Liverpool
Former England captain Steven Gerrard insists he is ready to ‘go again’ after World Cup failure followed the mistake that cost Liverpool the le
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/foo...slip-away.html
The Steven Gerrard rallying cry seemed destined to be the defining voice in a thrilling Premier League climax. The camera probed theLiverpool huddle following victory over Manchester City and captured their captain at his most impassioned.
“We go again. We do not let this slip,” Gerrard commanded his team-mates.
Two weeks later, the journey to the le ended with a torturous twist, when Gerrard slipped and gifted Chelsea the first goal in a decisive 2-0 defeat. The le was gone, and Gerrard had begun what he describes now as the worst three months of his life.
World Cup despair followed in June. July has seen his international retirement and the sale of Luis Suárez. It would be easier for Gerrard to see this season as a form of exorcism, but these demons are to be confronted, not expelled.
“Anything you don’t especially want to talk about?” Liverpool’s press officer discreetly asks him.
“No,” is the immediate, typically forthright response.
It feels cruel, but the impact of that Chelsea game and what Gerrard has been through since cannot be ignored. “You’re brave to ask about that. How do you think it was? You tell me,” Gerrard replies.
“The worst day of your life?”
“There’s your answer,” Gerrard says. “It’s probably been the worst three months of my life.
“I’ve seen it a few times. I don’t have to watch something like that to go through the pain again and again and again.
“I’ve been through the pain in the dressing room after and in the weeks and months since. I just stumbled across it. It didn’t hide away. I have TVs in my house and I read papers. There is social media.
“When something like that happens you have to face it up and be man enough to take it on the chin. Accept it happened. You can’t change it. I haven’t lost my man at a set-piece. I haven’t missed a penalty. I haven’t made a bad pass or a mistake. That’s why it was cruel. Every single person on the planet slips at some point in their life, whether it is on a set of stairs, on the floor or whatever.
“For me, it happened on the pitch at a really bad moment. But over the course of 38 games a lot happens for you and against you and that determines whether you win the league or not. That moment happened at a crucial time and I have to face that. And I will do.
“I don’t need something like that to inspire me. When I have had unbelievable highs for the club, it wasn’t because I was inspired by a mistake. You have to go through tough times. Unfortunately I have had that tough time at club level at the end of the season and then I have gone into a World Cup hoping that it was going to go really well to help me get over it.
“But it backfired. I have had two massive, unbelievable lows in a short space of time, so it is a good test for me this season. Can I hit form after that? I believe that I can.
“Of course it is tough to take but you have to move on sharpish. We have to try to win the league, progress in the Champions League. There are massive games to look forward to.
“When you’re the captain, you can’t afford to be down, feel sorry for yourself and mope around. Everyone in this group looks to me to see what mood I’m in, so I have to shake it off quick. Every time I speak to the media it’s going to be mentioned. I appreciate how big it is when you go out the World Cup and when you fall short after going close to the le. The level I play means it can be a cruel game.
“It’s not always going to be celebrations, smiles and highs. There are always going to be heartbreaks and disappointments and the last three months have been a massive disappointment. At 34, there is no way I am going to let the last three months be the things I remember. It’s important to finish on a high.”
After the failure of the World Cup redemption plan, Gerrard reluctantly retired from England and the international captaincy, partly to prolong his Liverpool career but also with his family – he has three daughters – in mind.
“I’ve had a couple of sad days since I made the announcement because I know I’m not going to play for England again,” he says. “I’ve been playing for England since I was in the under-15s. I don’t feel like a weight has been lifted because I never saw it as a burden.
“I used to love going down there and knowing I was going to be captain. To be fair to Brendan, when I had the chat with him, he said that if you want to carry on for England, I can tailor your Liverpool games. When he said that. it made me go 100 per cent with my decision because I don’t want my Liverpool games to be tailored. I still want to be available, I want to be fresh and play at a high level for Liverpool for certainly one more season.
“We will have to wait and see if there are any more after that. Of course I’m going to feel fresher and benefit from not playing. I’m also going to be more liked in my house with being at home more. That was one of my reasons – to be around the girls a bit more.
“You sort of feel like you are lying to them all the time. It’s difficult to say to them you are going away for four to six weeks. Then they are on the phone and on FaceTime saying they want you home. It does become difficult being away. I’ve done it for 14 years. I had to be fair to my family but also to Liverpool as well.”
After Brazil and missing out on the le, Suárez’s sale ensured a triple whammy, but Gerrard is adamant the club is in a strong enough position to recover from his departure. “I am his number one fan. I love him to bits as a player and no doubt there is a hole that will be left when someone like that leaves,” he said.
“Everyone’s initial thoughts were to be down and sad, but it was exactly the same when [Fernando] Torres moved on. This club is so big that it moves forward, it’s not about one player. We have been really sharp in the transfer market to fill the hole and soften the blow of a world-class player going.
“Everyone needs to share the responsibility of Luis moving on and that starts with me. We are a good team, with a good manager, that is getting stronger.
“The confidence is rising in the dressing room and we have got to show that we are the real deal. We are not there to just make the numbers up. There is genuine belief.
“Good sides don’t just have one good season. They keep trying to fight for what they want. Chelsea do it. Manchester City do it. Manchester United have had a one-off bad season and they will be back. Arsenalhave made a couple of really good signings. The league is going to be very, very tough but we know we are one of the sides that has got a genuine chance of winning it. I believe that.”
The ‘We go again’ mantra would feel appropriate if it did not carry such baggage, but Gerrard is ready to repeat it. Liverpool play the champions Manchester City in New York on Wednesday with Gerrard preferring to see last season as the catalyst for another le bid rather than a last chance that went begging. This unburdening session ends sounding more therapeutic than despondent.
“When I see that huddle against Man City it’s real, it was from my heart,” said Gerrard.“I was emotional at the time as we had just beaten them. We were so close. It was a reminder to everyone that there was still work to do and as it proved there was. You guys know me well enough, I’ll keep going and I’ll go again.”
Gerrard is good people tho. Fgt has a CL le, he needs to calm down.
you mean
actually I was being nice
They are both in the same ballpark of English players overrated by English press and fans.
Legends![]()
Overrated by English press. Not fans. Screw those overrated pampered TOSB and let some real English talent from the below divisions play.
My bad
When I said fans, I meant their own fans (Liverpool, Chelsea)
But yeah it's mostly the press
Yeah, Liverpool fans are convinced Gerrard is one of the top 10 midfielders of all time.. They're also convinced that Suarez was never a racist and happened to fall on three different people's arms..
but it's common to call people negros in Uruguay and Argentina
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Gerrard >>>>>>>>>>> Lampard
He's overrated, but not in same league of overrated tbh.
1)Beckham
2) Lampard
3) Gerrard
Gerrard vs Lampard vs Scholes
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Last edited by Infinite_limit; 07-30-2014 at 02:04 PM.
That's true, tbh. Negro is the most common nickname here. You can be blonde with blue eyes and still have negro as your nickname. In fact that's my nickname, tbh.
I don't see how Gerrard is overrated tbh. You could make a case for Lampard being overrated but Gerrard in his prime was a damn good player.
Schole's assist number seems a bit too shy for a midfield playmaker compared to Lampard and Gerrard, but it's understandable if you know he started off primarily as a Forward/Shadow Striker.
And I don't think neither Gerrard nor Lampard is overrated, they're just not the heroball type of player who can save his team on his own. Even if you give Pirlo to China national team they'd still suck major asses despite having Pirlo, imho. Gerrard and Lampard both need the right strategy and right teammates around them to make the optimum impact.
BOSS
Fergie said his dream MF was Keane + Ballack
resistanze is it ok if DAF86 calls you "negro"?
I guess it's like white boys saying ' ' here. Would still result in a punch to the face tbh
1) Negro means black not n¡gger, tbh.
2) If you knew the idiosyncrasy here you wouldn't get mad and accept it.
3) You don't know what ing race I am.![]()
isn't really offensive here tbh, not the same as n!gger. It is corny when people try to call you that to be hip
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