GUARDIAN – Liverpool’s Jamie Carragher relishing final curtain call in Anfield farewell

Retiring defender faces an emotional day against QPR but he is looking forward to experiencing life outside football

Quitting while ahead is en vogue but Jamie Carragher has never been one for fashion. The decision to join the Premier League’s passing-out parade after 16 years, 11 honours and, as of Sunday , 737 games with Liverpool was taken privately last summer and he has refused to dwell on the ramifications since. That is, until looking at his phone in the away changing room at Craven Cottage last Sunday.

“It sounds stupid but I haven’t thought about this being the end at all; it’s been more like, ‘We’ve got QPR at the weekend’ or whoever,” the 35-year-old explains. “But before the Fulham game someone sent me a text that said, ‘Don’t get sent off’ and I thought, ‘Imagine missing your last game at Anfield through suspension’. So before we went out I had a word with Mark Halsey. I said to him that if I’m misbehaving or whatever, just get the bench to bring me off. He said, ‘Don’t handball it on the line or commit a professional foul and you’ll be all right’. I hadn’t thought about it before then but I was thinking about it throughout the Fulham game. I just kept thinking, ‘Don’t do anything stupid’.”

Stupidity could not have elevated Carragher from emerging midfielder at Liverpool to put-upon full-back to one of the finest central defenders in Europe at his peak. Intelligence and an instinctive awareness of danger did. The defender knew this would be his last campaign from the outset, having lost his regular first-team place the previous season under the former manager Kenny Dalglish.

Nothing in the first half of Brendan Rodgers’ debut campaign challenged that decision but, courtesy of the single-mindedness that made the best, and more, of his talent, when Carragher bids farewell to Anfield on Sunday he will leave them wanting more.

A pundit’s role on Sky awaits instead of the move into coaching or management frequently predicted. Steven Gerrard is adamant the Liverpool vice-captain’s experience will not be lost to the game for good and that he will eventually return. More surprising, perhaps, is the relish with which Carragher is approaching his curtain call.

“I’m looking forward to the end now,” he admits. “I have for a while. My missus and family have known for a while, so we are looking forward to doing different things. In 12 months’ time I might think, ‘I haven’t missed anything’. I want to go and do something else, so that I either will or won’t miss it. And if I do miss it, it will give me that buzz again to try and get back in. But perhaps it won’t and I’ll think, ‘This is great, I love doing what I’m doing, great life, bit more time, going out doing different things’. I’m looking forward to seeing how it pans out.”

Where to channel that undiluted passion, however, remains an unknown. “I’ve been thinking about that and I don’t know what to do,” adds Carragher. “All of that running around and shouting every day gets it out of your system. I’ll have to see if there are any five-a-side teams, although I actually fancy having a go at squash.” He has put plenty back into Bootle, providing vital financial support for the Brunswick Youth Club for example and receiving the freedom of the borough of Sefton for his charity work, to merit an invitation.

If there is regret at leaving a Liverpool team that have been cut adrift from the leading pack in the Premier League then Carragher disguises it well. He faced a crowded press conference at Melwood on Wednesday when the number of questions about not winning the title seemed disproportionate to a career yielding Champions League, Uefa Cup, FA Cup and League Cup success, but seventh in the table and second-best on Merseyside is not how he wanted to go. Carragher sees only reasons for optimism at Anfield.

“The manager,” he states, “he’s really good and I think he will take it up again next season. And I’d imagine financial fair play will help us, although I don’t know much about it. Even the [Sir Alex] Ferguson situation will help in some respects, not just Liverpool but maybe it will give everyone an opportunity.

“Then there’s the form we have showed since Christmas, January time. In the first half of the season we had a lot of kids in the team and it’s not easy, not for the manager either. He lost a lot of experience in the summer in Dirk Kuyt, Craig Bellamy and Maxi [Rodríguez], and he was replacing them with Raheem Sterling and Suso at the start. With the signing of Sturridge and [Philippe] Coutinho, the second half of the season has given us a positive to take into the next one. But I think we should be looking for the top four – we’ve got to get into the top four. We can’t be having it where we’ve not even been close enough to put a challenge in throughout the season.”

One name is missing from Carragher’s list of the reasons for Liverpool’s post-January improvement: his own. Even Rodgers conceded the team lacked “men” and “a voice” after defeat at Manchester United on 13 January and the subsequent return of Carragher rectified that weakness at a stroke.

The clamour for the veteran to reconsider his retirement plans, which involved Liverpool’s owners at one point, soon gathered pace and the flaw in Carragher’s optimism is that a huge void will be created at Anfield when his desire, drive and formidable will-to-win disappear. He does not recognise the characteristics to fill that void in those coming through.

“It’s becoming less and less, I must say,” Carragher laments. “It’s just different generations. I’m sure my dad will say he had more than me. It’s just society in general now. You don’t see it as much. You could talk of all other reasons why it is, but you don’t see as many kids with it as you should. It’s a worry for football, not just Liverpool.

“It’s not just an excuse for Liverpool kids. If anyone is going to have that character it’s going to be Liverpool kids, so maybe they should all be worried. In general you hear stories of kids coming through, from other clubs and different things, and you do sometimes wonder if they have got that bit of something about them.”

It is for that reason Carragher has only admiration for Ferguson, the man who knocked Liverpool off their perch (though Carragher will tell you it was Graeme Souness) and with whom he shares retirement day. He admits: “I like him because I find it remarkable to see someone who is a bit like yourself in terms of passion but at that age. It’s brilliant to have that passion to win at 71. He’s been a great manager and it would be stupid to say anything else.”

Carragher plans to keep a respectful distance from Liverpool once the game with Queens Park Rangers, the guard of honour and a planned address to the Anfield crowd are over. “You have to be careful,” he says, though he cannot go too far with a son at the club’s academy and a job in the television studio next season.

“When you have a good point to make or a valid one I have always respected that,” he adds. “Players like people saying good things about them and, of course, no one is ever wrong when they do that, but they always are when they say bad stuff. That winds me up a bit. But I’m ready for it. I’ve told the lads if they’re not performing they will be getting it.”

Liverpool’s No23 insists he would decline the opportunity to increase his goal haul of five even if the team are winning 3-0 and awarded a last-minute penalty against QPR. “I wouldn’t take one. Imagine missing that on your last game. You’d go for a pint after and they’d be saying, ‘You missed a penalty in your last game!’”

After Istanbul, Turin, Dortmund and Cardiff, to select just a few highlights, how would the veteran of 150 European appearances and countless rescue acts for Liverpool like to be remembered? “Nothing special,” says Carragher. “Just someone who was always there, home and away, and gave his all.”


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A news article on 2013-05-17 21:30:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Brendan Rodgers says consistency is key to Liverpool top-four ambition

• Manager leads side to one place higher than under Dalglish
• ‘This year has provided a great learning curve for me’

Brendan Rodgers has described his debut season as Liverpool manager as a necessary learning curve that can produce a top-four challenge next term providing the team’s consistency and mentality improves.

The Liverpool manager has delivered a seventh-placed finish in the Premier League, one place higher than Kenny Dalglish achieved last year albeit without winning the League Cup and having spent almost £50m on new players. The first half of the campaign suffered from the calamitous end to last summer’s transfer window, when Liverpool’s new recruitment team were on gardening leaving following their departures from Manchester City, and Rodgers insists lessons have been learned throughout his debut season.

“This year has provided a great learning curve for me and I look back and see that it was learning that I needed,” he said. “I knew the expectancy of the club but, going into next season, I am a much better prepared manager for that. We want to make significant improvements next year in the points total because the reality is we are 30 points behind the leaders and 11 points behind the top four.

“But I’ve seen enough and if we improve our mentality in the summer – by signing players who have that consistent winning mentality – we can then improve again, like we have done in the second half of the season. That’s the job of the recruitment team and the club to identify those types of players. They might not always be the best players but what we need in the second year of this project is to find a great level of consistency.”

Liverpool are five points behind Everton in sixth ahead of their final game of the season at home to Queens Park Rangers on Sunday, when Jamie Carragher will make his final appearance for the club, but Rodgers insists “small steps” forward have been taken.

The Liverpool manager added: “There is a process of getting into the top four and becoming champions and that is consistency. This club didn’t win two league games in a row for over a year. That came earlier on in the season and when you step back and look at that, it is nowhere near good enough if you are going to succeed.

“You build a mentality in your group and you get the types of players who can be on it every single game. I’ve loved every minute of being here and the small steps of where we want to go. But now I want to make bigger steps.”


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A news article on 2013-05-14 13:59:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Daniel Sturridge thanks God and Drogba for scoring form at Liverpool

• Striker has 11 goals in 15 games for Merseyside club
• ‘God showed me how I need to be strong mentally’

Daniel Sturridge finally seems to have found contentment at Anfield. The striker took his Liverpool tally to 11 goals in 15 matches on Sunday with a clinical hat-trick in the Merseysiders’ 3-1 win at Fulham.

Sturridge’s talent has never been in doubt, but questions have persisted throughout his career about his temperament and discipline. The 23-year-old’s attitude came into question during his days in Manchester City youth ranks while his repeated desire to play through the middle is said to have irked a number of his managers at Chelsea.

However, Brendan Rodgers, the Liverpool manager, has been supportive of Sturridge since his January move from Chelsea and the striker himself seems more happy.

“I’m relaxed, I’m enjoying my football and I’m enjoying being out on the field,” he said. “When the manager believes in you and gives you an opportunity, you have to go out there and work as hard as you can. If you can do that then, hopefully, your ability will shine through.

“I’ve kept praying every game – which I always do. God showed me how I need to be strong mentally. Being strong mentally is the one thing that can separate you from anyone else. When I worked with Didier Drogba at Chelsea, the one strength he had above everybody was his mental strength. I learned a lot from working with him about what it takes to be a top player. Hopefully I’ll become one.”

Sturridge was barracked from the terraces at Craven Cottage on Sunday due to his former employment with Fulham’s neighbours Chelsea. But rather than be annoyed by the jeers, he revealed afterwards that he enjoys being booed.

“I love that. I hope the fans do it every game,” he said. “It doesn’t really matter what they say to me. I love the banter, it’s what I live for. So hopefully they’ll keep giving me stick.”

Along with Sturridge, Philippe Coutinho has also impressed since joining Liverpool in January. The Brazilian, who arrived from Internazionale, has shone in a role just behind the main attacker and appears to have developed an excellent relationship with Sturridge in particular.

“He’s a quality player,” said the striker. “He has created four or five goals for me already. It’s fantastic to be playing with someone of his calibre.

“We have both come from big clubs where we haven’t had an opportunity to play week in week out. We are both hungry to show what we are capable of doing. I can’t praise him highly enough for what he’s shown.”


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A news article on 2013-05-13 15:22:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Fulham 1-3 Liverpool | Premier League match report

For a match involving two sides who were meant to have one foot on the beach this was a surprisingly lively affair. There were fireworks in the stands and excitement on the pitch as both Fulham and Liverpool looked to end their respective campaigns with a bang, no one more so than Daniel Sturridge who left here having scored his first hat-trick for Liverpool.

It all ultimately mattered for very little with the hosts coming into this game safe from relegation following Aston Villa’s defeat to Chelsea on Saturday and the visitors’ slim hopes of finishing above Everton ended after they defeated West Ham at Goodison Park, but they should both be praised for serving up such a hectic and committed display.

Back in west London for the first time since his arrival from Chelsea, Sturridge was the man who ultimately grabbed the headlines, much to the ire of the Fulham fans he goaded with a cupped-ear salute. “You’re just a shit Danny Welbeck” they roared back in disgust.

