Lay Off Liverpool and Rafa
After Liverpool’s unconvincing draw at Fratton Park with a less than full-strength squad, people are once again, as it seems now a yearly rite, piling on Rafa Benitez’s rotation policy for Liverpool. For instance, this article by Norman Hubbard on Soccernet.
You can say that the reason it keeps coming up is that it’s still what is holding Liverpool back, but I have to disagree. What held us back in the past was a combination of a lack of attacking talent and a lack of attacking will against poor teams. We have, I think, solved both of those problems at least to some extent, and so the tides at Anfield are turning.
Yes, Liverpool’s three best players, Torres, Gerrard and Mascherano were all left out of the starting XI on Saturday, and that very well may be what cost us the three points. Liverpool on the road against a good team without those three are not going to dominate; there’s no way around that.
There seems to be a belief, however, that this is something Rafa regularly does. This is simply not true. The players he rotates are the Kuyts, the Pennants, the Benayouns, the Arbeloas. Stevie G played 35 Premiership matches last year, and two of the ones he missed were at the end of the year when there was nothing to play for. The only other great players LFC had for all of last year, Jamie Carragher and Pepe Reina, played 34 and 35 league games, respectively.
As you can see, Rafa doesn’t usually leave his match-winners out of the team. He rotates the players that can be replaced easily and will therefore benefit at the end of the year by being much fresher. For instance, by rotating Pennant, Benayoun,
Babel and sometimes Riise on the wing, he saves them for the last part of the season without losing much on the pitch. When you have four players like that who are so closely bunched in talent, it makes sense to rotate them to give them rest.
What happened on Saturday was an aberration brought about by very unfavorable circumstances. The Portsmouth game was sandwiched around the international break and LFC’s most important CL group stage game, away to Porto. Gerrard played 70 minutes on Saturday against Israel and then the full 90 on Wednesday against Russia. Torres played an hour on Saturday and then 90 on Wednesday. Mascherano had just flown back all the way from Australia.
Rafa has already stated, I think justifiably, that he wants to qualify for the round of 16 in the CL as quickly as possible so he can focus on the PL. So he needs at least Gerrard, and probably Torres and Monster Masch to play on Tuesday. And anyway, could you imagine Stevie-G being left out of any big European game?
Would you have Gerrard play four games in a little over a week, on a broken toe? And even though Torres and Mascherano are young, they still need some rest.
Now, if I was in Rafa’s position, I would have started Torres on Saturday, to hopefully provide that spark we were missing, and left him out of the team against Porto, but what Rafa did was perfectly reasonable. Porto are at least as good a side as Portsmouth, and in the scheme of things, the Porto game is more important. By putting our best side on the pitch against them, it’s a signal of intent to win the group (which is not extremely important but is helpful). More critically, it’s a calculated risk that we won’t have to play our best players in the last game or two of the group stage, thereby helping in what’s really important, the Premiership.
And in the end, we got a point at one of the toughest places to play in the PL. I still think of it more as two points lost rather than one gained, but it was a sacrifice worth making for the long term health of the team.
Topics: Liverpool



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The Arbeloas? You do realize he’s played every minute of every match for us this season so far.
September 18th, 2007 @ 14:11What are you saying? You mean to say Liverpool have 3 good players and 8 idiots that’s just around to fill up the gaps in the squad?
“…in the scheme of things, the Porto game is more important.”
Does this mean that the League is not a priority again this season? Perhaps this is the reason why people view LFC as a cup team.
I must admit, I agree with having to rotate the team.
September 18th, 2007 @ 15:13Yeah – but it doesnt explain why you leave your 3 best attacking players (torres, gerrard and babel) and masc for the SAME game.
It makes more sense to perhaps leave 1 (maybe 2) out for the same game but not all at once
September 18th, 2007 @ 19:05interesting point about trying to qualify for the next CL round as quickly as possible, to then focus on premier league. that makes some sense, and would seem to indicate that Liverpool have mapped out a strategy for accomplishing multiple goals this season, which they should hew to as they are doing fine in both PL and CL so far. As long as they progress towards both goals, fans are going to have to accept the rotation policy. If they start dropping games and fade in the PL, then there will be grounds for criticism, but i think its too early in the season to be grinding this axe
September 18th, 2007 @ 19:41Yes, Liverpool’s three best players, Torres, Gerrard and Mascherano :::: this is probably the only part i dont agree with Reina and Carragher are better than mascherano but mascherano is a great player!
Remmember we were linked with the likes of Quaresma, David Villa, Eto and very importantly Torres because of our ability in the champions league if you want to see more players like Torres in our squad in the future it is necessary to get far.
but i still would rather win the league but at the end of the day its a long term rong game not a season and thats it!
September 18th, 2007 @ 20:12Firstly i have to say teams like Utd and Liverpool need large squads and therefore rotation is a key element. What i will say though is that Liverpool are very poor at their rotation policy. If you look at the team Utd sent out against Everton it was as near to the strongest squad we could put out at the time, and u could say possibly that with our injuries our only squad, but if u look at the times when Utd rotate players it is at home games against teams id consider bottom half finishers and away at some of the lesser teams. Sir Alex knows that a team needs to keep momentum and that rotating your squad just because u play 3 games in a week doesn’t always work.
It is very rare for me to see a liverpool team go unchanged for more than 2 or 3 matches at a time when they need consistancy! One reason why Utd won the title last year was our best players played most games and would only be rested if we had the game won when they could be subbed i.e. Rooney and Ronaldo!
Furthermore id love Rafa to shut up about the fixture list, live with it everyone else does. He complains that he had to play at midday on saturday after international break, well so did, Utd, Arsenal and 4 hours later Chelsea. He then said that his team should have played on sunday instead, and so what give him a day less before a CL game! All top teams have this problem and not just Liverpool so Rafa should just keep quiet and get on with his job!
September 19th, 2007 @ 07:13