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Finally, A Match to Match the Matthew’s Final?

Sunday, May 14th, 2006

(Sorry about the headline!)

Ah, the 2006 FA Cup Final, a great football match, certainly, enjoyable, no.

As a Liverpool fan I don’t think I enjoyed a single minute.

From the clumsy error ridden first twenty minutes, to the even clumsier og on 22 and goalkeeping spill on 28, I was a wreck.

Jamie, what were you thinking?

Brief hope in the following few minutes with Crouchinho’s (wrongly) disallowed goal, and Cisse’s excellent volleyed finish from Stevie G’s pass. Relief at being back in the game, yes… enjoyment, no.

The second half continued in the same vein, Liverpool still weren’t convincing (and Pepe made amends for his earlier mistake almost immediately), their passing sloppy, their play unbalanced, Harry Kewell injuring himself in the tunnel! But, almost inspite of that, a mis-worked freekick fell to Stevie to thump home. For the first time in the match a smile was starting to work its way onto my face, surely Liverpool, with their big match experience and superior players could take the game by the scruff of the neck? What d’ya mean NO!

Almost immediately, West Ham picked up their play again, and although I’ll be decrying Konchesky as a lucky son-of-a-female terrier for many a year, I couldn’t argue with the Hammers’ lead. Liverpool took control of the ball, but couldn’t work their way behind a resolute defence. Alonso went off injured on 67, Cisse had been a passenger for a while, but the cramp was getting worse, and oh horror of horrors, Gerrard was visibly struggling too (Mottie an co worrying about the World Cup, my worries were far more pressing). Half-arsed freekick followed sloppy pass and the minutes were ticking away. I had lost all hope when the board came out saying four more minutes, I thought, “**** it ref, put us out of our misery, we’re never going to score!”

Then, just as I’d strung together, what I thought, was one of the most honest appraisals of a Liverpool performance that I’ve ever given, a thunderbolt, from 35 yards, the previously struggling Gerrard once again single handedly rescued a beaten Liverpool. The grin across my face could probably be seen from space, the cries of joy, heard in New Zealand, the stamps of my feet felt in the soul of every football fan.

The saviour rams home his first

But, once again, the realisation, Liverpool have about eight fit players, West Ham had been seemingly largely unaffected by the cramp that had decimated my beloved Reds. And so to extra-time, I clearly hadn’t read the West Ham problems that well, Harewood and Reo-Coker joined Cisse, Riise, Gerrard and Sissoko on the ground as the half hour passed by. Liverpool however seemed to be taking the game at last, Riise’s effort passing agonisingly over the cross-bar, Sami Hyypia drove just wide from the edge of the box after a neat turn (now, that would have been a story), and Jan Kromkamp was proving an effective running option down the right-hand side (though his final delivery was generally shocking).

The extra minutes ticked on, but West Ham weren’t for letting this one go easily, the always threatening Israeli, Benayoun, continued to cause beads of sweat on my brow, and then with seconds remaining Harewood sent an effort goalwards, “bugger!” my brain thought out loud. But, as with Istanbul last year, a ‘keeper was to perform late miracles to take the game to penalties.

At last I was confident, and I quote from an article I wrote for this very site back in October:
“Well, I?ve already ruled out the Premiership (let Chelsea have it, then they?ll only be fifteen behind the mighty Reds), so that leaves the Champions League, FA Cup or the thingy sponsored League Cup, and after last May, I?m confident we can beat anybody on penalties!”

The query over who was going to be fit enough to actually take a kick didn’t seem to matter, the heroes who stepped, all eight of them, and the two goalkeepers knew what was at stake. It was all about hitting a ball hard and accurately in a manner which would have phased none of them in training, but they found themselves exhausted and with thirty-odd thousand fans baying for them to miss the target… none of them did. It was down to the ‘keepers. Reina saved brilliantly from Zamora’s well struck penalty; Hislop saved easily from Hyypia’s tame effort; Konchesky went for power down the middle, but didn’t put any height on it and the ball struck Reina’s trailing legs; Anton Ferdinand stepped up, a chorus of boos ringing in his ears, but once again Reina guesses right, and his save brought the celebrations of another penalty shoot-out victory for Liverpool (their eighth in nine attempts), and more importantly the FA Cup back to Anfield for a seventh time.

Reina's joy... and relief

At last I could relax, smile and enjoy a drink, with the old adage, ?I?d rather be lucky than good? swilling round my stress addled brain!

Worth it all in the end!

As a footnote, I?ve heard a lot of complaints about the goalkeepers moving before the penalties were struck. Certainly, I was too wrapped up in the moment to notice any such impropriety, but I have since sought out any videos of the penalties that I can find online. Unfortunately I can only find the winning save by Reina from Ferdinand?s penalty, and whilst Reina moves along the line, it seems he only leaves it and moves forward as the ball is struck, which is legal. I await a closer examination, and certainly in last years Champions [sic] League Final shoot-out, these rules were clearly flouted by both ?keepers.

Fowler Earns New Deal At Anfield

Friday, May 5th, 2006

Robbie Fowler will have at least another year at his spiritual footballijg home of Anfield after the striker agreed a one year extension to his Liverpool contract.

Having signed for an initial six month stint from Manchester City in January, Fowler had been uncertain as to whether manager Rafael Benitez would decide to keep his services for next season but today’s announcement will be a huge weight off the player’s shoulders.

With four league goals to his name since his return, Fowler can now enjoy the summer break, safe in the knowledge that he won’t be denied the chance to further add to his prolific Anfield scoring record.

Rafael Benitez said about the signing: “This is fantastic news. Robbie has done really well and he deserves this.

“He has scored some vital goals for us and he has worked really hard. I am delighted to have him with us for next season. He is an important member of our squad.”

Seventeen Years of Hurt

Friday, April 21st, 2006

This article was due for publication last weekend, but due to “technical difficulties” it has been held up in the system.
Both the author and site admin are in agreement that this remains important, no matter the time of year.

Today marks the seventeenth anniversary of the worst disaster ever to befall English football. Ninety-six Liverpool fans attending an FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest at Hillsborough, Sheffield, never returned home to their families.

I was just ten when this, an event that has shaped football since, happened. Although it is a day that sticks in my mind - it was a sunny outside and I had spent the morning playing football with my brothers in the back garden - I can offer no real insight into what actually happened in the Leppings Lane end to cause the came to be abandoned a 3:06pm on 15th April 1989.

This is a poem about that day which sends shivers down my spine:

That Lad
Liverpool fans attempting to escape the Leppings Lane crush

April fifteenth, nineteen-eighty-nine.
Semi-final day, the weather was fine.
Set off for Hillsborough in our mini-bus.
Laughing and singing, all twelve of us.
Bevy in the alehouse. Reds having the crack.
We didn’t know then some wouldn’t come back.
Walked down the hill on the way to the ground.
This was dead weird, not many bizzies around.
There’s normally hundreds. Usually loads.
They must all be busy blocking off the roads.
Forest fans in one way, Liverpool another.
Can’t have them meeting. “Don’t want the bother.”
One bizzy on horseback shouting over the din.
“Stop bloody pushing. You’ll all get in.”
“Come on lads, they’ve opened a gate.”
“Hurry up, we don’t wanna be late.”
Straight up the tunnel and into the dark.
Couldn’t even see the players out there on the park.
Something’s not right. This is all going wrong.
My ribs are getting crushed in this massive throng.
I fell on the terrace, looking up at the sky.
God, I was scared. I don’t wanna die!
Punch, kick, scrap, fight.
Got to do anything to get back upright.
I was like a wild animal. What’s happening here!
Survival instinct. Stark bloody fear!
“Get outa my way lad. I can’t get my breath!”
I didn’t realise he was so near to death.
“Open the fence! Please! Let us out!”
That lad went under. It was his last ever shout.
Help me! Pull me up! Grab hold of my hand!
Get me out of this hellhole and into the stand!
I was safe. I survived. I was free from that hell.
How many dead? I just couldn’t tell.
Looked down at the pitch, there was that lad.
A man weeping over him. That man was his Dad.
He was trying to revive him with the kiss of life.
But that lad was gone. How would his Dad tell his wife?
Many years on. Still no justice done.
That man’s still grieving for his dear son.
Was it me? Was it my fault? Was I to blame?
I still ask myself at the Eternal Flame.

I would urge all to think about this, to be thankful that it wasn’t you or a loved one who was crushed to death by a fellow fan, a friend, that you have returned home to your family after the countless football matches you may have attended, and to remember the 96 who didn’t.

Rest in Peace

John Alfred Anderson (62)
Thomas Howard (39)
Colin Mark Ashcroft (19)
Thomas Anthony Howard (14)
James Gary Aspinall (18)
Eric George Hughes (42)
Kester Roger Marcus Ball (16)
Alan Johnston (29)
Gerard Bernard Patrick Baron (67)
Christine Anne Jones (27)
Simon Bell (17)
Gary Philip Jones (18)
Barry Sidney Bennett (26)
Richard Jones (25)
David John Benson (22)
Nicholas Peter Joynes (27)
David William Birtle (22)
Anthony Peter Kelly (29)
Tony Bland (22)
Michael David Kelly (38)
Paul David Brady (21)
Carl David Lewis (18)
Andrew Mark Brookes (26)
David William Mather (19)
Carl Brown (18)
Brian Christopher Mathews (38)
David Steven Brown (25)
Francis Joseph McAllister (27)
Henry Thomas Burke (47)
John McBrien (18)
Peter Andrew Burkett (24)
Marion Hazel McCabe (21)
Paul William Carlile (19)
Joseph Daniel McCarthy (21)
Raymond Thomas Chapman (50)
Peter McDonnell (21)
Gary Christopher Church (19)
Alan McGlone (28)
Joseph Clark (29)
Keith McGrath (17)
Paul Clark (18)
Paul Brian Murray (14)
Gary Collins (22)
Lee Nicol (14)
Stephen Paul Copoc (20)
Stephen Francis O’Neill (17)
Tracey Elizabeth Cox (23)
Jonathon Owens (18)
James Philip Delaney (19)
William Roy Pemberton (23)
Christopher Barry Devonside (18)
Carl William Rimmer (21)
Christopher Edwards (29)
David George Rimmer (38)
Vincent Michael Fitzsimmons (34)
Graham John Roberts (24)
Thomas Steven Fox (21)
Steven Joseph Robinson (17)
Jon-Paul Gilhooley (10)
Henry Charles Rogers (17)
Barry Glover (27)
Colin Andrew Hugh William Sefton (23)
Ian Thomas Glover (20)
Inger Shah (38)
Derrick George Godwin (24)
Paula Ann Smith (26)
Roy Harry Hamilton (34)
Adam Edward Spearritt (14)
Philip Hammond (14)
Philip John Steele (15)
Eric Hankin (33)
David Leonard Thomas (23)
Gary Harrison (27)
Patrik John Thompson (35)
Stephen Francis Harrison (31)
Peter Reuben Thompson (30)
Peter Andrew Harrison (15)
Stuart Paul William Thompson (17)
David Hawley (39)
Peter Francis Tootle (21)
James Robert Hennessy (29)
Christopher James Traynor (26)
Paul Anthony Hewitson (26)
Martin Kevin Traynor (16)
Carl Darren Hewitt (17)
Kevin Tyrrell (15)
Nicholas Michael Hewitt (16)
Colin Wafer (19)
Sarah Louise Hicks (19)
Ian David Whelan (19)
Victoria Jane Hicks (15)
Martin Kenneth Wild (29)
Gordon Rodney Horn (20)
Kevin Daniel Williams (15)
Arthur Horrocks (41)
Graham John Wright (17)

The Hillsborough Memorial at Anfield - at its centre the Eternal Flame

For information, support or to offer help please contact:

The Hillsborough Justice Campaign
PO Box 1089
178 Walton Breck Road
Liverpool
L69 4WR
Tel / fax : 0151 2605262

email: info@hillsboroughjustice.org.uk

http://www.contrast.org/hillsborough/

Hillsborough Family Support Group
69 Anfield Road
Liverpool
L4 0TH

Tel: 0151 2642931

email: hfsg@liverpoolfc.tv

http://www.liverpoolfc.tv/club/hfsg.htm

Liverpool Try To Avoid Playing On Hillsborough Memorial Day

Wednesday, March 15th, 2006

Liverpool's Hillsborough MemorialAfter being eliminated from this season’s Champion’s League, Liverpool are appealing to Blackburn Rovers to change the date of their Premiership clash which is scheduled for 15th April as it clashes with the annual Hillsborough Memorial service.

