tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5735347986718349687.post7867713295359644221..comments2008-06-04T07:08:44.059+01:00Comments on Liverpool-Kop: Do you have a unique view on Liverpool FC? Write ...Jaimie Kanwarnoreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5735347986718349687.post-3468696705605045172008-06-04T07:08:00.000+01:002008-06-04T07:08:00.000+01:002008-06-04T07:08:00.000+01:00This is my first visit to your site and find the c...This is my first visit to your site and find the contributors' comments interesting from a number of perspectives. Although some articles offer valid points of view on 21st century football culture as it applies to LFC, on first reading it appears that most writers are justifiably venting their frustrations at our inability to lift the championship trophy after 18 years and are clutching at any available straws to find a scapegoat for their distress. I also find the comments about Stevie G to be risible and ill considered but I'll get to that shortly.<BR/>What galls LFC fans more than any other fact is that the Stretford Scum have lifted their championship tally from 7 to 17 during the EPL era. The new setup hit LFC like an artic on the M6 and we still haven't been able to reconcile our past successes to the uncompromising new milieu that ensued.Ferguson arrived in England with the avowed ambition to displace LFC from the top of the English tree and to our shame we have been unable to come to grips with the changing culture of football in the age of the EPL to prevent this from happening. 17 championships is too close to LFC's "enduring legacy" to ever be acceptable. Ferguson has stated recently that he will retire by 2012 and every kopite should make it their singular aim to ensure that he departs with fewer championships than LFC whatever it takes!<BR/>Although tradition is the bedrock of this club it has sadly become a burden which time and again prevents us from opening a new chapter in its proud history. The appalling way that the ownership debacle has played out has magnified these deficiencies to an intolerable extent. Sadly Rick Parry has been more than complicit in the excesses that have come to light. In contrast look at the way the SS dealt with the Glazer takeover. There were practically riots in the streets of bleak city in the lead up to the deal. Having been signed however, when is Brian Glazer ever seen or heard from in the press or elsewhere? I'm sure that at Ferguson's insistence all boardroom dealings and behind the scenes shenanigans have been kept squarely where they belong - out of the public gaze.<BR/>Yes, "...we had Heighway on the wing, we had dreams and songs to sing of glory on the fields of Anfield Road". I was there! Paisley and Fagin fulfilled those dreams forged in Shankly's vision but it's high time we came to grips with the realities of today's game.<BR/>This preamble is written in an attempt to contextualise my response to contributors'comments about Stevie G. SG is passing the opinions of one professional footballer about another who happens to be a friend, England teammate and a high calibre player with justifiable aims and ambitions comensurate with his skill.To label this as "tapping up" is to flagrantly disregard the definition of this phrase as currently understood. Mourinho/Cole, Parry-Yanks/Klinsmann, Thaksin/Hughes etc. are more accurate examples of the consequences of tapping up where men of wealth, power and authority to determine the financial and professional direction of huge business entities, unethically and at times illegally approach players and managers to achieve their own ends, is to put this practice into proper perspective. To put a player who has the fervent desire to fulfil his only lacking professional achievement in the same category is to denigrate and disrespect a player who gives his all to this club. Get a bit of perspective and ask yourself where LFC would have been over the last 5 years if not for his skill and leadership. He certainly has influence in the shaping of fans' opinions but let's take an example of undue influence from recent history and see how it measures up.<BR/>In the wake of the Ashley Cole "respect" debacle, Ferguson seized upon this climate of opinion to unscrupulously manipulate the outcome of the MANU LFC game the following week. In an inexcusable and calculatedly hysterical tirade against Keith Hackett, the refs and their association he effectively created a climate in which they had to make a strong point at the "Theatre of Schemes". With "Stretford" Steve Bennett in control and (surprise surprise) Hackett in attendance, Ferguson abused his influence as the Chairman of the Professional Managers Association to influence the outcome of a game by unreasonable coercion of the ref. Did anybody see or hear a single syllable of admonition written or spoken by the game's pundits against his actions - of course not!!! Yet those who purport to be fans of LFC roundly criticise their own captain for demonstrating the single mindedness necessary to redress the balance of power that has been skewed in Ferguson's favour for far too long.<BR/>To close for now I would like to pass the comment that, love him or hate him, Ferguson has always been prepared to demonstrate the ruthlessness to keep his mob at the top and it's about time we stopped whining about our "enduring legacy" and followed suit. We stand on the shoulders of giants - let's do them proud!mike cnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5735347986718349687.post-33051721544064478422008-03-15T20:50:00.000Z2008-03-15T20:50:00.000Z2008-03-15T20:50:00.000ZActually, I'm not having difficulty at all finding...Actually, I'm not having difficulty at all finding writers. And if you bothered to read the post you would see that I state the following quite clearly:<BR/><BR/>'This does not mean articles have to be negative. Far from it! Writers can be as positive as they like, as long as there is a critical basis for the positivity'<BR/><BR/>I'm not looking for liverpool 'bashers' as you put it, and I am not a basher myself. Every view I have has merit from a critical standpoint. it doesn't mean I'm right all the time, and I do not profess to be, but there has to be room for all kinds of view - postitive and critical. if you can't hack that then I would suggest the problem lies with you, not me.<BR/><BR/>My detractors really need to change the record! Come up with some new material because we're entering the realms of pasrody now.<BR/><BR/>Every person who slags me off infers that I'm a manc - how original! <BR/><BR/>There are plenty of positive articles on this site, but you already know that, but to acknowledge that fact would be to defeat your own tenuous argument.Jaimie Kanwarhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10194435857441422153noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5735347986718349687.post-81048465770984895682008-03-15T19:27:00.000Z2008-03-15T19:27:00.000Z2008-03-15T19:27:00.000ZNo wonder you're having difficulty finding writers...No wonder you're having difficulty finding writers of the "caliber", you claim you seek. You're not looking for writers who can offer critical analysis of Liverpool; no, you're looking for perpetual Liverpool FC bashers much like yourself, who never ever ever see any positives out of any Liverpool performance, or Liverpool players, regardless of how much its merited, simply because you're afraid of being viewed as fawning over them. I have yet to read one single article on this site that rightly or purely praises, or congratulates a deserved Liverpool performance, or player for that matter, without a dash of pointless negativity or plain bashing thrown in. You often sound more like a Manure fan more than a Liverpool FC fan. In fact even they are more willing to give credit where credit is due and more often, than you ever seem willing to. Sad really.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com