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Friday, 29 March 2013

Rodgers On Carra Replacements


Brendan Rodgers admits Liverpool may need to bring in defensive reinforcements this summer.

While the Reds have strengthened in midfield and attack since Rodgers arrived at the club last summer, the squad has been well stocked with defensive quality.

However, the retirement of Jamie Carragher at the end of the season means the Liverpool manager may look to enter the transfer market.

He told reporters at his pre-Villa press conference: "We're going to be light in that area. We have to assess it between now and the end of the season.

"That's the one area of the field where we haven't brought anyone in. We've brought midfield players and front players into the group, but as of yet there has been no one in that area.

"We're going to lose Jamie, which is a big loss. There is no player that is irreplaceable but he's a big loss.

"You see his experience and how he leads the line, and when you're playing as a defender you need someone who is vocal in there who can organise the line. He does that remarkably well.

"But I've also got really good players here. Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel - we've got some really, really good players.

"Between now and the end of the season we know we need to strengthen the group and that's something we'll look at doing.

"If it's not something we've got in the group we may need that kind of character, who can organise and lead. That's something we'll have a look at."

While Carragher spent much of the first half of the season on the bench, he returned to the starting 11 in the Barclays Premier League against Norwich in January and has remained there since.

An injury kept him out of our defeat to Southampton but he is set to return this weekend.

Rodgers was pressed by reporters on exactly how big a loss the 35-year-old would be when he finally called it a day.

"I will miss him," he said. "He's a good man and a lover of football. He puts everything into his training every day. He's a real role model for all the players - young and senior players.

"He's got eight games left and let's not write him off yet. He's still fit and strong. We missed his leadership qualities at Southampton and he'll come back into the squad for the weekend."

With eight games remaining, Liverpool still have a chance to qualify for Europe next season - but even if that doesn't happen, Rodgers is confident he can attract quality players to the club.

"Whether we're in Europe or not we're going to be able to attract good players here," he added. "Of course, [Europe] is where we'd like to be, but if it isn't to be I still believe we'll be able to bring in players who'll improve us.

"That's the challenge now: to bring those types in over the next months."

LFC Eye Eriksen



Liverpool have stepped up their interest in young Danish star Christian Eriksen, following final checks during the international break.

Reds boss Brendan Rodgers has been impressed with scouting reports about the Ajax playmaker and, after watching him play for his country against the Czech Republic and Bulgaria over the past week, the Anfield club are ready to take the plunge with a firm offer.

After refusing the Dutch giants' offer of a new contract, 21-year-old Eriksen will be made available for transfer in the summer as he will be entering the final year of his current deal.

The midfielder's profile suits Liverpool's blueprint for new players so perfectly, they are ready to go head to head with the likes of Inter Milan, Tottenham and perhaps Chelsea - who have been linked with Eriksen recently - for his services.

Rodgers knows there will be competition for a player who already has 34 Denmark caps, but he believes he has two trump-cards he can play.

Not only is Liverpool centre-half Daniel Agger the midfielder's captain at international level, but Eriksen also played alongside Luis Suarez when he first broke into the Ajax first-team in 2010.

The player is also known to have an affinity for the Reds and has hinted strongly in recent weeks that he will leave Holland at the end of the season, with a switch to the Premier League his most likely option.

"I don't know if I will be an Ajax player after the summer - we will see what happens. I don't exclude anything," he said.

"I haven't received a detailed offer of a contract extension yet, but my agent has had talks with the club regarding that matter."

Liverpool were busy during the international break, with Eriksen one of several summer targets to be scouted while playing for their country.

Rodgers is determined to add a creative midfielder in the close-season, and he has identified several targets, to try to ensure he doesn't miss out if his first choice is tempted away elsewhere.

The Anfield boss is also highly impressed by Armenia attacking midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan, and sent Anfield's head of analytics Michael Edwards - one of the key men in Liverpool's recruitment team - to Yereven to watch the 24-year-old play for his country against Czech Republic.

Edwards was joined by Barry Hunter, Liverpool's overseas scout.

Even though Armenia were beaten 3-0, the pair were impressed by Mkhitaryan, who took man of the match honours in a losing cause.

The sticking point with the 24-year-old has always been the fee - Shaktar Donetsk want £23million for a player they are convinced will become one of the top stars in Europe.

Again, Mkhitaryan has aroused interest from other Premier League clubs as well as Italy, but Rodgers will continue to monitor the situation to see if he can negotiate a price that fits into his budget.

Newcastle midfielder Hatem Ben Arfa and Brazilian defender Dede are also on Liverpool's radar.



Thursday, 28 March 2013

First Class Bill Shankly



Liverpool fans know that Bill Shankly was first class, now Royal Mail will issue a stamp commemorating the 100th Birth Anniversary of legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly on 16th April 2013.

This will be one of a set of 10 stamps issued dedicated to Great Britons celebrating individuals across sport, journalism, music, politics and the arts with other stamps including:

Norman Parkinson
Vivien Leigh
Peter Cushing
David Lloyd George
Elizabeth David
John Archer
Benjamin Britten
Mary Leakey
Richard Dimbleby

LFC Pursue £12m Shakhtar Striker



Liverpool are set to pursue Shakhtar Donetsk striker Henrikh Mkhitaryan in the summer, as boss Brendan Rodgers looks to improve his attacking options.

Mkhitaryan recently indicated he was keen to move on from his current club, citing a move to one of Europe's top leagues as a priority.

It is believed Shakhtar would not be adverse to selling the striker, but any club is likely to have to stump up around £12m for his signature.

With Liverpool having brought Daniel Sturridge and Philippe Coutinho to Anfield in January, it looks as though Rodgers is keen to continue the squad's development ahead of next season.