“We have already been in touch with the Premier League and Blackburn,” said Reds chief executive Rick Parry.

Parry told the Liverpool website: “This is an issue we were aware of right at the start of the season.

“That’s why we contacted the Hillsborough Families’ Support group last June and they said they accepted that, sadly, one day it might be an inevitability that we’d have to play on 15 April.

“Now we are out of Europe, there may be some scope to look once again but it’s not just our fixtures to consider, it’s Blackburn’s as well and this is their home fixture at the end of the day.”

Relatives of the families bereaved on that fateful day in 1989 have led the calls for the match date to be switched as the memorial service is traditionally attended by Liverpool players and officials.

As one of the most terrible days in English football history, the Hillsborough disaster still looms large over Liverpool Football Club and with the memories still so fresh for so many people there can’t be too many reasons for Blackburn Rovers not to agree to the switch. Ultimately that greatest of Liverpool heroes Bill Shankly got one thing wrong, football isn’t more important than life or death or the act of remembering those who paid for their loyalty to their club with their lives.

FA Back Xabi Over Bennett

Tuesday, March 14th, 2006

Xabi Alonso Sent Off Against ArsenalThe FA have ignored referee Steve Bennett’s match report from Sunday’s Arsenal-Liverpool clash and decided not to impose any further punishment on Xabi Alonso for his furious reaction being sent off in the game at Highbury.

Alonso had been given a second yellow card after appearing to slip and crash into Mathieu Flamini by accident, an incident which Bennett had his back turned to but still felt Alonso should have been sent off for.

The player initially refused to leave the field of play such was his incredulation state of incredulity at being dismissed for slipping and Bennett included this in his report of the match for the FA. They have decided not to take any more action against Alonso, seemingly coming out in sympathy of his situation, which referee Bennett still refuses to admit he got wrong.

This begs the question of when do the FA decide to censure referees for making blatantly incorrect decisions and despite having seen TV replays can we expect referees temselves to never back down from their decsions, however erroneous they may be. Either the FA have to take a stand and bring the match officials to task or we need a new code of conduct for referees whereby it doesn’t negatively impact them if they admit post-match that they got a decision wrong. Maybe they’d even get more respect from fans for such a stance. Maybe it’s time to open up that debate about video replays during matches for contentious decisions again.

Robbie Fowler Makes Surprise Return To Liverpool

Friday, January 27th, 2006

In the biggest surprise move of the January 2006 transfer window, Liverpool have swooped to re-sign former goalscoring hero Robbie Fowler on a six month contract from Manchester City.

The Toxteth born striker had graduated through the ranks at Anfield, winning the 1995 and 1996 Young Player of the Year awards in the process, before moving to Leeds United in an ?11 million transfer in 2001 following disagreements with then Liverpool manager Gerard Houllier.

Despite his frequent injury problems and alledged off-field antics, Fowler remains one of England’s best natural goalscorers of the past fifty years and with a resurgence in form this season bringing a hat-trick against Scunthorpe and a late winner for Manchester City against old enemy Manchester United in the Manchester derby, Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez hopes that Fowler’s passion for Liverpool Football Club can rub off on some of his new teammates.

Benitez said “We have signed a player with so much passion for this football club and I think he will act as an example to every player here in how much he loves Liverpool.

“It is a boost for the team, a boost for the supporters and a boost for Robbie himself. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a player quite so happy to be joining a club before.”

The Vagaries of Youth

Sunday, October 16th, 2005

Ever get involved in a what ever happened to?? conversation? Often it springs from a young footballer who shone brightly for a few months before disappearing to the reserves, then to Bury, then to the Beezer Homes League and last heard of playing in the Hyundai A-League for Perth Glory. It may be a player nobody else would have heard of unless they followed a clubs reserves or youth sides or read their match programme or club magazine from cover-to-cover, but they had been hailed as the English Johan Cruyff, or the next ?insert club legend here? by a coach or senior player.

Please welcome the next?
Often people will hark back to the great Manchester United FA Youth Cup winning sides of the early 1990s which featured the likes of Ryan Giggs, David Beckham, Nicky Butt and the Neville brothers, as well as Keith Gillespie, Robbie Savage and Phil Mulryne who went on to make their names elsewhere (how many next George Bests is that?). But what about Ben Thornley, or Chris Casper, or John O?Kane, or Kevin Pilkington? They were all ?bigged? up as future internationals, but at what should now be the peak of their careers, they were last spotted turning out for Halifax (2004), Reading (2002), Hyde United (2003) and Notts County (2005) respectively. Only Pilkington is still featuring in the Football League, all-be-it in the bottom tier, hardly satisfactory for a man who Peter Schmeichel termed ?a future England number one.?

Likewise at my club, Liverpool, who clinched the Youth Cup in 1996, defeating West Ham 4-1 over two legs with teams which read:
First Leg: Naylor; Prior, Brazier, Carragher, Roberts, S. Quinn, Thompson, M. Quinn, Cassidy, Newby (Larmour), Parkinson. Goalscorers: Newby, Larmour.
Second Leg: Naylor; Prior, Brazier, Carragher, Roberts, S. Quinn, Thompson, M. Quinn, Cassidy (Turkington), Owen, Newby (Parkinson). Goalscorers: Owen, S. Quinn.

So, where are they now?
Only David Thompson, Jamie Carragher and Michael Owen made an impact on the Liverpool first-team, with Jon Newby making a handful of substitute appearances before being sold to Bury. Of the rest, only Gareth Roberts and Andy Parkinson are still with Football League clubs, and David Larmour and Jamie Cassidy had brief League careers before moving out of full-time football. The others, on leaving Anfield, found themselves playing in lower-League reserve sides or for local non-League teams. So how did the cream of young English talent find itself so scattered to the four winds?

The ones who made it
Of course we could talk at great lengths about the current England internationals, Carragher and Owen, mentioned above, but it is perhaps David Thompson?s career which proves more interesting.

David Thompson at Liverpool
David Thompson at Liverpool

Marked for greatness from a very young age, Thompson?s first involvement in the first-team came at the tail-end of the 1994/95 season whilst still just 17 years-old, though he didn?t make it on to the pitch. He had to wait another sixteen months for his debut, coming on as a substitute in a 2-0 win over Arsenal in August 1996 and again the following week against Sunderland in a 0-0 draw. Those were his only League appearances that season. By 1997/98 Owen and Carragher had cemented their places in the first-team squad, if not the starting eleven, but Thompson found himself loaned out to Swindon Town, before returning to Liverpool to make another handful of appearances. Further slow progress was made during the 1998/99 season as he started four games and appeared from the bench ten times, but in the 1999/2000 season he made 27 Premiership appearances, scoring three times, and he finally seemed to be making the impact expected of him. However, Thompson himself wasn?t satisfied, he had set a personal target to become an established first-teamer by the age of 22, and he felt he wasn?t quite there. He took the opportunity to leave Liverpool for a team that could give him regular football and signed for Coventry City in August 2000. At Highfield Road Thompson developed further as a player, scoring 15 goals in 66 appearances over two seasons before Graeme Souness snapped him up for Blackburn. Thompson?s early form at Ewood Park earned him an England call-up, but injury forced him to withdraw from the squad. Further injuries have continued to blight his career and he is yet to make an appearance this season. However, when fit again his combatitive style should mean he fits perfectly into Mark Hughes? side.

Finding their level
To a certain extent this is what Thompson did, and what Ritchie Partridge, for instance failed to do. Thompson took the brave and heart-breaking decision to walk away from the club he supported as a boy for the sake of his career, Ritchie Partridge ?a talented young winger who is destined for greatness? believed his own hype and stuck around at Anfield until he was just shy of twenty-fifth birthday, making just three League Cup appearances. Partridge is now attempting to build a career with Sheffield Wednesday having been released by Liverpool during the summer.

