The recent news that Fabio Borini is
out for a few months with an injury couldn't have come at a worse
time for Liverpool. While the Italian has only scored once this
season, his absence means that the Reds now have just one senior
striker in Luis Suarez to see them through until the January transfer window opens.
It is time for the rest of team to start chipping in with some goals to ease the burden on the mercurial Uruguayan, but with two of the three forward positions currently being taken up
by inexperienced teenagers Raheem Sterling and Spanish starlet Suso,
is that a realistic proposition?
It has to be assumed that, form and
fitness permitting, from now until January at least, Suso and
Sterling will be playing regularly in the Premier League for the Reds
in two of the three forward positions that Brendan Rodgers selects.
The only viable replacements for their starting positions right now
are Oussama Assaidi, Stewart Downing and Joe Cole. Assaidi has been understandably hit and miss so far as he tries to get up to speed with English football. This leaves Downing and Cole. The funny thing is
that given their age, pedigree, experience and expense to the club,
Cole and Downing should be in the starting eleven every week for
Liverpool with the likes of Suso and Sterling providing the back up
rather than the other way round.
Suso doesn't look like a regular goalscorer yet |
Cole should be ahead of Suso in the
pecking order given his standing in the game and what he has
accomplished, but his woeful injury record, lack of any match fitness
what so ever and his form when compared to Suso's, suggests that the
former England international will have to be content with being
understudy to the kid from Cadiz who is 12 years his junior. On the
opposite flank of Liverpool's attacking trio, it is equally hard to
see Downing displacing Sterling despite his extra experience in the
Premier League and his numerous England caps. Downing should be a
prominent player for Liverpool right now. He cost £20m, he is in the
prime of his career, he has scored goals for his previous clubs on a
fairly regular basis and Liverpool need goals and experience
desperately at this moment. However, he has proven himself so unwilling to
take responsibility in a red shirt that it is inconceivable that he
could start ahead of Sterling in the first team as things stand. It
is a damning indictment on two players in their prime who have cost
Liverpool so much money, that two relatively unknown kids are who the
goal scoring burden for such a large club is now going to fall on.
The reds need goals and regardless of age, lots of people are going
to expect them from players in the forward positions.
Sterling has shown at youth level that
he can score regularly from wide areas and even scored for the first
team in pre season. This season in the Premier League though, he has
only attempted 3 shots, which were all off target. It's easy to
expect that as his confidence and experience continue to grow, his
efforts at goal will become more frequent and accurate, but regular
goals in the senior side still seem a way off.
Suso, since his introduction to the
first team, has shown that keeps the ball exceptionally well and is
technically proficient but goals or even serious attempted shots have
evaded him for the most part. He has though, only played 171 Premier
League minutes so far and to judge his potential as a goal scorer on
such a small sample isn't fair. However, when we look at his record
at reserve level, he scored just 8 times in the last two seasons and
that does not suggest that we can expect a regular stream of goals
from him either. In short, neither of the two young prodigies seem
likely to to enrich the current Liverpool team with an influx of
goals in the near future. But that really isn't their fault.
Sterling has the potential to add goals to his game, given time |
It is unfortunate for Suso and Sterling
that because of the circumstances they find themselves in, pressure
is going to be on them almost immediately to provide Liverpool with a
decent number of goals. In an ideal world, both teenagers would be
introduced into the first team in a way that would limit the pressure on
them. Playing the odd Premier League game and making appearances in
the League Cup and Europa League is presumably how Brendan Rodgers
would have preferred to acclimatise his two young stars to the trials
of first team football. However, because of the failings of players
like Downing and Cole, the injuries to players like Borini and the
lack of summer signings, Suso and Sterling are now not only players
that Liverpool fans will expect to see in the team every weekend, but
a pair of players who will be expected to get on the score sheet.
This is the downside to seeing such
exciting talent emerge at Anfield these days. Suso and Sterling need
to be playing free of pressure and allowed to express themselves
without the burden of the teams results weighing too heavily on their
inexperienced shoulders. Instead, these two rookies will have major
expectations from the clubs fans almost right away. It is not ideal
and it could be detrimental to their progress if too much is demanded
too soon.
Even Cristiano Ronaldo wasn't a prolific goal scorer as a teenager |
Cristiano Ronaldo scored just 3 goals
in his début season at Sporting Lisbon and in his first Premier
League season he only scored 4 goals in 29 appearances for Manchester
United. Andres Iniesta at Barcelona scored 2 goals in his first 2
full seasons despite making 70 starts in La Liga for the Catalan
giants. Ronaldo now scores a goal a game and Iniesta scores between 5
and 10 a season. End product is seldom consistently evident in young
attacking players and while Reds fans are desperate for their team to
starting winning and scoring goals, frustrations must not be aimed at
2 talents who need nurturing.
If goals are still at premium over the
coming weeks and months then the blame will lie with whoever's
decision it was not to bring in an experienced striker to replace
Andy Carroll. The blame will lie with under performing expensive
players who have scored goals in the past but now seem happy to sit
on the side lines and pick up their wages. The blame may even lie
with the managers tactics. But the blame should not be attributed to
a pair of talented kids who are finding their feet in the Premier
League. Patience is a virtue, after all.
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