Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category

Duck, its flying pigs and sensible words…

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Well stone the crows, knock me over, I’ll go to the foot of our stairs (and/or Bootle) and duck, beware of flying pig droppings…

Along has come an article pointing out a few fascinating home truths about Rafa, Liverpool and a certain F. Torres. Alan Hansen last night on MOTD said ” I bet Benitez wished he played Torres more”, given that he’s missed about two games when fit…. not to mention a few other journo’s who ought to know better but don’t as they are wearing their red and black tinted specs…

Anyway Dion Fanning from the Irish Independent has written a lovely piece eloquently telling readers what many Liverpool fans have been trying to less eloquently point out for some time. Enjoy and cheers Dion.

“Sunday March 16 2008

‘It does make you wonder what he would have done if he had played more regularly.” Richard Keys said of Fernando Torres last Tuesday, entering a world of magic realism without the magic or, indeed, the realism. It was remarkable in itself that Torres’ stats of 26 goals in 35 matches had just been mentioned, because most broadcasters have only one thing in their heads when talking about Rafael Benitez.

It was also, perhaps, an indication of Benitez’s stubbornness that when he was asked a similar question by Sky’s Geoff Shreeves a few minutes later, he did not reply, “Well, Geoff, if you checked your facts you’d see that Torres has started every league and Champions League game since September.” He may have had to qualify this by adding, “when fit” because there are many in the media who seem prepared to criticise Benitez for not playing Torres even when he’s injured.

Instead Benitez played along, talking about rotation, unwilling, it appeared, to engage at any level with people whom he clearly feels serve no purpose when he is thinking about things like knocking the Italian champions out of the European Cup.

In fact, Sky’s question would more accurately be asked about Wayne Rooney. Why don’t we see more of him? Manchester United have lost more league matches than Liverpool this season and Rooney has missed every one of them, usually rested. Torres, who if Sky are to be believed is glimpsed as frequently as the Aurora Borealis, has played five games more than Rooney this season, but Benitez is the man who has to answer questions about rotation.

It is customary to see Tom Hicks get more credit for the purchase of Torres than Benitez. The American is usually praised for putting up £26m for the striker, although the fee was a lot less than that, and then the coverage usually proceeds along the lines that the signing was a no-brainer.

Last summer, Torres’s signing was questioned by many of those who now wonder why he doesn’t play more often. Arsene Wenger and Ferguson hesitated before Benitez signed the player for £16m, the same price Spurs paid Charlton for Darren Bent. The critics said he didn’t score enough goals — one every three games was his ratio at Atletico — and now, as he’s scored 26 (all of them from open play), they wonder why he doesn’t play more often.

To report it along the lines that Benitez had made the best signing of the summer and had played some part in developing a player regarded by some in Spain as a laughing stock would involve praising the Liverpool manager.

Of course, it is the Italian league and its failings that are the reason for Liverpool’s victory over Inter, according to the pundits who last week predicted that AC Milan — nearly 20 points behind Inter — would knock out Premier League leaders Arsenal.

The Italian league is decaying, but if it was wholly rotten, Real Madrid — eight points clear at the top of La Liga — wouldn’t have lost to Roma — six points behind Inter. There is always another reason for Benitez’ success; something they missed when writing him off beforehand but a factor beyond his control, something for which he deserves no credit. It was summed up perfectly by the journalist who appeared on Sky to talk about Liverpool’s first-leg victory against Inter. He wasn’t the only one who

seemed reluctant to acknowledge that the game had lasted 90 minutes, preferring instead to emphasis that Liverpool had struggled to score for 85 minutes before winning by two goals.

He seemed reluctant to concede that Liverpool had, in fact, won the game. “Goals,” he sighed, finally forced into some admission, “determine how we view matches.”

For the time being they do anyway and while goals and results shape matches rather than journalists, Benitez has a chance of continuing to be a success.”

http://www.independent.ie/sport/other-sports/skys-the-limit-when-it-comes-to-rotating-the-knife-into-benitez-1318987.html

Bouncing is back.