The Reds have been without Champions League football since the 2009-10 season and look likely to miss out again this time around, but have improved immeasurably over the course of the campaign.

But the acquisition of Armenia international Mkhitaryan will ease the pressure on top scorer Luis Suarez, as well as Daniel Sturridge and Fabio Borini, who has been on the sidelines for best part of the season.

The 24-year-old would also arrive at Anfield with Champions League experience.


Wednesday, 27 March 2013

John Glover's Legacy Will Live On



The legacy of a prominent Hillsborough campaigner who died after a brave battle with cancer will live on due to the way he helped pave the way for justice, his friends said today.

John Glover, 72, lost his 20-year-old son Ian in the 1989 disaster and was an ardent campaigner for the truth.

A founding member of the Hillsborough Justice Campaign (HJC), he died on Monday at his family home in Walton.

Speaking on behalf of his family, HJC spokeswoman Sheila Coleman said he was a huge loss but his legacy would live on.

She said: "I saw in him a searing passion for the truth. The respect he commanded was immense.

"From an early stage John was suspicious of how things were proceeding and became aware of the cover-up.

"He was a driving force for justice and the truth to be revealed."

John leaves wife Teresa, children John, Tom, Cathy and Lorraine, and a number of grandchildren.

In October 2011 John was diagnosed with cancer and doctors told him he might only survive until that Christmas.

But he bravely hung on against the odds and for the findings of the Hillsborough Independent Panel last September.

The panel's work revealed Ian was one of the 41 victims of the disaster who could have been saved.

John's determination to get the truth led to him helping to launch the HJC. He was played by Ricky Tomlinson in Jimmy McGovern's groundbreaking 1996 TV docu-drama Hillsborough.

Sheila said: "Ricky could get his teeth into John's character because of his honesty. He knew right from wrong - he would not be fooled by anyone.

"The knowledge John acquired exemplified how ordinary people, when treated badly by the system, will educate themselves and fight back."

The Hillsborough disaster took a huge toll on the Glover family.

John's son Joe, who was with Ian at the tragedy, never recovered from witnessing his brother die.

Tragedy struck again almost exactly 10 years later when Joe was killed in an accident at work aged 32.

He was crushed by marble slabs but heroically pushed a workmate out of the way, almost certainly saving his life.

Sheila added: "The toll Hillsborough took on John's health cannot be underestimated. He lived with two traumatised sons after the tragedy.

"He fought for survivors to be recognised, which was very important."

Sheila said despite coming to know John through such tragic circumstances she had fond memories and many moments of humour.

She said: "No matter what the circumstances you were always welcome when you went to see him.

"It was an honour to have known John and call him my friend. I valued his opinion and I trusted him implicitly.

"If you want to see community then you need look no further than the Glover family, their front door always open and kids running in and out.

"The family will miss him so much because he was a life force. They adored him and are heartbroken because he was such a lively figure."



Rush Urges LFC To Sign Williams



Ashley Williams has been backed by Ian Rush as the answer to Liverpool's defensive dilemma this summer.

With Jamie Carragher planning to retire at the end of the season, Reds manager Brendan Rodgers is drawing up a list of potential replacements.

The ECHO understands that Swansea City captain Williams - a player Rodgers managed at the Liberty Stadium - is on his wishlist with other alternatives also being monitored.

Williams signed a new contract with the south Wales club in October and it is thought he would command a transfer fee of around £8m.

The 28-year-old captained Wales in their World Cup qualifier against Croatia last night and a fellow countryman says he could be ideal for the Reds.

Liverpool legend Rush believes Williams has the qualities the club will be looking for when trying to fill the void left by Carragher at the end of the campaign.

"To get in Ashley Williams would be great," said Rush, who scored 346 times for Liverpool.

"I've seen him play for Wales on a number of occasions and he is organised and a good captain.

"He knows what he is doing and the link to Liverpool is natural because Brendan Rodgers managed him at Swansea.

"At the right price Swansea would let him go although that they are in Europe next season may have a bearing on his decision.

"But he would be good for Liverpool with his experience."

Rush says it is vital players of character and experience are brought into the club," he added.

"We need to replace not just what Jamie brings on the field but off it as well.

"Every teams needs people like Carragher.

"At Liverpool we have Jamie and Stevie G.

"At United there's Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs and Chelsea have John Terry and Frank Lampard."


Monday, 25 March 2013

LFC Linked With Ochoa



Mexican goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa remains happy at Ajaccio amid ongoing reports of a move to Liverpool.

The 27-year-old claimed in February the Anfield club had tried to sign him in the past along with sides from Spain, Germany and Italy.

Liverpool continue to be linked with a return move for Ochoa and he is aware of the rumours but is in no rush to leave Ligue 1 outfit Ajaccio.

Regarding his future, he told Mediotiempo: "I only know what is said sometimes in the press.

"I have heard in Mexico that there is a type of interest from Liverpool but I have to let things happen."

Ochoa also said: "Ajaccio are getting better each day and we all feel that we are doing our work correctly in the first division.

"I feel very well, in the professional and sporting way. Physically, I am also very well.

"I am happy with my team, things are getting sorted out in the correct way and the team is advancing."


Saturday, 23 March 2013

Sakho Puts Clubs On Alert



Mamadou Sakho has put Premier League clubs on alert after hinting he could be forced to quit Paris St Germain in search of regular football.

The 23-year-old France defender has shared defensive duties with Thiago Silva and Alex this season, starting 18 of 29 league games, and fears for his international future in the run-up to next year's World Cup.

Sakho has reportedly been tracked by Liverpool as a potential replacement for Jamie Carragher, while Arsenal and Newcastle are also understood to be interested.