The shoulder operation Steven Gerrard has just undergone meant Liverpool were definitely going to be altered for this game, yet the arrival of the team-sheet still caused surprise. Not only had Brendan Rodgers made three changes to the side which drew with Everton last week, with one of them, Sebastian Coates, making just his second league start of the season, but he had also altered their formation. Coates joined Jamie Carragher and Andre Wisdom in a three-man defence with Glen Johnson and Stewart Downing deployed as wing-backs.

Fulham’s side also contained three changes, which was not a surprise given they came into this match on the back of four defeats. For both sides, however, the concern at kick-off was visibility after a plume of red smoke covered a large part of Liverpool’s half following the release of fireworks in the visitors’ end. Once the smoke had cleared, a lively encounter broke out and Sturridge could have given Liverpool the lead had he not miss-hit his close-range strike following Jordan Henderson’s low cross.

The visitors were dominating possession and territory and Fulham’s hopes of making a mark in the contest were not helped by an injury to Kieran Richardson after 15 minutes that led to him being replaced by Urby Emanuelson.

It was, however, Fulham who struck first after Berbatov found space inside the area on 33 minutes to head in Sasha Riether’s cross. Liverpool could only blame themselves for going behind given the Bulgarian was unmarked when he scored his 14th league goal of the season.

They were back on level terms just three minutes later, however, as Sturridge collected Wisdom’s long clearance and, having jinxed past Aaron Hughes, smashed a shot past Mark Schwarzer. Cue more red smoke.

Rodgers brought José Enrique on for Wisdom at the start of the second half and revered to his more accustomed 4-2-3-1 formation.

The men in red appeared comfortable in the shape yet almost found themselves going behind again on 54 minutes when the lively Alexander Kacaniklic, a former Liverpool player, surged towards goal and hit a drive that zipped just wide of the far post.

Six minutes later the Fulham players, along with their fans, were screaming for a penalty after Bryan Ruiz’s shot hit Lucas’s hand at close-range. The referee, Mark Halsey, turned down the appeals and the hosts mood darkened soon after when Sturridge scored his second goal, collecting Philippe Coutinho’s deflected shot to strike at the far post.

The forward then had a chance to seal his hat-trick after robbing Brede Hangeland of possession but his resulting shot was blocked by Schwarzer. Sturridge saw another shot saved by Schwarzer soon after following an excellent pass from Lucas that put three Liverpool players in on goal with only Hangeland to beat.

At the other end, Hughes forced Pepe Reina into a stunning save but Liverpool came again and hit the post through a shot by the substitute Fabio Borini before Sturridge got his third on 85 minutes, lifting the ball over Schwarzer following an exquisite through pass by Coutinho.


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A news article on 2013-05-12 16:19:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Merseyside derby used to have a say in where title went – but not now | Andy Hunter

Liverpool v Everton is the most-played derby in England, but these days it is very much a battle for best of the rest

The question being asked is whether the balance of power will have shifted on Merseyside should Everton finish above Liverpool for the second successive season. The brutal answer is that power cannot shift when it has already slipped along the M62. David Moyes is among those who fears two historic clubs are in danger of being left behind.

An Everton win at Anfield on Sunday would be their first since 1999 and guarantee a finish above their wealthier, local rivals. The last time that happened two seasons in a row with Everton and Liverpool in the same division was in 1936 and 1937, and a repeat in the financially doped Premier League era would represent a victory of sorts for Moyes. There will be no open-top bus parade.

Steven Gerrard recoiled when the introductory question was put to him this week. His answer might be interpreted by sensitive souls as a sour dig at Everton, and naturally the Liverpool captain was defending Liverpool’s corner, but his honest, factually correct assessment was more about Merseyside’s current frustration as outsiders looking in than point scoring in derby week. On the task of overhauling Everton, Gerrard said: “That’s in everyone’s head at the moment, short-term. But you know, sixth or seventh is not a real big deal is it?”

Back came the question about power shifting on Merseyside. Gerrard retorted: “Yes, but they [Everton] haven’t won anything have they? It’s nothing to finish sixth or seventh in this league. Listen, if Everton finish above us and their supporters are really happy and their players and everyone is really happy, then that’s up to them. But if we finish above Everton there will be no celebrating or anything around here because it’s nothing really. It’s no big deal. We want to win the derby, of course we do. We want to finish above Everton, of course we do. But in the big picture is it really, really important? I don’t know … maybe not.”

Gerrard did insist that the most played derby in English league football, Sunday’s is the 188th league meeting between the teams and the 220th in total, remains “a special game”. He added: “We might be fighting for sixth and seventh but it’s still a massive game.” But the days when a spring Merseyside derby influenced the destiny of the title, days that Gerrard grew up with, are gone. One obvious, influential reason is the financial might of the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea. But with Tottenham and Arsenal also pushing Merseyside behind the leading lights in London, the explanation runs deeper.

Moyes admits: “Merseyside is third behind Manchester and London at the moment. The strength the Manchester clubs have got has overpowered everybody. With Chelsea joining in and Tottenham too, and then Arsenal have their quality, it is a tough ask to compete against that. But Liverpool have been very close to it. It wasn’t too long ago, in 2009 under Rafa [Benítez], that they were second, so football can change very quickly. Liverpool have been much, much closer than we were to the Manchester teams but we’ve maybe had a longer journey to come.

“We’ve been climbing from a lot further away and we have closed that gap. We’re not close enough, but we are getting closer.”

Liverpool and Everton, with their hemmed-in stadia, do not have Manchester United’s good fortune with the space required to develop Old Trafford. Equally, their leaders in the boardroom, and the civic leadership in Liverpool, have lacked the foresight and means that has turned United into such a dominant force, that attracted the Commonwealth Games to the city and built the stadium that was then passed on to Manchester City and, in turn, attracted Sheikh Mansour.

“I agree, it’s getting harder to compete financially,” said the Everton manager. “The Manchester clubs have got stadiums that hold 70-odd thousand and 50-odd, and they’ve got the corporate facilities that play a big part these days. City were helped in their stadium by the council and with the new rules over financial fair play, all clubs will be relying very heavily on their marketing team – how many executive boxes you can sell, how many season tickets and dinners you can sell.

“At Everton we have very few rooms to cater, very few executive boxes, so we are going to find it difficult to keep up because the marketing side is so important. Keeping up and then catching up is going to be even harder. You really have to have a good team to bring the sponsorship to enable you to improve your wage budget.”

European football and the size of Everton’s transfer budget will influence Moyes’s decision whether to stay or leave Goodison Park when his contract expires at the end of the season. In the arduous search for new investment for the club, and following two failed stadium projects on the watch of the chairman, Bill Kenwright, the Scot has raised the subject of renaming the club’s 121-year-old home.

Moyes said: “A lot of people did not want to go to Kirkby for different reasons but you do need to generate revenue streams. We could even look at naming rights for the stadium. Obviously the club could do that because it owns Goodison. Things like this are going to be relevant to both clubs if we’re going to hang in there with the top teams.

“The chairman has given me everything he can to try and move us up the league and we’ve done that. The bit we’ve not yet been able to do is find the new stadium. All the money we’ve had has gone to me to improve the team and catch the others up. As I said, we’ve got a little bit closer, if not close enough.”


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A news article on 2013-05-03 21:30:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – New Hillsborough inquest will be held in north-west, coroner rules

Lord Justice Goldring says hearing should be held near where bereaved families live, but not too close to Liverpool

The new inquest into how 96 people died at Hillsborough football ground in 1989 will be held in the north-west, the coroner has ruled. Michael Mansfield QC, representing 71 bereaved families, had argued it should be in London because of concern about “actual or perceived bias” in the north.