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

From our song correspondent, Scully:

His armband proved he was a red TORRES TORRES
You’ll Never Walk Alone it said TORRES TORRES
We got the lad from sunny spain,
he gets the ball he’ll score again
FERNANDO TORRES LIBPOOLS NUMBER 9

BOUNCE!!!!

NANANANANANANAN NANA
NANANANANANANAN NANA
NANANANANANANANAN
NANANANANANANA
FERNANDO TORRES LIBPOOLS NUMBER 9

END BOUNCING

repeat from beginning.

An Old Codger’s View on - Any Tom, DIC or Parry

Friday, February 29th, 2008

Written by Wooltonian, and posted here for a wider audience…

Whatever next ?

I’ve just been reading a thread regarding Hicks - Sandon II, an invite by a pub Director.

The following is my opinion having kept my gob shut all week, but having read liquorice allsorts since last weekend.

Holding any meeting in a pub is starting on the wrong foot. And as for a set agenda on any questions for current or future owners, isn’t that how we do things in a democracy?
Does anyone believe Prime Ministers question time agenda is not set in advance?

Any meeting with the club directors should be held inside Anfield, away from the prying eyes of the press, That way we will not get the media whores trying to get their name in the papers.
Representatives from all Independent bodies SOS SLFC and perhaps Independent website editors should make up the floor.

I have been reading all the threads lately but have decided holding my tongue was the wisest move. Having had time now to reflect on all I’ve read, I’m seriously wondering what fans want.

Do we want foreign ownership ? It doesn’t look like we do.
We’ve had fans as shareholders, but the decision was taken to sell out.
We’ve had a Scouser (Steve Morgan) try and take control and most websites cringed at the possibility of him taking us down the PLC route.
Wouldn’t SOS and SLFC do exactly the same ?
Who would fund the new stadium if we buy our club back ?
Who would finance Rafa’s next £25-50 million tantrum in the next transfer window ?

None of us like what we’re seeing under the current regime, but is there anyone who has all the answers ?
Do you honestly believe DIC will have the support of all the fans ?
Do you think we as fans, would be happy with another Abramovic who basically see his club as a “Boys Toy”?

I’m not clever enough business wise to make any judgements, and I remember my Grandfathers advice “keep quiet and let people think you are an idiot rather than open your mouth and prove it beyond doubt”.

My forte, if I have one, is writing about The History of Liverpool Football Club and avoiding day to day issues. Where history teaches us what we think on the spur of the moment is replaced by more “common Sense” decisions on later reflection. But as they say if there is one thing not common it’s common sense.

Jumping on the SOS or the SLFC bandwagon, when frankly you don’t fully understand their agenda is to me foolhardy.
I’ll start listening to parties when they announce their financial structure for the next five years including payment of the new stadium.
The next line I’m waiting to hear is, lets start a “Stay at Anfield” party ie avoiding the largest payment we have in our foreseeable future.
Buying back the shares might put the club back in the hands of the fans, but who is going to stump up the new stadium cost and the transfer kitty for the next 5 years ?

Before we jump out of the frying pan and into the fire I would hope fans who are business minded have a long hard look at a future purchasers financial manifesto. Thus being 100% sure the next move is the right move.
Otherwise what seems like Storm blowing through the Hallowed Halls may well turn into a force 9 tornado.
And the words of the song “At the end of the storm….. now, there will be a bigger one brewing”
Remember this, a tug of war always ends up with one side having their faces in the mud.

If you must choose a side make your selection wisely otherwise you will end up with a muddy face. If like me you are not business minded enough to understand my advise is to sit on the fence and just hope and pray for a successful out come.

It’s not embarrassing to abstain from making an ill judged decision.

My stance has been and always will be, I am a football fan who supports 11 players on the park. I don’t make management decisions and I do not make decisions at board level.
As Shankly once said, “the Directors are only here to sign the cheques, I’m here to prepare the team for the next game and the fans are here to support the team”
Right now it appears we want to select the directors, the manager want’s to take his ball home if he doesn’t get his own way and the directors want to drink in the bloody Sandon.
What a Cockeyed world we live in

If you consider abstaining from voting cowardly, be ready to accept the responsibility of the decision you make.

