• You may have to login or register before you can post and view our exclusive members only forums.
    To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Will Carra be first choice again?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Modo

A contentious scando
Member
A bit premature but here's what Kenny had to say:

"Carra has only been back a week after his calf injury," Dalglish was quoted as saying by Sky Sports.

"He's an important part of this football club and of this squad, now and going forward. He knows that and we know that.

"We know what he's done for the football club. The respect and admiration he has here from myself and everyone else connected. He understands."

-----

Don't think Carra will be preferred to Skrtel and Agger after this season.
 
Possibly from now on.

He will play again for sure, because Dan can't last a whole half season, unfortunately, if only he could though!
 
He's a great option to have either way.

I'm very happy with the Skagger partnership at the back. Carra's experience will obviously come in handy at some point over the course of the season.

It remains to be seen that skrtel and or agger can even keep up their performances and in aggers case fitness for a full season..
 
[quote author=Hardcastle link=topic=47667.msg1432397#msg1432397 date=1322261306]
He's a great option to have either way.

I'm very happy with the Skagger partnership at the back. Carra's experience will obviously come in handy at some point over the course of the season.

It remains to be seen that skrtel and or agger can even keep up their performances and in aggers case fitness for a full season..
[/quote]

Sounds great.
 
Not if Agger & Skrtel keep playing the way they have been and remain injury free obv.

Wouldn't completely rule out Carra going elsewhere for a season or two before he hangs up the boots.
- He's said himself, he'd have no qualms about leaving Liverpool if he wasn't getting a game. Be sad to see him playing for another team though.
 
Carragher has not been in good enough form to walk back into the side. He'll have to wait - 5 minutes - until Skrtel or Agger either loses form or gets injured.

I wouldn't be against him coming back strong either.
 
Liverpool’s Jamie Carragher is aware of just how ruthless it can be. He is far from finished at Anfield, but last week at Stamford Bridge he experienced a sobering reminder of his footballing mortality. He was available for an important Liverpool game and was not picked. That had not happened for 11 seasons and could be repeated against Manchester City at Anfield on Sunday.

Several years ago, such decisions might have brought consternation. Today finds Carragher, 33, in his deep-thinking role, adapting to unfamiliar but inevitable changes in circumstances and already assessing what lies in store when his No?23 jersey is surely retired with him.

“I am not the future of Liverpool. Daniel Agger, Martin Skrtel and Sebastian Coates are,” said Carragher. “But I can still be part of the present for a few more years. It’s only one game I’ve not been selected so it’s not the end yet.

“Over the last decade if I had missed a match I would have gone straight back into the team when available. This time I didn’t and I have to accept it, agree with it and understand it. I was out for a couple of weeks and the lads who came in did really well. I’ve always said mental strength is important in every player and this is another test of that.

“In the past there were people saying if Steven Gerrard and me weren’t playing there was a problem, but now you look at it and say out of the last three games we’ve won two away from home. That’s good for the club. We have to look to the future. I’m sure the manager, [Director of Football] Damien Comolli and owners are looking at that while wanting to make sure we’re doing everything to win from one week to the next. I think I can speak for Stevie too when I say we’re desperate to help the club win trophies as much as we can, whether we play all the games or not.

“That has always been our aim. I still always want to play the next game, but this club has been great to me and I will never be disrespectful to it or to anyone who is selected ahead of me. That was one of the things Gérard Houllier always said to me. You must respect those that are playing, especially those in your position.

“If I’ve played nearly 700 games for Liverpool, it means someone else has been on the bench showing respect for me, so I have no problem when it is the other way around. I am at one of the biggest teams in the world, a club which is looking for players in every country. We’re not some Mickey Mouse club short of top-class players so to have been able to go straight back into the team every time for so long has been a great achievement.

“You want to be involved and you’re disappointed when you are not, but I am aware my situation is changing over the next few years. Last weekend may have been one of the first signs of that.”

Thoughts inevitably drift to what happens once those signs are displayed more frequently. It is widely presumed that Carragher will take the fast track into management, but he is cautious about committing to a coaching career. He says he has learnt from the best and wants to continue doing so before making a decision.

“I have an idea what I would like to do,” he says. “You’re basically left with two options when you finish; the managerial route or a media job. Whatever’s best for my family and me will determine that. I’m not 100 per cent certain to become a manager because I won’t take any job just to stay in the game and I have done some media work, which I enjoy.

