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Phil McNulty Turns Spotlight On Kenny Bullshit

jonathanhotspur

Loose Cannon
Jun 28, 2009
10,292
8,250
Kenny Dalglish sat at Anfield and told the same old story - but it was a tale that had a happy ending for Blackburn Rovers manager Steve Kean.

When Kean spoke defiantly above the din of hundreds of protesting Blackburn Rovers fans following Tuesday's home defeat to fellow strugglers Bolton, few would have risked their wages on him still taking charge at Liverpool on Boxing Day.

And yet there he was, celebrating a point earned gallantly on the back of defensive discipline and some stoppage-time miracles as the critical spotlight switched to Dalglish after a sixth Anfield draw this season.

Dalglish has written a golden chapter in Blackburn's history by winning the Premier League at Anfield in 1995. Kean sharing the spoils on the same territory does not even register a dot when set against that scale of achievement, but his sense of satisfaction and elation was understandable.

Kean was even able to experience that rarity of hearing applause from Blackburn's fans at the final whistle - not for him of course, but far distant from the abuse that has been his constant companion this season.

In recent weeks I have watched Blackburn visit Sunderland and Liverpool, and not once did their players give off the unmistakeable air of a squad that has lost faith in their manager. This does not offer any sort of guarantee about Kean's long-term future, but it is certainly a point in his favour.

It is still almost impossible to see how Kean can shift public opinion back in his favour after it has turned so savagely against him, but on this day he deserved the respite a 1-1 draw gave him.

When Maxi Rodriguez levelled after the own goal from Charlie Adam that gave Blackburn an unlikely lead, both Kean and his players could have been forgiven for feeling the tide had turned against them.

And yet, even in the face of a barrage of sorts from a disappointing Liverpool, they stood firm but still had to thank goalkeeper Mark Bunn for a magnificent save from Andy Carroll and Adam Henley for a goalline clearance from Daniel Agger in the final 20 seconds.

Blackburn had relief and overdue illumination from the darkness that has engulfed this fine old club. Liverpool and Dalglish were left to accept they had come up short at Anfield once more, not just against Manchester City and Manchester United, but also against Sunderland, Norwich, Swansea and now the Premier League's bottom club.

Dalglish's argument about ill-fortune, the defiance of opposing goalkeepers and a failure to reap deserved rewards carries some merit, but starts to lose its legs when it happens on such a regular basis.

He is coming up to the first anniversary of his return to Anfield as manager following Roy Hodgson's sacking - a year that has seen an undoubted improvement in the style of play via a return to old values and a sense of unity coming back to a club that had been fractured for so long.

This does not mean, however, that his work can escape questions, especially when he has spent funds so lavishly on attacking resources and Liverpool have failed to score twice at Anfield since the victory against Wolves in September.

And one question in particular irks Dalglish - a question he was again asked in the aftermath of another unfulfilling afternoon for £35m striker Andy Carroll. He may not like the question, but it will not go away until the giant Geordie at least hints at riches - not to mention value for money - to come.

"Unbelievable" was Dalglish's response to being asked to deliver an assessment of Carroll's performance. And yet it remains a valid query.

Carroll should have scored with a chance from only eight yards in the first half and was only denied the status of match-winner by Bunn's late brilliance. Such are the fine margins of operation at this level.

And yet too often his positioning and reactions seem awry, too often this season he has been attacking the important moments from a standing start. Dalglish has delivered his complete public confidence in Carroll - now he must transfer it to a striker who is clearly struggling to make an impact.

With Stewart Downing continuing to be a hit-and-miss affair, Liverpool and their supporters are still waiting for £55m worth of attacking talent to make their mark and the statistics prove something is absent that Dalglish will need to address next month.

Luis Suarez's performances have deemed him an unqualified playing success, and yet for a footballer of such prowess his finishing is too often wayward. Four times in the first 20 minutes he finished with varying degrees of inaccuracy, none on target.

He was perfectly described by one press-box sage as "Liverpool's ideas man rather than the one you want to deliver the finished product". The Uruguayan has abundant natural gifts, but on the evidence of his season so far, ruthless finishing is not among them.

In boxing terms Liverpool have all the moves and a stout defence, but at Anfield at least they struggle to punch a hole in a paper bag. Blackburn and Bolton have both scored more Premier League goals this season than Dalglish's side - a stark statistic for a team aiming for the top four.

Dalglish is unswerving in support of his players but it will not blind him to the reality of the heavy price of lost points at home. And Liverpool are losing too many.

Kean, buoyed by this point, set his sights on four January signings. Whether he is still at Blackburn to make them, and whether he actually gets the backing from owners Venky's to sign the quartet if he is, is a story for another day.

