Benitez return a memory of Christmas past for Liverpool

There is a strong sense this could be the season that the English league trophy comes to Anfield for the first time since 1990, although recent history is offering mixed messages for Liverpool.

Published : Dec 25, 2018 13:09 IST

Rafa Benitez’s return to Anfield on Boxing Day is likely to stir memories of an unsuccessful Liverpool challenge for the Premier League title, but Jurgen Klopp is trying to focus on the present.

Klopp’s Liverpool hold a four-point lead at the top of the table as Benitez, the club’s manager between 2004 and 2010, visits with his relegation-threatened Newcastle United side on Wednesday.

READ | Salah's shoulder woes a factor early in Liverpool's season

There is a strong sense this could be the season that the English league trophy comes to Anfield for the first time since 1990, although recent history is offering mixed messages as to whether that will happen.

First, the good news for Liverpool: In eight of the past 10 seasons, the leaders on Christmas Day have gone on to win the Premier League.

Now, the bad news: On the two occasions it did not happen, the Christmas leader was Liverpool. In 2008/09, Manchester United won the title; in 2013/14 it was Manchester City.

The late collapse to miss out in 2014 was perhaps the more immediately painful experience for Liverpool fans, but the failure of 2009, under Benitez, maybe offers more reason for regret. Both cases offer lessons that the Merseyside club, however, appear to have absorbed.

Brendan Rodgers’ team of 2013/14 was not as balanced as the side current Reds boss Klopp has now.

While Rodgers had an outstanding attacking partnership, with Luis Suarez supported by a fully-fit Daniel Sturridge, his men were defensively suspect.

The then Liverpool manager had four senior centre-backs -- Martin Skrtel, Daniel Agger, Mamadou Sakho and Kolo Toure -- yet struggled to settle on a first-choice pairing. A team who scored 101 league goals conceded a whopping 50; far too many for any side with serious championship ambitions.

- ‘Influential’ Van Dijk -

The class of 2018/19 should avoid that trap; it has the Premier League’s best defensive record this season, with only seven goals conceded.

Virgil van Dijk’s influence has been key; the centre-back, signed for £75 million (USD 94.5 million) from Southampton last January, has provided the defensive leadership that Liverpool missed badly following Jamie Carragher’s retirement in 2013. “He’s very influential,” Klopp said of Van Dijk.

“When I met him first, I thought I knew about his personality, I was pretty sure he would be like he is.

“After we lost 4-1 at Tottenham in October of last season, we started defending better and conceding less but then Virgil came in on top.” Liverpool’s solid defending means it does not have to score as freely to win games, although it is coming up with the goals when needed.

Mohamed Salah, after a quiet start to the season, is thriving after being switched from a wide position to a central attacking role. His total of 11 Premier League goals is only one fewer than Arsenal’s Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, the competition’s leading scorer.

Yet despite that quality, avoiding the fate of the 2008/09 Liverpool team, managed by Benitez, might still need a little luck to go the way of Klopp’s men.

That side, containing a spine of Pepe Reina, Carragher, Xabi Alonso, Javier Mascherano, Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres, was strong enough to be champion, but suffered from a lack of adequate back-up.

Too many draws against lowly opponents proved costly too, with Stoke, Fulham, West Ham and Hull all coming away from Anfield with a point.

READ | Top at Christmas? We might need 105 points – Klopp

 

Certainly, while Liverpool has the versatile attacking talent of Xherdan Shaqiri to call on if it loses one of its main forwards, and good quality options in midfield now that Fabinho and Naby Keita have found their feet, it may struggle if anything happens to Van Dijk. Perhaps that is why Klopp has not ruled out signings in January.

“I keep the door open because if something happens then we will need to have a look, as there are monstrous numbers of games coming and that’s really important that we can react,” said the German.

“But it’s all good, unless something dramatically changes.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment