Home > Football > Why have Rafa's Liverpool squad-rotation critics all gone quiet?
by Tetteh Otuteye on 05 December 2007
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When asked this week whether he thought Liverpool are serious title contenders this season, an Anfield fan - and one of Rafa's biggest critics during the period when rotation headlines were ubiquitous - responded :
This sounded distinctly like an attempt to exit from the back door. Yes, our form has improved since this pundit's statement that the Reds wouldn't win under Rafa - but that's because he made a major doomsday prediction when our form wobbled a bit, and he set himself up for this by getting carried away with the pessimism and negativity after a home draw or two.
As far as the claims of a more settled squad are concerned, I can understand why people would think the squad is more settled (given the absence of rotation headlines when Liverpool are winning - as I predicted would happen when rotation bashing was the fashion during our lull in form). But they'd be mistaken, since the media tend to talk about rotation only when we're losing. In reality, Rafa has 'rotated'" 41 times since our last defeat (against Besiktas) - that's 41 changes in nine matches. In other words, an average of about 4.6 rotations per match, no fewer than he made before (in fact, above his average for the last two seasons). In fact, he made five changes from the team that drew 0-0 with Blackburn, and had we not thumped Besiktas 8-0, we'd have seen headlines about squad rotation.
Rafa then made no changes against Fulham, and there was amazement that the tinkerman extraordinaire had kept the same line-up. Six changes were made to the side to face Newcastle, and had we not won 3-0 (and it could have been 6-0 if Fernando Torres had taken his hat-trick of clear chances) we'd have again seen Alan Hansen and the other pundits going on about Rafa's rotation.
Five changes followed that match as we hosted Porto, and again, you can imagine the headlines had we not won 4-1. Then there were four more changes this past weekend, and our 4-0 win again kept the critics of squad rotation silent.
So I'm afraid the injuries haven't done anything to stop Rafa from rotating. In fact, Agger was almost never rotated before his injury, and Xabi was rotated no more or less than Javier Mascherano, Momo Sissoko and Lucas Leiva have been since he was crocked. In fact, Lucas didn't get many matches at all prior to Xabi's injury and the rotation was between the other three, while now with Alonso injured, Lucas is being rotated in and out in his place.
Our strikers are still being rotated as much as they were when the anti-rotation headlines were a fixture on the back pages. Our improvement has nothing to do with a more settled side. It is simply the big players starting to pull their weight (most notably Steven Gerrard), the team finally converting chances into goals, and a general improvement in attitude and confidence. If you believe the scaremongers, you would have thought zonal marking was a problem in the past, and then suddenly you would forget about it once the team adapted to it and started defending well (the best defensive record in the Premier League). Similarly, if you believed the nonsense the lazy journos were printing about squad rotation, you could also have made similarly infamous statements about Liverpool never winning under a rotation-obsessed Rafa.
Now that we are putting together good results - squad rotation still withstanding - and the lazy journos have conveniently shut-up about squad rotation, it seems the Rafa-rotation critics are attempting to back-track through the back-door. The moral of the story? Lazy journalists and knee-jerkers are half-brothers. When results don't go our way, they all start shouting "the sky is falling" and looking for simple, short answers to our problems - be it zonal marking or squad rotation. When results go in our favour, the doomsday headlines disappear, and people quickly forget that "zonal marking is not the way to defend set-pieces" (after all, empty spaces don't score goals - men do! So why are they marking empty space?) and that you can't win with squad rotation. How are players going to learn to play with each other? Never mind the fact that they train together six days a week!
In short, the next time you read a headline succinctly summarising the key to a team's form (good or bad) with a simple theory like squad rotation or zonal marking, ask yourself whether you're reading lazy journalism masquerading as football punditry. All to often, you'll find the answer is a resounding "yes"!
Comments (26)
by mark on December 05, 2007
I'm slightly speechless. A sensible well written article on Sportingo. Has Jaimie been given his cards? Good stuff Tetteh
by kw on December 05, 2007
We need to see more sense, not the lazy journalism as mentioned. I can go as far back to argue that both the (effective) careers of Fowler and Owen were shortened because they've played week in, week out for a few years before serious injuries happened...
by bhekos on December 05, 2007
excellent article mate i was wondering when someone would voice that fact and you dont know how glad i am you did, thank you. The Rafalution is in "full steam ahead", i'm even starting to believe we 'might' actually win it the rotation system just like Rafa did with Valencia.Go on the Reds.
by magnumopus on December 05, 2007
No doubt about it... rotation is a necessity these days for teams playing so many games a season. End of story. Now let it die!