“In my first year after retiring I will take time out with the family and also try to see how different coaches work. Maybe I will try to see how Pep Guardiola, Jose Mourinho and some of the top Italian coaches work on the training ground. Arsène Wenger, too. I try and analyse everything – why a manager has made one decision over another. It’s not to be critical; it is because I always think about the game after it’s been played. Management is getting more difficult because everyone has an opinion now. It used to just be the press, but now it is the public through social networking on Twitter, Facebook and whatever else.

“People need to understand how difficult it is for players to go straight into coaching. Andre Villas-Boas started his coaching badge at 16, so think how far ahead he is of a player just starting that process in his early thirties. It takes a long time to get the qualifications, although you pick up experience and knowledge from playing.

“Stuart Pearce organised it for me to spend time on the FA licence course in Reading last summer and I really enjoyed it and I will definitely do the two-week course needed to pass all my badges.”

The FA is keen for Carragher to become one of its elite coaches. It is easy to see why given the broad education he has received at Liverpool as they have dabbled in varying football philosophies over the past decade.

Carragher’s insight into how English football can revive itself can be summarised as identifying and enforcing what we are good at more effectively rather than being a third-rate copy of someone else.

“We all want to play the Barcelona way, but we can’t,” he says. “People are getting too obsessed about copying them. Even when they’re in a bit of trouble you see goalkeepers wanting to show what good footballers they are, playing it from the back. What did Sir Alex Ferguson say about David de Gea’s mistake against Benfica the other night? That he should have kicked the ball into the stand. He is right, but Barcelona have changed how people think about the game.

“I love watching them play, but they had the same philosophy during the days they were struggling to qualify for the Champions League and we were beating them in the Uefa Cup. They just have players that are a lot better at it now.

“When I started everyone was saying the same about Ajax. They were the blueprint for our academy. Then everyone was talking about Clairefontaine in France. Now it’s all about Le Maisa. We always want to do what everyone else has already done. It is right to study them but there is no point copying. What we have to develop is our own identity.

“I read what my friend Xabi Alonso said about tackling being perceived as a quality here, but that’s part of our culture. Maybe it mattered more 20 years ago, but you can’t just change the culture of a country.

“Every father who watches his son play wants him to be a great footballer, but they are also intent on making sure he is not a coward on the pitch. That’s the mentality. Wenger explained it very well when he said the English always go to war.

“It’s not just about being able to tackle and nothing else, but you want players with the full package. If you can develop the technique, it’s competitiveness that can give us an extra edge over other countries.

“Don’t give me all this 'it’s the fancy dan foreign coaches’ who play all the great football, either. Of all the managers I’ve had at Liverpool, the ones who wanted to play the most football were a fella from Bootle, Roy Evans, and a fella from Glasgow, Kenny Dalglish. I’m not saying the others wanted long-ball football, but they were more tactical and that meant doing anything to win, even if it meant hitting it early to the big man up front, Emile Heskey, who Gérard Houllier bought, or Peter Crouch, signed by Rafa Benítez.

“We would go to Europe, play 10 men behind the ball and get a result and we were very successful playing that way winning everything but the league title. It’s not right to criticise that, either, but it has been like that in this country for a long time. Sven-Goran Eriksson and Fabio Capello were the same. It is always about the players you’ve got. It doesn’t matter which way you go, the game of football is there to be won and there are many different ways to do it.”

As the passion rises in Carragher’s voice, so it becomes clear what a loss he will be to Liverpool and English football if he does not make the transition from the pitch to the technical area.

“Who knows what the future holds?” he asks, the interview ending while Carragher still has much more to offer. Time, as ever, makes subjects of us all.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/liverpool/8916584/Liverpools-veteran-defender-Jamie-Carragher-is-determined-to-enjoy-every-minute-of-the-rest-of-his-career.html
 
[quote author=Ryan link=topic=47667.msg1432803#msg1432803 date=1322388562]
That's a really really good interview.
[/quote]

Aye, he knows his shit.
 
Carra is accepting the fact that he is a bit part player going forward and his honesty is refreshing.

He can still contribute and help on the coaching side.
 
Andy Dunn's column before yesterday's match.

A manager's loyalty to his players is pretty much taken for granted. Kenny Dalglish takes it to extremes.

Had he been boss when Craig ­Bellamy took aim at John Arne Riise with a seven-iron, Kenny would probably have given the Welshman a few swing tips.

Dalglish’s staff is his extended family.

Hence his defiant public support of Andy Carroll — a striker who sometimes looks slower than a week in solitary.

That Fabio Capello’s interest was so fleeting, despite a chronic dearth of top-class English strikers, tells all you need to know about Carroll’s struggles.

Dalglish is convinced he will come good.

“If you can pass the ball, score goals and play well then we are happy. Money is irrelevant.

“We are absolutely delighted with Andy Carroll.”

Well, Carroll has managed to score four times in 18 Premier League ­appearances — six of those as ­substitute — but, more tellingly, he has not been credited with a single assist. Not particularly credible grounds for absolute delight.

Tactically, it was a smart Dalglish move to omit Carroll from all but a couple of minutes of last weekend’s ­win against Chelsea’s ­porous, high ­defensive line.

And despite ­lauding Carroll’s progress, Dalglish will not hesitate to leave him on the bench again and again.

There is a steeliness about this incarnation of Dalglish the manager that suggests his vocal backing of players such as Carroll is twinned with a ruthlessness behind ­dressing-room doors.


Which brings us on to Jamie ­Carragher and ­Steven Gerrard.

When Dalglish ­repeats the mantra that no individual is bigger than the club, he is not paying mere lip service to a tired cliché.

For over half a decade, Carragher and Gerrard have not been bigger than the club. But, essentially, they have been THE club — the two mainstays of modern-day Liverpool, their influence extending beyond the field and into every fabric of the institution.


From the moment Rafa Benitez decided his first job as Liverpool manager should be to fly to ­England’s Euro 2004 base and dissuade his midfielder from switching to ­Chelsea, it was clear Gerrard would be as important as any manager.

Until now.

There was never any evidence that Gerrard and Carragher might have, in the final throes of Rafa’s Anfield career, undermined the Spaniard. But one thing is clear. No Liverpool player — well, none in their right mind (even the sparingly used ­Bellamy) – has yet to kick up a fuss that would ­undermine Dalglish.

Which is why this Liverpool squad is a world away from those riddled with rifts during previous regimes.


Dalglish clearly has a strong bond with Carragher and Gerrard, both personally and professionally.

But if he leaves Carragher on the bench for what could be a defining game of the season against ­Manchester City today, it will be a small, but significant, sign that this Liverpool team is being reshaped for a day without these two ­magnificent club servants.

The central partnership of Daniel Agger and Martin Skrtel impresses hugely, while, during Gerrard’s ­prolonged absences, Lucas has ­defined himself as a high-quality holding midfielder.

Particularly in cameos, Jordan Henderson has exuded potential, and Dalglish’s attacking midfield options were illustrated by Maxi’s rare start and goal last weekend and the sight of Stewart Downing ­unwrapped on the bench.

A Gerrard return from injury was always a matter of desperation — of necessity — for Liverpool.

Now, it will be a boost, a bonus.

Carragher remains an ­accomplished defender who will play a part in the rest of this ­Liverpool ­campaign. But he is no longer a ­talisman.


After a victory at Stamford Bridge that featured neither Gerrard nor Carragher – and that re-established them as very serious contenders for a Champions League place – ­Liverpool and Dalglish did not get enough credit.

That was because it was overshadowed by the travails of Andre Villas-Boas.
Ironically, those travails are intrinsically linked to an over-reliance on the old guard, on long-standing pillars of the club. John Terry and Frank Lampard — Chelsea’s Carragher and Gerrard.

Dalglish might have a special ­affinity for two players who have the club burned into their souls.

But he will know that a new era beckons. Sooner rather than later.
 
Andy Carroll will pick up a staggering £150,000 loyalty bonus from Liverpool next month despite making only 13 starts since his £35million move from Newcastle.

Carroll negotiated the windfall, whichwill be paid in each year of his contract at Anfield, when he signed last January.

The 22-year-old striker, who has scored only four times for his new club, has a deal worth £60,000 a week basic but he is also paid an additional £10,000 for his image rights and a further £5,000 for each appearance.

He is also entitled to a salary increase if he plays in more than 60 per cent of Liverpool's matches this season. That appears unlikely after Carroll's failure to earn an automatic place in Kenny Dalglish's side.
 
Ah come on now Binny ! ..it's bad enough you confusing everyone by digging up old threads but now you're posting about Carroll in Carragher threads , how the hell is anyone expected to keep up 🙂
 
[quote author=RedZeppelin link=topic=47667.msg1443739#msg1443739 date=1323923381]
Ah come on now Binny ! ..it's bad enough you confusing everyone by digging up old threads but now you're posting about Carroll in Carragher threads , how the hell is anyone expected to keep up 🙂
[/quote]

Opps. :-[

My bad. Click on the wrong thread
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom