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forde

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Everything posted by forde

  1. Liverpool have confirmed the dates for their two legged Europa League last 16 tie with SC Braga. The first leg will take place in Portugal at the Estadio Muncipal de Braga on Thursday, March 10, with the return at Anfield on Thursday, March 17. http://www.liverpoolfc.tv/news/latest-news/braga-dates-confirmed
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  3. Spot on
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  8. Best i have seen, but i was not fortunate enough to see Clemence!
  9. forde

    Steve Clarke

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWu8_8uxlUg
  10. forde

    Kenny

    Yep he def said it lol. http://www.talksport.co.uk/radio/football-first/blog/2011-02-06/dalglish-well-show-ronnie-rosenthals-miss-maxi-and-see-how-it-measures
  11. forde

    Kenny

    Dalglish: We'll show Ronnie Rosenthal's miss to Maxi and see how it measures up
  12. Fantastic news, nice rest before wigan next sat
  13. http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2011/feb/04/john-w-henry-interview-liverpool?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+theguardian%2Ffootball%2Frss+%28Football%29 On the day Fernando Torres was unveiled as a Chelsea player, Liverpool's American owner, John Henry, has criticised Chelsea for their extravagant transfer window spending, questioning Chelsea's commitment of Roman Abramovich's club to Uefa's financial fair-play rules. In an interview granted exclusively to the Guardian, Henry suggested Chelsea may be planning to "evade" the rules and called on the governing body to ensure they are strictly followed by all clubs. The fair-play rules, which require clubs to spend only the income they make and not rely on subsidies from owners, come into effect from next season to 2014. "I was surprised Monday morning to receive an offer [from Chelsea for Fernando Torres] in that amount [£50m] at the same time they were announcing such large losses [£71m for 2009-10]," Henry said. "The big question is just how effective the financial fair-play rules are going to be. Perhaps some clubs support the concept in order to limit the spending of other clubs, while implementing activities specifically designed to evade the rules they publicly support. We can only hope that Uefa has the ability and determination to enforce what they have proposed." Chelsea have insisted since signing Torres and David Luiz that they firmly intend to comply with financial fair play and that the £71m outlay was within overall progress towards cutting costs. Henry, setting out his thoughts on Liverpool's direction almost four months since his Fenway Sports Group bought the club by paying off the £200m debts Tom Hicks's and George Gillett's "leveraged" takeover had loaded on to Liverpool, said he is committed to the club living within its income. "We've always spent money we've generated rather than deficit-spending and that will be the case in Liverpool," he said, referring to the group's ownership of the Boston Red Sox baseball team. "It's up to us to generate enough revenue to be successful over the long term. We have not and will not deviate from that." That commitment to sound financial management was followed, not breached, Henry asserted, in the £35m Liverpool paid Newcastle United for Andy Carroll, a fee that astonished English football. Henry said the £35m made financial sense because Liverpool were only paying to Newcastle what they were to receive from Chelsea by selling Torres, whom they allowed to leave because he had become too evidently unhappy at Anfield. "The fee for Torres was dependent on what Newcastle asked for Carroll," Henry said, explaining that Liverpool wanted Carroll, plus £15m, to replace Torres. Together with the £6m sale of Ryan Babel to Hoffenheim, that effectively financed Liverpool's £22.8m signing of Luis Suárez, meaning the club bought two strikers but net, spent almost nothing. "The negotiation for us was simply the difference in prices paid by Chelsea and to Newcastle," Henry said. "Those prices could have been £35m [from Chelsea for Torres] and £20m [to Newcastle for Carroll], 40 and 25 or 50 and 35. It was ultimately up to Newcastle how much this was all going to cost. They [Newcastle] made a hell of a deal. We felt the same way." Saying Kenny Dalglish has "exceeded our expectations" as the club's caretaker manager, Henry explained that Liverpool retain ambitions to qualify for European competition this season, so insisted they had to sign a replacement striker, preferably Carroll, if Torres was to go. "We weren't going to write off Champions League and Europa League for the sake of someone's happiness," Henry said of Torres. "The striker position had to be filled, by someone who made sense for the long term. With about 24 hours remaining, the possibility of Andy, who was No1 on our list of possibilities for the summer, emerged." Henry explained how Carroll, even at £35m, fits into FSG's philosophy, which famously learns from the strategy honed by Billy Beane, the general manager at baseball's Oakland Rangers. As described in the book Moneyball, by Michael Lewis, players are assessed from performance statistics, not solely by scouts rating how good they look. Henry, however, said this did not mean they were not prepared to spend big fees on the right players, as the group has done when turning the Red Sox into a World Series-winning baseball team again. "The Moneyball approach is about poor decision-making in baseball, based on anecdotal evidence [about players' qualities] as opposed to hard, statistical evidence. If the Red Sox are a Moneyball team it has to be noted that we are second in spending over the last decade within Major League Baseball. We have been successful through spending and through securing and developing young players." That, he said, will be Liverpool's two-pronged approach to rebuilding the squad, which will be financed only out of its income; he and his fellow investors in Fenway will not be pouring cash in. "We intend to get younger, deeper and play positive football. Adding two top players [Carroll and Suárez] who have just turned 22 and 24 is a good first step." Henry lavished praise on Dalglish, although he declined to say whether Dalglish is likely to be offered the job permanently. "We didn't know Kenny well prior to him coming aboard as manager," Henry said. "But he has exceeded our expectations on all fronts. It would be inappropriate to comment publicly on what happens beyond the end of this season." FSG is, Henry confirmed, studying the possibility of expanding Anfield rather than building the long-mooted new stadium on Stanley Park, a plan which he criticised. "It's not a coincidence that the last two ownership groups could not get a new stadium built," he argued pointedly. "What they proposed or hoped for just didn't make any economic sense or they would have been built. A lot of time and effort is being put into study and creatively looking at all options." With his first, extraordinary, transfer window done, in which Liverpool managed to part with English football's most astonishing fee ever while spending nothing overall, Henry argued the new American owners' strategy, to refashion Liverpool as a major club, is on course. "Our goal in Liverpool is to create the kind of stability that the Red Sox enjoy," he said. "We are committed to building for the long term."
  14. forde

