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“They thought that Liverpool Football Club was a business, a company, a fanchise, and it’s more than this when you can see the fans, see the feelings, see the stadium atmosphere. So it’s different, it’s not where you go and you just eat hot dogs and then go to another city with another franchise. Liverpool Football Club was different, the fans are different, and I think that they didn’t realise this.”
These long off weeks do have a way of bringing the past around for a quick visit, and with Rafa Benitez doing his first sizable interview for television since his time at Inter ended and he returned to his home on Merseyside, it was likely only a matter of time before I would in turn take the chance to pass it along here on the Liverpool Offside. Though there are a few awkward moments where he does his best to avoid answering the questions as asked, there are some informative passages in it such as when he touches on the issue of having to sell to buy over his final seasons at the club. He doesn’t get into the details of having made a profit in his last five transfer windows under Hicks and Gillett, an important point often ignored by those who continue to insist he’s the one who left the squad looking so threadbare, but it’s clear he holds some level of resentment towards the at times shabby treatment he received for his “thin squad” full of bargain basement players who weren’t Liverpool quality when he had had little choice but to scrape the bottom of the barrel as the years passed and money became scarce with a growing debt to service.
Also of interest is his talk of the how managers can’t admit to individual mistakes to the media following a match because it would lead to them being constantly undermined. That doesn’t mean they haven’t made mistakes and aren’t trying to address those shortcomings honestly with both themselves and the team, and it seems a fairly obvious reality of holding a top managerial position, but it does bear repeating as some can at times forget this reality when managers stick to an us against the world mentality when the going gets tough. Still, as he says, a good manager has to be constantly critical of himself and looking to improve the way he does things no matter how well or poorly things are going on the pitch and with the club, even if admitting that publicly in tough times would be the quickest way to get one’s walking papers.
The best part, though, comes towards the end when he talks about working under the previous owners, and the way that the trip to Athens and a Champions League final in their first season, followed up by the purchase of Torres, gave him hope for the future that obviously didn’t last. When the club did start to run into problems, or when it simply needed the guiding hand of men who knew the sport and culture, it became obvious just how little they knew about Football, the club’s history, or what it took to compete at the highest level in England and Europe.
To round things off, there is also talk about only wanting to go to a new club and job when he can find a project, something that he can work on and build over a number of years, and of the difficulty in finding a situation where a manager might be afforded that kind of time and leeway. He does think that England is slightly more set up to have such opportunities than the big continental leagues, and he also talks of his family being settled in England, so one expects that whenever he does take another job it will be in the Premier League somewhere. Whether it might be back at Liverpool or not, though, is obviously a subject he tries to side-step, instead choosing to praise Dalglish. That, at least, is obviously a big change from the at times antagonistic stance he took towards Roy Hodgson, a man whose presence he clearly felt was a disservice to the club and its supporters when on some level it seems clear that he himself is still a fan.
Needless to say, it will be interesting to see where he ends up going forward, and one imagines a lot Liverpool fans will always have a soft spot for him just as he does for many of them.
Some Related Liverpool Posts:Video: Safe StandingVideo: The Liverpool GrooveVideo: Carragher and Agger v. ChelseaVideo: U19 England 2, U19 Slovakia 0Rehabilitating Rafa, and Other Friday Notes
Tweet « Blog Pollin’: Steven Gerrard’s Best Position | Home | GrubbOh... Hotdogs are for eating?PDubz18Being an Inter fan who happens to also like Liverpool, I hate Benitez. His philosophy of managing and coaching a club is deeply flawed, and to put on top of that he has a horrible touchline personality. He might have worked very hard for Liverpool, but he is a horrible tactician, and has no idea how to win a big league title. (Let's be real here, the Spanish league requires 4 big wins, and not much else.)
We Inter fans tried to give him a chance, the Rafa experiment looked very good on paper, but in practice he had no idea how to adapt to the Italian game. He showed no emotion and just took notes during each game, showing an attitude that needless to say does not inspire players. There was a bust-up in the dressing room before the first game against Juventus this season, which ruined him for everyone on the team. Marco Materazzi asked of Benitez one thing, and that was to play in the Club World Cup finals. Every fan who has any sort of interest in Inter can see that Marco is a huge dressing room personality, and can make or break a manager's control of the team.
And then finally, there was the Werder Bremen match in the group stages of the Champs League. We could have easily won the group with a win over Werder, but instead Benitez put in the 2nd team and let Tottenham win the group.
I'm sorry to all those Benitez supporters out there, but he should not be trusted with any sort of responsibility with a large club. Since he left, We have won 12/15 matches...which just shows how much negativity Benitez brought to Inter.cheekyfellowDude, no offense, but Italians are difficult to deal with. Materazzi is a whiney toolLonelyportraitPretty sure Benitez beat the Inters' with the Mancinis and Mourinhos on a far less talented squad with Liverpool everytime in the Champions League. Horrible tactician? Hmm.