Dalglish does not need such reinforcement in numbers after his summer transfer activity and with captain Steven Gerrard back for a 32-minute cameo following his latest injury problems, but the growing body of evidence at Anfield suggests he still has to find a missing link.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/philmcnulty/2011/12/questions_for_dalglish_after_a.html#more
 

nightgoat

Well-Known Member
Sep 12, 2005
24,604
21,898
But the supporters view him as an untouchable deity (like some of them did Benitez), which could well be their downfall...
 

StartingPrice

Chief Sardonicus Hyperlip
Feb 13, 2004
32,568
10,280
But the supporters view him as an untouchable deity (like some of them did Benitez), which could well be their downfall...

They have the best players, managers (and fans :eek:mg:)...because they won some things a while ago :wink:
 

jonathanhotspur

Loose Cannon
Jun 28, 2009
10,292
8,250
It's that time again. Kenny Bullshit Time.

Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish has taken a swipe at the media for focusing too much on misfiring striker Andy Carroll.

Carroll has made 16 Premier League appearances this season, mustering 38 shots and only two goals. Another wasteful display in the disappointing home draw with basement club Blackburn Rovers had the press pointing the finger once more.

"I don't think self-belief is a problem for Andy Carroll, I don't see why it should be,'' Dalglish said. "There's nothing to say he's short of belief and there is no evidence he should be.

"One game he played (started) in we went down to nine men (the defeat at Tottenham) and another (the loss at Fulham) we had another sent off.

"I think yourselves (the media) have a bigger problem with Andy than anyone else. This week is understandable because it is against Newcastle but I don't understand the rest of the stuff.

"I think somebody has got some imagination about the lifestyle that big Andy leads compared to the one that we know he leads."


http://www.espn.co.uk/football/sport/story/128024.html?CMP=OTC-RSS
 

Kingellesar

This is the way
May 2, 2005
8,767
9,263
I dont think Kenny is the right man for the job, his tactics are very poor. Will be interesting to see how long Liverpool fans support him! Wouldnt surprise me if Newcastle beat em on Friday.
 

MrWoolley

Moderator
Staff
May 26, 2004
13,415
576
It'll be interesting to see if Liverpool decide to sign a striker in January. With Bellamy unable to play 2 games in a week, Carroll misfiring and Suarez banned for 8 games (as well as Newcastle on Friday!), if they seriously want to continue the chase for 4th surely they need to get someone in.
 

RichieS

Well-Known Member
Dec 23, 2004
11,916
16,436
It'll be interesting to see if Liverpool decide to sign a striker in January. With Bellamy unable to play 2 games in a week, Carroll misfiring and Suarez banned for 8 games (as well as Newcastle on Friday!), if they seriously want to continue the chase for 4th surely they need to get someone in.

Will there be more money available though? They've spent so much on players who are average at best that Henry might not be willing to stump up more just yet.
 

jonathanhotspur

Loose Cannon
Jun 28, 2009
10,292
8,250
Will there be more money available though? They've spent so much on players who are average at best that Henry might not be willing to stump up more just yet.

Not only that but I am sure that Henry said anything less than a top 4 finish would be regarded as a failure.
 

jonathanhotspur

Loose Cannon
Jun 28, 2009
10,292
8,250

Tryph

Active Member
Jan 20, 2005
2,558
14
I actually hope they win the Carling Cup. The Scouse fans will think Kenny is their godsend. Then this King Kenny B.S. can continue and he can purchase further mediocre players playing for a dinosaur manager bereft of ideas. One less team to worry about for us.
 

StartingPrice

Chief Sardonicus Hyperlip
Feb 13, 2004
32,568
10,280
'It’s too early for us to start talking about winning the league,' said Henry. 'In my opinion Manchester United are the ones to beat. They have a good squad, and look really good.
'Our main goal is to qualify for the Champions League. If we don’t it would be a major disappointment.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...l-finish-says-John-W-Henry.html#ixzz1hr8WzOTI

To paraphase Junior Soprano: "My main goal is to FCUK (Eek) Angie Dickinson...let's see who gets lucky first" :grin:
 

MR_BEN

Well-Known Member
Aug 5, 2005
3,153
1,549
even their superstar - luis suarez, is actually not that good in terms of doing what he is supposed to. He has scored only 8 goals since joining liverpool!

I was, and still am shocked by that.

I love King Kenny - in the same way that i loved Benitez, as they are bringing liverpool to their knees, and the fans cannot see it. Long may it continue.
 

