jeudi 14 janvier 2010

Liverpool 1-2 Reading: La faute à Benitez?

Liverpool's hopes of a first appearance at new Wembley are over for another season after Reading completed a stunning comeback to claim a 2-1 extra-time victory on Wednesday night.

The Royals belied their lowly Championship standing to produce one of the biggest FA Cup shocks of the third round after the Reds had looked on course to progress courtesy of Ryan Bertrand's 45th minute own goal.

But Gylfi Sigurdsson's 90th minute spot-kick forced the game into extra-time, leaving substitute Shane Long to grab the headlines when he stooped to head home the winner 10 minutes later.

A night of high drama had begun with the news that the Reds had secured the free transfer signing of Maxi Rodriguez and the Anfield faithful were treated to a brief glimpse of our new Argentine star prior to kick-off.

It was enough to help warm the palms of the supporters who had braved the icy conditions; the majority of whom were eager to see the Reds mark their first home match of 2010 with a win.

The boss had opted to make five changes to the side that drew 1-1 at the Madejski Stadium, and while Liverpool started brightly, it was the visitors who looked the more likely as the half wore on.

The home side went close on three minutes when Steven Gerrard's devilish right-wing centre was almost turned into his own net by Bryn Gunnarson while at the other end Gylfi Sigurdsson forced a smart save out of Diego Cavalieri, who was making his fourth appearance of the season in place of Pepe Reina.

Dirk Kuyt then saw a goalbound effort well blocked before Fernando Torres dragged wide from the right side of the area.

The Royals' game-plan was to hit Liverpool on the counter attack and it almost worked to perfection on 21 minutes when they should have snatched a shock lead.

Simon Church, who scored the goal that earned the Championship outfit a 1-1 draw in the first meeting, broke down the right before cutting past Daniel Agger with ease. The Welsh forward sent a dangerous cross to the far post, where Grzegorz Rasiak arrived and stabbed over with the goal gaping.

The threat on the break was there for all to see and the away side came within a whisker of opening the scoring again just two minutes later, when Church somehow failed to connect with Jobi McAnuff's sublime cross.

It wasn't quite going to script for the Anfield faithful and Benitez's men suffered another blow on the half hour mark when Torres limped out of the action. It was a frustrating sight for the Reds boss, who will now face an anxious wait to see if the Spain international will be forced to miss the forthcoming matches against Stoke and Spurs.

With half-time approaching Liverpool had barely mustered a shot on goal, although Yossi Benayoun did go close when his instinctive curler arced inches past the post after a forceful run from the right by Philipp Degen.

In truth, the Royals were good value to go in level at the interval, but all their hard work was undone on 45 minutes when Bertrand deflected Gerrard's cross into his own net.

The half-time tea must have tasted that much sweeter for Kopites but they would have been well aware that the Reds needed to crank it up a gear if they were to remove any lingering thoughts of an upset - and they would have to do that without Gerrard, who was replaced by Ryan Babel.

The hosts were now without their two most attack-minded players, but as the second period got underway, there was a significant improvement in Liverpool's approach.

Kuyt went close to doubling the advantage with two snap shots before Agger fizzed a 25 yarder just wide after Alberto Aquilani struck the wall with a free-kick.

Reading were struggling to make any inroads on Cavalieri's goal but almost grabbed an equaliser on 67 minutes when Ivar Ingimarsson somehow failed to connect with a right-wing free-kick.

With chances at a premium, the visitors knew they would have to take any that came there way and there were none better than when McAnuff broke clear 10 minutes from the end.

The winger enjoyed an impressive display at the Madejski and almost capped his appearance at Anfield with a goal when he slalomed past three Reds challenges, only to slot his effort wide of the post with Cavalieri beaten.

It set up a nervy finale for the home side and just when it looked like they would edge to victory, the visitors were handed a stoppage time lifeline.

Benayoun was adjudged to have brought down Long in the penalty area, leaving Sigurdsson to step up and coolly send Cavalieri the wrong way from the spot.

