game against Bolton and a performance that shows no respect to either the opponent or the shirt.

    Andy Carroll starts and isn’t going anywhere despite rumours this transfer window. Steven Gerrard was taken off as a precaution on Saturday and is rested tonight too. There’s no repeat of Carra’s role midfield role and that’s partly because one player missing from recent matches has recovered from injury to fit into the starting line-up, Jay Spearing.

    Tonight’s referee is from Wythenshawe in Manchester and has dished out 66 yellows, plus five reds, in his 20 matches this season.

    Wolves: Hennessey, Ward, Johnson, Berra, Foley, Edwards, Kightly, Frimpong, Jarvis, Jonsson, Fletcher
    Subs: De Vries, Elokobi, Stearman, Hunt, Milijas, Ebanks-Blake, Doyle

    Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Agger, Enrique, Henderson, Spearing, Adam, Kuyt, Bellamy, Carroll
    Subs: Doni, Aurelio, Coates, Carragher, Downing, Shelvey, Kelly.

    Referee: Anthony Taylor (Manchester)

    Kick-off: 7:45pm

    TV coverage:
    UK: Not being shown live.
    US: FoxSoccer.TV (online, sub required *).

    * To watch FoxSoccer.TV from outside the US you will need to use a VPN or Proxy Server to give you US IP address. Visit usaproxyserver.com for details.

  • 5th round draw: Reds at home to Brighton

    Posted: January 29, 2012, 5:57 pm by Jim Boardman

    Having beaten Manchester United 2-1 at Anfield yesterday thanks to goals from Daniel Agger and a late Dirk Kuyt winner Liverpool are through to the fifth round of the Budweiser sponsored cup. The draw took place at Wembley today and Liverpool were drawn against the only other side Kuyt has scored against this season.

    Having had two home ties so far – beating Oldham 5-1 in the 3rd round – Liverpool were drawn at home again and their opponents will be Championship side Brighton and Hove Albion. The tie will be played a week before Liverpool’s Carling Cup final against Cardiff at Wembley.

    That last meeting between the two sides was down on the South Coast when the Reds were there for this season’s Carling Cup third round tie and despite winning that one Kenny Dalglish won’t let any complacency creep in. The game ended 2-1 to Liverpool with goals from Bellamy and Kuyt but a late penalty from Brighton after Carragher’s foul caused a few anxious minutes of injury time.

    Gus Poyet is Brighton’s manager and will relish the chance to bring his side up to Anfield for a match where his compatriots Luis Suarez and Sebastian Coates could be part of the home side’s squad.

    * Matches to be played on the weekend of February 17/18/19.

    Everton have also been handed a home draw – against Blackpool or Sheffield Wednesday – so at least one of the two Merseyside clubs will need to have their match switched from the Saturday to either the Friday or the Sunday.

  • Maybe that anger isn’t a lack of respect

    Posted: January 29, 2012, 2:45 pm by Jim Boardman

    LUIS SUÁREZ has one game left of the eight-match suspension he got following on from the incident with Patrice Evra in October. By the time he returns the incident will have been in the headlines, or never far away, for the best part of four months.

    For two and a half of those months the headlines sat above stories that were based on speculation and on anything that might be leaked from those in or around the two clubs and players. Since then, since the written reasons were published, the stories have been based on a mixture of that speculation and little more than a cursory glance at a handful of the 115 pages the FA panel produced to justify their decision.

    There is no excuse for anyone who feels strongly about the incident to comment on it without having read the full report. Not now.

    It came out on New Year’s Eve and in the urgency to get a reaction out it’s hardly a surprise the reaction was based on the summary spread out over the last few pages of the epic document. Four weeks on, why have those who keep talking in such strong terms about it still not bothered to read it?

    Look at the facts before making the accusations

    Freddie Kanouté told the BBC’s World Football Focus that it was possible Luis Suárez had a point, that cultural differences could mean the Uruguayan has been unfairly treated, but he made it clear that he was in no position to defend either player, for one simple reason. He hasn’t read the report, he hasn’t studied the case in any detail.

    Kanouté, based in Spain with Sevilla since 2005, said: “Here, some people, they have a way to talk to each other. It’s true; when I arrived here I was a bit shocked because that’s their way to express themselves. But I’m not going to defend him, or the other player, because I haven’t studied the case.

    “All the time I think we should study the cases more deeply to be sure we don’t accuse someone falsely.”

    Kanouté played in England for a number of years for West Ham and Spurs, he was born in France and played for their under-21s before choosing the African nation of Mali as his country for full internationals.

    As we waited over the Christmas holidays for the written reasons from that FA appointed panel it’s safe to say that most of us hoped the document would clarify the facts of what had really happened.  Armed with the facts we could all, whichever way our football or personal allegiances swayed our opinion, make our own judgement on the whole mess. We could find out why Liverpool’s defence of their player was so strong, we could find out why the panel were not only sure they had come to the right decision but why they were so strong in their punishment, we could finally air our opinions based on whatever evidence there was and not on the sensationalised hypothetical versions based on the opinions of those looking on from outside.

    Facts

    Liverpool fans who stood by Suárez as they waited for that written reasons report did so with a fear somewhere between the front and back of their minds that their opinion of the player and of those running their club could take a massive hit when its contents were revealed.

    It’s fair to say that those who condemned Suárez from the first airing of Evra’s accusations also awaited the report with a fear that it might be hard to stand by its findings. Deep down they knew that there might be more to Liverpool’s stance than commercial, financial and team selection worries.

    Nobody expected 115 pages. Nobody expected it just as they were about to get changed to go out for New Year’s Eve. Nobody, it seems, did anything more with it than they needed to in order to confirm their existing opinions.

    Those who wanted to agree with the verdict didn’t need to read the full document. They got all they needed in a convenient summary at the end. But that summary didn’t really explain the assumptions that had been made in order to reach those conclusions. And those who continue to condemn Suárez, his club or his fans based on that summary have quite literally jumped to conclusions.

    The Truth

    If your interest stops short of wanting to know the truth and revolves around wanting to condemn Suárez, his club or his club’s fans then it’s a surprise you’re still reading this now. If you saw this as an ideal opportunity for some tribal point scoring the chances are you’re licking your wounds today anyway, avoiding football talk at all costs.

    If that’s not you, if you do feel strongly about the issue itself, the accusations of racial abuse, it’s time you did read that report. The longer you avoid it the closer you become to those who celebrated the verdict for the harm it might do Liverpool more than the benefits it might bring to the fight against racism.

    If you feel strongly about the issue you’ve had four weeks to read the 115 pages front to back a few times. If you haven’t even had the decency to do that then you should hold your hands up now and admit you’re not really in any position to comment either way.

    Blagger’s guide

    The nature of the report is such that if you haven’t read it, you can’t bluff your way into making it sound like you have. This is worse than watching the last game on Match of the Day and using the four minutes of action to help pretend you were there or that you saw the whole game live. It’s worse than supplementing that with the opinions of someone who only saw the match report on Teletext.

    Much of what has been written – before and after the publication of that document – is way off beam in terms of the detail the report contained.

    If you go around mentioning the word “negrito” you’ll stand out a mile to those who have bothered to read it all. “Negrito” got into the conversation about the case after “high level sources” at Old Trafford spoke to a sympathetic Manchester journalist. The word only appears in one place in that 115 page report, in a point discussing what Manchester United’s Hernandez had said about the word.

    Have you looked at what Evra’s initial allegations were? Do you know the word he originally accused Suárez of using? When did he change his mind about the word? How many times did he change his mind about the word on the day itself? How many times did he claim Suárez had said the word – and how many times did he change his mind about that number?

    If you only read the summary you won’t have a clue. Maybe it doesn’t matter how many times he changed his mind – but how can you say that without reading about it?

    Amnesty

    There are signs that some of those who condemned LFC and its fans without reading the report have actually started to realise that the anger isn’t a defence of racism, or about blindly putting their club ahead of the abhorrent subject of racism. In time they might actually have the guts to stand up and admit they jumped to conclusions and that they now understand the points being made, even if they still disagree with them. In time they might just see what the cause of the anger really is. Those who do this maybe deserve a bit of an amnesty – as long as they hold their hands up about how they reached their earlier conclusions.

    The anger is, in many ways, that we still haven’t actually debated what really happened and that the condemnation is based on something other than what really happened.

    Is it wrong that the anger should be directed at Patrice Evra? Maybe – but that’s a debate in itself. And debating the rights and wrongs of Liverpool fans calling him a liar is all part of that debate.

    Some of those so quick to condemn that anger need to look at themselves before looking down at Liverpool supporters.

    Inconsistencies

    Time and again we hear condemnation of inconsistencies in football and many of those having a go at Liverpool now bang on repeatedly about introducing technology into football to cut down on the number of contentious decisions. They do this because they know what one person sees at first glance might differ from what someone else sees at first glance. They do this because they know the ability to spend ten seconds looking at something instead of a split second makes a big difference.

    They do this, however, knowing full well that no amount of technology is going to bring an end to the controversies that surround the interpretation of the game’s laws.

    And they do this whilst having spent the equivalent of a split second looking at the Suárez incident when basic technology, in the form of a PDF document, allows them to spend the equivalent of many minutes looking at it.

    Why the reluctance from those who have been so outspoken to look again, properly, at the incident? The decision has now been made and it won’t be changed by those with the power to change it – but why not just look again anyway? Just for your own personal piece of mind, just for your own integrity?

    You’d look stupid if you kept banging on about a penalty you thought was stonewall, demanding a belated 3-match ban for the player you think gave the penalty away, if you’d only seen it once, from one angle, at normal speed. Especially if you added weight to your claims based on the opinions of someone from the side that didn’t get the penalty, knowing that side had also not seen it more than once, from more than one angle. Unless you dropped lucky of course and by coincidence your opinion tied with the details the replays showed.

    Without that bit of luck and coincidence you’d look stupid if you chose not to look at the replays, offered to you on a plate, yet continued to condemn the referee for getting it wrong. At times like that you’ve got to choose – take the time to check your facts or shut the hell up. If you genuinely cared, the way your constant references to the incident suggested you did, you’d check your facts.

    Look again

    This isn’t a penalty, this isn’t a sending-off, this is something far more serious. Yet people still won’t look at the replays. Are they scared it might make them look foolish, it might put them in a position where they have to own up to being wrong, even just a little bit wrong?

    Are you one of those who wanted to see Liverpool suffer more than you wanted to kick racism out of football?

    Someone amongst the Liverpool supporters looks to have made offensive gestures of a racist nature during the game yesterday and was widely condemned by Liverpool supporters for seemingly doing so. An arrest was made later in the day and that means it’s best not to comment on the incident in too much detail – but anyone doing what that man was accused of doing isn’t welcome at Anfield or entitled to call himself a supporter. And that’s putting it nicely.

    Meanwhile Manchester United fans sang, more than once, a song they have been singing for a number of years. They sang it in between chants that “the S*n was right” and far worse chants about Hillsborough. They sang it between chants where they compared Liverpool’s anger at this verdict to the anger felt about Hillsborough. They sang it between chants accusing Liverpool FC of being racist. The chant was about their South Korean player, Park Ji-Sung, and “eating dogs”. The song is considered highly offensive by the South Koreans it’s aimed at yet there is never a word heard condemning it by those who profess to care about discrimination and those who remind everyone about the importance of “zero tolerance”.

    If you’re still reading this you probably do care about discrimination, you’ll probably realise that the song about Park shouldn’t be sung, you’ll probably see that Liverpool anger isn’t coming from “closet racists” (as one journalist claimed during a number of embarrassing exchanges on Twitter last night). So you’ll want to find out why Liverpool are angry, you’ll want to try and engage Liverpool fans and you’ll want to make sure the future reporting of this incident is not only more accurate but more helpful to the cause it is meant to all be about helping.

    Liverpool fans might still be wrong. The player might still be wrong. But you’ll never persuade us that’s the case if you keep condemning us for what we’ve never said or done.

    Think about what respect means before accusing others of lacking it.

    Read the report; read it from front to back – it won’t be easy but if you care as much as you claim it’s not a lot to ask really. Imagine it’s a movie outline if that helps, see if you can spot any holes in the plot or see if you think it all makes sense. Just don’t judge the movie by its trailer.

    In other words, shut up and focus on reading that report!

    Sooner or later we’d like to move on.

    * If you’ve not got a copy of the report yet, you can download a copy of it from here or here.

  • Four changes for Reds – Carra, Kelly, Maxi, Carroll

    Posted: January 28, 2012, 2:03 pm by Jim Boardman

    Forget the media-driven circus off the field, the place to keep your eyes this afternoon is on the pitch as Manchester United are the guests at Anfield for this 4th round cup tie.

    Liverpool were outstanding on Wednesday as they sent Manchester City out of the Carling Cup and booked a place at Wembley, more of the same today could see Kenny Dalglish’s side in contention for a second trip to the new version of what used to be known as Anfield south.

    Both sides should be up for this, even allowing for the usual motivation this fixture brings. Manchester United in particular might fear this is their main hope for silverware this season if their neighbours continue to keep them off top spot in the league. “Liverpool exist to win trophies,” so the old saying goes, and one man who is likely to have that belief is Mr Dalglish.

    Andy Carroll was on the bench on Wednesday with Craig Bellamy keeping him out – and deservedly so given the performance Bellamy put in. Carroll starts today with Bellamy on the bench. Dirk Kuyt put in arguably his best performance of the season on Wednesday but he also drops to the bench, his replacement is Maxi Rodriguez.

    At the back Martin Kelly comes in for Glen Johnson and Jamie Carragher also starts. Whether he plays in midfield – he’s in the side at the expense of Charlie Adam – remains to be seen, but it looks like Kenny is planning to use three centre-backs.

    For the other lot Wayne Rooney is out of the starting line up, Patrice Evra starts as captain with veterans Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes also in from the off.

    Liverpool: Reina, Kelly, Agger, Skrtel, Carragher, Enrique, Henderson, Gerrard, Downing, Maxi, Carroll.
    Subs: Doni, Johnson, Coates, Kuyt, Adam, Shelvey, Bellamy.

    Manchester United: De Gea, Rafael, Smalling, Evans, Evra, Carrick, Scholes, Giggs, Valencia, Welbeck, Park.
    Subs: Lindegaard, Fabio, Ferdinand, M Keane, Pogba, Berbatov, Hernandez.

  • Kanouté: We need to study facts in more depth to avoid false racial abuse allegations

    Posted: January 28, 2012, 11:51 am by Jim Boardman

    Freddie Kanouté, the former West Ham and Tottenham striker now playing in Spain for Sevilla, agrees that despite the FA’s reluctance to accept it the Liverpool striker Luis Suárez might well have been punished for cultural differences.

    Kanouté told the BBC’s World Football Focus that he’s seen those cultural differences first-hand, including in Seville where he’s now been based for six years and is fluent in the Spanish language: “It’s different in every country you know.

    “Here, some people, they have a way to talk to each other. It’s true; when I arrived here I was a bit shocked because that’s their way to express themselves.”

    Suárez was banned for eight matches after an FA-appointed panel decided he wasn’t a credible witness and instead took the word of his accuser, Patrice Evra, finding a charge of insulting behaviour with a reference to race proven. A 115-page report was issued where the panel tried to justify their reasons for making that decision, but few who have commented on the case have taken the time to read it in full, meaning the inconsistencies it is littered with have had very little coverage.

    The French-born Mali international stopped short of passing judgement on the case itself, instead pointing out that he’s not looked at the case in enough detail to be able to say who was right. He’s keeping an open mind – false allegations are dangerous and Suárez might have had a point: “But I’m not going to defend him, or the other player, because I haven’t studied the case.

    “All the time I think we should study the cases more deeply to be sure we don’t accuse someone falsely.”

    Kanouté was caught up in a ‘race row’ himself in October after accusations were made against Barcelona’s former Arsenal player Cesc Fabregas. Kanouté had been sent off after an altercation with Fabregas and local media reported that Kanouté had been provoked by insults which had a racial element to them.  The accusations weren’t made by Kanouté.

    Fabregas used Twitter to deny the claims: “I want to categorically deny that I made any kind of racist insult towards any Sevilla player.  I will not tolerate anyone accusing me of things that I’m not. If they are frustrated by a decision that has gone against them on the football pitch then there are others ways to deal with it.

    “To cry racism is cowardly and an easy option to excuse your own poor behaviour. My conscience is completely clear. I’ve done nothing wrong.”

    Kanouté, whilst reluctant to discuss exactly what Fabregas did say, made it clear in the BBC interview that there was no racial element to the words that were exchanged: “I’m not going to explain now what he said because this is something personal.

    “Sometimes there is bad language on the pitch and sometimes some players react and that’s what I did – but I’ve never said he was racist and said racist things. I’ve got to be honest about that. There’s nothing about that and that’s it.”

    Kanouté, a Muslim, found himself in a difficult situation at one point when his club got a new shirt sponsor – a betting company. Freddie refused to wear the shirt initially but later came to an agreement with his club that meant he wasn’t expected to take part in any other publicity work for the sponsor: “I felt I shouldn’t wear that shirt but we are in a society where sometimes you have to understand you are not on your own and sometimes you have to do things – as far as I’m concerned I’m not doing those kinds of things myself but it’s like publicity, I felt I shouldn’t make publicity of that kind of company.

    “When I play football, when I’m in my personal life, I am still Muslim. It doesn’t change anything, so sometimes when there are some things that are not in agreement with my principles I say, ‘Stop, no,’ but that’s the only thing.

    “I think I’ve been understood by the majority, let’s say, even the non-Muslims, because something is like common sense.  Also there’s no problem at all expressing my views on some issues.”

    Liverpool face Manchester United at Anfield today with Patrice Evra set to make his first appearance there since making those allegations in October.

    It was after the league game between the two sides that Evra reported Luis Suárez to the referee for insulting him using the word “n****r”. Evra then went on French TV, claiming Suárez had used the word “more than ten times”, and the accusations were then aired around the world. Evra had made reference to only one occasion in his statement to the referee and would later change his evidence again to say the word used wasn’t “n****r” but the Spanish word “negro” (meaning “black”, not to be confused with the English word with the same spelling but different pronunciation and meaning).

    Although Evra went public to make his “more than ten times” allegations and told reporters the word used was “n****r”, he is yet to clarify publicly that those allegations were false and exaggerated. Whatever the truth of what happened on the pitch at Anfield in October, it is a long way removed from the version Evra told the media.

    Evra also told the hearing, but not the media, that before Suárez said anything at all to him he’d insulted the Uruguayan with the words “your sister’s c***.” The FA excused this on the grounds of there being cultural differences between the use of “your sister’s c***” in Spanish and its literal English translation. Despite ruling that Suárez’s use of the word “negro” should be judged based on its direct English translation and in the context of it being said on an English football pitch, with any cultural differences discounted, the panel ruled that Evra’s use of an extremely insulting phrase when directly translated into English should be judged based on the cultural use of the phrase in Spanish and not on its direct English translation.

    The FA refuses to answer questions on those any many other inconsistencies. Liverpool, whilst not accepting the findings, have expressed a desire to move on from the incident. Much of the media and certain anti-discrimination campaigners don’t share that desire but also don’t show any desire for the truth, instead continuing to perpetuate a number of myths from the case.

    * The full World Football Focus programme is now online on the BBC’s website: World Football Focus. (NB: Geographic restrictions may apply, content may only be available for a limited time.) Thanks to the producer, @SimonEllisJones, for letting us know about the programme.

  • We want to watch the match

    Posted: January 27, 2012, 7:04 pm by Jim Boardman

    IN a parallel universe somewhere, if such things exist, the Liverpool –Manchester United league game in October turned out a little bit differently. The first fifty-odd minutes were exactly the same; the rest of the game, to all but a couple of people, looked to have carried on exactly the same too. 

    Evra still had that little tantrum about losing the toss. He still told the ref to book Downing and still got away without being booked himself. He still went down writhing in agony for what looked at least from some angles as an innocuous challenge from Suárez. If he was asked later why he’d writhed around in agony following that type of challenge he’d still say it was more painful for him to be caught there because of existing injury problems.

    Five minutes after that challenge Evra still said something (best not repeated) to Suárez, something Suárez still didn’t hear. But in this parallel universe Suárez responded to the rest of Evra’s pestering with a word picked up from one of the local lads at Anfield.

    “Why did you kick me?”

    “Because you’re a blert?”

    “A what?”

    “A blert; stop whining.”

    To people watching from the stands or on TV nothing looked any different to what (it looked like) went on in this universe. Suárez and Evra were still the only ones who really knew what they’d said and what they thought they’d heard. But in the parallel universe Evra’s team mate Rooney explained what “blert” meant and that was the end of that. The controversy afterwards was about Ferguson being asked if Liverpool’s free kick was soft and replying it was and that “that Suárez dives all over the place”, without anyone pointing out to him that it was Adam who’d been fouled for the free kick. Even in that universe Ferguson won’t stand for having things pointed out to him.

    Liverpool fans would talk about how it looked like their opponents had come looking for a draw and that it seemed like their opponents were happier with the score than they were. A quick friendly against Rangers followed for Liverpool and then it was the visit of another side that would be happy to leave Anfield with a point – Norwich this time.  From then on the game against the Mancs would hardly get a mention.

    Liverpool played 13 games whilst waiting for a final outcome on Evra’s accusations; they’ve now played six of the eight-game ban that was part of that outcome.  In that parallel universe, where Liverpool’s results weren’t necessarily any better, the only reason the October match would be under discussion now would be if the FA Cup draw was the same.

    Chances are, in that parallel universe, Evra would have had a bit of stick from Liverpool fans because of that toin-coss tantrum, the attempt to get Downing booked and his constant narkiness throughout the October fixture (even before that 50-oddth minute). If, as part of the build-up for tomorrow’s game there’d been wall-to-wall coverage of all this there’s a good chance Evra would hear what people thought of him tomorrow. And there’s no doubt at all that if he acted like he did for those first 50 minutes on October he’d get told it again and again. That’s football, after all.

    Suárez might be missing from that parallel fixture anyway, after all no player is immune from injury or from racking up unjust or silly bookings. If he was playing, though, he’d almost certainly be the subject of abuse from away supporters thanks to the “diving all over the place” nonsense their manager and others were spreading prior to any mention of more serious allegations. But again, that’s football.

    Sometimes the hostility works in the player’s favour anyway. If the crowd react strongly to three or four reasonable challenges from the player they’re aiming their venom at, what happens when it’s the fourth or fifth but this time the ref isn’t so well-sighted? If a player has been clearly fouled a couple of times in plain sight of the referee, only for the ref to hear accusations of diving, what’s that ref going to do the next time when he’s not so well positioned?

    It’s not just the referee’s perception of the vitriol that can make a difference of course. Some players thrive on it; they use it to spur them on, all the more if they know there’s no merit to the abuse coming from the stands or if it’s about something that genuinely does not bother them.

    Some supporters, at some clubs, have their pantomime boos ready every time a player who used to play for one of their rivals comes to play with his new team. He might only have been on their rival’s books for one season, spent mainly in the reserves, but once a [whatever the neighbours are called] always a [whatever the neighbours are called] and he’ll be booed every time he goes near the ball. Watching other teams on TV people are asking why there’s such anger towards that player, did he end someone’s career? No, he just played for that lot in the next town once.

    Wayne Rooney gets it at Anfield, because Wayne Rooney has played for both of the sides that Liverpool supporters like least. He grew up supporting one of them; some would argue his transfer fee meant he supported them in a different way for a couple of years after he’d gone too. The more stick he gets from Liverpool fans the better he usually does.

    Gary Neville also always got a bit more attention from Liverpool fans than his team mates did. That was mainly down to him being very publicly full of spite towards Liverpool from early in his career – but the feeling was mutual and on the whole it never did anyone any harm. Nowadays he even gets compliments from Liverpool fans, his punditry for Sky on the whole a welcome surprise.

    Manchester United were prepared to lose money on a want away player before they’d let Liverpool buy him, such is their, or their manager’s, dislike (it can’t be fear, can it?) of LFC. But had that player been signed for the side that wear the better shade of Red it doesn’t take much imagination to work out the kind of reception he’d get from his old club’s fans. Something like the reception Paul Ince got when he, via another club, joined Liverpool.

    Some of the (internet) abuse aimed at Evra for admitting he considered leaving Old Trafford (for a club overseas) suggests he’d be a long way from popular if he’d gone there and the two sides had met up in a future Champions League (or Europa League) tie.

    Whatever the reasons might be for a hostile reception, whether it’s for something that was there before the match or something that happened in the match, chances are it’s not going to mess that player’s head up. If anything it might just make the difference that sees him put that extra 2% effort in to throw himself on the end of a slightly over hit cross or make that last ditch yet well-timed tackle.

    A lot of players claim to not even notice what’s being said about them from the stands, to not notice the chanting or insults. Sometimes of course the insults are being hurled at players by their own fans – and chances are they would hurt far more than anything the opposing fans could come up with.

    In that parallel universe Evra might have been booed every time he touched the ball in tomorrow’s game and nothing would have been made of it. Evra would probably take it as a compliment, the way many footballers do when they’ve riled the other side’s fans.

    Back to reality, what happens if he’s booed tomorrow, or more accurately what happens if he gets shouted at a lot, with some expletives thrown in, by Liverpool supporters tomorrow? We won’t know until it happens – but nothing should be made of it, unless there’s evidence of it being for reasons more sinister than that old club rivalry.

    The usual (mainly internet) few who try to make out a chant is worse than it sounds or even make some up that were never sung will no doubt be planning to do more of the same after tomorrow’s match. It helps them fine tune their audience, attracting more of those who can’t think for themselves and won’t ask questions – and repelling those who can and do.

    Tomorrow will also be a good test for the cluster of mainstream reporters who have jumped to the wrong conclusions time and again since Evra’s allegations were first heard publicly. Can they report on events at a Liverpool FA cup tie without having to hastily get their reports corrected and the inaccuracies wiped out? Can they report any words Liverpool come out with relating to Evra, if Liverpool do, without putting words into Liverpool’s mouths that were never there?

    There is absolutely no reason, other than normal footballing reasons, for Evra to miss tomorrow’s match. As that game goes on any abuse he gets will be because of his actions on the pitch, not his fluid allegations off the pitch.

    And, if Evra is 100% certain in his own mind that the decision the FA panel made over the Suárez charge was correct, he’s hardly going to be hurt by a bit of booing tomorrow. He’s not going to play any worse if there seems to be a stronger reaction to a late tackle from him than there is to one from another of his team mates (we don’t even know if Paul Scholes is playing yet).

    Will Luis Suárez be there, like he was on Wednesday to see Liverpool knock Manchester City out of the Carling Cup? There’s no reason he shouldn’t be, after all the FA’s punishment didn’t extend to him being prevented from going to see his team’s games, but this is Manchester United we’re playing and it would just be inviting them to stir up trouble about it in some way.

    Liverpool will be there to play football, the Liverpool fans will be there to see it played. Liverpool will try to win, not try for a draw, and once that coin has been tossed, tantrum from the visiting captain or not, football will be all that matters.

    Manchester United can do what they want.

  • Questions that won’t be answered

    Posted: January 25, 2012, 4:12 pm by Jim Boardman

    A COUPLE of weeks ago I started something I’d loosely titled “An open letter to Piara Powar, Lord Ouseley and the rest of them.” In the first paragraph it asked: “Are you all the same you anti-discrimination campaigners?”

    I didn’t finish it; it was one of those pieces that have no end in sight because there’s so much to say. And this is no shorter, so apologies if you don’t like reading anything too lengthy.

    It followed on from comments by Piara Powar, the latest in a number, that had themselves followed on from comments Lord Ouseley and a number of other anti-discrimination campaigners. It was shortly after the incident at Anfield involving Tom Adeyemi.

    None of the more prominent anti-discrimination campaigners, along with the members of the press so eager to give them a platform to spout from, seemed to grasp exactly what was at the heart of Liverpool’s stance on the Luis Suárez incident. Those who have spoken out about it and defended the club or the player have been branded as racist and that has been fuelled in a large part by the comments made by Ouseley, Powar and a number of other anti-discrimination campaigners.

    What they are all unable – or unwilling – to grasp is that people who were defending Suárez were not condoning racism.

    And what the ones doing it are also unwilling to grasp is that by inferring Liverpool and its fans are all racist they are as discriminatory as any of the people they claim to be protecting others from. All anti-discrimination campaigners aren’t the same – but football seems to be blessed with some of the worst.

    When the Suárez case first came to light the first reaction was as to be expected from both sets of supporters. There was no proof – so, football being football, supporters stood by their own man until such a time as proof to the contrary was shown. Some would probably stand by him even then, but most decent fans of both sides would at least be open to the possibility that their man could be in the wrong – or that it was all a big misunderstanding. What most people wanted was definitive proof, hopefully in their man’s favour, but proof either way. That way there would be no real arguing to be done and if your man was in the wrong you could see it and react accordingly. Most Liverpool fans I heard comment on that possibility made it clear that they’d want him out if he’d done what Evra had said he’d done.

    Neutrals, meanwhile, were either genuinely dismayed at the possibility it had happened or were rubbing their hands together in private at the chance of something to gossip about or write headlines about. If Suárez had done what Evra had accused him of it was dynamite for the headline writers and it would give the writers of what sites underneath the headlines story after story for the foreseeable future.  Those stories would be lapped up by those who care about having something to gossip about far more than they care about the truth.

    And of course, whichever “side” “lost” the battle, plenty of those on the “winning” side would be glad to spread that gossip too. It’s what people do. Some people.

    So now, with very little indeed to go on, everyone interested in the story decided what they thought about it. It might not be there final decision but it was the one they went with to start with. Had Suárez done what Evra said he’d done?

    What had Evra actually said? Well…

    Evra had accused Suárez of calling him a “ni****” ten times. He’d told French TV, and through that the world, that the Uruguayan had done something that – if true – no amount of explaining could play down.

    Suárez had denied it, saying instead (later) that he’d used a word once, a word that isn’t racist in his own country and that Evra’s own team mates use the same word to him. His club stood behind him and made it clear that they didn’t think he was guilty of the accusations made against him.

    The two versions of events are complete polar opposites.

    But those two versions of events were all that anyone outside of the process had to go on. Any comments made before New Year’s Eve and the release of the “written reasons” were based on those two completely opposite versions of events. The only other “evidence” the general public had to go on was whatever was leaked to the press, and that had to be taken with a huge pinch of salt because it wasn’t always clear where it had come from and how biased the original storyteller might be.

    It turned out that Evra’s story had inconsistencies in it from the beginning. Although we weren’t to find this out until later, the version of events reported by the referee in the ‘Extraordinary Incident Report Form’ was different to what Evra had told Canal+, in that there is only a reference to Suárez making a comment once, not multiple times: “Luis Suárez is alleged to have said to Patrice Evra ‘I don’t talk to you because you ni****s’.”

    Neither Ferguson nor Evra made mention of the alleged insult being used more than once, according to their witness statements.

    Ferguson’s statement said that “as he was speaking to David De Gea, Mr Evra approached him. He said ‘Boss, Suarez called me a ni****.’” Ferguson’s statement also said: “[Ferguson] told Mr Marriner that they had a complaint to make. [Ferguson] told him ‘Evra has been called a ni**** by one of the Liverpool players.’ [Ferguson] then motioned for Mr Evra to tell the referee what had been said.”