Spurs_Bear

Well-Known Member
Jan 7, 2009
17,094
22,286
The best thing about this is that the fans would go batshit if their American owner even hinted about replacing Dalglish.
 

spurslenny

I hate football
Nov 24, 2006
7,545
6,539
The thing with Liverpool FC and their fans is that in many ways, they are heavily weighed down by their history. In more ways than most clubs IMO.
What I mean by that is that they are proud to be a club that doesn't sack their managers at the first signed of trouble, and hence, have had only a handful of managers over the last 30/40 years.
It is my belief that they are yearning for the second coming of a Shankly, or a Paisley, and in their eyes Dalgleish is the obvious successor. In actual fact, he's not, but they are too blinded by their misplaced loyalty to see it (in much the same way that they held Benitez in such high regard even though he was responsible for kick-starting their decline with some of his ludicrous transfer buys)

You will only need to venture onto RAWK to see that hey are already lining up their excuses for when they inevitably fail to finish in the top 4 for the 3rd season running.
Pearls such as 'the FA are against us', 'the team needs time to gel', 'we've been unlucky/robbed by bent refs/had shit GK's play blinders against us', while all along failing to accept that 'King Kenny' wasted 35mil on a striker they didn't need, or was so alien to their playing style, and clearly didn't have a clue who or what type of player was required to make top 4. Certainly not a clutch of midtable superstars in their own right (downing, Henderson and Adam).

Anyway, why should we care. All too soon they will realise that The King is not the saviour of LFC, but just an average, outdated, relic of a manager of from Liverpool halcyon days.

Europa league here you come.
 

hans

Active Member
Aug 8, 2005
1,414
71
even their superstar - luis suarez, is actually not that good in terms of doing what he is supposed to. He has scored only 8 goals since joining liverpool!

I was, and still am shocked by that.

I love King Kenny - in the same way that i loved Benitez, as they are bringing liverpool to their knees, and the fans cannot see it. Long may it continue.

:)

i saw a pretty sad stat the other day, berbatov this season has scored 1 less goal than suarez .. . . . berba has played - 255mins, suarez - 1455mins . . . . . Eek


:rofl:
 

jonathanhotspur

Loose Cannon
Jun 28, 2009
10,292
8,250
The thing with Liverpool FC and their fans is that in many ways, they are heavily weighed down by their history. In more ways than most clubs IMO.
What I mean by that is that they are proud to be a club that doesn't sack their managers at the first signed of trouble, and hence, have had only a handful of managers over the last 30/40 years.
It is my belief that they are yearning for the second coming of a Shankly, or a Paisley, and in their eyes Dalgleish is the obvious successor. In actual fact, he's not, but they are too blinded by their misplaced loyalty to see it (in much the same way that they held Benitez in such high regard even though he was responsible for kick-starting their decline with some of his ludicrous transfer buys)

You will only need to venture onto RAWK to see that hey are already lining up their excuses for when they inevitably fail to finish in the top 4 for the 3rd season running.
Pearls such as 'the FA are against us', 'the team needs time to gel', 'we've been unlucky/robbed by bent refs/had shit GK's play blinders against us', while all along failing to accept that 'King Kenny' wasted 35mil on a striker they didn't need, or was so alien to their playing style, and clearly didn't have a clue who or what type of player was required to make top 4. Certainly not a clutch of midtable superstars in their own right (downing, Henderson and Adam).

Anyway, why should we care. All too soon they will realise that The King is not the saviour of LFC, but just an average, outdated, relic of a manager of from Liverpool halcyon days.

Europa league here you come.

Alienating Alonso was quite possibly the dumbest thing that Benitez ever did, wasn't it?
 

Azazello

The Boney King of Nowhere
Aug 15, 2009
6,965
5,069
The thing with Liverpool FC and their fans is that in many ways, they are heavily weighed down by their history. In more ways than most clubs IMO.
What I mean by that is that they are proud to be a club that doesn't sack their managers at the first signed of trouble, and hence, have had only a handful of managers over the last 30/40 years.
It is my belief that they are yearning for the second coming of a Shankly, or a Paisley, and in their eyes Dalgleish is the obvious successor. In actual fact, he's not, but they are too blinded by their misplaced loyalty to see it (in much the same way that they held Benitez in such high regard even though he was responsible for kick-starting their decline with some of his ludicrous transfer buys)

You will only need to venture onto RAWK to see that hey are already lining up their excuses for when they inevitably fail to finish in the top 4 for the 3rd season running.
Pearls such as 'the FA are against us', 'the team needs time to gel', 'we've been unlucky/robbed by bent refs/had shit GK's play blinders against us', while all along failing to accept that 'King Kenny' wasted 35mil on a striker they didn't need, or was so alien to their playing style, and clearly didn't have a clue who or what type of player was required to make top 4. Certainly not a clutch of midtable superstars in their own right (downing, Henderson and Adam).

Anyway, why should we care. All too soon they will realise that The King is not the saviour of LFC, but just an average, outdated, relic of a manager of from Liverpool halcyon days.

Europa league here you come.

It would be so funny if Stoke or even Toon beat them to it.
 
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