"In the mind of the PSG coach, I'm the third (in the pecking order of central defenders)," Sakho, who is under contract at Parc des Princes until the summer of 2014, told L'Equipe.

"I finally come to accept it even if I do not understand it.

"I have to play at club level to qualify for the France team. Next season will be important.

"It's been a difficult year and a half for me at PSG. To continue my progress, I must be playing."


The Suarez Story - Part 3



It was the kind of day Sky dream of. A day to justify their all-singing, all-dancing deadline day coverage. Three transfers, totalling more than £100m, and all completed within 24 manic hours. No wonder Jim White and co struggle to contain themselves.

For Liverpool fans, January 31 2011 will never be forgotten. It was the day one Reds hero severed his ties with the club in cold fashion, only for another to emerge from the ashes. For a club which has had its fair share of hectic days in recent years, this was off the scale.

With Fernando Torres heading for Chelsea, and £50m heading to Liverpool's bank account, it was pushing 10pm when Andy Carroll rolled up at Melwood to complete a scarcely-believable £35m transfer from Newcastle.

But while Carroll's signing can be criticised - and it is, with each passing week - the other big-money deal at Anfield that day is beyond reproach.

Kenny Dalglish and Damien Comolli had worked round the clock to bring Luis Suarez to Merseyside. No wonder.

The Uruguayan may be the second most expensive player in Liverpool history, but he may just go down as one of the finest pieces of business the club has ever made. A £22.8m bargain.

Comolli, then the director of football strategy, had joined Liverpool only two months earlier, the first senior appointment of Fenway Sports Group's ownership. Upon his arrival, the Frenchman had been greeted with the news that Suarez, 24 and fresh from a standout performance with Uruguay at the 2010 World Cup, was target number one. Dalglish, at that point a club ambassador, had personally scouted him at Ajax, the recruitment team were convinced he was the man.

Initial enquiries, made that summer, had proven fruitless. Liverpool were quoted around £35m for Suarez, a fee that, with the club buckling under the weight of George Gillett and Tom Hicks' debts, was patently out of reach. Instead, they added Paul Konchesky, Raul Meireles, Christian Poulsen, Joe Cole, Milan Jovanovic and Danny Wilson to their squad, and replaced Rafa Benitez with Roy Hodgson.

Months later, though, and the Anfield landscape was shifting. Hicks and Gillett were ousted in acrimonious fashion in October, and Hodgson was gone weeks later, replaced by Dalglish.

Then came what Comolli has referred to as "the Suarez call".

"Our chief scout Steve Hitchen rang one day," remembers Comolli. "He said we had received some intelligence, that we could get Suarez.

"I was stunned. 'Are you sure?' I said, and he said yes, there was a problem with his club, they needed to sell, but that there was another Premier League club trying to sign him. We needed to be quick.

"I spoke to Kenny. He thought I was joking!"

He wasn't. Suarez finalised his move hours before the Carroll and Torres sideshow. Half-fit - he was in the middle of a seven-game ban at Ajax after the Ottman Bakkal 'biting' incident - he made his debut as a substitute against Stoke at Anfield 48 hours later, and marked the occasion with a goal inside 16 minutes. He has barely looked back since.

The plan initially had been to pair him with Torres, but with the Spaniard gone, the Uruguayan wasted no time stepping into the breach.

His first half-season brought only four goals, but his general play bewitched the Anfield crowd. His invention, his trickery, but equally his passion, struck a chord with supporters. Within weeks of his arrival, he had his own song. Rarely has Depeche Mode been sung with such feeling.

Performance-wise, though, there is little to criticise. Suarez scored 17 times last season, despite his off-field problems, helping Liverpool end their six-year trophy drought with victory in the Carling Cup final at Wembley. His goal in the FA Cup semi-final against Everton set them on their way to another final, whilst his hat-trick at Norwich will live long in the memory.

This season, the levels have been upped further. Liverpool's dearth of strikers, particularly during the early part of the season, was glossed over by Suarez's one-man mission.

Having faced questions over the quality of his finishing, he has taken the Premier League by storm. He is the division's leading scorer with 22 goals and has 29 in all competitions. They come in the big games, the small games, the home games, the away games. They come from outside the box and inside the box, with his right foot, with his left foot or with his head.

If politics were no issue in football, he would win both the PFA and Football Writers' player of the year awards.

That there is any doubt at all is down to his character, or people's perception of it. Some see a driven winner, some see a master of the dark arts. When he dived in front of David Moyes at Goodison - a response to some provocative pre-match comments from the Everton manager - some saw a player enjoying his status as a cheat. Others, Brendan Rodgers included, just laughed.

Liverpool fans certainly did. They've been smiling a lot since Luis Suarez came to town.


Thursday, 21 March 2013

The Suarez Story - Part 2



What would you do for love? Miss a night out with the lads? Sit through a dull rom-com when there's football on the other channel? Max out your overdraft every Valentine's Day?

Good for you. How about moving half way round the world, just so you could be within a two-hour flight of your loved one?

That's what Luis Suarez did, aged 19.

Having burst onto the scene at Nacional, impressing with his impish talent and indefatigable style, Suarez's personal life was turned upside down when Sofia Balbi, the woman who "sorted his head out" amid a troubled youth career, moved to Barcelona to study.

Suarez was in the midst of helping Nacional to yet another Uruguayan title, scoring in both legs of their play-off triumph over Rocha FC, but Sofia's absence affected him deeply.

"My happiness was not complete," he says. "Sofia and I had a long distance relationship for a year.

"Despite this, I could not give up on our relationship and when I got a call to play in Europe I didn't think twice."