Pete Weatherby QC, representing 20 families, and lawyers for a further three, were “vehemently against” London, arguing it would make attending the inquest extremely difficult.

The coroner, Lord Justice Goldring, has ruled the inquests should be close to where the bereaved families live, enabling them to attend conveniently and return home at night. He decided that in the north-west, not too close to Liverpool, there was no more risk of a jury being prejudiced than in London.

The original 1991 inquest was quashed in December after a long campaign by the families. The new inquest is to start in early 2014.


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A news article on 2013-05-02 18:49:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Hillsborough campaigner Anne Williams’s funeral draws crowds

Hundreds line streets of Formby to pay tribute to mother whose fight to get son’s inquest verdict overturned led to fresh hearings

Crowds lined the streets of a Merseyside town to bid farewell to Hillsborough campaigner Anne Williams on Monday.

Williams, one of the most persistent voices throughout the campaign for justice following the 1989 football stadium disaster, was remembered at a service in Formby.

She died aged 62 on 18 April from cancer.

Scores of people, many wearing Liverpool scarves, gathered in bright sunshine outside Our Lady of Compassion church.

A hush fell over the street as the hearse bearing her coffin pulled up. It contained a wreath of white flowers embellished with red roses that spelled out “Mum”.

Bystanders watched as the coffin was carried into the church, followed by hundreds of mourners.

Williams spent almost half her life campaigning after her 15-year-old son Kevin died in the Hillsborough tragedy.

It was her fight to get his inquest verdict of accidental death overturned that is credited with leading to fresh hearings for all 96 supporters who died.


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A news article on 2013-04-29 14:00:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Newcastle manager Alan Pardew says his future is out of his hands

• Liverpool inflict heaviest home defeat on Magpies in 87 years
• Mauling leaves Geordie side facing perilous run-in to season

Almost empty and eerily silent, the stadium was shutting down. Doors were being locked and lights switched off when the security man said “good night” as he ushered a late straggler out of the Milburn Stand’s main reception.

“Or perhaps we’d better just make that ‘night’,” he added. “Nothing good about it.” Liverpool fans and neutrals thrilled by Philippe Coutinho’s midfield brilliance might have disagreed but for anyone connected with Newcastle United, the club’s heaviest home defeat in 87 years hurt.

Even worse, it leaves Alan Pardew’s largely Francophone side dizzily contemplating the vertiginous drop into the Championship. Five points clear of the relegation zone, they are probably only one win from safety but have conceded nine goals against Sunderland and Liverpool in their past two games at St James’ Park.

Amid much knee-jerk, social media fuelled, outrage it is important to introduce a bit of context. After all, only last month Guus Hiddink – who knows a thing or two about English football – praised Pardew’s tactics to the skies and predicted that Newcastle “are so strong they must be in the Premier League’s top five next season” after his Anzhi Makhachkala ensemble were knocked out of the Europa League by the Tynesiders.

Little did Hiddink know that Pardew’s players were about to hit a wall. When Yohan Cabaye fell to the floor at Saturday’s final whistle it seemed emblematic of Newcastle’s woes. The influential France midfielder is a brainy footballer capable of brilliance but he barely got a touch against Liverpool and looks burnt out.

Exhausted by both the Europa League and a raft of injuries, too many of Pardew’s players are running on empty. Others, meanwhile, have switched off and mentally decamped to warm beaches. Alarmingly, experienced hands such as Cheick Tioté and Jonas Gutiérrez are neglecting too many basics and suffering for it. Badly.

Tioté should be made to study DVDs of the way Lucas and Steven Gerrard controlled central midfield. These problems are exacerbated by the presence of five January imports from France’s Ligue 1 who, while technically accomplished, look to have suddenly been hit by extreme culture shock.

It does not help that several still require a translator to communicate with Pardew. Yet despite English no longer being the dominant training-ground language, a manager who would be well advised to learn French fast believes the high-intensity nature of the Premier League represents the principal stumbling block to survival.

