After his side's dismal start to the league campaign, Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers has a lot on his plate and numerous problems to rectify. The form of his 3 star players is perhaps the most pressing concern (aside from the off-field problems of course). Pepe Reina, Steven Gerrard and Luis Suarez are fundamental players in Liverpool's squad and so far, the three leading lights at Anfield have yet to ignite. Rodgers must get them firing again, but is it possible and if so, how?
Liverpool need to get more out of their Captain |
Steven Gerrard – Phenomenal player
though he is, Steven Gerrard appears to be struggling to adapt to
Rodgers' 4-3-3 system more than most. He has been positioned
regularly as the most advanced player in the midfield 3 and hasn't
looked at ease very often. Against Arsenal, as he did on the opening
day at West Brom, Gerrard gave a slack ball away in the opposition
half and within seconds Liverpool found themselves 1-0 down. When he
was at his best under Benitez, Gerrard played predominantly as a
second striker behind Fernando Torres where his starting position
would be similar to what Rodgers is asking of him these days, but
under the Spaniard he was allowed to neglect his defensive duties a
lot more. At Anfield against Arsenal, he frequently left Sahin and
Allen alone in midfield and noticeably took a long time to get back
into position when the reds lost the ball. Perhaps it was down to
fatigue after 3 games in 7 days but in general Gerrard hasn't yet hit
top form for Liverpool and is not fitting into the new system very
impressively. Countless times this season already we've seen
Liverpool work themselves into an attacking position with patient
build up play only for Gerrard (and Suarez) to play a careless,
rushed pass and surrender possession in a hasty attempt to create a
chance. Gerrard's game has always been about dynamism, pace and power
but in Liverpool's new formation he has to start using his brain more
and his ageing legs a little less. His natural instinct is to try and
drag Liverpool by their bootstraps into a game and create something
out of nothing but while he has been the saviour so many times in the
past he now needs to adapt and use his bursts of energy less and more
intelligently. He isn't the 25 year old tornado that he was in
Istanbul and he needs his team mates to share the burden of winning
games with him. He has all the tools to succeed in pretty much any
position on the pitch but he needs to step his game up a few levels
and quickly.
Reina reflects on another poorly conceded goal |
Pepe Reina – The 2 poor mistakes in a
week against Hearts and Arsenal were symptomatic of the last few
years for Reina. While he is still regarded as one of the finest goal
keepers in Europe, this is a reputation based on his performances
from a long while ago as, since Rafa Benitez exited Anfield, the
keeper's form has generally fluctuated from the poor to the mediocre
with some horrendous aberrations thrown into the mix. Reina is doing
well with his distribution, as expected, but in terms of shot
stopping, concentration and positioning, the Spaniard is a long way
short of his best. Reina has several times publicly yearned for the
return of his former goal keeping coach Xavi Valero and maybe that
would help him to regain his former glories, but the problem for
Rodgers is that while his number 1 is out of form, there is no viable
replacement. Brad Jones simply isn't up to it and Doni seems to have
vanished from the face of the earth. All this leaves Rodgers with a
goalkeeper who has been sleepwalking his way through the past few
season and who looks low on confidence and, at this moment, an
accident waiting to happen. The manager has little choice but to
persist with the Spaniard and hope he can shake off his current
malaise and recapture his form. It is risk, but Rodgers has no other
choice but to trust in Reina.
Frustration has been etched on Suarez' face for most of the season |
Luis Suarez – Suarez is not a number
9. Suarez doesn't hold play up and Suarez is not a clinical finisher.
Unfortunately for both player an manager, Suarez is being positioned
as Liverpool's most forward central attacker and, unless Fabio Borini
can fill the void with Suarez moving out to the right hand side,
nothing can really change. The Uruguayan has started the season as
most would have expected. Beguiling one moment, astonishingly
wasteful and frustrating the next. Suarez is Liverpool biggest threat
and opposition teams know it. He is consistently double marked and is
trying to do too much. Like Gerrard, he is guilty of playing this
season in fast forward mode. Every time he receives the ball, his
first instinct is to attack defenders or play a difficult first time
pass regardless of his chances of success. The burden of being the
only player in his squad likely to score upwards of 10 league goals
is obviously weighing heavily on his shoulders and his agitation and
frustration are there for all to see. Silly bookings, petulant
outbursts and bad decisions have all been evident thus far. The
problem is, unless someone steps up to the plate to ease the pressure
on the mercurial number 7, nothing is likely to change. Suarez is
Liverpool's only regular match winner and he needs help. Perhaps
altering his role in the side to play from a wider position with
Borini through the centre would help but Rodgers has resisted that
temptation so far and will have his reasons. Either way, Liverpool
need more from Suarez and Suarez needs more from Liverpool.
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