The Good And Bad Of Rafa`s Five Years

Discussion in 'Association Football Discussion' started by mouse, Jun 29, 2009.

  1. mouse MJ Edwards

    The Good And Bad Of Rafa`s Five Years...

    18/06/09

    Rafa Benitez arrived at Anfield five years ago this week, and in that time plenty has occured. So what's gone well, and what badly? Nick Miller looks at the good and bad of Rafa's half decade...


    THE GOOD


    Signing Fernando Torres, Xabi Alonso and Pepe Reina

    Quite good players, these three. Would any of them be in the Premier League if it wasn't for Benitez? Real Madrid were Alonso's other main suitor in 2004 (still are), Torres might still be at Atletico had Liverpool not come up with the cash, while Reina would most likely have moved back to Barcelona. In these three - along with Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher - Benitez has created a spine around which Liverpool's success is based, and if he does something daft (like selling Alonso) this summer, their continued title challenge will almost certainly falter.

    Keeping - then getting the best from - Steven Gerrard

    When Benitez arrived, two of Liverpool's best players were about to jump ship. While Michael Owen left, Gerrard was persuaded to stay (just a couple of weeks after Benitez's appointment too) despite offers of riches and instant success from Chelsea. It happened again the following summer, and while Gerrard claimed it was an emotional decision, Benitez would no doubt have been a major factor.

    Keeping him was only a half-success though. After a couple of years shoving him out to the right and occasionally the left of midfield, Benitez realised that his true potential could only be brought out in his current 'free' role. While it might be a stretch to say Benitez alone has converted him from midfielder to support striker, he must be praised for allowing Gerrard to roam free.

    Istanbul

    The story goes that, as the entire Liverpool side and staff were cavorting around the Ataturk Stadium pitch, Benitez took Jamie Carragher aside and offered some constructive criticism about his positioning during the game.

    It's this sort of cold attention to detail that was the centre of Liverpool's comeback. Amid the chaos of half-time, and after setting out a formation that included 12 players, Benitez had the nous and awareness to realise that he had to introduce Dietmar Hamman in order to protect his ravaged defence and midfield. Without this Liverpool probably wouldn't have scored those three goals in six minutes, and certainly wouldn't have prevented Milan from adding more.

    Reigniting a rivalry

    In this generation of football, there can be few things more flattering than Alex Ferguson recognising you are a threat. The difference between Ferguson's treatment of Benitez and Arsene Wenger at the tail end of last season was telling. While Wenger received the equivalent of a ruffle of the hair and a 'Bless 'em, they play nice football', Benitez was the subject of a cynical and co-ordinated attack from Ferguson and Sam Allardyce, designed to destabilise their season.

    Much has been made (on these pages and others) of the 'facts rant', and while it's clear that Ferguson got under Benitez's skin, it's difficult to prove either way that it had a significant impact on Liverpool's season. Sure, they went on a poor run shortly after, but if Benitez had truly been psychologically battered and it had sabotaged Liverpool's season, how do you explain the 4-1 win at Old Trafford?

    The improvement in Liverpool's league position since 2004 has been gradual, but last season they were genuine, serious and sustained title contenders for the first time since they last won the thing in 1990. With the right signings, it could be even closer next time.

    Surviving the power struggle

    18 months ago it looked like Benitez's time at Anfield was done. Disagreements with the American owners and Rick Parry over control (it always is) meant that he was being pushed out, with Tom Hicks and George Gillett even lining up Jurgen Klinsmann to replace him.

    How much should be made of the apparent power struggle between Parry and Benitez is unclear, and who actually bought Robbie Keane, but if there really was a row, there's only one winner.

    The extent of his victory is perfectly illustrated by the long negotiations over his new contract last season. He rejected every version of the deal that didn't please him, safe in the knowledge that he could ask for a monkey butler and strippers and the club would have to acquiesce, such was and is his power. He now has control over Liverpool's transfer policy, and is shaping the club into his own image.


    THE BAD


    Blind spots

    Strange how some managers have blind spots in certain positions. With Ferguson for a long time it was goalkeepers, for Arsene Wenger centre-backs, but for Benitez it seems to be full-backs. Josemi, Jan Kronkamp, Antonio Barragan, Philip Degen, Andrea Dossena, Alvaro Arbeloa and Fabio Aurelio have been purchased, with arguably only the latter two being successes. And now it looks like he is about to pay a huge fee for the good, but not great, Glen Johnson.

    The '7/10' obsession

    The fundamental element of Benitez's managerial philosophy is control. He's obsessed with it. One imagines the sort of games that we punters enjoy (the break-neck seven-goalers, the games we remember) are the ones that Benitez hates, because there's no control. They're unpredictable. Anything could happen.

    This might explain his early fascination with steady, predictable players that would play quite well and run around a lot every week, but rarely created anything spectacular. It's why he persisted with Dirk Kuyt and eventually found a place for him, as well as Momo Sissoko, Andrei Voronin, Alvaro Arbeloa, Bolo Zenden, Albert Riera, even Craig Bellamy and to an extent Yossi Benayoun.

    With the signing of Torres one suspected he finally realised that a mixture of flair and graft is the way to go, which is why their reluctance to chase a player like David Silva is so frustrating.

    Rotation

    In his early days, you suspected that Benitez made changes to his side almost out of spite, being deliberately obtuse. He famously didn't keep the same side for 99 consecutive games (even that he made no changes for that 100th match suggests stubbornness), and such changes were as much about him not knowing his best side as keeping things fresh. Now, most people could probably name his first-choice eleven, but back then you might as well have picked names from a hat. It's difficult to work out whether the recent success is simply down to keeping a settled side, or the settled side is simply because he has better players now, and can thus more readily trust them.

    Questionable transfer record

    For every Torres there's a Voronin, for every a Skrtel a Kronkamp, for every Alonso a Nunez. In five years Benitez has signed 45 players, a massive number that smacks of at best trial and error, at worst guessing. Obviously he was unsure in his early days about which players would work in England, but even last summer there were some stinkers.

    Philip Degen has yet to make a league appearance (although much of that was down to injury), Andrea Dossena cost £7million, and then there was Robbie Keane. For a manager who is operating on a budget (as he never fails to remind us) much lower than his immediate rivals, he must minimise these sort of judgement errors.

    Over-analysis

    After Liverpool beat Real Madrid last summer, one of the Spanish papers wrote that you should never play chess with a grandmaster. It's true, and it might be one of the reasons that Liverpool had such a good record in 'big' games last season, while they dropped points against the lesser lights of the Premier League.

    Clever thinking and effective tactics are required against Manchester United and Chelsea, but perhaps less so against Stoke and Hull. One suspects against those from the nether regions of the Premier League, Alex Ferguson offers little by way of tactical thinking - he simply says 'You're better than them, go and win it'. Benitez rarely lets his players loose, or goes for all-out attack in the same way that Jose Mourinho used to at Chelsea. If they were losing 1-0 after an hour, Mourinho would chuck on two more strikers and play four up front. Benitez tends to stick with the plan.

    He has a tendency to over-think, to try and work out how to beat every team, when he could merely trust that his troops are better than the opposition, which they frequently are. Sometimes football really is that simple, and it might be a lesson that Benitez would do well to learn.


    Nick Miller

    http://www.football365.com/story/0,17033,8750_5387540,00.html
     
  2. mouse MJ Edwards

    Probably the most balanced piece I have read on him.

    Wingers have been a problem and Rafa's record with them hasn't been that good: Nunez, Gonzalez, Pennant, Leto and Babel.
    Instead, axial players who have the ability to play between the lines have been doing a better job for us in the wide positions: Garcia, Yossi, Kuyt and even Gerrard. We have usually ended up with central players in wide positions. Riera has been the only decent wide acquisition.

    fullbacks have also been an issue and play such an important role in our system not just in defence but in attack also. Aurelio is solid on the left but seemingly never fit. Now we've got johnson id like to think that this problem is put to rest with Insua coming through and looking promising
     
  3. Dave DR Armstrong

    Thought this was about Nadal.
    Giant don't care.
     
  4. MightyPies DA Alessi

  5. Eggman DA Eggman

    Stupid rotations ****ed us over so many times.
     
  6. Julian BJ Taylor

    Good = clay court play.
     
  7. Guest MR Hayes

    Then don't post in here preety simple.
     
  8. Bibu07 BI Immanuel

    True.:ninja:
     
  9. Dave DR Armstrong

    Bad = Knee.
     
  10. Hybrid A Kolar

    Nah very good read. Balanced piece and he didn't leave a stone unturned.
     
  11. Bibu07 BI Immanuel

    Not really.
     
  12. Riddy JH Ridd

    good article and very true :)
     
  13. SM MD Dorn

    Pretty much, Rafa is a ****wit in the trasnfer market.

    He hasn't signed a centre back in years, all those you mentioned and WB's or LB/RB (Johnson too)

    Agger is probably his best CB signing, and he doesn't even play him FFS.

    IMO he loads up with too many strikers, sacrificing defense
     
  14. Eggman DA Eggman

    100% agree with you needs more young talent in the midfield as well
     
  15. BoyBlunder BOY Blunder

    Lol at that. It took Benitez too long to make that switch. I remember people saying (including Gerrard) for so long that he needed to be moved inside.
    His hesitancy is probably due to the lack of wingers available to him. Comes down to his transfer ignorance again I guess :p

    Benitez is in general far too cautious a manager. While it is very effective in Europe, in the Premier league you need to open up and attack a bit more. I think we've seen a bit more of that this season but its been too long in the coming.



    His greatest moment by far.

    All in all its a good article though.
     

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