“I don’t think the language barrier is so much of a problem as the lack of experience in certain scenarios,” said Pardew, whose team visit West Ham and QPR before their final game at home to Arsenal. “A lot of those players will never have been beaten 3-0 at home, never mind 6-0. I think that showed; we became ragged, some of our play was naive and disorganised.”

So much so that some Newcastle fans are demanding the shredding of his eight-year contract. “Well that’s out of my hands,” said Newcastle’s commendably measured manager. “Until I’m told otherwise, my job is to lift the team and make it as good as I can.”

Inevitably he was asked if he expects to stave off the sack. “Yes,” said the 2012 LMA manager of the year, who remains a talented, extremely hard working coach. “I hope so. I’ve got to make sure I put things right. We’ve got to show we’ve got the fight for this because I think a lot of people will look at us and think we’ve got a great chance of being relegated. We’ve got to prove them wrong but I genuinely believe we’ve got enough quality to get the points we need.”

He must cope without Mathieu Debuchy at West Ham after the France right-back – who had a shocking game – was sent off for a second bookable offence; an awful challenge on Coutinho. From the ensuing free-kick Jordan Henderson – extremely impressive throughout and a great advert for Brendan Rodgers’s coaching – scored Liverpool’s sixth.

Immediately Steven Taylor – who had the misfortune to experience one of his worst days in a Newcastle shirt under the watching gaze of the England coach, Roy Hodgson – was summoned for a touchline tête à tête with Pardew.

Earlier Taylor – turned regularly by the excellent Daniel Sturridge, although, in mitigation, he was being asked to put out numerous fires started by his dreadful co-defenders – watched Daniel Agger head in the first goal after playing him onside. From then on it was a case of keeping count as Henderson made it two, then Sturridge scored a couple before the substitute Fabio Borini’s first touch precipitated No5.

“I’ve got to channel my anger in the right way,” said Pardew. “But if I don’t get a response after this I’ll be deeply disappointed.”

Man of the match Philippe Coutinho (Liverpool)


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A news article on 2013-04-28 22:00:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Newcastle fans have every right to boo, says anxious Alan Pardew

• Newcastle manager ‘deeply disappointed’ by 6-0 hammering
• Liverpool not a one-man team, insists Brendan Rodgers

Brendan Rodgers dressed all in black as Luis Suárez began his 10-game suspension for biting but it was Alan Pardew who was left in sombre mood after Newcastle United were thrashed 6-0. The club had not suffered such a heavy home defeat since 1925.

Newcastle – who lost 3-0 to Sunderland in their previous game – remain deep in relegation danger in 16th place with some fans demanding Pardew’s dismissal. “Of course I’m worried,” said the Newcastle manager, whose players face trips to West Ham and QPR before their final home game against Arsenal. “I’m deeply disappointed that Liverpool looked so much better than us but I believe we’ve got enough in the dressing room to keep us up. Liverpool were faster and sharper than us. We never recovered from our start and, after going 3-0 down, we turned ragged, which isn’t like one of my teams and which we can’t accept.”

He had no complaint about the boos which echoed round St James’ Park at the final whistle. “The fans have got every right to boo,” said Pardew, who knows he may not be insulated by the eight-year contract he signed in the autumn. “That performance was not good enough for Newcastle. Now we’ve got to show we’ve got the heart for this little relegation scrap we’re in because other teams in it certainly have.”

Liverpool proved they are far from a one-man team. “It’s been a traumatic week for the club. Luis accepts he did wrong and accepts his suspension,” said Rodgers, who was thrilled by an outstanding performance from Philippe Coutinho. No one doubted the desire of the 20-year-old Brazilian. “Our collective performance was very impressive, different class,” he said. “Coutinho might be small in stature but he’s so strong and he’s got every pass in his bag. The weight of his passes are incredible.”