    According to Evra’s statement, although this may have been paraphrased by the panel in its written reasons, “[Evra] said that he told the referee that Mr Suarez had called him a ni****.”  Again according to the panel’s description of Evra’s statement: “According to Mr Evra, the referee said to him ‘Oh, that is why you were talking about being called black’, referring back to what Mr Evra had said to the referee on the pitch. Mr Evra said ‘Yes.’”

    Also, according to the panel’s retelling of the witness statement from referee Marriner, the referee only mentions the accusation being of one instance: “Mr Evra, speaking in English, then told Mr Marriner that during a coming together in the penalty area in the second half of the match, Mr Suarez said to Mr Evra, ‘I don’t talk to you because you ni****s’.”

    None of this was out in the public domain, but according to Evra, Ferguson and Marriner there was no mention of the alleged insult being used more than once.

    Evra said “ten times” to French TV. Also, according to the LFC member of staff who stands outside the dressing rooms on match days in case anyone needs anything, Ferguson alleged it happened “five times”. That was what the LFC member of staff, Ray Haughan, said he heard Ferguson say. Haughan said he was outside in the corridor when he heard Ferguson say this inside the referee’s dressing room. The referee’s door was then closed and Haughan went to warn LFC officials about the allegation he’d heard Ferguson make.

    In the public domain Suárez had been accused of calling Evra a “ni****” ten times.

    Behind the scenes but in an area where his comments would potentially be audible to many different people Ferguson had alleged Suárez had called Evra a “ni****” five times.

    Behind the closed door of the referee’s room Ferguson and Evra had together alleged Suárez had called Evra a “ni****” once.

    Between them, Ferguson and Evra had accused Suárez of saying “ni****” ten times, five times or once. The panel eventually settled on “probably seven”, as if it was some kind of negotiation.

    In fact the panel didn’t settle on seven – they settled on none. At some point after that the day of the alleged incident Evra changed his mind about the actual word that was used. Now it wasn’t “ni****” or “ni****s” it was the Spanish word for black, said in Spanish, i.e. “negro”.

    Nobody has said when it was that Evra changed his mind about what he’d heard.

    None of this changing of mind on the word used was in the public domain either. The only two accounts in the public domain were Evra’s allegations of “ni****” ten times and Suárez’s claim of “a word his own team mates use for him” once.

    What the campaigners fail to see is that these differences are massive.  The closest they come to seeing it is to pipe up with “zero tolerance”, an attitude in itself that flies in the face of their own anti-discrimination policies. Their attitude is that if it’s a bad word in this country, in the language of this country, then it shouldn’t be said in this country, in any language. They’ve got a point, sort of, but they’re so keen to prove it that they actually miss the whole point of what the debate was about.

    Suárez was on public trial for saying “ni****” ten times. He didn’t even say that word once – and all parties involved accept this. But nobody from The FA or Manchester United ever sought to clarify this on the record in public prior to the hearing. Would it have hurt anyone for Evra to issue a statement to clarify that the word used wasn’t the one he’d told everybody else it was?

    The answer is yes. It might have hurt Evra’s case. It might have hurt The FA’s case. Liverpool were criticised for defending Suárez yet nobody at The FA or Manchester United was criticised for keeping quiet about Evra’s allegations to French TV being false and exaggerated.

    Is it any wonder that Liverpool were defensive?

    To those who just wanted to get to the truth of the situation, if it was possible to do so, the failure to clarify in some way that the original allegations to French TV had been false and exaggerated is alarming.

    If, after having some time to calm down and think about it, Evra realised that what Suárez said wasn’t what he thought he said, why not admit it more openly? What was there to hide?

    In some ways it is understandable – but not necessarily acceptable – for Manchester United and their player not to clarify the situation. A statement to the effect that he’d got it wrong but was still going ahead with his complaint would have shown honesty – but could also have made them look foolish. “Manchester United would like to clarify that Patrice Evra’s allegations, made to Canal+, about Luis Suárez, were inaccurate. Mr Evra now understands that Mr Suárez did not use the word that Mr Evra told Canal+ had been used. Mr Evra also wishes to clarify that the word that was used was not used ten times and that prior to Mr Evra speaking to Canal+ both Mr Evra and Mr Ferguson reported to the referee that the word originally alleged was used on one occasion. However Mr Evra still feels that the word used once was offensive and wishes to continue with his complaint.”

    It’s not understandable at all, unless the FA had some other agenda in mind, for the FA to allow the allegations to stand despite knowing them to be untrue. They knew what Evra had said to the press and they knew it was false. Yet they said nothing at all about it. Then again, it was The FA who charged Suárez and the FA that decided on five times as the number of occasions the word was used. This figure was arrived at, it seems, during interviews the FA held with Evra in which he was shown video footage of the game.

    The FA, whether deliberately or negligently, chose to withhold tapes of their interviews with Evra. It was only by accident, during some other conversations during the hearing, that their existence was made known to the panel and – more importantly – to Liverpool. By the time Liverpool got access to those tapes it had already been made clear by the panel and by The FA that this hearing had to proceed as quickly as possible.

    After being charged Suárez’s representative had asked for more time to prepare his reply to the charge and also to supply all documents and witness statements he intended to use in any defence of the charge. The FA refused to grant Suárez the extension he had asked for. He wanted until Thursday 8th, the FA insisted on Monday the 5th. The reason the FA were unwilling to allow those three extra days was because of “the importance of concluding the hearing of the Charge as soon as reasonably practicable in the interests of Mr Suarez, Mr Evra and others involved.” They said there may be a need for The FA to “respond to the documents submitted” by Suárez and that an extension to the Thursday would leave them little time to do so “if a hearing was to take place in the week commencing 12 December.”

    They wanted the hearing to take place that week because “it was clearly desirable” they said, “otherwise, with Christmas and New Year intervening, the hearing would be unlikely to be concluded until January 2012.”

    The panel actually overruled this and allowed Suárez until the Wednesday, the 7th. They did this by balancing the need for Suárez to have time to prepare his response to such a serious charge with the need to avoid the case hanging over the heads of all involved into the New Year: “The Chairman recognised that a serious charge had been brought against Mr Suarez and that he should have adequate time in which to prepare to meet the Charge with the assistance of his chosen legal representative. It was also important that this matter should not be left hanging over the parties any longer than necessary, and that the hearing should be concluded in December if reasonably and fairly practicable.”

    When the existence of previously secret tapes was made known on day one of the hearing perhaps Suárez’s representative should have called foul and demanded the case be put on hold until they’d had more time to listen to them and to learn of anything in the contents that might help their case. Instead Suárez’s representative, “whilst understandably critical of the omission of the tapes” agreed to continue with the hearing. This decision allowed the hearing to continue without any more delay but he was given no credit for doing so. The panel didn’t think to criticise The FA, or question the credibility of The FA, for holding the tapes back.

    The club made mistakes in how it handled the situation in that it showed inexperience in dealing with the FA.  The representative the club used to handle the case for Suárez made mistakes too, it would seem. The FA had already shown their attitude is to get rules and regulations to meet their best needs rather than to set appropriate examples. For example, they appealed a decision that saw an international player they wanted to make use of suspended for three games. Under their own rules the suspension would be as lengthy and they would only make it shorter by overruling it completely – in reality a similar appeal to The FA would be more likely to result in an extra one-game ban being tagged on the end.

    The FA have also fallen foul of trying to stand up to the governing body above them in football’s mod-style hierarchy. They stood up to FIFA and got slapped back down again. Liverpool got the same treatment for daring to question the problems with The FA’s system. That system has been criticised increasingly but The FA refuse to acknowledge that it is long overdue an overhaul.

    By the time it was produced the 115-page report seemed more concerned with refuting Liverpool’s angry statements and comments that were made as the process crawled along than it did with showing how it had got to the truth. In fact it hadn’t got to the truth, it had picked one of the two sides of the story for reasons that seem flimsy at best and had used that version to base its decisions on.

    Looking back now it’s easy to say that Liverpool should have kept their opinions to themselves until after the written reasons had been released. Their anger was justified, but should have been kept in-house until after the written reasons had been released. At that point they could have questioned the inconsistencies that litter the report and the report wouldn’t have been largely written as a response to LFC’s public criticisms of the process.

    At that point they could have asked how some details had been leaked to the press even before the charge was issued.

    For example, Suárez was charged on November 16th (co-incidentally the day Blatter made his “handshake” comment). It was only then that he received the evidence that The FA would rely on in order to state their case. Included in that evidence was the statement from Hernandez, and that statement is the only one that – from what the written reasons have told us – makes reference to the word “negrito”.

    Neither Evra nor Suárez said the word used was “negrito”. Neither manager mentioned it, the referee didn’t. The word isn’t used at all in the 115 pages of the report aside from where it is referring to a statement from that one Manchester United player, Hernandez. “A Mexican footballer, Omar Esparza, is widely known in Mexico as ‘el Negrito’. Hernandez, the Manchester United player, has been a close friend of Omar Esparza for many years and refers to him as ‘el Negrito’ in an affectionate way. Hernandez admitted that terms such as ‘Negrito’ can be used with close friends and in certain situations without it being offensive.” (It isn’t exactly clear why the panel mention it at all, but perhaps it relates to the secret paragraph 8 from the Hernandez statement that was referred to but not revealed in the report.)

    So the only mention of “negrito” in the 115 pages of that report comes from a Manchester United player. Suárez was given the witness statements from Hernandez and others on November 16th. On November 13th, days before the charges were issued and the witness statements passed to Liverpool, Daniel Taylor of The Guardian seemed to know about “negrito”. He wrote:

    “Top-level sources at Old Trafford say the offending word was uttered in Spanish and allegedly was a derivative of ‘negro’, with Evra stating that it was used ‘at least 10 times’.

    He goes on to write:

    “’Negrito’, for example, could have shocking connotations for someone without full knowledge of the nuances of the language. But the counter-argument is that this is one of several derivations that are used in many countries, with no derogatory meaning – often in the same way someone could be called ‘pal’ or ‘mate’.”

    It seems, in all probability, that the word “negrito” was brought into the public discussion of the case after someone at Old Trafford, or someone connected to Old Trafford, tipped some reporters off about it.

    None of the evidence presented in the 115 pages of that report suggests Liverpool, or Suárez, even mentioned that variation of the word. Yet that was the word used in numerous arguments about how right or wrong Liverpool were to defend their player.

    In fact when the decision was announced, but before the reasons for it were published, it was being used by people to back up their arguments about why the decision – for which they’d not heard the reasons – must have been spot on. For example:

    On BBC News, Piara Powar of Football Against Racism in Europe (FARE) says “as I understand it the case [against Suárez] centred around the use of the word “Negrito”, which for Luis Suárez is apparently acceptable but for many of us in the UK racialising an interaction amongst players is not the right thing – it’s wrong, it is racially offensive”. [adrianhart.com]

    Without knowing the reasons for the decision – and if he thought the word used was “negrito” it would seem likely that he’d not had any kind of tip-off about the reasons – he condemned the player. Perhaps he’d been looking forward to doing that so much that he forgot to keep his own opinions and prejudices in check.

    Powar wasn’t the only anti-discrimination “name” to act like this. He was one of the worst though.

    Before long he’d forgotten, conveniently, that Liverpool supporters were steadfast behind their player before any written reasons had been released, before even the decision was made to charge him. All along that support was based on trust in their club’s manager and trust that he’d do the right thing had Suárez done the wrong thing.

    Not many people have that level of trust from the vast majority of Liverpool supporters. Kenny isn’t infallible but he commands respect, respect he’s earned and never demanded.

    At the same time The FA, UEFA and FIFA demand “respect” from participants in the game. They don’t earn it; they threaten punishments for not showing it. They bully the participants into submission and wonder why there is still dissent. The same attitude shown over whether or not a referee got a decision wrong came to the fore in this decision about Suárez. “We are right, don’t you dare question us.”

    How can any respect be shown to The FA when they, along with Manchester United and Evra, kept quiet for two-and-a-half months without owning up that they knew Evra’s “more than ten times” and “ni****” accusations were untrue?

    For two and a half months we were waiting for something to show us who was telling the truth. Had Evra been called a “nigger” ten times, or had he been called, as Suárez had claimed, “a word his teammates call him” once? It was obvious that the truth could lie somewhere in between, that the disagreement over what was actually said could be down to a misunderstanding or translation issue as much as it could be down to a bare-faced lie.

    We supported him for two-and-a-half months because we know that Kenny Dalglish would not have risked his own reputation by backing anyone he knew was racist. We knew the club’s owners would rather see Liverpool’s transfer budget take a hit than be seen to be backing a proven racist. We knew the club’s commercial department would see the potential damage that could be caused by continuing to market an out and out racist as some kind of hero.

    We also knew that – even if it turned out our club wasn’t as scrupulous as it looks to our loyal eyes – having to play so many games under this cloud was punishment in itself and that accepting a ban early on would have lessened the slow torture Suárez was under during that two-and-a-half month period. As those who didn’t believe Suárez’s version even before seeing any evidence said – if he’d apologised straight away it would have been much better for him (presumably that applies even if he honestly doesn’t know he’s done wrong).

    If we’d found Liverpool’s anger was based on a technicality they thought would get Suárez off we’d have been as indignant as anyone else about it, believe me.

    If we’d found Liverpool’s anger was completely misplaced because of overwhelming proof that Suárez was in the wrong we’d have been on our club’s back ourselves, far quicker than any of those trying to make a name for themselves were.

    Instead we read 115 pages that tried too hard to prove Suárez wrong. 115 pages that were largely ignored by the reporters who got to see them at the same time as most of us, at tea-time on New Year’s Eve. At least one report for a national newspaper was filed less than an hour after the reasons were released – and I’ve had it on good authority from a long, long, list of national journalists that the reasons weren’t released any earlier to the press under embargo. They got them when we got them. So how anyone could write anything meaningful on their contents in under an hour is beyond me.

    They had to get something out, fast, so they skipped straight to page 111, point 452 of 453, where the judgement is summed up with little reference as to the assumptions that had gone into it.

    Maybe if the likes of Powar and Ouseley had read all 115 pages, more than once, before making so many ill-advised comments about Liverpool FC, its staff and – the bit that upsets us the most – its supporters, maybe there’d be a reason to show some respect.

    How helpful have Powar’s and Ouseley’s words and actions been in helping deal with racism and discrimination in sport? How much time did they spend looking at the obvious flaws in the whole process, flaws that must be addressed as a matter of urgency before the next time an accusation like this is made?

    The regulations are wide open to abuse.

    But this seems to be of little concern to men like Powar, men who are more interested in sending out a message than in dealing with any real problem.

    For example, Mr Powar, speaking to the FA:

    “I think the FA should come back now and be very clear that Liverpool could be construed to have brought the game into disrepute by the way in which they have consistently undermined the judgement and by Kenny Dalglish’s comments.”

    The FA haven’t done this. Why? Believe it or not we’d like them to, because by doing so it would allow Liverpool to explain their reasons for being so unhappy about the report. The lack of action from The FA, in comparison to what they normally consider grounds for misconduct, suggests a can of worms might then be opened.

    But the club can defend itself; this is more about defending the supporters. Defending them from the treatment dished out by the likes of Powar.  “Liverpool have been too keen to support their man and in doing so have whipped up a sense of paranoia amongst their fans.”

    Are you suggesting that Liverpool supporters are too blind to make up their own minds on issues of importance? Are we all the same, us Liverpool fans? Stupid ignorant Scousers, is that how you see us?

    Are we all a bit thick, Neanderthals waiting to be pointed in the direction of the next thing to complain about. Mates with Boris Johnson by any chance, Mr Powar?

    And on he goes, looking down his nose at us:

    “For the club to so aggressively militate against what looks to most people is a considered judgement from the FA leads to a potential for anarchy.”

    Nice use of the phrase “most people” Mr Powar. So “most people” see it as a “considered judgement”, but that nasty Scouse underclass aren’t as clever as “most people” are they? No, they blindly and dumbly follow what their club tells them to do and anarchy is now on the way.

    Your claim your colleagues agree too, so maybe you are all the same, you anti-discrimination people:

    “I have emails from colleagues in Africa asking me what the hell is going on. I think people will be watching this and I believe there is no question that their plans for global expansion will have been damaged by this.”

    I have correspondence from fellow supporters – and not just Liverpool supporters – who fully understand why we remain supportive of Luis Suárez. I also have correspondence from Liverpool supporters who don’t agree. In fact, funnily enough, I have quite a mix. It’s like we’re all individuals or something. Who’d have thought that then?

    It’s not like we’ve a fanbase made up of people from all around the world as well as all around the country is it? I’ve no idea what kind of ratio our supporters made up of in terms of any of the categories referred to in The FA’s rule, E3(2), which makes the punishment of an offence under E3(1) stronger if an “aggravating factor” is present, namely a reference to “ethnic origin, colour, race, nationality, faith, gender, sexual orientation or disability.”

    What I do know is that there is quite a mix when it comes to each of those categories and that up until recently I’ve never really had to give it any thought.

    But it’s that mix of people that people like Powar are talking down to when they come out with stuff like this. Powar, on Twitter, said: “The obvious thing for LFC today must be to come out as a club – owner, manager, captain – and start to undo some of the damage, including addressing their fans. Go onto the LFC website and there is not a single expression of regret about what happened last night.”

    And worse of all, making ridiculous assumptions about the backgrounds and views of all Liverpool supporters based on the alleged actions of one supporter: “Are LFC fans going to do this at every game, support the mistakes made by their own man by abusing others? 25% of PL players are black.”

    What percentage of The Kop isn’t white? What percentage allegedly hurled racist abuse at one of the Premier League’s non-white players?

    Powar went on: “That’s a lot of players to abuse. Top clubs have unprecedented influence and power over millions of people. They should exercise that power responsibly, if they don’t it’s time for the authorities to step in. Those scenes last night, it was clear, this is not just an issue for football but our society as a whole.”

    Good grief Powar, do you realise how offensive your comments are? Have you any idea?

    He added: “The LFC brand is being tarnished, but so is British football. Where are football’s leaders on this issue today?”

    Does he not see the way he tarnishes the reputation of Kick It Out, for whom he was the spokesman for a number of years, and FARE, the organisation we know little about but which he is now head of?

    Allegations – two separate sets of allegations – were made against Chelsea fans travelling home from their game against Norwich at the weekend. Not a word, so far as we’ve seen, from Powar. Why’s that?

    Meanwhile Lord Ouseley’s been to see Sepp Blatter. He was saying stuff like this a few weeks back: “Liverpool have failed [Suárez]. Because they have not told Suárez what the club’s expectations are; that they have a zero policy towards racism. If he is ignorant of what is required of him, Liverpool should be asking: how come we have got a contract with the player?

    “Liverpool have been particularly hypocritical.

    “You can’t on the one hand wear a Kick It Out T-shirt in a week of campaigning against racism when this is also happening on the pitch: it’s the height of hypocrisy. Liverpool players wore a T-shirt saying: ‘We support Luis Suárez’, seemingly whatever the outcome. This was a dreadful knee-jerk reaction because it stirs things up.

    “And, then, this was followed, after the verdict, with a kind of stance that says: ‘Hey, we support anti-racism and Kick It Out. But we’re not sorry. All we are really saying is that we blame someone else, not us.’”

    Liverpool weren’t sorry because Liverpool wouldn’t have defended their player in the first place if they thought there was something to be sorry about. How hard is it for such a well-versed observer to see this? Especially when that well-versed observer said himself at the outset of the Suárez case that there should be proof beyond reasonable doubt?

    Now that he’s seen Blatter it’s all different. Talking about John Terry, who is involved in a case that can’t really be talked about much, Ouseley said: “There is every reason for players and indeed fans to show civility and respect toward each other and focus on the football. I have nothing against that.

    “A handshake now is part of the reconciliation and honesty that needs to take place. There is nothing wrong for someone making a mistake to apologise for it, hold their hands up and then face the consequences and move on.”

    It’s difficult to work out who exactly he thinks made the mistake and best not discussed given the fact the case is yet to be heard. All the more reason to wonder why he’s doing so now.

    He maybe should have a word with Powar: “It is not about retribution and continued hostility, it is about reconciliation, otherwise the next generation will not understand the need for harmony in sport, which mirrors society. It is about how to take the heat out of the situation of the two clubs meeting again, and problems with fans’ behaviour as a result of what happened between the players previously.”

    Is he still talking about Chelsea?

    He goes back to that word “respect” again: “There has been a lot of nastiness surfacing in the last few months that should have no part in football. The fans have to respect each other, and they won’t if the players fail to respect each other. There is passion and emotion in sport, and so it should be, but you also have to respect the individual.

    “A handshake before the game will not deflect from what went on before and how it will be dealt with.”

    So, Lord Ouseley, how about a word with Mr Powar? Is it time he showed some respect to Liverpool supporters and apologised for his comments? Or is that too much to ask? Did his wife ever explain those comments about the BNP and Glasgow Rangers?

    Have either of you read that report, in full, to see what went into the pages that made up the summary?

    I don’t expect any answers. We might as well talk to Blatter, or someone else in a lofty position that fails to listen to what’s really making people angry.

    In the meantime maybe it’s time to look for a new organisation to fight discrimination in football. One that isn’t quite so discriminatory as those running the existing ones.

  • No need for Liverpool to match Ferguson’s letter to his side’s fans

    Posted: January 24, 2012, 5:26 pm by Jim Boardman

    A LETTER from Alex Ferguson to Manchester United supporters urging they behave at Anfield on Saturday has nothing to do with the recent Patrice Evra incident last October. Suggestions from some that Liverpool should now follow suit are either ill-advised, lazy or an attempt to stir up a bit more trouble.

    When Manchester United played at Anfield last season in Liverpool’s 3-1 win the behaviour of the visiting supporters led to the Ground Safety Advisory group recommending a cut in allocation for their next visit. The group compared behaviour by away supporters at a different Anfield fixtures with that of the visit from the Old Trafford side and felt there were safety issues in the way the Manchester United fans conducted themselves.

    As a result of this the group recommended the visitors have their allocation cut from 3,015 to 1,965, primarily as an attempt to deal with the issue of the blocking of gangways. The Group said:

    “Pictures were presented which showed how the gangways at that game were affected compared to a similar high-profile game where persistent standing also occurred. The actions of the Manchester United supporters had overwhelmed the reasonable operations of the stewards through the management plan.”

    “This is an escalation of the actions of the supporters from previous games. It is not clear what more the club can reasonably do through stewarding measures to ensure spectators do not encroach in to gangways.”

    The report pointed out that the issue they were raising wasn’t persistent standing but the way that many of the supporters weren’t standing near their own seats and instead were blocking gangways:

    “Spectators from other away clubs attending the ground also persistently stand. However they do not spread out in to the gangways to the same extent that the Manchester United spectators do.”

    The City Council took those concerns on board and United’s allocation was cut for the October visit.

    This weekend the two sides meet again at Anfield, but this time in The FA Cup. For FA Cup fixtures there is a requirement under competition rules for significantly more tickets to be made available to travelling supporters than for a league game, and although there was an improvement in the conduct of the away supporters in October the City Council have once again imposed conditions on Liverpool in terms of selling tickets to the visitors.

    Stephen Clare, the principal licensing officer for the council, said recently:

    “We have taken into account the improvement of the Manchester United supporters at the most recent Premier League fixture relating to the blocking of gangways and aisles. Migration was still occurring to the rear of the stand but not to the extent of previous years.

    “However, due to the large increase in capacity for this fixture we’ve deemed it necessary to inform the club that two seats from either side of the radial gangways from the top to the bottom of the terrace should not be sold for safety reasons. This will be in addition to the normal segregation line that was in place for the most recent FA Cup tie, where the Anfield Road stand abuts the Lower Centenary Stand.”

    He was unable to state what that would mean in terms of the final allocation:

    “Liverpool FC will be responsible for determining the actual numbers that this will result in.”

    Eventually the number made available to the travelling fans was 5,319, a massive increase on the number allocated for the league match but still some way short of the 15% that FA Cup rules would normally allow. Anfield’s full capacity is 45,276 which would mean 6,791 tickets for away supporters based on that FA rule – but that is the full capacity without any reduction in available seats due to segregation.

    Manchester United were clearly concerned by the behaviour of their supporters, sending out a letter with the tickets they sold in October and another with the tickets they sold for this fixture. Sent in Alex Ferguson’s name, the latest letter urged their fans to respect Liverpool stadium staff and not to block the aisles and gangways:

    “I wrote to fans attending the away match in October urging them to co-operate with stewards and officials at Liverpool so we can make a strong case for restoring our allocation for future United games at Anfield. The fans did almost everything asked of them that day and as a result, we have a much improved allocation for this important FA Cup tie.

    “Please do everything you can to continue that good work and protect next season’s allocation by: Going to the seat that you’ve bought; Not blocking aisles and gangways; Respecting the stewards; Following the ground regulations

    “FA Cup ties are tense affairs at the best of times. Add in the fact that Manchester United against Liverpool is the biggest game around and it becomes even more so. Your support is vital to the team and down the years that has been especially true at Anfield. But please put the emphasis on getting us into the next round and giving the sort of support you are famous for – positive, witty and loud.

    “Thank you in advance for your co-operation.”

    This letter, quite clearly, is part of an effort by Manchester United to restore the reputation of their supporters in the eyes of the external bodies that deal with safety and licensing at games at Anfield. Alex Ferguson’s letter to his team’s fans is urging they don’t repeat the bad behaviour displayed for a number of years when they have had an allocation of over 2,000 at Anfield. Fixtures where the behaviour of the visiting supporters has, even at Youth level, included sick and offensive chanting for which there is no justification. The last message, and reduction in allocation, seems to have worked – at least in terms of safety.

    The message from Old Trafford has nothing whatsoever to do with the Patrice Evra – Luis Suarez incident but already there are efforts being made in some quarters to imply it is – and that Liverpool now need to make a similar gesture to their own supporters. If Liverpool’s allocation at Anfield had been cut – by external agencies concerned about safety in light of previous incidents involving its supporters behaviour at Anfield – there is every likelihood that the club would send such a message out to supporters.

    As it stands there is absolutely no reason for Liverpool to send out such a letter to its fans.

  • Bolton v Liverpool: Carroll, Bellamy and Gerrard start

    Posted: January 21, 2012, 6:50 pm by Jim Boardman

    LIVERPOOL are at The Reebok Stadium to take on Bolton Wanderers, a side currently second-from bottom in the table, for tonight’s early-evening kick-off. The games comes ahead of a double-header of cup matches for the Reds in the course of the next week.

    Stewart Downing is on the bench for this one, along with Dirk Kuyt, Jamie Carragher and Sebastian Coates. Daniel Agger has recovered from injury and returns to the back four that has served the Reds so well this season, alongside Enrique, Johnson and Skrtel.

    The captain starts, Gerrard involved alongside Henderson and Adam. Maxi, Craig Bellamy and Andy Carroll all come into to the starting line-up.

    Former Reds striker David Ngog starts for Bolton.

    Bolton: Bogdan, Steinsson, Knight, Wheater, Ricketts, Eagles, Reo-Coker, Muamba, M Davies, Petrov, Ngog
    Subs: Lynch, Tuncay, Pratley, Boyata, O’Halloran, Riley, K Davies

    Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Agger, Enrique, Henderson, Gerrard, Adam, Maxi, Bellamy, Carroll
    Subs: Doni, Kelly, Carragher, Coates, Downing, Shelvey, Kuyt

    Referee: Kevin Friend

    Kick-off: 5:30pm GMT

  • Rest in peace Paul Rice

    Posted: January 21, 2012, 5:18 pm by Anfield Road

    THERE was much sadness amongst the Liverpool supporter community today at the news of the passing Paul Rice.

    Paul was one of the founders of the Spirit of Shankly, the Liverpool supporters’ union, and was a vice president as well as the vice-chair of the organisation.

    Paul Rice

    Paul Rice

    Paul chaired the first meeting of what later became the Spirit of Shankly at the Sandon, holding together a group of around 350 angry Liverpool supporters who all wanted something done about the impending crisis their club was in. Many people deserve credit for their part in the formation of the union but had Paul not been there to keep order that first night the union may never have gone on to be the success it became. 350 angry voices became “the noise that refused to be dealt with”.

    He was also chosen to represent Liverpool fans in the Merseyside area for the club’s own Supporters’ Committee, formed after the change of ownership of the club.

    He was Chief Executive of Liverpool Commercial District Partnership, a role he took up in 2006 following on from two years as Chief Executive of the Manchester City Centre Management Company. He started out at Liverpool City Council, where he worked for 14 years before becoming Town Centre Manager for Warrington Borough Council. After two years in the private sector as Regional Development Manager at Clear Channel, he returned to Liverpool City Council to become City Centre Manager. He was also Company Secretary of Baltic Creative CIC in Liverpool.

    Spirit of Shankly announced his passing at lunchtime today, describing him as “an inspiration to all who met him.”

    Paul Rice RIP

    It is with deep regret and sadness that the Spirit of Shankly have to announce that one of the founders and Vice President of the union, Paul Rice, passed away peacefully in his sleep at the Marie Curie hospice at 11am this morning.

    Paul was an inspiration to all who met him and was a dedicated and passionate member of the organisation, always giving leadership and advice.

    Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this very sad time.

    YNWA

    Tributes poured in for a man who made a difference.

    Tony Barrett, of The Times, said: “Paul Rice – friend, confidant & inspiration. Rest in peace mate.”

    Jay McKenna, of Spirit of Shankly, said: “Gutted to hear the news about Paul Rice. Truly inspirational and one of the best, most knowledgeable individuals I have met. RIP”

    Paul Gardner, also of Spirit of Shankly, said: “Absolutely gutted to hear about Paul Rice. One of the greatest people I’ve ever met. An inspiration.  I learnt a lot from Paul. Learnt things that will stay with me forever. To know him and work with him with SOS was a great honour. RIP Paul. YNWA.”

    Peter Hooton said: “Paul Rice was an inspiration to all that met him. From Chair of the Broadgreen Labour Party to his leadership of the SOS – a true hero RIP!”

    Liverpool FC Managing Director Ian Ayre said: “I was fortunate to have known Paul personally and he was a true fan, and also an excellent businessman. Paul was a leading figure in the representations between the club and the fans in our ownership issues some time back and I had huge respect for the way he conducted himself in my dealings with him. He will be sadly missed.”

    The Hillsborough Justice Campaign also paid tribute, saying: “The HJC is saddened to hear of the death of Paul Rice this morning. A driving force behind SOS, Paul will be sadly missed. The HJC offers its sincerest condolences to Paul’s family. You have lost a principled, committed man but his legacy will long live on.”

    Sam Armstrong, like Paul a member of both the SOS Management Committee and the LFC Supporters’ Committee, said: “Sleep peacefully Mr Chairman. Your advice and support were invaluable. Will really miss our little chats Paul. XXXXX YNWA”

    The Anfield Wrap: “On behalf of everyone at The Anfield Wrap we offer our deepest sympathies and condolences to Paul’s family. Paul was a great Liverpudlian in all senses of that word, a gentleman; it was a pleasure to have known him, to have met him or to have even known of him.”

    Rest in peace Paul Rice. 

  • LFC v Stoke: Agger out injured, Carroll on bench

    Posted: January 14, 2012, 4:19 pm by Jim Boardman

    Barclays Premier League – January 14 2012

    Liverpool v Stoke City

    THE REDS start today’s match against Stoke with a number of changes from the side that beat Manchester City 1-0 in midweek.

    Daniel Agger is injured and missing from the squad; Andy Carroll has dropped to the bench.

