Solid defence is laying platform for progress



Solid defence is laying platform for progress

Sep 19 2005

By David Prior, Daily Post


RUSS ABBOTT was in the directors' box at Anfield yesterday, and given the
poverty of entertainment on display against United there was a real danger
of him being summoned from retirement.

Surely it's not betraying too much of a nostalgia for 1980s comedy to
suggest that a quick reprise of the red-faced Scotsman, or even an
appearance by a Roly Poly, would have held the crowd's attention with more
success. And they're two of Abbott's characters, by the way, not Sir Alex
Ferguson and Wayne Rooney.

This encounter's first goalless draw for 14 years was a dull headache of a
match, one that arrived with a high billing but departed without leaving a
moment memorable enough to outlast the final blow of Rob Styles's whistle.
To continue the analogy, it died on its feet.

In so doing, it pumped more ammunition into many scribes' already cocked
pens. The charge presently doing the rounds, after all, is the one that
accuses the Premier-ship of being boring; of encouraging tactics of such
fun-syphoning negativity that stadiums around the country are emptying
quicker than Freddie Flintoff's first pint.

And after a result that further diminishes Chelsea's silhouette on the
horizon, the case for the prosecution is, for many, ever more convincing.

But is Rafael Benitez bothered? Not in the slightest. For him, the most
significant statistic of the season so far is not Chelsea's 18 points or
even his own side's one goal from four games.

It's the statistic confirming that after 360 minutes of Premiership action,
Pepe Reina is yet to concede a goal - or even,, indeed, have a save to make
of any consequence.

Compare that with last season - after facing United on virtually the same
day last September, Liverpool could boast just one clean sheet from five
games.

So there's progress. Not in the entertainment stakes, of course, but
Benitez's grasp of English probably already includes that cliche about there
being few points awarded for entertainment.

And it's a kind of progress that shouldn't be understated - United barely
had a shot yesterday, with the few chances they did have deriving mostly
from set-pieces.

Just as at White Hart Lane last week, the back four were immense.

Jamie Carragher and Sami Hyypia, at the centre, have a growing sense of
inpenetrability about them. Without the former's saving first-half tackle,
Ruud van Nistelrooy would have been clean through on goal.

Stephen Warnock overcame an early dose of nerves to help limit Cristiano
Ronaldo to a skilful but largely impotent performance. Rooney, meanwhile,
was jostled and harangued into his least influential game of the season.

Such increasingly firm foundations, Benitez hopes, will soon be glossed by
more entertainment - or in other words, the goals.

Ah yes, goals. Four games in, and just a solitary Xabi Alonso goal in the
league.

And while it's still far too early to panic - the blanks have come at two
tricky away destinations and against United at home, after all - it's not
too early to earmark some clear areas for concern. Alonso, for one. The
sublime distributor of last season is, on present viewing, nothing of the
sort. At least four times during the opening half he sprayed wildly wide of
intended red shirts, with one pass for Luis Garcia flying high over the
Spaniard's head and into the stands.

Post-interval he improved only marginally, and if Liverpool are to thread
their attacking movement with more cohesiveness, Alonso must rediscover his
radar.

Garcia, too, was again disappointingly flimsy. It's not the case that he
seems to reserve his best form for European competition; more that his game
and physique is patently illsuited to the kind of fierce domestic battle
that yesterday's contest was always going to be.

And while Peter Crouch's early form has been encouraging, Liverpool must
learn how to make the most of his unique threat - at times yesterday, he was
cut adrift to such an extent that support often arrived too late to be of
any use.

His height, too, must be complemented by a greater willingness from the
player to dominate defenders - he's virtually unplayable when he does.

Five times, we've won it five times' was the chant that made yesterday a
thoroughly satisfying experience for the majority at Anfield, for all the
disappointment of the game itself.

But as Steven Gerrard reminded before the game, it's still the domestic
fulfilment he seeks above all else. The closing of a gap between Liverpool
and the top three, the size of which he patently regards with deep
embarrassment.

On yesterday's evidence, and the form of this campaign so far, that gap will
close this year. But for Liverpool to really begin to challenge the leading
trio, they must discard some of the caution that is restricting their
ambition.

Surely goals will then begin to flow - even if the 'against' column isn't
quite so pristine - and Russ Abbott, for one, can stay firmly in retirement.


.



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