That call came from Holland. FC Groningen, a middling club in the Eredivisie, had sent a delegation to watch one of Suarez's Nacional teammates, in a league game against Defensor. The report which returned to the Netherlands consisted of three words; sign Luis Suarez.

So they did. The fee of 800,000 euros caused barely a ripple among the cash-rich European game, but represented a sizeable outlay for a side like Groningen.

"Groningen were one of the first Dutch sides to target the Uruguayan market specifically," says Dutch journalist Leander Schaerlaeckens.

"Dutch clubs tend to stick to what they know. For example, Ajax get a lot of players from Denmark, PSV from Brazil, whilst AZ Alkmaar have used the Belgian market.

"Groningen saw an opportunity. They brought Bruno Silva from Danubio, and a year later they went back for Suarez. It proved a terrific signing."

More importantly for Suarez, the move meant he was closer to Sofia. The pair would travel between Barcelona and Groningen whenever time allowed, their long-distance relationship having been shortened considerably.

Not that everything was perfect to begin with, though.

"It was hard for him at first," says Ron Jans, Groningen's manager at the time. "He wasn't happy and struggled to adapt. He just wanted to play but he was in the reserves.

"He was so impatient. He had problems getting used to the referees, he was a little bit heavy and it took him some time to get fit. But once he was, he was probably the best I've worked with. He's a real winner, he cannot stand losing."

His debut campaign in Europe passed in a blur. Suarez's performances improved rapidly as he established himself, his off-field life helped when Sofia joined him in Holland.

Groningen were a decent, if unspectacular, side, who would finish the 2006-07 season in eighth place. Suarez, though, gave them star quality.

"It was a bit of a struggle," says Erik Nevland, his strike partner throughout that season. "But once he cracked the code, he played unbelievably every week. He was tremendous."

Suarez netted 15 times in 37 appearances in all competitions, though he would also begin to earn a reputation that has proven tough to shift since.

"He got a lot of stick for the way he went down to win free-kicks and penalties," remembers Nevland. "But that is his type of play. He won't change that."

Jans, meanwhile, remembers encountering a different type of problem.

"In one game I took him off and he was really unhappy," he says. "He didn't shake hands and he wanted to go straight to the dressing room.

"I was angry with him. It was raining hard and I threw my umbrella at him. Afterwards I told him he couldn't act like that in Holland and that he had to control himself. In the next game, we were 3-1 down against Vitesse Arnhem with 10 minutes to play and we won 4-3, with Luis scoring two goals. Afterwards I gave him my umbrella, and he paraded it around in front of the crowd."

Suarez's time at Groningen, however, was always likely to be short-lived. A player scoring goals for a provincial Dutch time will always invite interest from the traditional powerhouses and sure enough, in the summer of 2007, Ajax, their coffers boosted by the sale of Ryan Babel to Liverpool, came knocking.

A bid of 3.5m was turned down flat, but with Suarez eager to move to Amsterdam, an impasse was reached. The player went to the KNVB, the Dutch Football Association, to try to force through a deal, at one point threatening to go on strike.

An arbitration committee ruled against him, but Ajax were determined to get their man. Eventually, a deal worth 7.5m was agreed, and Suarez was on his way once more.

"In his first season at Ajax, he was used as a wide forward," says Leander Schaerlaeckens. "He scored goals, but he spent most of it being scorned by Klaas-Jan Huntelaar for not providing good enough service."

Still, 22 goals as a support act (Huntelaar netted 36) was a handy return. And when Huntelaar moved on to Real Madrid midway through the following campaign, Suarez assumed centre stage. His relationship with Marco Van Basten was fraught - the pair "barely spoke" according to Suarez - but the goals flowed. Suarez plundered 28 in his second season at Ajax, but would scale new heights once Martin Jol, the current Fulham boss, had taken over from Van Basten at the start of the 2009-10 season.

"Jol made Suarez the most important player," says Roberto Decock of the Ajax Supporters Club. "He made him team captain, talked a lot with him and tuned the rest of the team into Suarez."

It paid dividends. Suarez scored a staggering 49 goals in 48 appearances under Jol, guiding Ajax to the KNVB Cup in the process. He was named Dutch Footballer of the Year for his performances.

"He was always a great player," remembers Jol. "He became one of the best finishers in world football."

Though if his goalscoring was never in question, his temperament most definitely was.

"He was always getting into trouble with referees," says Schaerlaeckens. "He was actually voted as the Eredivisie's most irritating player by supporters, and that was because he would often dive or go to ground, and he was forever arguing with referees."

His final game for Ajax came in December 2010. By then, he was serving a seven-game ban after a clash with PSV Eindhoven's Ottman Bakkal, in which he was seen to bite his opponent on the shoulder. "The Cannibal" was one front-page headline the following day.

He was also, by that point, attracting admiring glances from across the North Sea. Liverpool called. The next stage of the journey beckoned.

His feet may have taken him to the top of the world, but it would be his hand that shook it.

July 2, 2010. Crouched in the corner of Johannesburg's Soccer City stadium, barely able to turn his eyes to the pitch, Suarez watches as Asamoah Gyan skies his penalty high over the crossbar, and explodes into a jig of delight. Delight and relief.

Moments earlier, Uruguay's No.9 had been ordered from the field, sent off after denying Ghana what would have been a winning goal with his hand.

Uruguay, of course, went on to win the quarter-final clash after a penalty shoot-out. Suarez's actions, though, attracted widespread condemnation, in particular from the British press.

The truth is, though, that Suarez's handball, and his willingness to celebrate it, is representative more of a burning desire for success than anything else. It is a shame that his contribution to the tournament should be overshadowed by something which, surely, any professional would have done.

Suarez found the net three times in South Africa, as Uruguay blustered all the way to the semi-finals, where they were beaten, narrowly, by Holland.