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A news article on 2013-04-27 22:13:00 from: The Guardian

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GUARDIAN – Luis Suárez failed to grasp seriousness of bite, says FA panel

• Independent disciplinary body denies bias against Uruguayan
• Previous record not taken into account or held against him

Luis Suárez failed to grasp the “gravity and seriousness” of his bite on Branislav Ivanovic, according to the independent panel that imposed a 10-match ban on the Liverpool striker. The body has also denied accusations of bias against the Uruguayan.

Suárez’s chequered past in English football played no part in his punishment, confirmed the Football Association following his decision not to appeal the ban on Friday. Though the player did contest the FA’s initial assertion that a standard three-match ban for violent conduct was “clearly insufficient”, his status as a role model and the damage to the image of the English game globally did influence the tariff, agreed by an independent regulatory commission on Wednesday.

The Liverpool striker challenged the FA’s call for an increased ban with the backing of the club. Liverpool’s legal advice was questioned at the time of the Patrice Evra racism controversy and the three-man panel was left unimpressed by Suárez’s attempts to secure a three-match suspension.

“We took into consideration of Mr Suárez’s apology, his personal statement, supporting letter from Mr Brendan Rodgers and the letter from [club secretary] Ms Zoe Ward,” explained the commission. “But when these were read in conjunction with Mr Suárez’s denial of the standard punishment that would otherwise apply for violent conduct is clearly insufficient [sic], it seemed to us that Mr Suárez has not fully appreciated the gravity and seriousness of this truly exceptional incident.”

Liverpool received the reasons for a suspension that will keep Suárez out of club football until late September after Rodgers had accused the FA and prime minister David Cameron of prejudicing the hearing. The Liverpool manager claimed the commission had punished “the man rather than the incident” but the panel discounted Suárez’s previous misconduct, including an eight-match ban for using racially abusive language towards Evra. “We did not take into consideration any previous disciplinary records of Mr Suárez and considered the offence in isolation,”

But the panel did concur with the prime minister’s official spokesman, who prior to the hearing said Suárez’s role model status should be taken into account. It confirmed: “The FA added that Mr Suárez is an international and one of the best known and lauded players in the country. He plays for Liverpool, one of the most successful clubs in English football history. A player at this level of the game has a duty to uphold the highest standards of conduct and to set an example to minors. Mr Suárez’s conduct on this occasion fell far below the standards expected of him.”

Cameron responded to the Liverpool manager’s criticism on Friday when he told BBC Radio 5 Live that he spoke out “just as a dad watching the game” and that Suárez had set “the most appalling example to young people in our country”. The FA ruling finds that: “Mr Suárez’s conduct has damaged the image of English football across the globe.”

Suárez chose not to appeal having considered the written reasons with legal representatives and issued another apology for last Sunday’s bite. The Liverpool striker, who is considering his future in English football having been suspended for a total of 20 matches in two seasons, said: “I am truly very sorry about the incident with Branislav Ivanovic. I hope that all the people who I have offended at Anfield last Sunday will grant me forgiveness and I again repeat my personal apology to Branislav. I know that all the things that are happening to me in England will help me improve my conduct on the field. Right now I just want to focus on becoming a better footballer on and off the field.

“I would like to explain to everybody that I decided to accept the ban because, whilst 10 games is clearly greater than those bans given in past cases where players have actually been seriously hurt, I acknowledge that my actions were not acceptable on the football pitch, so I do not want to give the wrong impression to people by making an appeal. I really want to learn from what has happened in the last two and a half years; many things have been said and written about me, I just tried to do my best on the field. I hope to come back early to play.”

Rodgers and Liverpool’s managing director, Ian Ayre, issued statements saying they respected Suárez’s decision not to appeal but condemning a ban they feel is disproportionate with previous bites. The FA ruling, however, highlights a seven-match ban handed to Brighton’s Ashley Barnes for tripping a referee last month as a more recent benchmark.


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A news article on 2013-04-26 18:16:00 from: The Guardian

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