    Kenny

  15. @paul_tomkins Paul Tomkins RT @iainmacintosh: Just had it confirmed. There is no agreement in place between LiverpoolChelsea regarding Torres. He's free to play Sunday
  16. Yea thats def barcode spin!
  17. Fantastic news! Bet he will be working for talksport in a matter of weeks/months! Keys must go as well!
  18. http://www.liverpoolfc.tv/news/latest-news/babel-set-for-hoffenheim
  19. forde

    Kenny

  20. BBC 5 Live Senior Football Reporter Ian Dennis on Twitter: "Told Stephen Warnock will tie up return to Liverpool from Villa in next few days. Loan with view to permanent deal.
  21. Liverpool's director of football strategy Damien Comolli has revealed that the club discussed a move for Aston Villa's £18 million new signing Darren Bent and are prioritising success in the Europa League this season. Comolli, who was appointed at Anfield in November, admitted that it was likely to be the club's only way of playing European football next season. In the same revealing interview with French channel Canal+ Sport where Comolli confirmed the club's interest in Luis Suarez and Ashley Young, he also said: “The Europa League is our main goal for the season. "We have already won [the UEFA Cup] three times, and it's important for us to win it again. For us it is the shortest route – and perhaps the only route – that takes us back into to Europe next season.” The Frenchman also admitted that the club had considered a move for Bent, who joined Aston Villa this week from Sunderland in controversial fashion, but Comolli felt that the England striker would struggle to play alongside Fernando Torres. He said: “We thought of him, but we looked at his profile and thought that he would not be very complementary to Fernando Torres. He is a player who is, as the English say, a lone wolf. He needs to play alone in attack.” Comolli reiterated the need to sign a number of players this January, after stating that the side were suffering from fatigue following last summer's World Cup in South Africa. He added: “The match against Everton we deserved to win. This was not the case. Why? In my opinion, the team is still suffering from the accumulated fatigue of our players during the World Cup. And when you see the starting line-up, we see that eight players have gone to at least the last 16, and many have gone further. “This team has quality. I am convinced that the squad left by Benitez is good, but it's true that we need reinforcements. “I am surprised in a way, given our results, the number of top level players who want to join us. They say that Liverpool is an attractive club, and most are also telling me that ‘you’ve had a bad season, but you won’t have two’.” The 38-year-old, who formerly worked at Tottenham and Arsenal, also praised Liverpool's American owners for providing the financial backing to improve the squad. He said: "There is no more debt. The owners are willing to invest, there is plenty of money. When I first got here, the first question I asked was ‘do I have to lower the payroll?’ They said, ‘No, the important thing is to win.’ It was a great relief for me.”
  22. Google translate: AMSTERDAM - Ajax is prepared for the departure of Luis Suárez. That said coach Frank de Boer at a press conference this afternoon in preparation for the next league game at FC Utrecht. ,, We have preferred to remain''Luis said De Boer. © ANP © ANP "Because we can not miss him. But we know what we want if he does leave, "the brand new head coach. Suárez is strongly in the interest of Liverpool. The striker has the English club said that he was open to a room with Ajax. Liverpool has more than 15 million euros for the Uruguayan. Ajax does not seem willing to make the striker for much less than EUR 25 million to leave. Pere Guardiola, the agent of Suárez, dined Tuesday with the leaders of Liverpool. The English club has since reached no agreement with Ajax. ,, Fortunately, it remained silent'', said De Boer. The successor to the departed Martin Jol has a list of potential replacements for Suárez. Then figure at least the names of Eidur Gudjohnsen and Bas Dost. The first Icelander is under contract with Stoke City and played football before including in Barcelona and PSV. Dost shall maintain a difficult relationship with SC Heerenveen coach Ron Jans. Ajax is still in the deal with Ryan Babel Suárez making. The striker gets little playing time at Liverpool and can sign with the German Hoffenheim. He turns to go back to Ajax. "It beats the boys on a list,''said De Boer. ,, For it is good footballers. But that list many more names. Let's hope it does not get this far, because Suarez is hard to replace.'' Boyer wants certainty about the situation around quickly Suárez. "The transfer market closed on Feb. 1. It just would not be that Suárez five minutes before that deadline and leave us no longer able to act.''
  23. Leyton Maxwell will come good
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