    Alongside Carroll on the bench are Craig Bellamy and Jonjo Shelvey, with three defenders – Martin Kelly, Jon Flanagan and Fabio Aurelio making up the remainder of the outfield subs.

    Live coverage >>


    In defence Dalglish looks to be going for a back five, with both Carragher and Coates brought into the starting line-up in Agger’s absence. It’s also possible that Carragher is playing further forward in the absence of Lucas and Spearing.

    The midfield includes Charlie Adam, Jordan Henderson and Stewart Downing, with an assumption that Steven Gerrard will play just behind the only recognised striker in the starting line-up, Dirk Kuyt.

    Liverpool Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Carra, Coates, Enrique, Downing, Henderson, Adam, Gerrard, Kuyt.
    Subs: Doni, Kelly, Flanagan, Aurelio, Shelvey, Carroll, Bellamy

    Stoke: TBC
    Subs: TBC

    Referee: Howard Webb (2011-12: 15 games, 48 yellows, 3 reds)

    Kick-off: 3pm GMT

    Watch Live / Listen Live

    TV Coverage:

    UK: No live coverage. Highlights: MOTD, BBC1, 10:20pm. SS2, Football First, 10.15pm (+ repeats).

    US: Fox Soccer online (FoxSoccer.TV) from 2:50pm GMT / 9:50am EST

    To watch FoxSoccer.TV from outside the USA you will need a US VPN or Proxy Server – see [anfieldroad.com] for details.

    To subscribe to FoxSoccer.TV visit [anfieldroad.com]

    Radio Coverage:

    UK:

    City Talk 105.9FM [www.citytalk.fm]

    BBC Radio 5 Live [www.bbc.co.uk]

    BBC Radio Merseyside 95.8FM or 1458AM [www.bbc.co.uk]

    BBC Radio Stoke 94.6FM 104.1FM [www.bbc.co.uk]

  • Preview: Liverpool v Stoke City

    Posted: January 14, 2012, 11:13 am by Jim Boardman

    Barclays Premier League – January 14 2012

    Liverpool v Stoke City

    Liverpool welcome Stoke City to Anfield for a less rare than usual 3pm Saturday kick-off. Last time the two sides met was in the League Cup at Stoke’s place where Luis Suárez scored twice as The Reds came back from behind to win 2-1

    The little Uruguayan isn’t available today as he continues to serve an 8-game ban, meaning he also misses out on the chance to play in the same fixture he made his Reds debut in. That was just under a year ago, last February, with Suárez’s debut goal adding to one from Meireles to give Liverpool a 2-0 win.

    Live coverage >>

    Before that League Cup win Liverpool had struggled in away games against Stoke, losing the last two league games and drawing the two before that. Prior to that the last meeting between the two sides was the 8-0 League Cup win in 2000.

    At Anfield it’s been a somewhat different story and Stoke haven’t won on any of their 48 Premier League or old Division 1 matches visits. They did manage a trio of wins in the fifties, when both sides were in the old Division 2 – the last time was in 1959 when a brace from Jimmy Melia wasn’t enough to stop Liverpool losing 4-3.

    The other two meetings at Anfield since Stoke’s return to the top flight ended 0-0 in September 2008 and 4-0 to The Reds in August 2009. Stoke have won as many away games as they have home games so far this season, four each, but have only scored 8 goals away from home this term.

    Liverpool remain unbeaten at home this season but have dropped more points than anyone at the club would like because six of those ten games ended in draws, some of which were games the Reds were expected to win, including games against Swansea, Norwich and Sunderland. Today’s opponents will be no pushover and Tony Pulis, taking charge of Stoke for the 400th time, may well turn up with a side happy to leave with a single point.

    Stoke have lost just one of their last eight league games whilst Liverpool have lost just two of their last 15.

    Dirk Kuyt is still waiting for his 50th league goal – he scored the 49th in May but hasn’t been selected as often this season and hasn’t looked the goalscoring threat he once did. With Suárez out there may be more chances for the Dutchman, but that depends on the form of Andy Carroll and the fitness of Craig Bellamy.

    Bellamy has known problems with his knees that make it difficult for him to repeat games, particularly if he’s played 90 minutes, so today’s fixture may come too soon following the 79 minutes he played in the midweek 1-0 League Cup win at Manchester City. Jay Spearing isn’t expected to make the squad today after suffering a hamstring strain in that game – but Kenny Dalglish expects him back for the next match.

    Fresh from signing a new contract the Reds captain, Steven Gerrard, is expected to start today’s game. He’s scored three in his last four appearances, including two penalties.

    Stoke have concerns over the fitness of Jonathan Woodgate, Ryan Shotton and Marc Wilson. Peter Crouch will be looking for a start and a goal against his former club – and having scored three in his last three league games, six overall in the league this season, he’ll be confident he can get it. Another former Red, Jermaine Pennant, will also be expecting to start, but yet another ex-Liverpool player, 34-year-old Salif Diao, has yet to start a Premier League game for Stoke this season.

    The two sides are separated by five points going into this game, Stoke in eighth and Liverpool sixth in the league. A win for Liverpool would take them into fifth above Arsenal who don’t play until tomorrow.

    Liverpool (probable): Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Agger, Enrique, Henderson, Gerrard, Adam, Maxi, Kuyt, Carroll
    Subs (probable, from): Doni, Kelly, Aurélio, Carragher, Spearing, Coates, Flanagan, Shelvey, Downing, Bellamy

    Stoke (from): Sorenson, Wilson, Huth, Woodgate, Shawcross, Whelan, Shotton, Etherington, Pennant, Crouch, Walters, Begovic, Fuller, Diao, Palacios, Higginbotham, Jones, Upson, Whitehead, Delap, Wilkinson, Jerome

    Referee: Howard Webb (2011-12: 15 games, 48 yellows, 3 reds)

    Kick-off: 3pm GMT

    Watch Live / Listen Live

    TV Coverage:

    UK: No live coverage. Highlights: MOTD, BBC1, 10:20pm. SS2, Football First, 10.15pm (+ repeats).

    US: Fox Soccer online (FoxSoccer.TV) from 2:50pm GMT / 9:50am EST

    To watch FoxSoccer.TV from outside the USA you will need a US VPN or Proxy Server – see [anfieldroad.com] for details.

    To subscribe to FoxSoccer.TV visit [anfieldroad.com]

    Radio Coverage:

    UK:

    City Talk 105.9FM [www.citytalk.fm]

    BBC Radio 5 Live [www.bbc.co.uk]

    BBC Radio Merseyside 95.8FM or 1458AM [www.bbc.co.uk]

    BBC Radio Stoke 94.6FM 104.1FM [www.bbc.co.uk]

     

  • VIDEO: The Didi Man – Hamann on his love for Liverpool

    Posted: January 13, 2012, 1:23 pm by Jim Boardman

    DIETMAR HAMANN, the “World’s first German Scouser”, releases his book, “The Didi Man – My Love Affair with Liverpoool” on February 2nd and it promises to be an engaging – and funny – read.

    The Didi Man - My Love Affair With Liverpool

    The Didi Man - available to pre-order

    Didi was signed by Kenny Dalglish from Bayern Munich in 1998 – but that was when Kenny was manager of Newcastle. A year later Gerard Houllier signed him for Liverpool and so began that special bond with the city and the club. As a Liverpool player he picked up a string of winners medals, including two League Cups, 2 FA Cups, a UEFA Cup and of course that Champions League winners medal in 2005. He also played in a World Cup final for Germany during his time at Anfield.

    The player admits he likes a drink and a smoke and the book is littered with phrases he wouldn’t have picked up in English lessons at school back in Germany. He talks about his relationship with Houllier and with Rafa Benitez (who, he says, “doesn’t fanny around”). He also talks about his friendship with Jamie Carragher, “The Cultural Attaché for Bootle”, and their scrapes in Flares nightclub and also in Japan.

    For a taste of what the book is about the publishers Headline have helped come up with this video, “The Didi Man: My Love Affair with Liverpool – In 5 fab factoids!” Didi is in it, and so is another familiar face to Liverpool fans, albeit dressing differently to how we might normally see him. A bit of music from The Beatles courtesy of The Hope Street Buskers fits in nicely – much like Didi did as he made that central midfield position his own, much like he did when he settled into Scouse and English culture.

    Hamann discusses the highs and lows of his time so far in football but even the lows don’t seem that bad the way “the Kaiser” uses his sense of humour to tell them. His get-up for his arrival at Anfield is something he’ll probably never live down, but he’ll laugh about it as much as anyone.

    This Monday Didi is a guest on The Anfield Wrap podcast, which as always will be available to download from iTunes and from the Anfield Wrap website from 4pm that Monday. You can download last week’s episode from here.

    The Didi Man – My Love Affair With Liverpool” is available for pre-order now, ready for its February release.

  • Football Aid 2012 – Bid to Play at Anfield

    Posted: January 12, 2012, 7:49 pm by Anfield Road

    Football Aid - play at AnfieldLIVERPOOL FC have once again shown magnificent support and joined forces with Football Aid, allowing football fans the opportunity to grace the hallowed turf and play on their Field of Dreams at Anfield in 2012, while at the same time raising funds for charity.

    Football Aid’s magical event allows Liverpool supporters to ‘Live the Dream’ in an authentic match day experience. Players will gain exclusive access to the pitch and tunnel areas, pull on their own personalised shirt in the official changing rooms, walk down the tunnel to the sound of a cheering crowd and ultimately to step out on the hallowed turf and represent their club in a never to be forgotten 90 minutes of football.

    Alan Kennedy, keen supporter of Football AidThe matches have also been supported by a host of Reds legends, with the likes of Jan Molby, John Aldridge, Alan Kennedy, Jason McAteer, John Barnes and many more all lending their valuable support in recent years, by playing alongside or managing the supporters in the hugely enjoyable matches at Anfield.

    Getting involved couldn’t be easier, just visit www.footballaid.com, select Liverpool and your position, then place your bid – it really is that simple. And with most starting bids for positions at just £170, booking a position could turn out to be the best bargain you’ll ever bag! Bidding is open from now until the middle of March, depending on what position you want to play.

    So if you’re keen to secure your place on your Field of Dreams this season, why not visit www.footballaid.com today to make sure you’re part of the team!

    If you’d like any additional information, you can call Football Aid on 0131 220 5999 or email info@footballaid.com.

    John Barnes Lining up at Anfield The Anfield turf Football Aid - play at Anfield Alan Kennedy, keen supporter of Football Aid

    Football Aid celebrated their 10th anniversary in 2010 and have allowed over 12,225 football fans the chance to ‘Live the Dream’ in more than 460 matches. They are a groundbreaking organisation which generates funds annually by hosting charity football matches at iconic stadiums all over the UK. The unique concept was the brainchild of businessman and Football Aid Chairman Craig Paterson and funds raised from the event will benefit the work of a charitable project nominated by the club, as well as projects nominated by Football Aid’s parent charity Field of Dreams.

  • Gerrard signs new deal as part of Liverpool’s long term plans

    Posted: January 12, 2012, 7:00 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE NEWS that Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard had signed an extension to his contract that will likely take him to the end of his playing days couldn’t have come at a better time for the club.

    Having suffered from injuries for pretty much the whole of 2011 Gerrard has come back into the side and made the difference that few other players are capable of making. It’s not just the goals – three goals in his last four appearances – it’s the leadership he shows and the inspiration he brings.

    The goals came against Newcastle in the league (a 3-1 win), Oldham in the FA Cup (a 5-1 win) and last night against Manchester City in the Carling Cup (a 1-0 win). Those last two goals were from the spot and in a season that has seen Liverpool miss far too many penalties they assurance he scored them with brought as much relief as it did joy. Gerrard is back.

    Speaking to Liverpool’s official website after signing the new deal Steven said: “I’m very happy, it’s a very proud day for myself and my family. It comes on the back of a fantastic team performance last night when we got the result we were looking for.

    “Hopefully we can finish the job off in two weeks’ time and take all of our magnificent fans down to Wembley for a day out. The contract extension coming the day after has been the icing on the cake so it has been a perfect 24 hours.”

    Although the captain twice flirted with Chelsea the idea of him playing football anywhere else has long since been consigned to history. His heart is in Liverpool and will be until he calls it a day: “This is the club I love and is the club I have supported since I was a young boy. I am living the dream as the captain of one of the biggest clubs in the world. I love coming to work every day and the experiences I have had since I was eight years of age and first signed for the club, I wouldn’t change them for the world. To extend that and to hopefully have some more good times in a red shirt is what I want.”

    High points like Istanbul have been mixed with low points brought about by Hicks, Gillett and others but for Gerrard that’s how it works and it’s wrong to expect it always to go your way. You have to fight for the high points, not sulk when they don’t come your way: “There will be more highs and lows,” he said, “There’s no doubt about it as that’s part and parcel of being a football player at a top club. The important thing is that you react well to the lows and experience more of the highs.”

    Hodgson has gone and Kenny is back in charge and Gerrard shares the supporters’ optimism about the future: “I’m confident moving forward that the club is going in the right direction. We’ve got a fantastic team, we’ve got the right owners in place and the right team behind our team, so I’m really confident we’ll have more good experiences in the future.”

    Dalglish was delighted too: “It’s fantastic for everybody. Over the past couple of years he’s had a couple of disappointing spells where he’s picked up injuries through no fault of anybody. He picked up a couple of infections which were completely unrelated. He’s come back fantastically well and is starting to get himself back to full fitness.

    “For us, for Steven and for everybody connected with football club it’s fantastic news. We’re delighted for him and are looking forward to him getting back to full fitness and working hard for us and with us. He’s been here since he was a very young boy. In this day and age there’s not many people who go through their football career and represent just one club, especially people with quality like Steven. If you’re happy where you’re playing, you’re enjoying what you’re doing and you enjoy the football club I don’t see any reason to move, and it’s fantastic for us that he hasn’t.”

    Kenny also pointed to Gerrard’s contribution on the pitch since his return from injury: “He’s scored in two of the three games this year. If he keeps that up he’ll win the Golden Boot!”

    The club’s director of football, Damien Comolli, spoke about the deal too and it’s no surprise that he was pleased too: “It’s a great day for the club, for the fans, for the manager and for everybody. The way he puts the team first and the club first over his interests is absolutely tremendous. He’s a fantasy professional and it’s just great to have someone like this at the club. He’s a leader, he’s charismatic, he’s a top player and he’s a team player. There’s not much more you can ask for from an individual.”

    As well as announcing the extension to his playing deal the club said Gerrard had agreed to take on an ambassadorial role after his playing days are over. Comolli explained that was essentially something Gerrard already did for the club: “Whenever we want to sign a young player, no matter what their age is, if I ask Stevie to come to the academy to speak to a player, or have a word with someone at Melwood, he is always there to help and try and convince the boy to come to us, to tell the boy about his experiences of being at Liverpool, of coming through the academy and playing for the first team and for this fantastic fan base.

    “Then you have on the pitch as well. We were talking to Jordan Henderson last summer and he was talking about training for a couple of days with Stevie for England. He said that as soon as he trained the level went up fantastically. It’s about technical leadership as well, not only mental.

    “The view myself and Ian Ayre took is we took is we want to keep people like Stevie for the reasons I have talked about. As an ambassador he’s going to be around and can give advice to young players, he can give advice to players he would have played with. It’s just great to know he’ll be around for a long time.”

    Kenny agreed that Gerrard’s role was about far more than what the fans can see when he’s playing: “He does everything. People only see what he does on the pitch. He’s very impressive – if there’s a problem to be sorted in the dressing room, which isn’t very often, he’ll deal with it and it doesn’t come any further than the dressing room which is fantastic for us. It doesn’t happen too often but if it happens he steps in. So he stands up to be counted on and off the pitch. He’s been a fantastic servant to the football club so let’s hope he gets past his present contract as well.”