Alongside Diego Forlan, and the fast-emerging Edinson Cavani, Suarez completed a fearsome attacking triumvirate, announcing himself on the world stage with glee.

"It was a fantastic tournament for Uruguay, and for Luis," Forlan told the ECHO. "It was a team performance, but there were so many great performances throughout. Luis was one of those, definitely. He was very good.

"Uruguay's national team is like a club side, everyone gets on really well with one another. Myself, Edinson and Luis have a good relationship, and I think that could be seen on the pitch. It was a great tournament to be part of."


Prem Giants In For Dede



Liverpool are ready to commit massive funds to take on Manchester United in the race to land the next Brazilian superstar.

Centre-half Dede has been identified as the man the Samba nation will build their team on for the World Cup they are hosting in 2014.

And his club, Vasco da Gama, have confirmed this week he WILL be sold in the summer.

The club from Rio have hit massive financial problems after being pursued by federal tax authorities for unpaid debts, and they have admitted they will be forced to sell to the highest bidder to stave off the threat of liquidation.

That means attempting to get an auction going to realise an asking price of around £15million, with the likes of Liverpool, United, Juventus and Benfica all making enquiries about the 24-year-old.

The Anfield club believe they have stolen a march on their rivals after targeting the 6ft 3in stopper over the past 12 months, and establishing a relationship with the private investment group that owns 55 per cent of the player.

Dede - full name Anderson Vital da Silva - fits the Liverpool profile perfectly, given he is a young international who promises much for the future.

And with boss Brendan Rodgers keen to land at least TWO centre-halves in the summer, they will commit big money to fighting off champions-elect United.

Speaking this week, Vasco director general Cristiano Koehler confirmed a decision has been taken to allow Dede to leave, given the debts the club must address to avoid the threat of bankruptcy.

"We can't mislead the fans, we will find it very difficult to hold on to Dede because the club needs the resources, and at some point it will happen - by the middle of the year," the official explained.

"The desire of all is that he stays, but we have to prioritise the payment of wages, taxes and federal agreements, so it is inevitable we will have to sell - so it is possible, in the middle of the year when the sale goes through, we can use the money to restructure the club and make it safe.

"The player is ambitious and he also wants to experience better opportunities with better pay, and the partners in his ownership want to make the agreement now to develop their investment.

"We have a balance sheet we must meet, and we can't hide the fact."

Dede, part of the Brazil squad that will play Italy in a friendly on Friday night and Russia next week, has been described as the future of the national side after emerging with Vasco in the past two years.

The defender has won six caps in the past few months, and has been courted by most of Brazil's top clubs, with his own domestic side struggling to pay their players' wages as well as that tax bill.

A deal to sell him to Corinthians fell through in January, and another interested club is Fluminese, whose coach Abel Braga admitted an approach for a player he said is "absurdly talented and will certainly be one of Brazil's stars at the 2014 World Cup".

But with Vasco facing such daunting debts, they would prefer to sell the defender on the international market, in an attempt to tease the price as high as £15m - a fee none of their domestic rivals would pay.

The situation is complicated by the fact that, like many South American internationals, Dede is part owed by an investment group who bought a stake in him as a youngster.

Vasco only hold 45 per cent of the player's registration, with another 45 per cent held by the DIS Group - a subsidiary of a Brazilian supermarket chain - and 10 per cent held by the Ability investment group.

Liverpool have made in-roads in their relationship with his investors after watching Dede over the past year.

They also have another card to play, in that they already have two Brazilians in the squad in Lucas Leiva and Philippe Coutinho.

United, of course, have the Da Silva brothers, Rafael and Fabio - who hail from the same area of Rio de Janeiro as Dede - but the player may decide he will have a more immediate first-team opportunity at Liverpool, given the looming retirement of Jamie Carragher.


Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Retro Subbuteo T-Shirts


http://www.shotdeadinthehead.com/collection/shortlist?utm_source=SL_HP_SD_CP&utm_medium=LN&utm_content=NB&utm_campaign=Shortlist_Subbuteo_Article

The Suarez Story



By Neil Jones

The Estadio Gran Parque Central, tucked away amid Montevideo's tight La Blanqueda neighbourhood, does not, at first glance, seem much to look at. Signs of modern football's fast-expanding wealth and affluence are yet to reach this particular corner of the globe.

There is no retractable roof, no colour-changing exterior, no five-star hotels or vast retail space.

Yet Gran Parque Central, with its open plan and its modest 23,500 capacity, has history coursing through its veins. The home of Nacional CF, one of Uruguay's traditional 'big two', can tell plenty of stories.

It was here, in 1930, that the first ever World Cup match was played, with the USA defeating Belgium in front of 19,000. Away from football, it was on this site, a former bullring, that Jose Artigas - "the father of Uruguayan nationhood" - was crowned in 1811.

But as the famous South American saying goes; "Other countries have history, Uruguay has football". And it was at the modern Gran Parque Central, redeveloped extensively in the mid-2000s, that the new leader of the Uruguayan (football) nation began his journey to the top.

His name, of course, is Luis Alberto Suarez Diaz. He may only have played 34 times for Nacional, leaving the club for the bright lights of Europe at the age of 19, but he remains a club hero.

Uruguay, a nation of just 3.5m, has traditionally, in football terms at least, punched well above its weight. That it continues to do so - they are the current Copa America holders, and finished fourth at the last World Cup - is down to talent and personality. Suarez has both, in abundance.

Yet whilst Montevideo worships Suarez, it is also true that they merely inherited him. Salto, a city of around 120,000 which lies on the banks of the Rio Uruguay river, some 300 miles northwest of the capital, is the place that can truly lay claim to him. Suarez's earliest memory is playing football, barefoot, on its cobbled streets.

The middle of seven children, born to mother Sandra and father Rodolfo, it was not until Suarez was seven that his family arrived in Montevideo, forced to move so that Rodolfo, a porter by trade, could find work.

There, amid the high rises and the pollution, life was tough. Money was tight, poverty a looming presence. Suarez remembers being unable to attend one practice match because he did not have shoes to wear.

"We were from the lower class," he remembers. "I never had the possibility to choose my own running shoes, for example, because of how big my family was.

"My parents did everything they could but they couldn't buy us the things that we wanted, only what they could provide. But I was forever grateful for what they provided."

Those who know Suarez, those who understand him, believe those formative years, scrapping for survival, jostling for attention, are reflected in his character today. Suarez agrees.

"(Montevideo) was basically where my life started," he says. "It's where I started to learn about everything, to go to school, to learn how to play football better. They taught you good football much more in Montevideo than in Salto. So this is where my path really started."

The tale of South American kid-come-good has become something of a cliché over the years. But, as hackneyed as this phrase will sound, football provided an escape for the young Suarez.

"In Montevideo, we started to look for a team for him," says his mother.

"I was told about Urreta, a club where there were a lot of people with money, so I took him there."

It proved a wise choice. Suarez scored a hat-trick, as a substitute, in his first friendly match for Urreta. Tricky, speedy and relentless, his development was as quick as his feet.

It was playing for Urreta, aged nine, that he was discovered by Wilson Pirez, a scout working for Nacional.

"He had incredible ability for someone of that age," says Pirez. "You could always tell he was going to be a great player."

Suarez, though, is rather more modest.

"I actually knew that I was very bad, technically, with the ball," he says. "But I had the character to get past this. I never gave up on any ball or play.

"Technically, I wasn't very good but as time passed, I figured what I needed to get better and focused on that every day."

It was far from plain sailing. Suarez, never the most attentive of students, was jolted by his father abandoning the family home when he was 12. His mother and grandmother would strive to keep the family together, but by 14, distracted and disenchanted, he was fighting for his career at Nacional.

"Life was difficult for him," says Pirez.

"He wasn't quite ready mentally to be a footballer. But that tough childhood made him so hungry for success."

Suarez agrees: "I wasn't on the path I wanted to be on. I was going out at night, I didn't enjoy studying and I wasn't dedicating myself to football. There were some people around me who were a bad influence."

Fortunately for Suarez, there was a good influence waiting around the corner. He was 15 when he met Sofia Balbi, but was instantly smitten.

"She gave me a lot of confidence and helped me believe in myself," he says.

Pirez recalls Suarez picking up coins from the street in order to treat Sofia, who is now his wife.

"He was infatuated," he says. In the meantime, he was busy convincing Nacional's sceptical coaches to keep faith with their young maverick.

Thankfully for Suarez, and for football, they did. It proved to be one of their smarter moves.


LFC Given Alonso Encouragement



Liverpool have been given further encouragement in their bid to bring back old Anfield favourite Xabi Alonso.

The Real Madrid midfielder's future has been the subject of intriguing speculation and the Express Online reported yesterday he would turn down a new contract to extend his stay at the Bernebeu.

Verratti has emerged as a transfer target for Los Blancos, as they want to wrestle the La Liga title back from bitter rivals Barcelona, whom they trail 13 points in the Championship race.

The PSG midfielder has also been on Manchester United's radar as they seek to strengthen in that department.

French paper Le 10 Sport claims PSG are desperate to hold onto Verratti.

But Real are keen on Verratti whom they believe would be a suitable replacement for Alonso.

Verratti has clocked up 29 appearances for PSG this season.


Friday, 15 March 2013

'Coutinho Can Be As Good As Messi'



Mauricio Pochettino believes Liverpool's Philippe Coutinho possesses qualities similar to Ronaldinho and Lionel Messi.

The Brazilian has enjoyed a promising start at Anfield since joining from Inter Milan in January, and also attracted interest from Southampton during the transfer window.

Pochettino knows the 20-year-old midfielder well after coaching him during a loan spell at Espanyol last season, and admits he could cause Southampton problems when Liverpool visit St Mary's on Saturday.

"Philippe is a Brazilian player and, as it happens with most Brazilians, he has a special magic in his feet," said the Saints boss.

"Aside from the magic that he has, he also has an amazing work-rate and that makes us doubt whether he fits the mould of a typical Brazilian player or a European one because his work ethic is outstanding.

"What is important about him is he is a good lad, a good kid - a great, humble person.

"I do think Coutinho has that same quality that Ronaldinho and Messi have, but he has much to prove yet.

"What is really clear to me is that Coutinho is a really responsible player - really dedicated and responsible to his own players."


Coutinho Hitting The Gym


Philippe Coutinho has revealed how he is hitting the gym in a bid to become a fully-fledged Barclays Premier League star.

The Brazilian has impressed since moving to Liverpool from Inter Milan in January, claiming one goal and two assists in three starts.

Though satisfied with how things have gone so far, Coutinho is undergoing extra work in order to come to terms with the physical nature of the English game.

He told Liverpoolfc.com: "It is very different here. In Brazil the game is very open, the defenders are not as tight with the attacker. I think this is the hardest thing here.

"Also, the game is very quick - but I feel I can improve these things during training and improve my intensity.

"I have been doing some body building, too, so I can get more used to the physicality."

Though he is just 20 years old, the Barclays Premier League is the fourth top-flight division Coutinho has played in having featured in Serie A, La Liga and the Brazilian league.

He's well placed, therefore, to discuss the different styles of play in each country.

"English football is very quick, it has great intensity, and I think this is the big difference [to other leagues]," he continued.

"In Brazil, football is slower, the tactics are a bit more open and the pitch even seems to be bigger - even though it is obviously the same size - due to the game being so open.

"In Italy, it is a little bit different than it is in Brazil, but here in England it is very quick. I played in Italy and in Spain but the intensity of the game here is very strong. I just have to improve to be able to play at the highest level here.

"I will always give my best and then try to score and create good moves to help the team win."

Coutinho already appears to have struck up an understanding with South American compatriot Luis Suarez - a man whose talents he believes are not of this world.

"Suarez is phenomenal - he is otherworldly," said the No.10. "The goals he scores, the way he gives himself to the team... It is very important and I am very happy to be able to play next to him.

"I think it's the way he gives himself to the team - he fights all the time and chases all the time. He doesn't let one ball go - even if it's the hardest one.

"He fights all the time to win and I admire that in a player. I think it is one of his strong points.

"I'm not only happy to play next to him, but also other players like Steven [Gerrard], who is phenomenal, too. These are guys from another world!"

Despite feeling as though he still has much more to offer, Coutinho could hardly have wished for a better start to Anfield life.

He concluded: "I'm very happy here. I am at a great club, I am wearing a shirt that has a great history and what I have noticed in the last few weeks here is that the whole group is very united, strong and fights for their aims. I hope I can learn more and more with my teammates here."

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

LFC Considers Five Stars


Brendan Rodgers wants to make four new signings this summer to give Liverpool's squad the depth to become credible Champions League challengers.

The club have made significant progress on the back of a January transfer window which saw them land Daniel Sturridge and Philippe Coutinho.

Rodgers is eager to sign similar quality players in the close season and plans have already been put into place for the recruitment drive.

Feyenoord's Stefan De Vrij and Swansea captain Ashley Williams will be considered as potential new central defenders, while Newcastle forward Hatem Ben Arfa, winger Tom Ince of Blackpool and Paris Saint-Germain striker Kevin Gameiro will also come under consideration.

LFC Plan Double PSG Raid



Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers is weighing up a double raid on Paris St Germain with a summer move for attacking pair Jeremy Menez and Kevin Gameiro.

The Reds boss is determined to bolster his improving squad at Anfield during the close season and has sent scouts to monitor the PSG duo.

According to reports on the continent it is winger Menez who Rodgers is particularly keen on.

The French international was a first team regular under Carlo Ancelotti for much of the Ligue 1 season but has fallen out of favour in recent weeks.

Former Roma star Menez, 25, has just over one year left to run on his current contract and Rodgers is confident he can bag his man on a cut-price deal.

Striker Gameiro, meanwhile, has seen his chances at PSG limited since the arrival of Zlatan Ibrahimovic last summer and is keen on a move away from Paris.

The 25-year-old said: "I want to play football every time, I am no different to any player.

"It is difficult to sit on the bench but all big clubs in Europe have the same problems, you can't play every game but being involved is good.

"I always wanted to play abroad. At the end of the season, hopefully after we win the title, we can decide about my future."

It is reported that Rodgers believes Gameiro could provide good competition for Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge in the Liverpool attack.


Monday, 11 March 2013

'He'd Be The Greatest Not To Win It'



Luis Suarez will be the greatest player to not win the Player of the Year award if he is overlooked for the accolade this season – that's the view of Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard.

The No.7 turned in another outstanding display in Sunday's 3-2 victory over Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield, firing the opening goal to take his tally for the season so far to 29.

In the Barclays Premier League, Suarez now has 22 goals to his name, making him the division's leading marksman - and Gerrard believes he deserves to be rewarded for his fine form.

"He's been doing that for us all season," said the skipper. "Before the last deadline, we never got that centre-forward in and he's almost carried this team on his own. At times he was the only centre-forward we had.

"He's top scorer in the league now and he's been incredible. I can't put into words how good he's been.

"If he doesn't win an award this year, he'll be the best player ever not to win an award."

Suarez came up against one of the men thought to be among his main rivals for end-of-season honours in Tottenham's Gareth Bale.

Gerrard acknowledges the Wales winger has been in scintillating form this term - but remains steadfast in his belief that Suarez has been the league's most outstanding player this season.

"Bale's in top form and probably one of the best players in the world on current form," added the midfielder.

"But luckily enough, we've got a player who is as equally as good as him in Luis Suarez - and I think Luis may just pip him to Player of the Year, in my opinion.

"He's been incredible. It's hard to put into words how good he's been."

After Suarez had opened the scoring, Spurs raced into a 2-1 lead thanks to a brace from centre-back Jan Vertonghen.

Liverpool levelled through Stewart Downing, who made the most of a mistake from Hugo Lloris - and Gerrard was eager to highlight the No.19's form.

He said: "He's a different player now. Now we're seeing Stewart Downing the England international and why he has got all those caps.

"What is impressing me the most about Stewart Downing at the moment is the work he's doing for the team without the ball - sliding tackles, his double marking with Glen Johnson and his effort.

"The stats that go up on the board after every game underline that. He's a different player and if he can keep producing those types of performances then it will be money well spent.

"If he keeps to that level of consistency he can make that position in the team his own."

It was left to Gerrard to secure the three points when he fired home a dramatic late penalty.

The midfielder raced towards John Achterberg on the bench to celebrate - and afterwards explained how the goalkeeping coach had assisted him in his preparations should he have been required to take a spot-kick.

"I wouldn't like to take all the credit for the three points today," he revealed.

"There are so many details that go into the games nowadays. John Achterberg did a montage on their goalie for me before the game. He consistently went to the right and I think he had saved four out of eight going to his right.

"I was always going to his left having watched that, but if I had never got that montage then I would probably have gone to his right - so credit to John."

With Brendan Rodgers opting to select an attack-minded starting XI that included Suarez, Downing, Daniel Sturridge and Philippe Coutinho, Gerrard was deployed in a deeper role alongside Lucas Leiva.

"When your squad is littered with players like that, sometimes you have to sacrifice yourself at times and play that little bit deeper for the team," he said.

"If that means the other players go and excite the crowd, assist and score goals, then I'm quite happy to watch that."

The result moved Liverpool into sixth place in the Premier League, seven points off fourth-placed Chelsea.

Reflecting on the contest as a whole, Gerrard said: "It's a big win for us.

"With our performances against the top sides this season, I think we've been very unlucky not to get a win. It's been too long so there's a bit of relief really that we have proved we can beat one of the top sides in the league.

"I think on current form, along with ourselves, Tottenham are probably the best team in the league. When the top sides come, you always know there will be periods of the game when they will have control.

"Credit to Tottenham, they are a fantastic team but we always stayed in the game. Even at 2-1, with players like Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge in your team you always know that something can happen to get you back in it.

"When we went out of the Europa League, the message from the manager and the staff was that we needed to try and win as many of our remaining games as possible and try to finish as high as possible.

"Our form is good but we can't afford to get carried away just because we've beaten Tottenham.

"We need to show what we've shown today in all of our remaining games. We want to finish above Everton and as high as we can in the league."

Meanwhile, Gerrard paid tribute to Jamie Carragher after the veteran centre-back notched up his 500th league appearance for the club against Spurs.

He said: "For me personally, it's a sad and emotional time to see Jamie announce his retirement. I'm closer to him than anyone. I've been there through a lot of his games. To see him hang his boots up is a sad time for myself and the club as well.

"You've got to respect his decision - he feels as if it's time - but he'll be impossible to replace because he's been that good and consistent for this club over the years."


Saturday, 9 March 2013

LFC 2013/14 Ticket Prices


FSG have announced a new six-tier ticket structure for the 2013-14 season, similar to whats in place at Fenway Park.

Friday, 8 March 2013

Suarez - I Won't Reveal My Target



Luis Suarez was today presented with a special accolade from the Barclays Premier League after becoming the first player in the division to reach the 20-goal mark – though he won't be revealing what tally he hopes to end 2012-13 with.

The Uruguayan catapulted himself to the pinnacle of the leading goalscorers' chart after his hat-trick at Wigan Athletic last weekend took his tally to 21 in the league.

Overall, he has 28 in 38 appearances for Liverpool so far this season -but he modestly attributes that to the form of the team as a whole.

Suarez said: "I don't know if I am in the very best scoring form of my life, but certainly I am enjoying a bit of what every striker needs and that is a little bit of luck.

"Last season, chances weren't going in, whereas this year they are.

"You have to work hard as a striker to get into the right positions and anticipate situations - that's important, too.

"It's also evidence the team are working well and moving in the right direction as a whole - but at the same time, it is nice as a player to receive personal recognition because it means you're doing a good job."

With 10 games to go, Suarez's end-of-season tally is likely to surpass the 30-goal barrier - but has he set himself any targets?

"I do set myself targets, but as a striker I like to keep them to myself," he said. "I'll never reveal what my actual goal scoring target is, but I have set myself a target."
Injuries to his teammates have meant Suarez has led Liverpool's line on his own for much of the season, until the arrival of Daniel Sturridge and Philippe Coutinho in January.

The No.7 is full of praise for the impact the duo have made in their short time at Anfield.

"Things have been going really well with Daniel, but not only him - there's also Philippe," he said. "They have both brought something and maybe given us an extra cutting edge. They are players who can make a difference in a game, so it's been nice to link up with them.

"The lads who were here before their arrival were doing a fantastic job, but now we have more options as a team."

Next up for Suarez and co is a visit from Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday - a chance for Liverpool to bolster their hopes of mounting a late challenge for the top four, according to the 26-year-old.

He said: "We've been in good form recently and it's a good opportunity to reduce the gap between ourselves and Spurs.

"There is a slight chance we can make Champions League football - and if we want to do that, this is the sort of game we need to win."

Reds Eye Swoop For Defender


Liverpool are looking at Peruvian defender Carlos Zambrano to bolster their backline this summer.

The centre-back has been a key part of the Eintracht Frankfurt team that is overachieving in this year's Bundesliga, currently sitting in the Champions League places.

One of the club's directors Bruno Hübner revealed: "There is interest from Liverpool in Carlos Zambrano. They have asked about him, but there has not been an offer yet."

Brought over to Germany by Schalke at the age of 16 after some impressive displays in the U17 World Cup of 2005, he could never secure his place in the first team and was loaned out to newly-promoted St Pauli.

Zambrano remained in Hamburg with St Pauli even after their relegation, and was sufficiently impressive in the 2. Bundesliga to catch the eye of Armin Veh at Eintracht Frankfurt.

Veh recently said that Zambrano "would fit any of the top clubs in Europe", and after paying just €1.2million for him in the summer, Frankfurt would be looking at a significant profit if Liverpool were to come back in with an offer.

Thursday, 7 March 2013

My Golden Left Foot


A Japanese jeweler by the name of Tanaka Kikinzoku has produced a pure gold model of Lionel Messi’s left foot, which was revealed to the public in Tokyo yesterday.

Tanaka took a casting of Messi’s foot at the tail end of 2012 and now, three months on down the line, the 25cm-tall, 25kg replica was unveiled by none other than Lionel Messi's brother, with the announcement that the sculpture is available for purchase and that it could be yours for the incredibly reasonable price of just $5.25million (around about £3.5million).