Why EPL and Liverpool need Kenny Dalgish

By matthewthorpe / Roar Pro

Liverpool have signed Kenny Dalgish to a three-year contract, making his caretaker role a permanent one. Dalglish’s return to the managerial fold has coincided with a Liverpool resurgence, and because of it, English football has never been better.

A proud Scot making the English better?

Sounds like something out of a fantasy novel to me. But no, it is true, and Reds fans, along with all other supporters of the English Premier League, should be rejoicing.

From a Liverpool perspective, Dalglish’s appointment could not have come at a better time.

The greatest team in English football history were in a terrible state six months ago, struggling with owners that didn’t care about the club’s proud on and off-field heritage, and a manager that looked out of his depth and didn’t have the full support of the playing staff.

12 months ago they weren’t much better, missing out on a prized Champions League spot and relying almost wholly on their two superstars, the inspirational Scouser hero Steven Gerrard and the grumpy-yet-brilliant Spaniard Fernando Torres.

The loss of two of their truly world-class players, Xabi Alonso and Javier Mascherano, did nothing to help the patience of those living on the red side of the Mersey who have now gone over two decades without a league title.

Enter Kenny (along with some new owners), Liverpool hero, Kop favourite, and one of the greatest footballers to come out of Britain.

If anyone was going to bring together a club that was falling apart it is Dalglish, a hard task but one made easier by having the continuous support of the fans and the respect of the players.

Immediately Liverpool’s on-field performances started to improve despite their tactics staying the same. They’re still playing a possession game; starting from the last line they build the play and involve all players including goalkeeper Pepe Reina. If this doesn’t result a an attacking move or shot they will play the ball back to their defence, reform their shape and start again.

So what has changed?

Dalglish has reinstalled belief in the players, given them confidence. They want to play for him. Gone was the misfiring Torres, replaced by the hard-working Luis Suarez and the next England superstar Andy Carroll, immediately reinvigorating their attack by not relying on the one-striker system employed under Rafa Benitez and Roy Hodgson.

Players like Dirk Kuyt, Raul Meireles, Lucas Leiva and Maxi Rodriguez have found an extra leg, confident in their abilities to beat a man one-on-one and carve up previously machine-like defences of the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea with crisp passing moves (I’ll admit they did get lucky in their draw against Arsenal).

Fabio Capello should also be thanking Dalglish.

His mantra when he returned to Liverpool was to rely on British players and stop the dominance of the foreign legion possessed by the clubs above them on the table. He’s stuck true to his word, and has brought on the next generation of England internationals.

Whether through injury or poor performance of established players, the likes of John Flanagan, Jonjo Shelvey and Jack Robinson have all played above the level many fans thought they were capable of, and none of these three have even reached their 20th birthday!

Jay Spearing has gone on to establish himself in the centre of midfield, ensuring players with international experience like Joe Cole and Christian Poulsen are stuck on the bench.

One would think only the return of Gerrard will keep Spearing out of a first-choice Liverpool side.

So a good Liverpool side is important to English football. Next season they will prove a genuine title contender, joining the likes of Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and Tottenham and I’ll bet many Spaniards, Italians and Germans are all wishing they had this many clubs that could compete for title honours year-in year-out.

And we must thank the return of the greatest Red of them all for this happy return to dominance, because without his influence, who knows how many titles those Red Devils will win.

The Crowd Says:

2011-05-18T06:06:56+00:00

Richard

Roar Guru


The plight of the 'Pool under those American owners was distressing for supporters. Long an admirer of the great tradition at Liverpool, I hope private ownership never comes to Australian Football. A club, in the end, should belong to its members. Welcome back Kenny Dalglish. There's a smug crew in Manchester who need attending to.

2011-05-15T12:37:07+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Tis good to see the Kop on the boil again ...

2011-05-14T02:16:09+00:00

Danny_Mac

Roar Guru


I think you've been very kind to roy hodgeson... I think the debacle that was his reign at liverpool only highlighted the gulf between the top and bottom of the premier league. Hodgeson set out not to loose. not to win, just not to loose. At a club like Fulham, where the goal year on year is simply to not get relegated, this works. This clearly works, as look at the turn around he has had at West Brom. However there are certain clubs, which all hover around the top half of the table, were they are expected to win. The tactics you're instructed to play impact that. there was a classic photo of liverpool early on in the season (against city i think) where there were eight, yes EIGHT, liverpool players in a straight line between the six yard box and the edge of the penalty box... hmmm winning football right there Lets face it, 2010 was not a good year for LFC, Torres had gone off the boil, Alonso (who seems to get better and better with every passing day that he doesn't play for the club) gone, and macherano with one foot out the door, and stevie-g getting older... the club struggled, the owners didn't invest in the club... it wasn't a desirable place. However, Hodgeson's farcial press conferences, his pandering to SAF, claiming that Northampton would be "tough" opposition, stating that he hoped not to get beaten 6-0 by man city... They weren't exactly endearing him to the fans. LFC fans are patient, and supportive of the manager. With the excpetion of Souness, there have always been fans who have been disappointed to see a manager leave or be dismissed. not this time. all that they ask is that you respect them, and the club. It isn't a club that will just be happy to stay up and put up the the tactics/mornic press conferences to do it (in the same way that i don't think that the club would accept Mourinhio)... Daglish is the absolute antihsis of this, and the results have followed... oh and i think the 1-1 with arsenal was fair, they were lucky to get the penalty, but arsenal were lucky to get thiers!

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