by Shanks on December 05, 2007
Yes you have hit the nail on the head, it seems to me you are one of only three good writers on this site, alongside Sean Maloney (another good Liverpool writer) and Mark Apostolou. I am sick and tired of people having a pop at Liverpool for no good reason! Thanks Tetteh for addressing the balance
by Catbat on December 05, 2007
I am in total agreemnet with you. I even heard one commentator blame zonal marking for a goal that Porto conceded agaisnt us. He never mentioned during the whole game that we were using zonal marking. Rafa sets his teams up to sprint the whole league period, which means not exhausting at the start of the league. He now has a squad (which a few months ago, the pundits were saying is not as strong as they thought at the start of the season) that fits in with his philosophy, and our position in the league this year puts us in a position to use his rotation to full effect in the second half of the season. It is not a case of us fans who have backed Rafa waiting to say I told you so at the end of the year if all does go to plan, but it highlights the fact that most football commentators cannot seem to accept that change will not work. They always follow the consensus, and think the the old ways cannot be better. If that was the case, all footballers would be on the piss the night before games, as was the case not
by Tetteh on December 05, 2007
Thanks. It's my first article on here so I'm glad you enjoyed it. Cheers. T
by Deano on December 05, 2007
Well said Tetteh, rotation does not pay at the start of a season, it pays at the end. Liverpool have finished as well as anybody the last 2 season's (except pointless last games when priming for UCL final), I would settle for a similar finish this year !!!!!
by Hmmm on December 05, 2007
Thats how you write an article. Well done Unfortunately he will be back!
by Steven on December 05, 2007
Excellent article. Well thought out and factual.
by Skamp on December 05, 2007
Great read mate,i obviously agree with it but to give weight to you arguement about lazy hacks i only need to point people towards the Mirrors latest Liverpool bashing 'KOPELLO' the first sentence claims Copello has said Liverpool tapped him up not once but TWICE (must be true if it's twice) but then not once in the tiny bit of garbage do they quote Copello,the only qoute they have in from J.Terry about Moaniniho. Fct is lads Liverpool stories sell papers more than those about ANY club,hence the reason Sportingo's resident retard constantly posts unfactual articals about our GREAT club. DAVID Speedy forgotten legend ffs :)
by Professoroffooty on December 05, 2007
Ridiculous story! I, for one, will never visit this site again. How dare you print an article with which I agree 100%? Good to see that you have decided to rotate Jamie!
by Colie on December 05, 2007
Great article, but not only that one that has got backing from every reply, the only reason for that is every manc and gooner in the country are actually starting to see the pool being an unbelievable threat this year, one they hadn't imagined, for once I actually believe it's coming home.
by larrylynchjr on December 05, 2007
Can anyone pass this to Jaimie as an example of how to write an interesting, balanced and well though out article? Nobody vexes me as much as that chump and i can only hope the barrage of criticism he recieves every time he writes will stop him chatting bollox.
by Torres special on December 05, 2007
I was reading through and was just wait for nonsense to seap through but there was nothing, good artical, to be honest i think the lads have realised it time to show people what LFC are all about, my it long continue
by stevie g on December 05, 2007
Actually its only been backed by Liverpool fans judging by their names and replys. I'm not a liverpool manc or Arsenal fan but I have friends who are liverpool fans and have criticised Rafa for rotating to much. I still think he does and dont think he'll win the league this season. Maybe next season though. Its not just the rotating but the style of play. They may have scored alot of goals in recent games but havent played great football in doing so.. ie porto, newcastle [quote]Great article, but not only that one that has got backing from every reply, the only reason for that is every manc and gooner in the country are actually starting to see the pool being an unbelievable threat this year, one they hadn't imagined, for once I actually believe it's coming home.[/quote]
by Brian on December 05, 2007
Superb piece. Make sure not to waste your talents nor get caught in the garbage of this site though. Cheers. Wow, stevie g, what a substantial reply filled with fact and original thought. Muppet.
by Yong on December 05, 2007
Nice Read and someone should forward it to the pundits!
by Mikey on December 05, 2007
It's good that someone is having a pop at pundits (and let's be honest, most internet journo's). I would say most pundits have a very conservative view of the game and are very dismissive of new ideas like zonal marking and rotation (ie keeping player fresh). They only speak out when results are bad and use them as excuses - when in reality every team has a bad run of form and fluke results against them. One thing though - who was the pundit in question?
by Paul F on December 06, 2007
Rafa did over rotate at the start of the season but has now settled and is keeping the spine of the team playing more regular.