Ritchie Partridge at Liverpool
Ritchie Partridge playing for Liverpool

Of course players do not always have the choice as to when they leave a club. Andy Parkinson was not offered a professional contract after the Youth Cup win, and moved across Merseyside to Tranmere Rovers, playing in their 2000 League Cup Final defeat by Leicester, and he is now making waves playing on the left-wing for Grimsby Town. Another to follow a similar route was Gareth Roberts; released in the summer of 1999 he joined Ronnie Whelan?s Panionios before joining Tranmere after three months in Greece. He too appeared in that League Cup Final, and earned a place in the Wales team. Roberts remains Tranmere?s regular left-back and a member of Welsh squad.

Jon Newby broke into Liverpool?s first-team squad during the 1999/2000 season (remember this was a time when Fowler and Owen were carrying injuries galore and the striking back-up consisted of Titi Camara, ?Mad? Erik Meijer and an aging Karl-Heinz Riedle). Newby proved to be a hard-worker, but in his four appearances he seemed to lack the goalscoring touch required, and so when Bury offered ?100,000 for his services in March 2001 all parties involved were satisfied the move would be for the best. Yet to find the goalscoring touch in League Football, Newby returned to Bury in the summer of 2004 after an unhappy season with Huddersfield.

Going a little lower
Most of the 1996 team have since found their way into English non-League football, with varying levels of (relative) success. One exception to this is striker David Larmour, who was released in the summer of ?96 and signed for Doncaster Rovers. In twenty appearances in the Third Division he failed to find the back of the net and with the club in a perilous financial situation he was again released. He returned to his native Northern Ireland to sign for Linfield in September 1997 and he made an immediate impact, scoring over twenty goals in each of his first four seasons and picking up a number of honours, and a call-up to the Northern Ireland squad in August 2000. Injuries have meant that Larmour?s goalscoring totals have slowed in recent seasons, but his strike-rate remains impressive. It may be part-time football, but the Irish League gives him a chance to play regularly in Europe, and in recent years there has been something of a Liverpool reunion at the club with former Anfield reserves Phil Charnock and Paul Dalglish playing at Windsor Park.

David Larmour playing for Linfield
David Larmour at Linfield

Injury nightmares
One of the most tragic things in football is when a promising young player is struck down by injury. Jamie Cassidy had recovered from a broken leg to star in Liverpool?s run to Youth Cup winning campaign, and was also beginning to feature regularly for the reserves. Indeed his form so impressed that he was awarded a squad number during the 1996/97 season. Alas, injury struck again and Cassidy?s development, both physically and skill-wise, was severely stunted. He moved to Cambridge United in 1999, but lasted just one season in Division Two before moving to non-League Northwich Victoria, where once again his impact was minimal. If Cassidy hadn?t lost almost two years of his career at such a crucial time, who knows what might have been?

Reckless youth
Aside from the well publicised 1998 Liverpool Christmas Party shenanigans (involving Jamie Carragher and some whipped cream if your memory fails), Liverpool?s recent youth products have been spared the worst of controversies, such as alleged rapes and drug use, which have blighted other clubs young players. That is not to say it hasn?t happened, and the law of averages states that at least one player listed above has dabbled, to whichever extent, in drugs (be they the illegal type or the legal type, i.e. alcohol). Certainly from George Best and Jimmy Greaves through to Diego Maradona and Chris Armstrong, young players? heads have been turned, and careers tainted, if not ruined, by the cultural accoutrements which are foisted on every young person, in every walk of life. However, the use of drink and drugs would hardly have the same obvious negative effect on a factory worker as they would on a footballer, and your average factory worker isn?t taking home ?500 a week in his late teens!

Not good enough?
The import of foreign players may have had an affect (but that’s another article or ten), but the simple fact is that some of these young players just weren?t good enough; they peaked at eighteen, and failed to develop any further. Why? Well they could have had their heads turned by success at a very young age, they could have been struck down by injuries, or it could just have been that they developed quicker than those around them in their teens, but were eventually surpassed by others. Of the fourteen who played in the two legs of that Final, six have went on to have decent Football League careers. Considering that the Youth team would?ve been made up of a two year ?snap-shot?, and the first-team perhaps fifteen years, six out of fourteen isn?t a bad ?success? rate. The fourteen may have been the cream, but to reach the very top you have to be the cr?me de la cr?me.

Footnote:
As a by the way, West Ham were also served quite well by their 1996 Youth side, with Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard emerging as two of the most talented players of their generation.


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