The truth at the moment is as fans we’re constantly being asked to choose sides.
Even when we put aside the differences between Owners and Manager.
Then another crack appears.
“Gerrard’s” now not a happy bunny (again)
And it appears after watching Rafa go 6 rounds with the owners, he wants to jump in the ring and take him to the distance.
The hacks this morning are talking about The fans siding with Steven Gerrard over Rafa Benitez.
Well I’m sorry both parties now look like their emphasis is improving their own CV’s rather than building something together.
I’ve always hated the side of Gerrard we see every now and again “I’m the Billy Big Bollocks” me me me.
And I’m not a big fan of Rafa when he does his “I’m taking my ball home if I cant get my own way”

As Big as Ron Yeats was and as hard as Tommy Smith was, could you see either of them trying a stunt like that with Shanks. Billy was the boss and no one ever questioned Shankly’s command.
I seem to remember Souness attempting the “I’m the Billy Big Bollocks” with Uncle Bob. And wasn’t it Paul Ince who last tried to be “Gaffer” if only in name.
Great players come and go, but if I’m ever asked to vote my allegiance between a player and a manager, I’m sorry the player is on the bus out of town. (or more likely in a bloody Ferrari that we’ve paid for)

Not content with watching our club tear itself into splinter groups, I’ve noticed recently than fan base doing exactly the same, SOS Shares LFC, AFC Liverpool. What’s next The Walton Breck Banker’s)?

The only way to get a say in matters concerning the club (and I’m not suggesting the club will listen) is to unite under a single banner, prepare an agenda for the possible meeting and stick to it. Don’t let anyone digress into trivial matters just so you can come out of the meeting claiming to have scored a few points.

I know this piece will not be popular but I cannot believe I am the only fan that is totally confused about what’s going on both on and off the park.
Remember the old Anny Road chant [i]”The Road End united will never be defeated”[/i]
If the club are having difficulty ‘Houlding’ it all together, lets show them for Gods sake, that we will not be split into small factions.

We all sing from the same song sheet in the spirit of the Old Kop.

“The Kopites united, will never be defeated,
the Kopites united, will never be defeated”

Whilst Hicks fiddles, the Coliseum that is Anfield burns…

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

As the players’ heads go down at Upton Park, whilst some try to buy the club, whilst there are those who say hang on, we’ve been paying for it for years, I’ve noticed frustration at the impotence we fans have - our energy has no direction, and I’m ashamed to say many of us are now fighting amongst ourselves over the next step forward, groups forming giving out rallying calls, only to be pettily put down, positivity a negative name round here, and suggestions from boycotting the shop (can’t remember last time I was ever in there anyway) to walk outs, to shout outs, its not the best time for our club.

If I could ask for one thing, it would be that fan stands with fan, united in agreement that we want our club back. Back to the principles of decency, hard work and good football. On and off the pitch. That shouldn’t be pie in the sky. But who knows.

In 2008, as the city celebrates its culture, Liverpool FC are in danger of losing theirs.

So for the time being, lets stop the petty bickering, choose a group/direction/plan of action you want to support and for gods sake, lets not us, the fans, fall out. There’s enough of that elsewhere at our beloved church.

If proof were needed…

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

That Liverpool fans were passionate about the club and didn’t want to lie down and accept the contempt being shown for the club by the owners then let me show you a few posts and thoughts from some members of RAWK:

Garstonite:

“I’m talking about full stop. The option to fuck football - the sport that has taken up so much of my time and money that I often don’t even have - to fuck it off completely. It would be easy to quote the famous of all the Shankly quotes at a time like this. So easy, it’s not worth me typing it out. But these American owners have come here pretending to know the values of this club. But it’s not something you can see from abroad. It’s not something you can get into. It’s a way of life. You earn a living, you eat food, you drink drink and you support Liverpool Football Club.