    And Gerrard himself admitted he felt honoured to be asked to take on the extended role: “It’s really flattering for me that the club have offered me the chance to stay when I eventually hang my boots up. Hopefully that will be in many years to come because I want to play for as long as I can.

    “I’ll know myself when it’s time to hang my boots up and then hopefully I can stay involved with the club and set the right example for youngsters coming through.”

    Having heard him stand up to Roberto Mancini on behalf of Glen Johnson after the match in Manchester last night it looks a safe bet that Gerrard will be defending Liverpool’s honour and doing a job for the club long into his retirement from playing.

    Liverpool will not make a better signing this transfer window.

  • The Redmen TV: MCFC 0 LFC 1 – Uncensored reaction

    Posted: January 12, 2012, 9:50 am by Jim Boardman

    Straight after Liverpool’s 1-0 first leg win at the City of Etihad Eastlands Manchester stadium the lads from The Redmen TV discussed the match and the reaction to it from Reds around the world.

    Steven Gerrard’s first-half penalty gave Liverpool a deserved lead but in the second half the focus from Kenny Dalglish was to hold onto that lead which his side did with arguably the most defensive Liverpool performance seen since his return. Man City were left frustrated, Liverpool left their ground elated, with the second leg to come at Anfield in a fortnight.

    How did the fans see it, how did Paul and Chris see it? Have a look – but remember, the language is strong and the show is, as always, uncensored.

    You can find more from The Redmen TV on YouTube and their website:

    YouTube: [www.youtube.com]
    Website: [www.theredmentv.com]

  • Gerrard, Bellamy and Carroll start – Man City v Liverpool

    Posted: January 11, 2012, 9:15 pm by Jim Boardman

    It’s the semi-final first leg in the Carling Cup and Kenny Dalglish has picked a strong side to face Manchester City in Manchester.

    Steven Gerrard makes another start and will be joined in midfield by Spearing, Henderson and Downing. Andy Carroll and Craig Bellamy start up front.

    Jose Enrique is on the bench and with Martin Kelly starting Glen Johnson looks set to play at left-back, with Dalglish making a return to the full-back pairing he started his return as manager with just over a year ago. Having had a rest for Friday night’s FA Cup tie Agger and Skrtel are back in the centre of defence.

    Man City: 25 Hart, 2 Richards, 6 Lescott, 15 Savic, 22 Clichy, 7 Milner, 11 Johnson, 18 Barry, 34 De Jong, 16 Aguero, 45 Balotelli
    Subs: 30 Pantilimon, 5 Zabaleta, 13 Kolarov, 24 Onuoha, 19 Nasri, 20 Hargreaves, 10 Dzeko

    Liverpool: 25 Reina, 34 Kelly, 37 Skrtel, 5 Agger, 2 Johnson, 20 Spearing, 14 Henderson, 8 Gerrard, 19 Downing, 9 Carroll, 39 Bellamy
    Subs: 32 Doni, 3 Jose Enrique, 16 Coates, 23 Carragher, 26 Adam, 33 Shelvey, 18 Kuyt

    Live TV and radio coverage: UK: BBC1 + Radio 5Live USA: FoxSoccer.TV

    Referee: Lee Mason

    Kick-off: 7:45pm GMT

  • Liverpool drawn at home to the Mancs in 4th Round

    Posted: January 8, 2012, 7:49 pm by Jim Boardman

    AFTER beating Oldham 5-1 in the Budweiser-sponsored cup at Anfield on Friday night Liverpool were in what used to be a hat (probably) for the fourth round draw this afternoon.

    The balls were warmed, Jim Rosenthal was excited and the draw was made.

    Liverpool got another home draw – against Manchester United.

    Maybe the balls weren’t warmed properly.

    The match will be played before the end of Luis Suarez’s ban for the Evra allegations, on the weekend of Friday 27th to Monday 30th January. It might be picked for live TV coverage.

    Bring it on.

  • This has to stop. Now.

    Posted: January 7, 2012, 3:38 pm by Jim Boardman

    A SERIOUS allegation was made by a visiting football player at Anfield last night and as it should be it was taken seriously by the club and, vitally, the police.

    The player in question, Oldham Athletic defender Tom Adeyemi, was visibly upset and angry at something that had happened towards the end of Liverpool’s 5-1 win over his side in last night’s third round tie in the Budweiser-sponsored cup. Looking at his reaction he certainly didn’t hold back from telling his team-mates, the referee and some of the Liverpool players what it was he thought he’d happened. He had to be comforted by his own team-mates and was also comforted by Liverpool players who were clearly trying to help him calm down.

    By all accounts he’s as certain as he can be about what he heard and he is understood to have said what this was in a statement to Merseyside Police, namely that he was called “a black bastard” and “a black c***” by a fan on The Kop who was wearing a Luis Suárez T-shirt.

    An unnamed person also told reporters they had heard one of the two insults. The Times quotes the witness as saying: “I was to the right of the Kop and the No 11 [Adeyemi] turned to walk away after a tackle. I heard a single voice shout ‘you f***ing black bastard’. He spun round with shock on his face and started pointing at the crowd from where the shout had come.”

    Other witnesses confirmed that Adeyemi had been insulted but said that the insult they’d heard was “Manc bastard”.

    The club issued a statement confirming that the incident was under investigation: “An incident occurred in the second half of the match which is now being investigated by both the club and the police. We will continue to work closely with the police to establish the details of what actually happened and will make a further statement in due course.”

    It would take a very stupid person to say that there was no possibility of the player being mistaken, just like it would take a very stupid person to say there was no possibility of him being right. LFC and the police are trying to establish the facts; meanwhile the press and others are trying too hard to turn speculation into what they’d like the truth to be.

    If one group of witness say the word in question was “black” and another group say “Manc” then clearly one group is wrong. Either group could be lying – but far more likely is that one group heard wrong. And let’s make it clear – that includes those who think it was ‘just’ “Manc bastard”.

    The situation is heart-breaking. The 20-year-old lad in tears at what he thought he’d heard found it heart-breaking and so do the vast majority of Liverpool supporters. For Liverpool fans it’s heart-breaking to even be in a position of talking about this instead of celebrating a 5-1 win. And what adds to the heartbreak for Liverpool fans is that whatever the truth of the situation the whole Liverpool fanbase and the club it adores is effectively being branded as racist.

    It’s heart-breaking to think that even wearing a Luis Suárez t-shirt, the way the story is being reported, is going to lead to individual supporters branded as racist.

    Taking away the racial part of the allegation there are still questions to be asked about what was said. Liverpool were comfortably ahead against a team two divisions below it in the league. Oldham had played well and certainly can’t be described as dirty. Their goal wasn’t an old-fashioned FA Cup third round type of goal it was a screamer and part of the reason why Oldham could take so much pride from their performance. It had been a good night for both sides and a chance for Liverpool to put a difficult week and a difficult couple of months into the past and to move onto better times. So why was there a need to shout any abuse whatsoever at their player?

    Whether he was a racist dickhead or just a dickhead he has put his foot into it big time and has a lot of explaining to do. If it was a racist remark then he won’t be welcome inside Anfield again. And if it was a group of dickheads the same applies to each of them.

    The same should also apply to certain elements of the media who have continued to show their contempt for truth and did so in their reporting of last night’s incident. Too eager to go to press with something juicy they got key parts of their stories wrong and ruined the last shreds of their credibility.

    If their outrage at what had been alleged was heartfelt they would have had a desire to report the truth. Instead their outrage was false and their desire was for something far from honest that does nothing but cause trouble.

    And, it has to be said, that desire gets fed daily by the people who come out with stuff like “they must have been plants from [pick a club]”, or insist that someone must be lying before launching into unsubstantiated groundless abuse.

    It’s time for people to start talking to each other instead of fighting. It’s time to stop accusing the wrong people of racism and time to find those who really are. It’s also time we dealt with those who use that – or other sensitive and objectionable situations – as a stick to beat their rivals with or as a means to a headline.

    Whatever the outcome of this case Tom Adeyemi was upset at what he believed he’d heard and we need to make sure no player is ever left feeling like that in a game of football again.

    All of us.

  • Gerrard starts for Reds in cup 3rd round

    Posted: January 6, 2012, 9:23 pm by Jim Boardman

    Liverpool have their captain back as Steven Gerrard makes his first start since his pre-Christmas injury lay-off. Manager Kenny Dalglish has picked a strong side for the visit of Oldham in this Budweiser sponsored cup match, but as strong as it might be it isn’t Liverpool’s strongest.

    Pepe Reina is in goal, underlining the importance of the match to Dalglish, but the whole back four has been changed from the normal line-up. Out go Johnson, Skrtel (on the bench), Agger and Enrique – in come Kelly, Carragher, Coates and Aurelio. Aurelio’s inclusion also comes after a lengthy lay-off. Jon Flanagan is on the bench.

    Andy Carroll doesn’t start tonight, he’s on the bench with Charlie Adam, Stewart Downing and Jordon Henderson. Instead Kenny has gone with Kuyt and Bellamy and Maxi makes a welcome return too. Shelvey also starts.

    The game gives the returning players the chance to persuade Kenny to bring them back on a more regular basis, but Oldham won’t be there to make up the numbers and the worst thing Liverpool can do is come out with any thoughts the match is already won.

    Liverpool: Reina, Kelly, Carragher, Coates, Aurelio, Gerrard, Spearing, Shelvey, Maxi, Kuyt, Bellamy
    Subs: Doni, Flanagan, Skrtel, Henderson, Adam, Downing, Carroll

    Kick-off: 8pm

  • The FA respond to some questions

    Posted: January 6, 2012, 7:46 pm by Jim Boardman

    AN EMAIL was sent to The FA following on from the publication of their independent panel’s report into the verdict in the Suarez-Evra case. It’s taken them a few days but they have now replied. On reading the email it’s apparent that they received more than one email on the issue – their response includes answers to questions we hadn’t even asked. 

    Their response:

    From: Info
    Date: 6 January 2012 15:15
    Subject: RE: Feedback from TheFA.com
    To:

    Dear Jim

    Thank you for contacting The Football Association.

    As you are aware an Independent Regulatory Commission found a charge of misconduct against Luis Suarez proven and has subsequently released the full written reasons of the commission. Liverpool FC and Suarez have accepted the sanction therefore Suarez will be suspended for a period of eight matches. Suarez was also fined £40,000 and was warned as to his future conduct.

    In relation to your email we feel it is important to highlight the following:

    a. It was accepted by all parties (including Mr Suarez) that the phrase “concha de tu hermana” properly translates into English as “f*cking hell”, “f*ck me” or similar and is therefore deemed an exclamation not a direct insult.

    b. The Commission found as a matter of fact that Evra did not use the term “South-American” in respect of Suarez;

    c. Evra’s further comments (i.e. “say it to me again, I’m going to punch you”, “okay, now I think I’m going to punch you”) were made in the context of, and in reaction to, him being spoken to in racially insulting terms;

    d. Accordingly, there was nothing in Evra’s language which breaches Rule E3 when assessed against the standards The FA applies to all incidents of on-field verbal exchanges between players.

    e. Similarly, language alleged to have been used by Dirk Kuyt could – on one reading – be said to amount to a breach of Rule E3; but, as stated above, The FA exercises a common sense approach to incidents of verbal exchanges involving players as they are seen to berate and engage with each other in relatively strong terms on a regular basis.

    f. The FA therefore considers that there is a clear and significant difference between Evra’s comments and Suarez’s repeated use of racially insulting language.

    We do appreciate all of the feedback we receive from supporters. This feedback is collated and used to build a picture of public opinion and is subsequently fed back internally within the organisation. Please rest assured your comments will form part of this feedback process.

    Kind regards

    Alex Burkwood | Customer Relations Officer

    The original email referenced parts of that 115-page document, including the part where the panel played down the use of a very offensive phrase by Evra:

    “Mr Evra stated that the goalmouth incident started when he addressed Mr Suarez, beginning with the phrase ‘Concha de tu hermana’. According to the experts, the literal translation is ‘your sister’s c*nt’ and it can be taken as a general swear word expressing anger, although the word ‘concha’ is not as taboo as the English word ‘c*nt’. It is thus equivalent to ‘f*cking hell’ or ‘f*ck me’. If directed at someone in particular, it can also be understood as ‘[you] son of a bitch’.”

    As the report pointed out, “it is the Commission’s task to decide whether the use of the word in England is abusive or insulting. The use of the word in a particular way might be seen as inoffensive by many in Uruguay. The same use of the same word in England might nevertheless be abusive or insulting.”  The document also said that the Commission: “…should apply standards that we consider should be applicable to games played under the jurisdiction of the FA. We are not deciding whether the words or behaviour would have been abusive or insulting if used in a match in Uruguay.”

    It wasn’t explained why different standards were applied to Evra’s words and Suarez’s words. Translate what Evra said into English and the word being used would not only be unprintable, it would be insulting and abusive and would contain a reference to a person’s gender. It would also quite likely lead to a punch in the face if said in English to an English player – and no leeway for the player throwing the punch and getting a red card for doing so, even if the recipient of the punch got a card or a charge of their own.

    Anyway, let’s go along with the panel’s convoluted reasons for using Suarez’s alleged words translated directly into English but allowing Evra’s to be adapted to fit in with the cultural rather than literal translation. There’s still a problem in what Evra said.

    Point a. in the FA’s reply ignores one of the translations the experts said applied to Evra’s words. Evra had directed his words at Suarez meaning it’s fair to assume the meaning was “[You] son of a bitch.” For reasons not explained in their 115 page report the panel had decided to ignore or forget that “son of a bitch” translation by the time they’d got to the bit where they were explaining how they made their decision. By then they decided the “f*cking hell” or “f*ck me” version would do.

    But that panel wasn’t sitting to look at charges against Evra, so it’s wrong to fast-forward to the summing up bits of the panel’s report to decide what Evra meant – and replacing “son of a bitch” with “or similar” (as the FA did in point a. of their reply) doesn’t cut it either. “F*ck me” and “F*cking hell” might well be an exclamation – but “[you] son of a bitch” is a direct insult.

    For point b. – we hadn’t mentioned anything about that in our email to the FA. Nice of the FA to take time to reply directly.

    Point c. The problem with this answer is that it’s based on the assumption that the panel got it right in terms of what Suarez said to Evra – and the FA are hardly going to answer based on any other assumption. If Suarez had said those things then nobody in their right mind would have a problem with Evra threatening to punch him – even though the FA would normally frown on retaliation for any reason. It’s taken them a while but at least the FA have given a reason that adds up.

    What The FA are saying in point d., needs looking at again in light of the inaccuracies of what they said in point a.

    Point e.  Again, this isn’t something we asked about – but the difference between what Kuyt was alleged to have said and what Evra admitted he said is that, quite simply, one admitted it and the other didn’t. If Kuyt was going to be charged under E3 he’d be entitled to call other witness and produce other evidence to mount his defence – after all his version of what he said doesn’t match what Evra claimed he said. If Evra is charged under E3 there is already an admission as to what he said, although he could arguably call more witness if they helped him to explain why he’d said what he did.

    And then we come to point f. We didn’t ask the questions about Evra in comparison to what Suarez may or may not have said. It’s obvious that the words the panel decided Suarez had used were far worse than what Evra admitted to saying. But does that make what Evra said – and he said it before Suarez said anything – acceptable? If Evra’s words had been caught on camera and microphone and then, for whatever reason, the rest of the exchange didn’t happen what would The FA have done about it? Instead of cameras and microphones we’ve got an admission – so why has nothing been done about it?

    Evra called Suarez a “son of a bitch” for an innocuous challenge and waited five minutes to do so. He did this after arguing the toss (literally) with the ref (accusing the ref of lying) and after another offence which the referee said he could have been booked for (waving the imaginary card to Downing). He had a gob on him, to put it simply, and by the time he went up to Suarez to call him a son of a bitch he looked to be in a foul mood.

    Whether it was “son of a bitch” or “your sister’s c*nt” it was insulting language and as soon as it came to light he should have been charged for it. He should have been charged before the other hearing took place, then the two charges could have been heard as part of the same proceedings – as was the case with his FA charge that was heard at the same time as other charges resulting from the incident that led to false allegations of racist remarks being aimed at him by Chelsea ground-staff.

    There is no point going back to the FA and clarifying any of this with them – their minds were made up a long time ago (otherwise they would have charged Evra at the same time as charging Suarez) and their aims have been met.

    Talking of which, Alex Ferguson said today that there was no need for his club to enter into discussions with LFC over the incident and with the return league fixture in mind. The ageing manager is probably quite happy with how it’s all gone, if he’s honest about it.

     

  • Give Kevin Williams his inquest

    Posted: January 5, 2012, 3:19 am by Jim Boardman

    KEVIN WILLIAMS died in the Hillsborough disaster in 1989 and his mother Anne is still trying to get justice for her son.

    The official ruling was that all the victims were dead or brain dead by 3.15pm due to “traumatic asphyxia” but Anne has evidence that Kevin was still alive at 4pm, that he was seen breathing and with a pulse and that he even cried out to a woman police officer for his mum after the 3.15pm cut-off.

    Anne explains some of the problems she’s faced – and using the word “problem” is an understatement – alongside an e-petition calling once more for an inquest for her son:

    Give Kevin Williams his inquest under section 13 of the Coroner’s Act; we have all the evidence under this section but keep getting refused.

    Kevin’s inquests were riddled with corruption, suppressing of vital evidence and perverting the course of JUSTICE.

    Kevin did not die from traumatic asphyxia or in an accident. I will not pick up his death certificate until we get the cause of death put right and the accidental death verdict struck down.

    Kevin does not relate to the 3.15pm cut off point.

    I want a new inquest where all the witnesses will be called to give evidence so the jury will know exactly what happened to Kevin at Hillsborough. I have all the evidence under section 13 of the Coroner’s Act and have been refused three times by the Attorney General’s office.

    I want the Attorney General to look at the evidence again and send Kevin’s case back to the divisional court recommending a new inquest into the death of my son.

    Please sign the e-petition, it closes in two weeks and so your signature is needed now, not tomorrow, if you can just spare five minutes. You can even sign it using your mobile phone or tablet browser if that’s what you’re reading this on.

    Remember – you must follow the instructions in the email you get after signing the petition. If you don’t do this your signature doesn’t count. If you’ve not had the email within about half an hour of signing then you should probably try again with a different email address. You can always sign up for a free email address from Hotmail, Gmail or Yahoo if the email doesn’t come through to your normal email address for some reason.

    He was 15 when he died. 15. He died 22 years ago. Please spare 5 minutes and spare Anne any more time waiting for some justice.

    [epetitions.direct.gov.uk]

    And if you can – please spread the word.

  • The magic of the FA Cup

    Posted: January 5, 2012, 1:28 am by Jim Boardman

    Friday night football at Anfield two weeks running with Oldham Athletic the visitors tomorrow night a week after the Reds beat Newcastle 3-1 in the league. Tomorrow night’s match is in the FA Cup and it’s certainly seen as a big game for the side from what used to be Lancashire.

    Oldham’s website featured an article today, under the headline “Big Match Countdown”, urging fans to do something that sounds either really exciting or plain daft depending on your point of view.

    Latics fans are bidding to light-up Liverpool tomorrow night.

    Three minutes before kick off, supporters will start a very slow count down from 20.

    As it reaches zero, every Latics fan with a mobile phone or flash camera will simultaneously flash their phones to create a spectacle of light which will hopefully be remembered as ‘Latics Light-up Liverpool.’

    Can you imagine around 6,000 flashes lighting up the Anfield Road end all at once?

    It should be spectacular and may even become Latics’ form of Mexican wave!

    A camera

    Not all cameras come with a flash. Check before you travel.

    It was probably the “slow countdown from 20″ that got us laughing most but maybe it will work and maybe it’ll catch on. And 6,000 synchronised phone flashes is better than one annoying drum.

    That’s assuming 6,000 Oldham fans take something that flashes and that all of them are in the mood to flash at the same time.

  • Stop kicking start listening

    Posted: January 5, 2012, 12:20 am by Jim Boardman

    THE BOSS of Kick It Out was quoted on the organisation’s website a couple of days after Patrice Evra’s allegations against Luis Suárez. At this point in time the word Suárez was accused of using was far stronger than the one Evra eventually settled on as the one he’d heard and if it could be proved it was going to be hefty punishment for the player. Liverpool fans on the whole were in agreement that they would not want a racist, no matter how talented a player, anywhere near their squad.

    For everyone’s sake the case had to be investigated properly and the end result of that investigation had to be a verdict that couldn’t be questioned in any way.

    The man who runs Kick It Out agreed:

    Lord Herman Ouesley, Chair of Kick It Out, said any footballer guilty of racism should face “severe action” both from The FA and the player’s club, but “you would have to be able to prove it beyond reasonable doubt”.

    He added: “There were incidents in the second half and Evra seemed to get very agitated so something was obviously bugging him because he was quite incensed. But if this happened he should have brought it to the attention of the referee at the time.

    “No doubt The FA will take the matter seriously and consider the complaint fully in order for them to take appropriate action.”

    So what happened? Why has Ouesley conveniently forgotten the need for such unquestionable proof? Ouesley felt it was vital when quoted in October, yet completely ignores it now that Liverpool are refusing to accept a judgement based on a far weaker standard of proof.

    His outburst in today’s Guardian, in a report also linked to from Kick It Out’s website, is embarrassing to him and his organisation. If the case had been proven beyond reasonable doubt perhaps there would be grounds for him to complain in such a vigorous manner. He said:

    Ouseley is a member of The FA Council

    Ouseley is a member of The FA Council

    “Liverpool FC need to take a hard look at themselves and how they have responded to the complaint and the investigations into the allegations of abuse in the Patrice Evra/Luis Suárez case.

    “Throughout the entirety of the proceedings, over the past three months, all we have heard are denials and denigration of Evra. Since the publication of the 115-page report of the findings of the FA’s independent commission, Liverpool’s vitriol has increased. Suárez’s attempt at a belated apology is nothing short of lamentable. I cannot believe that a club of Liverpool’s stature, and with how it has previously led on matters of social injustice and inequality, can allow its integrity and credibility to be debased by such crass and ill-considered responses.”

    Ouesley’s preconceived ideas about Luis Suárez jump out of the page. It’s easy to imagine him shouting about the nasty Uruguayan and how he should fit in with our ways if he wants to come to our country and asking how he dares use a defence of coming from a different country and culture when we’ve let him into our country and provided him with work.

    Maybe that’s doing him a disservice and it isn’t how he sees Suárez – but he certainly doesn’t see any possibility that the Uruguayan could have been telling the truth. Surely the truth is more important than half-baked ‘proof’ of a token charge?

    Ouesley then decides to bring up the hateful, racist, murder of Stephen Lawrence to help add weight to his blinkered argument: “At such a historic time in Britain, Doreen and Neville Lawrence have taught and inspired us never to give up the fight for equality, justice and fair treatment following Wednesday’s sentencing of Gary Dobson and David Norris for the murder of their son Stephen Lawrence in 1993.”

    He goes on: “With all these things, you come out of it with more credit if you hold your hands up.”

    With all of what things? What on earth is he trying to say? What are “these things”?

    The FA and Evra, in that report from that panel, made it clear that they did not think Luis Suárez was a racist. Yet here is the chair of the self-appointed and unregulated anti-discrimination group comparing Suárez, and Liverpool’s support of him, to the acts of racist murderers.

    For that alone Ouesley should resign from his post because he, personally, is setting back the years of good work put in by others and for which he no doubt enjoys taking the credit.

    He continues:

    “OK, Liverpool may have thought they had to defend their player as he is innocent. But if the club does not carry out a thorough investigation, how can it understand that Suárez said things which are not acceptable, but that he didn’t comprehend this due to his background?

    “If this is the case, Liverpool have failed him. Because they have not told Suárez what the club’s expectations are; that they have a zero policy towards racism. If he is ignorant of what is required of him, Liverpool should be asking: how come we have got a contract with the player? Unless, of course, Liverpool are saying that they have explained to Suárez what the club want and he has defied them.”

    Lord Ouseley

    Lord Ouseley

    Just a moment please, Herman. Let’s pretend (if you’re capable) for one moment that Liverpool and their player’s story was true. Suárez says something that he doesn’t know is wrong. Three months later, at the end of the case against him, he says he will never use that word again on an English football pitch, regardless of context.  So Suárez has now learned that at least in football in this country there is very little tolerance of other cultures. Rather than risk offending anyone, certain things must not be said or done, even if they would be perfectly acceptable back where you came from.

    You see Ouseley, and as those linguistic experts pointed out, Suárez did not think what he said was racist. The FA and Evra agreed that he was not racist. So how could he be “ignorant of what is required of him”? If he didn’t know using the Spanish word for “black”, in any context, was against your rules, how could it be that “of course” he “has defied” his club?

    He continues to insult Liverpool based on the blinkered views embedded into his thinking:

    “In any other sector, if someone makes a claim of racially motivated or abusive behaviour, an employer has to investigate if they are competent because this may be damaging to the business. Clubs in these cases don’t seem to be. And when it’s a high-profile incident involving a big-name player, they want to say, unequivocally, we defend our player 100%. Why are people not showing leadership and apologising, saying that we won’t do it again, and ask that they can move on?”

    His ignorance continues. Liverpool have investigated and are happy with what their player told them – even if Ouesley isn’t happy with that. The idea that Liverpool’s owners didn’t consider the potential damage to the business is as laughable as the rest of his ill-thought-out bile. Liverpool defended their player because they believed his story to be true. And Liverpool have, seemingly unnoticed by this blinkered man, published an apology from the player, who told the FA panel that he won’t do it again, and have made it clear that they want to move on. Until Lord Whatsit blurted his nonsense out today maybe they’d had their last word on the matter.

    He accused Liverpool of hypocrisy too:

    “Liverpool have been particularly hypocritical. You can’t on the one hand wear a Kick It Out T-shirt in a week of campaigning against racism when this is also happening on the pitch: it’s the height of hypocrisy. Liverpool players wore a T-shirt saying: ‘We support Luis Suárez’, seemingly whatever the outcome. This was a dreadful knee-jerk reaction because it stirs things up. And, then, this was followed, after the verdict, with a kind of stance that says: ‘Hey, we support anti-racism and Kick It Out. But we’re not sorry. All we are really saying is that we blame someone else, not us.’”

    Surely this outburst from Ouesley is a knee-jerk reaction. Surely his decision to drop his demands for proof beyond reasonable doubt is hypocritical. Surely Liverpool should withdraw from any co-operation with Kick It Out and find an anti-discrimination group that isn’t run by discriminatory officials.

    The fact that a Kick It Out spokesman was telling the press before the hearing had even begun that Suárez should apologise for something he maintained he hadn’t done suggests that Kick It Out saw Suárez as guilty from very early on – even though there was no evidence whatsoever.

    The Argentine national side show their support for hospitalised Fernando Cáceres

    When Fernando Cáceres was shot in the head and critically ill the Argentine national side, including Liverpool's Maxi, showed their support for him

    Lord Ouesley goes back to talking about the Stephen Lawrence case and perhaps some of what he says reflects his views of Liverpool Football Club. Perhaps he sees a club where the most of the owners are white, the board are all white and the senior coaching staff are all white and he somehow relates that to the police service of 1993. Why else mention it?

    “I do think that the police service is much better than it was in 1993, when Stephen Lawrence was murdered. You can actually raise matters of race in a police station and get a degree of sensitivity that gives you comfort that you are going to be treated in a fair manner.”

    How must The FA look to Luis Suárez? A South American, miles away from home, told that his own culture and language counted for nothing now he was in good old Blighty. The Uruguayan, sitting in a hearing run by three English men who didn’t speak his language and decided he was an unreliable witness because he didn’t look relaxed enough.

    Not hard to see comparisons between the FA of 2011 and the Police of 1993, come to think of it.

    One word the report from the FA mentioned was “sudaca”, a contraction of “sudamericano” (South American) that sometimes translates to “greaser” and is usually used in Spain as a derogatory term for immigrants from South America. It doesn’t take a great deal of imagination to work out the parallels between Spain and the UK in that regard. Whether the word “sudaca” was used or not on the pitch at Anfield isn’t clear and isn’t important in judging Suárez’s innocence or otherwise. But what has to be noted is how Suárez has been treated like a “sudaca” by certain elements in the football world – and that began well before the Evra incident.

    Lord Ouesley claims that “there’s been a rolling back regarding equality since 2005, due to the reaction to the July bombings in London. And this has continued with the present government and the suspicion that is held of a multicultural society. It’s important that we sharpen up our focus regarding these matters.”

    Well put your glasses on Lord Ouesley and read what you wrote back to yourself. Try to show some empathy, open your eyes, and read this back again: “Since the incident we’ve not heard a word of complaint from Evra about how his character has been besmirched by Liverpool. This is surely something the FA and the PFA and the whole of football should be concerned about: we can’t have a situation where there is just one side on the attack.”

    Which side was on the attack when Kick It Out were laughing off any idea that Suárez might have been telling the truth? Had Suárez kept his mouth shut when asked what he’d said would he have been charged? Evra was praised for admitting to using vile, unprintable sexist language towards Suárez. Suárez was called an unreliable witness because different people disagreed about which words he’d wrapped around the Spanish word for “black”, none of those people actually having Spanish as their first language and in some cases being far from fluent in it.

    The bloodlust to get Suárez banned in the wake of Sepp Blatter’s stupid comments was embarrassing – but you’d need a bit of empathy and an ability to view it without prejudice to see it.

    Racist abuse aimed at Lebron James on Twitter

    LeBron James is part of the Liverpool ownership. He has been on the wrong end of racist abuse on Twitter

    It says a lot about the new owners that rather than accept a plea bargain (which is something Kick It Out seemed to suggest would have helped Suárez) they chose to stand by him in his attempts to clear his name. Instead of letting him get a shorter ban for apologising for something he didn’t do, as Kick It Out seemed to suggest would happen, they risked him getting the full ban because they felt sure justice would be done and his defence would be successful. Lord Ouesley doesn’t see it this way: “Surely the new owners, with their experiences of equality and inclusion in the US, can see how their brand is being devalued, and if they sanction this sort of lack of professionalism and moral leadership, we may as well pack up and go home and forget about anti-racism.”

    That is the one good idea Lord Ouesley came up with in his astonishing rant. He should call it a day and let Kick It Out find a new Chair – and Liverpool’s owners, including the minor owner Lebron James, might just be able to help in the search for someone truly and wholeheartedly against all forms of discrimination.

    Lord Ouesley continues by praising The FA unreservedly, even though their rules and regulations fell short of his own demands for proof beyond reasonable doubt: “The FA has shown that it has the bottle to back its Respect campaign by enforcing rules and regulations with regard to unacceptable behaviour and conduct. We have a duty and responsibility to demonstrate to the world how we deal with this issue. It’s fine to criticise Fifa and Uefa but let’s show we can take care of our own business.”

    How best to do that? By removing the people in football who are stuck back in some bygone age – people like Lord Ouesley. He agrees, although he probably doesn’t realise it: “The future of football needs such strong and decisive leadership, especially for the next generation of young people who play the game across the country. Let’s remove all racists and bigots from football.”

    Zero tolerance should not lead to intolerance.

    Liverpool Football Club are not beyond criticism in their handling of this case but most of that criticism is about the naivety on show in dealing with The FA and its archaic, inconsistent and frankly inappropriate regulations and procedures. A lot of people in football deserve criticism for their part in this case and their part in historic cases that weren’t reviewed to prevent cases like this from evolving like this.

    It’s time to stop fighting each other and time to start working together, time to start opening eyes and ears and to start looking, listening and learning. The Chair of Kick It Out, the head of the FARE and the man who runs the PFA shouldn’t be celebrating a verdict based on such flimsy evidence and certainly shouldn’t be so openly and heavy-handedly criticising the losing party.

    Football needs to move on, and to do that it needs to throw away its grudges and remove the arrogant fools it relies on for leadership.

    As a Liverpool fan I won’t be alone in saying this. We’re sick of all the wars and we’re sick of fighting battles that aren’t really about football. But we won’t stop fighting them until we feel we’ve got something approaching a fair deal. Tom Hicks and George Gillett saw that. The Sun saw that. The government of 1989 and all those who assisted them with the Hillsborough cover up have seen that and will see that until that battle is won too. Compared to those battles this one is minor, but it’s only minor if we do compare it to those. It still matters to us.

    What we really want is to watch and play football and to go back to where we were a few months ago where the only time we talked about colour was when we talked about the shirts on players’ backs or when the referee was dishing out cards.

    So, let’s talk, let’s ask questions, let’s hear answers, let sort this mess out and get back to playing football.

    Stop kicking us and start listening to us.

  • Kick It Out: Allegations should be proven “beyond reasonable doubt”

    Posted: January 5, 2012, 1:47 pm by Jim Boardman

    When Liverpool announced they were not going to appeal the Luis Suárez verdict they did so after coming under a huge weight of pressure from various individuals and organisations. One of Liverpool’s main objections to the decision was the way it was reached and in particular the burden of proof considered adequate. It would seem that the FA’s standard also falls short of what Kick It Out, the anti-discrimination group that works so closely with English clubs, would expect.

    Some of the pressure Liverpool came under not to appeal appeared on the Kick It Out website earlier in the week when they ran a story referring to comments made by Football Against Racism in Europe (FARE):

    Piara Powar, executive director of the group, says Liverpool risk further damage to their global reputation if they appeal the suspension.

    He said: “Luis Suarez and Liverpool FC have the right to appeal, however we would call on the club to think again about their public campaign to dispute the charges and contest the principles involved in the case.

    “As a club with a good international standing, the vehemence of their campaign is unquestionably causing them reputational harm.”

    On Tuesday night Liverpool announced their decision not to appeal, a decision that was commended by the Chair of Kick It Out, Lord Herman Ouseley:

    Lord Housley, Chair of Kick It Out

    Lord Housley, Chair of Kick It Out

    “We commend Liverpool FC in bringing closure to this matter, reaffirming its commitment to an unequivocal, zero-tolerance approach towards discrimination in football.“The club can now move on from this period, showing leadership in how it demonstrates and communicates this stance to players and fans alike.

    “We look forward to working on the next level of Kick It Out’s Equality Standard framework closely with the club.”

    However the closure Lord Ouseley referred to is still some way from being reached. Liverpool are still angry at what they see as an injustice and briefed the media yesterday to clarify some of the reasons they feel this way.

    Those reasons include questions about how the panel came to its decision on the credibility of Evra, Suárez and others as well as the decision to allow Evra’s FA interview to be conducted with the aid of video footage, something they did not offer to Suárez when he was interviewed, leading to suggestions that Evra was ‘coached’ by the FA when preparing his evidence. There is also a question mark over the FA’s decision not to charge Evra for using threatening words towards Suárez and their refusal to explain why they haven’t charged the player, who admitted to using the words.

    One key issue for Liverpool is the burden of proof the panel relied on in making their decision. The report said: “It is for the FA to satisfy us on the balance of probability that Mr Suárez breached the Rules.” The club contend that for such a serious allegation that this is too weak a standard. The knock-on effect to Suárez’s reputation and career goes far beyond the FA’s eight-match ban and there should not have been any reasonable doubt about that verdict.

    And, it would seem, Kick It Out feel the same. In an email from Kick It Out sent shortly after Suárez was charged a spokesperson told Anfield Road that “the investigative process… should confirm beyond reasonable doubt that the allegation is proven.”

    This of course didn’t happen and the case was proven based on a number of contentious assumptions that came nowhere near to dispelling reasonable doubts. It is those reasonable doubts that are causing so much anger for Liverpool and for many of its supporters.

    When Suárez was charged, in November, an article appeared in The Independent with quotes from an unnamed spokesman for Kick It Out. The article claimed:

    “Luis Suarez has only himself to blame for the racism charge he now faces because he failed to apologise for, or personally explain, the Spanish slang which he claims has been the cause of the anger felt by Manchester United’s Patrice Evra, the Kick it Out organisation said last night.”

    The article then quoted the unnamed spokesman:

    “It would appear that Patrice Evra had no other option than to lodge a complaint in the absence of an apology or any sort of explanation. The process has begun and we await the outcome.”

    At the time it was already well publicised that Suárez didn’t think he’d said anything offensive and that he had in fact used a word that Evra’s own team-mates use for him, a claim yet to be denied by Evra, his club or the team-mates in question. Evra’s initial allegation was that Suárez had used the word “ni***r”, an allegation he later backed down from.

    Suarez in Kick It Out t-shirt

    Suárez in Kick It Out t-shirt

    In the light of the comments in The Independent we asked Kick It Out if they treated discrimination and abuse based on nationality and cultural background the same as they would if it was based on race. We also asked them to confirm if the wording attributed to the organisation but not in quotes had also come from them. Danny Lynch, from Kick It Out’s Media and Communications, said:

    “As an organisation, we’re against discrimination and support any group or individual on the receiving end of it, whether it’s based on race, nationality, sexuality or anything else perceived to be the reason for the sleight.

    “With regard to this incident, everyone concerned is still awaiting the verdict. In all of our related media statements, we haven’t alluded to or insinuated guilt from any quarter and this includes The Independent article which you have rightly flagged up. What we have said, however, is that matters should be reported instantly or as soon as possible to the referee for him or her to take action and that the investigative process following this should confirm beyond reasonable doubt that the allegation is proven.

    “We’ve worked with Liverpool for a number of years, particularly the community team, which is very proactive in promoting equality issues to the clubs fanbase. Kick It Out was involved in disability focussed day during the campaign’s One Game, One Community weeks of action in October.”

    It seems clear that The FA’s regulations have failed to even meet the standards required by those concerned with the eradication of discrimination from football, standards that seem to be quite reasonable to expect. It’s too late to change the Suárez decision but the FA must, as a matter of urgency, review its procedures and regulations to ensure that they work.

    Despite media and campaigner attempts to attack the credibility of Liverpool over this case it is the credibility of The FA that should be under attack and should remain under attack until they address the valid concerns raised by Liverpool, Luis Suárez and many other observers.

  • Suarez sorry but reiterates he used the word once

    Posted: January 4, 2012, 2:44 am by Jim Boardman

    LUIS SUÁREZ has issued another statement following on from his decision not to appeal the eight-match ban issued by an independent commission after it found an FA charge against him proven. In this latest statement he says he apologises if his use of a certain Spanish word offended anyone.

    Suárez says: “I admitted to the commission that I said a word in Spanish once, and only once, and I told the panel members that I will not use it again on a football pitch in England. I never, ever used this word in a derogatory way and if it offends anyone then I want to apologise for that.”

    The word Suarez admitted to using was “negro”, the Spanish word for “black”, although the initial accusation against him from Patrice Evra, the player he said it to, was that he’d used a much stronger word.

    Evra told the match referee that Suárez had called him that stronger word five times. However, in the interview the same day that led to the allegations being made public, Evra told Canal+ it was twice as many times. A tweet from a member of Canal+ staff quoted Evra as saying Suárez had said “a certain word to me at least 10 times. No place for that in 2011.”

    Eventually the panel split the difference on Evra’s two figures and decided Suárez had used the word (now accepted by Evra as being the word Suárez admitted to using and not the stronger one in his initial accusations) seven times. But Suárez insists he said it only once.

    The panel came to the figure of seven by making certain assumptions based on Evra’s version of events and body language they’d picked up from – as yet unreleased – video evidence.

    At the end of their 115 page report the panel made it clear that both the FA and Evra did not think Suárez was “a racist”:

    “The Charge against Mr Suarez was that he used insulting words which included a reference to Mr Evra’s colour. We have found that Charge proved on the evidence and arguments put before us. The FA made clear that it did not contend that Mr Suarez acted as he did because he is a racist. Mr Evra said in his evidence that he did not think Mr Suarez is a racist. Mr Suarez said in evidence that he will not use the word “negro” on a football pitch in England in the future, and we believe that is his genuine and firm intention.”

    The FA are yet to respond to enquiries as to why Evra wasn’t charged for threatening behaviour, something he admitted to doing twice in his own evidence, telling Suárez: “I’m going to punch you.”

    Using threatening behaviour is a breach of The FA’s rule E3(1) which in turn is considered to be “Misconduct” under rule E1(3).

    Rule E3(1) forbids players and other participants from using any one or a combination of “violent conduct, serious foul play, threatening, abusive, indecent or insulting words or behaviour.”

    The same rule, therefore, calls into question Evra’s initial outburst, as admitted by Evra himself, to Suárez. The phrase he used, translated by the linguistic experts called by the panel as “your sister’s c***”, would certainly be considered indecent in English.

    There would also be a question as to whether or not that phrase would invoke E3(2), which refers to additional punishment if the breach of E3(1) includes “a reference to any one or more of a person’s ethnic origin, colour, race, nationality, faith, gender, sexual orientation or disability.” The FA have yet to respond to queries about the admitted use of indecent words by Patrice Evra.

    Punishing Evra for those admitted breaches of the FA’s rules would not reduce Suárez’s ban and given the panel were aware of them when making their decision nobody would expect it to. But it would at least show that the FA were consistent about applying their own rules in the way they were written.

    To ignore the issue increases resentment towards a governing body that is increasingly leaving the game’s participant feeling disillusioned. Today Joey Barton lost an appeal against a ban he got after getting a red card for what looked no worse than what Clint Dempsey did to Craig Bellamy at Fulham. Dempsey’s punishment was a yellow card, with the referee also booking Bellamy for reasons that remain unexplained. Referees, backed by the FA, demand “respect” – yet the FA and the referees show very little to players and supporters by making inconsistent decisions without having the decency to explain why.

    The smaller-minded football fan has celebrated the Suárez decision (literally) but it isn’t just Liverpool fans who are doubting the verdict and penalties from The FA’s panel and also the way the investigation was conducted.

    Perhaps some kind of immunity was offered to Evra before he made his statement and that was why his misconduct hasn’t been charged. His ‘honesty’ in admitting to making the indecent remark about Suárez’s sister played a part in the panel deciding he was the more trustworthy of the two players.

    Whether Suárez was honest in how – and how often – he used that word or not there is one fact that does stand out.

    Suárez admitted to using the word “negro”. If Suárez had denied using the word completely, would this case have even got as far as the charge? If Suárez thought there was anything wrong with the use of the word would he have admitted to even using it once?

    The deterrent of the eight-game ban will no doubt have the desired effect on some players – but what kind of effect will come from the panel’s decision to reward Evra for honesty whilst punishing Suárez for the same?

    The inconsistencies in the panel’s treatment of different individuals and the FA’s inconsistency in not charging Evra for his own misconduct mirrors the inconsistency seen far too often from the governing body and the game’s officials. Their ignorance in refusing to explain the inconsistencies displays the kind of arrogance that breeds contempt much like that aimed so often last year at FIFA.

    Sepp Blatter’s handshake theory was wrong. But – at the complete opposite end of the scale – is the ‘best lawyer wins’ approach much better?

    Liverpool, and its fans, aren’t angry because they are going to miss Suárez for eight games. The anger is at the feeling their player is being made out to be something he isn’t, because of a process that was more interested in proving a point than finding the truth.

    Suárez is sorry if anyone was offended, but this still feels a long way from being over.

  • Now on Twitter: Rafa Benitez

    Posted: January 4, 2012, 11:12 pm by Jim Boardman

    FORMER Real Valladolid, Osasuna, Extremadura, Tenerife, Valencia, Inter Milan and, of course, Liverpool coach Rafael Benitez has added an official Twitter account to run alongside his official website.

    Rafa Benitez with the European Cup, aka "number 5"

    Rafa Benitez, pictured with Number Five, is now on Twitter

    The official Rafa Benitez website is a hive of information and in-depth analysis of the game of football as seen not only by Rafa but by a wealth of experts in various aspects of the game. Rafa is well known for the pleasure he gets from sharing not only his love for the game but his eye for detail and his website is one method for him to do this.

    The site also acts as a gateway to the Montse Benitez Foundation, the charity Rafa and his wife Montse set up to help local causes in and around Merseyside.

    The Twitter account – @RafaBenitezWeb – is 100% official, as confirmed in an announcement on the website earlier:

    After a fantastic response to the launch of [www.rafabenitez.com] , Rafa Benitez is expanding his online presence and now has launched an official twitter account of his website.

    The site has received widespread acclaim from both fans and professionals and has quickly become a focus point for the professional football industry.

    The website features a plethora of in-depth analysis and exclusive articles by some of football’s leading practitioners. To follow on twitter please go to @RafaBenitezWeb

  • Kuyt back and Gerrard on bench as Suarez ban begins

    Posted: January 3, 2012, 9:19 pm by Jim Boardman

    THE ANNOUNCEMENT that a decision had been made not to appeal the eight-game ban imposed on Luis Suarez by The FA’s independent panel meant that the suspension kicked in immediately and so Suarez would not be available for tonight’s match against Manchester City.

    Suarez wasn’t in the side for the 3-1 win over Newcastle on Friday due to his one-match ban for something for which there was some evidence so Kenny Dalglish could have named an unchanged side. However, following an elbow to the face that has – unsurprisingly – gone unpunished Craig Bellamy isn’t starting. Dirk Kuyt comes in for him.

    One change that might have been popular would have been the inclusion of Steven Gerrard from the off. The captain lifted his side when he came on against Newcastle but the club are correctly being cautious about his return after he missed so much of 2011 with injuries. Gerrard will be available should he be needed at some point later in the game.

    Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Agger, Enrique, Spearing, Henderson, Adam, Downing, Kuyt, Carroll. Subs: Doni, Kelly, Carragher, Shelvey, Gerrard, Maxi, Bellamy.

  • Suarez statement on his ‘upset’ at ‘totally false’ allegations

    Posted: January 3, 2012, 9:02 pm by Jim Boardman

    Following on from the announcement that Liverpool would not be appealing his eight-match ban, Luis Suarez issued a statement of his own.

    First of all I would like to thank everyone so much for all the help and support I have received during these last few weeks.

    Thank you to my family, my friends and everybody at LFC (the staff, manager and coaching staff, the directors, my team mates and everyone who is working on a daily basis for this great club) and thank you especially to all the fans who made sure I never felt let down for one second. During those days I understood more than ever what ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ means.

    Like many of you I was born into a very humble family, in a working class neighbourhood, in a small country. But I was born and raised learning what respect, manners and sacrifice mean. Thanks to my family, from my first club where I started playing, to my transfer to Holland in Europe, I learned the values which made me the person I am now. Never, I repeat, never, have I had any racial problem with a team mate or individual who was of a different race or colour to mine. Never.

    I am very upset by all the things which have been said during the last few weeks about me, all of them being very far from the truth. But above all, I’m very upset at feeling so powerless whilst being accused of something which I did not, nor would not, ever do.

    In my country, ‘negro’ is a word we use commonly, a word which doesn’t show any lack of respect and is even less so a form of racist abuse. Based on this, everything which has been said so far is totally false.

    I will carry out the suspension with the resignation of someone who hasn’t done anything wrong and who feels extremely upset by the events. I do feel sorry for the fans and for my team mates whom I will not be able to help during the next month. It will be a very difficult time for me.

    The only thing I wish for at the moment is being able to run out again at Anfield and to do what I like most which is playing football.

    Thank you very much.

    YNWA