The first period of extra-time saw Liverpool gain the ascendancy and after Agger's free-kick deflected wide, Babel forced Adam Federici into action with a low shot.

At this point the Reds were looking the more likely but on 100 minutes they were left stunned as Long stooped to guide a header past Cavalieri following a powerful run and cross from Gunnarsson.

Benayoun then had a chance to restore parity but hit a tame strike straight at Federici after bursting clear on goal.

With time running out, the frustration became tangible inside Anfield and although Ngog and Kuyt went close to levelling, Reading held firm to secure a famous triumph.

(lu sur Liverpool TV)

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(Posted by Tom Adams 6 hours, 54 minutes ago sur ESPN Soccernet)

After a frankly disastrous FA Cup defeat at the hands of Reading on Wednesday night, the future of Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez is once again high on the agenda of the nation’s press.

Their season over in January - bar the Europa League, a competition they never wanted to be in - Liverpool must ask some tough questions of their manager and while financial problems, unlovable owners and abusive board members have all proved handy scapegoats at times this season, the papers call for some intense scrutiny of Rafa’s record.

Jason Burt, writing in the Telegraph, leads the criticism against the Spaniard and asks if the club are in the right hands in his article, ‘Rafael Benitez must accept responsibility for the turmoil Liverpool are in’.

"The facts are plain. Out of the Champions League, out of the Premier League title race and now out of the FA Cup, the Liverpool manager is staring at a season in ruins. A career on the line. A famous club in furious turmoil.

"The blame game will start. Benitez needs to shoulder much of the responsibility. It is his duty. Never walk alone? Time, Rafa, to stand tall. Take a lead. It is said he is almost unsackable because of the long, lucrative contract he signed last season and because of the tumult over the club's despised American owners. Benitez has become a rallying point for Liverpool supporters who remain the most loyal in the country.

"But that doesn't wash. It's rubbish. You can't blame Tom Hicks – senior or junior – for this one. Liverpool cannot afford, in sporting or economic sense, to slide into decline, especially if Benitez then slips into his default mode. And that is to accuse everyone else. But it's gone beyond that now. Now is the time for the Spaniard to show something removed from a capacity to apportion responsibility to others.

"There is something rotten, and rotten beyond the board room in a team that surrenders a goal advantage at home at Anfield in such circumstances. This was a new nadir, a new low point. Confidence is smashed, the team fractured, the manager appears to have, in that time-old phrase, lost the dressing room. Maybe, also, it's time for all at Liverpool just to step back and examine what Benitez has achieved. Take away that incredible first year, the unbelievable comeback in Istanbul and have they really, truly progressed?

"Benitez is very good at railing against his detractors, against the perceived injustices he has faced and very good at playing the sensitive victim. This morning he needs to look in the mirror and accept where the responsibility lies. Accept who it was who sold Xabi Alonso, having alienated him, and has overseen five years of frantic, inconsistent team-building which has delivered very little. Benitez needs to earn his money – rather than complain about a shortage of cash. Liverpool need new owners, for sure, but maybe, also, a new manager."

Writing in the Guardian, Kevin McCarra is more restrained but he still warns that Benitez is at a crucial juncture of his Liverpool career.

"There may be even more troubles ahead for Liverpool. Gerrard has found it tough to regain his former vivacity and this has not been a happy campaign, either, for a familiar mainstay such as Jamie Carragher. It is not impossible that there will be further deterioration rather than a fightback from Liverpool.

"Tom Hicks and George Gillett will surely be conscious that Liverpool's habitual Champions League qualification cannot be taken for granted now, in particular when Manchester City are going to such expense to reinvent themselves. The proprietors would not be human if they did not have reservations about Benítez's capacity to reinvent himself to meet that challenge.

"It would, of course, be terrifyingly difficult to name a successor who could galvanise the club and do so on modest means. On the other hand, no manager survives for long simply because it is awkward to appoint a replacement. Benítez will have to pull off an astonishing upsurge if he is to survive beyond the next few weeks and months at Anfield."

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