We knew we had to move on amd the irony is we knew we had to move on to something that is so anti-everything most of us grew to love about the sport. Artsy-fartsy and prancy bullshit or not, it was the working-classes haven from reality. A glimmer of hope, a bit of joy. A fucking great way to end a shit week, to spend a couple of hours with the lads and support players that represented your area. You had a loyalty to your city. To your area. When Liverpool beat Manchester United or City, Newcastle or Birmingham, we were getting one over on that city. Now what have we become? Billionaires playthings, following overpaid primadonnas who show no loyalty so why the fuck should you?

Gillett and Hicks appear to be the extreme of what is wrong with modern-day footballing owners. Clearly only in it for the money, looking at every avenue in order to bleed everybody in sight dry. All week, the argument against putting our foot down and making a stand is “you don’t want to piss them off”. Fuck it. Are we gonna let these cunts ruin the finest fucking football club in the land while we sit on our hands?

The shit has hit the fan. Time to show these Yank twats that they’ve picked the wrong fight.”

or Terry De Niro:

“Every year of my Life of supporting my beloved Liverpool FC, I’ve been excited from the first kick of the season to the last, and from the time I was a kid in the 60’s growing into a man in the 70’s and 80’s, I had every right to. Watching my team steam roll their way to trophy after trophy. Further more, trophies that really mattered. The League championship being showed to us most seasons with various heroes from over the years walking up to the Kop and waving said trophy in front of us. European cups soon found their way to us and I’m lucky enough to have been to 3 finals when we were victorious. I’m not knocking the League Cup, FA Cup, UEFA Cup, and I loved it when we won them, but nothing compares with the League, and I really feel for our younger supporters who have never seen us lift it.

So back to the reason for this thread. I’m constantly looking at various threads on here involving the Mancs, Arse and Chelsea, where they are constantly clawing points and breaking away from us, and seeing comments like “Lucky Mancs, Arse, Chelsea. Dubious decisions going their way, diving cheats etc etc…”

The simple fact is…Liverpool at the moment are not as good as the other three, and that is a FACT! and haven’t been in the league consistently for a while now.

2005 was magic and nobody can ever take that roller coaster final ride away from us, but we can’t keep looking back to that. We need to sort our domestic position out ASAP or we will fall further behind than we already are.

As it stands now if somebody offered me a 4th finish now for this season, I’d snap their hands off and that’s coming from one the Shank’s old school of “first is first and second is nothing.” As we’ve got a fight to achieve that when you look at the teams and their points tally that are breathing down our necks.

I’d be delighted if we won either the FA Cup or Champions league again, but almost 18 years without the League title is really starting to get to me now.

I thought about posting this in the LFC forum, but it would only get the “knee-jerk” treatment, and after all my years of supporting this great club, I think I know what I’m on about…”

or -HH-’s poem:

“The way our club was run was always unique,
We knew when to be silent and when’s right to speak.
And while I’m sure that such an approach had its flaws,
I wish we’d never let these two cunts through our doors.

They promised us money, and a flashy new ground,
But that turned to shit when no loans could be found.
And speaking of loans, they said ‘none’ when they came,
But like so many promises it turned out to be lame.

‘We’ll sign Snoogy Doogy, if one can be found’,
But then you’ll um over a defender for 4 million pounds?
Tell Rafa he can’t sign who he wants on a free,
And can’t even decide who stays and who leaves?

They told Rafa to focus on coaching his team,
Took the control away from him cause they had the means.
Stories of them selling were quickly denied,
But the silence was deafening on the Rafa divide.

Whenever the stories began to die down,
The flames were fanned by these PR loving clowns.
Smiling thinking back to the way Rafa ‘pouted’,
We’ll wipe away your smiles now your agenda’s been outed.

Approaching a man not fit to wipe Rafa’s arse,
That you’d mention it in public shows a complete lack of class.
Consulting him on football also has me intrigued,
Where’s his La Liga’s? His Champions League’s?

I long for the days when the money didn’t matter,
Money men behind the scenes so we can listen to the Rafas.
When knowledge of football was required to comment,
Not PR games from the cunts with big wallets.

But they’ve picked the wrong battle with the wrong folk this time,
We won’t just lie down when our club’s on the line.
Shanks understood the people were the heart of this club,
As did Rafa when he came for a drink down the pub.

It’s not just for our manager now that we’re fighting,
But for the wrongs of these two fools that we just want righting.
We know now we should have never sold out to these Yanks,
And we’ll fight till it’s them who are walking the plank.

We are the supporters, we’ve seen the joy and the pain,
We’ve followed our team through the wind and the rain.
Without us there’s nothing, these clowns soon will see,
We are the club. We are Liverpool FC.

 and finally a classic from Garstonite again:

“I just think that there are times when, as football fans, we have to realise when to give up our unconditional support to a cause. There’s a long process towards that decision, of course. But who wants to talk about that? The ’cause’ can be an entire team, an individual player or the leader of the gang, the manager.

It’s safe to say, football has made a fool out of even the most erudite and level-headed… And me. I thought Souness would be able to turn it around. I had a belief Roy Evans would guide a new-age Liverpool side to success. I was convinced Houllier was the best thing to happen to this club since Kenny Dalglish and I had unreserved faith he would land us major honours.

So why should I now – older, fatter and probably just a little bit wiser – continue my loyalty towards the next man on the conveyor belt? Well, I shall tell you. And if you don’t wish to here my ramblings, the exits are here, here, here and here. Thank-you.

OK, I take a distinct disliking to the Championship Manager culture. We should sign so-and-so and all our problems will dissolve like a teardrop in the rising sun. It’s stupid, idiotic, foolish and if I had a thesaurus I’m sure I could find a thousand more words to describe how illogical and overly-simplistic it is. But am I a wannabe-manager? Of course. When I realised I wasn’t good enough to make it as a player, it was the obvious path to pursue. I blame my Mum for not getting me the appropriate footwear, just for the record. But, anyway, on the fear of digressing, I’ll get back to the point.

With Souness, with Evans, with Houllier - as pretentious as it may sound - I always felt I had ideas they should have used; that I knew the problems that they weren’t addressing. But then Rafael Benitez arrived. Yeah yeah, he spends days thinking about tactics, formations and his general footballing philosophy. Yeah yeah, he kicks his wife out of bed dreaming about football. Yeah yeah, he thinks about football so much he forgets his kids’ names (source citation required). And yes, he did also come with an impressive track record. But for the first time in a long while, my optimism had been compressed and I needed something to reignite that pride and that confidence I always possessed, even in face of a crisis. It is certainly true that I felt a large degree of frustration like many at that time, that we had become as further away as ever at being crowned Champions. But maybe the fact I was becoming a cantankerous old prick had something to do with it. I always there’s something about a man entering his thirties that makes the sun no longer brighten up his day, but merely get in his eyes. Ah well.

But then something remarkable happened. Something got hold of my hyper-inflated ego, dragged it into an alley way and severely pummelled it. Liverpool – a team that was half-filled with players who consistently failed to reach their potential, and half-filled with players I can only imagine got a football career by entering a raffle – won the Champions League. The most prestigious prize in club football. Now, dress it up all you like – say if Rivaldo had been on the field to take that free-kick in the exact position he scored past Chris Kirkland in that crucial group match, say if Del Piero’s shot hadn’t been stopped by a miraculous save from Carson in the quarter-final, say if William Gallas did indeed prevent that ball from crossing the line or Gudjohnsen’s effort in the dying moments actually killed me rather than just threatening to – the simple fact of the matter is, all of that is irrelevant. We won it. And we wouldn’t have without Benitez’s influence.

This could have only been achieved by a man that meticulously planned every eventuality, a man that tactically drilled the side to the brink of mental-exhaustion and, maybe, a man that offered Roman Slysko a generous pay-package, who knows? Who knows?

Now, I know that a Liverpool manager should never live off his past successes. I have people remind me this continuously, after all. Usually, by the by, people who are so pent up with anger and frustration, I can only assume are impotent. But there you go, that’s just an educated guess. BUT, does a managers past successes warrant support and patience from his fans and (I’m legally obliged to add) the owners? Fucking right it does.

Does the fact that Benitez has been working under immense pressure deflect from how he has built a strong squad, with a world-class spine? No! Is Rafael Benitez a world-class manager who shouldn’t allow no-nothings opinions’ stand in his way? Yes! Would getting rid of Rafael Benitez put our progression back five years, even if it were for short-term success? Yes! Am I in danger of using up my exclamation marks quota? Unfortunately, yes.

If you use a stream as a metaphor for football, then you’re most probably mad. But I will nevertheless pursue it, having not thought this through properly, so bear with me. The stream represents the division, and on the stream are twenty ships that represent the teams. Now, at one end of the stream we have largely calm waters where either side of the stream are greenlands where rabbits burrow and butterflies frolic gaily. At the other end, we have a waterfall where the ships nearest to will eventually plummet. Naturally.

Now, there is sufficient room here to venture how the bottom of the boat is where the background scene is worked: from the Chairman to the cleaner, the mechanisms behind the team are polished and checked once an hour, every hour. I could even say Gillett and Hicks are making their way through the ship’s wood with an axe, but anyway.

I am more interested in where the fans’ role plays in this. To me, we are the crew. We are behind the captain who is intensely trying to steer the ship in the right direction. Now, on one side of the ship, are the calm members of the crew. They laugh at the ship with the barcode flag. They are careering towards the waterfall and many members of their crew have decided to jump overboard. The other side are plotting against the captain. They hear there is a better man suited for the job from a stream a long way away. They are constantly criticising the captain and they question why he persists in fuelling the ship with coal, when the ships in front have invested in nuclear power. What the captain needs is unity and full support. Have we really reached the end of our tether with a manager that has promised and already brought so much? Consider this period a storm.

Now, you can take from this half-drunken rambling what you wish. You could conclude that Rafa is a pirate. You could also conclude I’m stark raving mad. What I hope you do conclude is that even though things haven’t been going well, it must be said that this is all part of what you signed up for when you decided to become a football fan and in such an unpredictable game, one thing will always ring true: a strong ship is a far greater force than one in a state of disrepair.

At the end of the storm, is a golden lark. Or something.

Post-script:
The silent ones with flasks come to life as we fire a canon at one of the ships behind us. They mimic the otters in the water, as they chant ‘Easeh? Easeh@ Easeh/”

If anything I hope makes one realise that Hicks and Gilette cannot just expect us to be armchair fans nodding with senility as we shove a greasy paw into the popcorn like some fans of other sports may do.

Take note, we are angry, aware and sad. Not a good combination.

Merry Christmas from us at the RAWK Blog

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

here’s to 12 points over the festive  period. May you get decent shinpads in your stocking and may the mighty, tricky Reds win every game put in front of them. May Rafa be given a budget, Tom and George an understanding and us, the fans, the customers, the clients, the paying public, a united front and a club that does things the Liverpool way.

Hillsborough for Dummies.

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

I have just read this:
http://www.redandwhitekop.com/forum/index.php?topic=201553.new#top
Many of us are tired of seeing broadcast programmes (such as a recent edition of the ‘Daily Politics Show’; or even a passing comment on ‘Eastenders’) perpetuate the myth that the tragedy of Hillsborough was caused by ticketless Liverpool supporters rushing into the all ready full central pens and causing liverpool supporters at the front to be crushed to death.

Or getting other fans, or members of the public asking why we hate the Sun newspaper. (An oxymoron if ever there was one).

Well here is the perfect riposte. Copy and paste, or email the link to the article above. It really does simply and clearly answer all the questions a lay person may have to that terrible day. Well in Kinki.

2 countries divided by a common language

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

George, Georgie, Big G, the ol Gil, Lord LFC, the yank to thank, the cereal killer, (that’s plenty)… When will you ever learn?

If the simple facts of European Football Transfer Policies are too difficult to master, how on earth will you ever get to grips with the ins and outs of the British Media?

There is a rumour that you’re popping up on Talkshite Radio next week to chat about Rafa. Well for a start I’m not sure you’re that naive, but if you are, let me introduce you to a couple of wee facts.

Talksport is disliked by Liverpool fans. Yes I think I speak for all of them. Firstly it had Kelvin MacKenzie at the helm, yes he of the lying Sun. Then since he left, its managed to sink its reputation (if possible) by being just plain ol rubbish. It hypes itself more than a Robbie Williams CD but basically it talks shite. Hence the name.

Not that endearing yourself to the Liverpool fanbase is your first concern, but surely it must be a consideration? Surely someone in your entourage is media savvy enough to say “Look boss, Talksport is a gutter tabloid form of radio and is known for being both boring and salacious (an Italian sausage) at the same time - a unique skill that takes years of talking bollocks to achieve, so don’t pop up on it and instantly get rid of the remaining goodwill you might have had with the fans”

Of course, I would recommend other media outlets if Mr Gil wanted to front a charm offensive. But who? Well I would’ve said 5Live on the BBC but they seem to hire liars regularly and most of the whoppers on 606 are just out for the day before the men in the white coats gently lead them back safely home to the self-hugging jacket.

But why speak out anyway? What’s to be gained by justifying your views on our manager? Surely enough people have said (and I’ve heard them) “Liverpool don’t wash their dirty linen in public”. Leave that to small clubs, like Newcastle for example. hee hee.

Why not have a proper talk with Mr Benitez, and both of you make a joint statement (even through white pearly gritted teeth) and point out to the world everything is fine, it was a big misunderstanding and Peace and Goodwill to all men.

Rafa may have been naive in initiating this public slanging match. Don’t you go making it worse.

European nights to European Knights… some notes for our owners

Monday, November 26th, 2007

owners, who by the way, it should be said, most of us welcomed, and welcomed warmly when they made the right noises as they popped up at ours for tea..

But now there is a rift with Rafa, bother with Benitez, and make no mistake, if Messrs G n H thought we could make a noise at Anfield on a European night, wait til you hear us over our European Knight… Talk about making the right noise..

If proof were needed that Liverpool have the right man for the job, Rushian’s piece on Houllier’s team v Newcastle 2 stories down, is by far the most eloquent way to show how far we have come as a team. It encapsulates where we were and how we feel about being here now.

The USA (us at Anfield that is) have long memories and like all fans, have a simple alleigence - the club. If the manager is making the club progress, he gets our support. Especially at Liverpool where we are patient and know our football.

And whether Rafa knows that or not, ( he must  know he has our backing), he is right in saying look this is how it works in Europe.

I hope for once there is contact with Manchester Utd. Contact between our owners and theirs.

Because I think that the Glaziers may point out a couple of things:

Don’t cross a successful manager

Don’t underestimate the fans

Don’t take the piss.

You wanted our club Gillette and Hicks, well you can’t just cherrypick the best of it - the big games, the Euro nights and the great feelings, supporting Liverpool, any club, you take the rough and the smooth.

It’s the shite that makes the good times so sweet. So let’s not overworry but lets be clear, don’t make us point out our support for our own European Knight.

The BBC, Kelvin MacKenzie and Sport Relief

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Yes, the BBC are at it again. In their infinite wisdom, the BBC has decided to dig deep into Britain’s deep population pool of 60 million and drag up Kelvin MacKenzie, the notorious lying bigot responsible for the original and since repeated Hillsborough smears, to appear in its Celebrity Apprentice show in aid of Sport Relief. It defies belief. Are they really that thick? Perhaps MacKenzie will accuse Alan Sugar or urinating on and robbing the dead when he’s told that he’s fired.

Sports Relief can be contacted as follows:

Email: info@sportrelief.com

Sport Relief
5th Floor
89 Albert Embankment
London
SE1 7TP

Switchboard: 020 7820 5555
Fax: 020 7820 5500

The BBC? It’s hardly worth complaining. You’ll just receive a standard reply composed by a trainee. It’s clear MacKenzie has a mate high up at the BBC from his continual use across its various networks.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/

Phone: 08700 100 222

Email: http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/make_complaint_step1.shtml

BBC Complaints,
PO Box 1922,
Glasgow G2 3WT