Horrible touchline personality? Guess you didn't catch Liverpool's 2005 run of the Champions League; he was taking notes when Gerrard scored the belter against Olympiakos, he was still taking notes when we came back against Milan. Everyone celebrates but he never shows it, does it mean he doesn't feel happy? No.
No idea how to win a big league title? He's got two with Valencia when there's supposed to be only a big 2 in la liga. He got Liverpool the highest points tally which would've won the league in most seasons except that one. No idea, seriously?
Can't manage the dressing room? Well, unfortunately players like Gerrard and formerly Torres and Mascherano flourished the most under Benitez himself. Perhaps it was just an old Inter team that got taken out of their comfort zones and childishly decided to spite the manager instead.LucasLeiva21Appreciated your response to PDubz. Personally didn't want to dignify his comment with my own response but appreciated yours.
On a side note, am I the only one here who is terrified if Mancini gets sacked at Man City and is replaced by Rafa?justinI just don't understand how some people can't see what Benitez has achieved in spite of it all.
Yes, he looks like a cold personality on the field but every individual has their own methods of conducting themselves and while it might not work for all, they all have the pros and cons no?
RB has over the years been the easiest target to scapegoat simply because he has made mistakes (of which he admits) but place someone else in his situation and there is no guaratee other managers won't make the same mistakes.
Even if you were to argue on Benitez's flaws, at least balance up the argument by providing others perspectives than the usual "Benitez is shit, tactics are shit, bought shit players, spent loads of shit" theme. I'm just really annoyed how people just lump it all to Benitez instead of reflecting on how other parties might've contributed to the "negativity" of whatever situation might've occured. He's not a one-man show you know, players and owners and fans play a part.LucasLeiva21Exactly. I believe you've covered it all, but I will add to your points that Rafa walked into a squad of older players who had all played 40, 45, some 50 matches in a Treble-winning season. Then, said aforementioned exhausted squad has most of its members participate in the World Cup in the summer. Overworked squad in turn receives a rash of injuries, and new manager Rafa (with no summer reinforcements) was handed a weaker squad.
Ultimately, comparing the successes of "The Special One" with Rafa's failures at Inter amounts to a straw man argument. Rafa held his own tactically with Jose with weaker squads in the EPL, and gosh darn it, that should be recognized, more so than the Inter experience.NoelYou're not the only one--especially if they hold onto a Champions League position this season. Though of course if they do that it's hard to see Mancini getting sacked.RoscoWell that's the big ugly Serb out of Sunday .broi will always look as rafa as one of are grates because he did a lot for us on and of the pitch. he help get rid of the those 2 disasters owners aswell because he had the guts to express his thoughts and feelings and concerns of there commitment and desires to as he relised they were only going to destroy are club and he risk being sacked by ways of letting the fans no. he got us kenny back. he got a grate youth team witch next season may pay off. never mind what he won us or how much he earnt the club revenue with constant champions league and how far we went in them. he got us are highist ever points tally in the prem ever but just so unlucky that the time we did it was won by the highist ever. he made bad choices he made bad signings who has not. but made some excellent to. he loves the club.RoscoHow long has this post been up Noel? The Rafa-bashing brigade are rather slow this evening.
Some un-related football humour in the shape of every time Ashley Cole touches the ball tonight it's followed by cries of . . . SHOOOOOT
Top drawerNoelI don't recall much bashing when I put up a bit about the redeveloped academy a week or two back, so perhaps they've moved on to other targets. Or the timezones just aren't lining up, or something.EdIs that actually happening? Been watching at work with the volume off and wrote something lame about it on Twitter.
Apparently I've been outdone.RoscoAt least one of their January signings has an eye for goal.RoscoFunny thing is it's hard to tell which end it's coming from. One would assume a jibe from opposing support.
But then again, cockney humour n all that.ChrisOThere's also a 25 minute interview on Dan Walker's blog at http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/dan.... No idea if it will play in the US. Or Oz.NoelThanks, looks like a good one. Seems to play in Canada at least, but unfortunately it's not embedable. People with a bit of time should definately go take a look at it, though, if they haven't seen it before.Bekim SejdijaBring him back to Liverpool. Rafa and Kenny will take us where we should be. Rafa YNWATom FooleryNot the worst idea, a dangerous one though. After the events of the last year, it does seem we need the people in charge to actually care about LFC. Kenny and Rafa clearly show this in heaps. Together, though...there may be a conflict of power. I think that what Rafa did (especially since he brought the King in and they worked together well), still rings true in our current managers ears. So, in a way, Rafa is still working for the club. He revamped the academy, and instilled the values that us fans deem as important. In order to avoid a clash of the titans, I think we just need to use Rafa as an example (both the good and bad), and move on from here.Hadi365"So, in a way, Rafa is still working for the club. He revamped the academy, and instilled the values that us fans deem as important. In order to avoid a clash of the titans, I think we just need to use Rafa as an example (both the good and bad), and move on from here. "
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