Beautiful game takes turn for the worse
http://www.unison.ie/irish_independe...issue_id=13012
LIVERPOOL 0
MANCHESTER UTD 0
Matt Dickinson
OVERPRICED tickets, dwindling crowds, lone strikers and the title sewn up by mid-September; the beautiful game, Premiership style, is in trouble.
The hope was that yesterday's High Noon showdown at Anfield might provide a break from the negativity and, perhaps even, the spark to ignite a moribund season.
Oh, dear. There was more fun to be had reading the batting averages in Wisden than watching Manchester United, a club famed for its spirit of adventure, play out a scoreless bore with a Liverpool team whose four games in the Premiership (or six hours of football) have yielded a solitary goal.
Liverpool's predilection for drilling long balls at Peter Crouch drew derision from United fans, who were soon chanting "Wimbledon".
Most Liverpool supporters have taken to their 6ft 7in target-man, serenading Crouch with "He's big, he's red, his feet stick out the bed," but he needs an accomplice.
For all the Anfield faithful's implicit trust in Rafa Benitez, many Kopites must have secretly been wishing he had pushed harder to sign Michael Owen. Crouch's flick-ons would have been meat and drink, Port and large cigars for Owen.
This game encapsulated the 05/06 Premiership: cautious. The new obsession with playing one up, a tactic that brought the modest Greeks such rich reward at Euro 2004, has influenced managerial thinking in England. One manager's 4-5-1 is another's 4-3-3 and the set-up of Alex Ferguson's team was only marginally more adventurous than Benitez's.
It appeared that Roy Keane was banned from crossing the half-way line, while Paul Scholes and Alan Smith must have been told that they would be fined a week's wages for advancing beyond the ball.
Unstoppable in pre-season, Cristiano Ronaldo was comprehensively snuffed out by the eager tackling of Stephen Warnock. Even Wayne Rooney - or Wayniac Roonatic as he is known on many back pages - could not enliven this occasion, taking the instruction to calm down a little too far.
"Liverpool set their stall out to make it very difficult to break them down, but we had enough quality to do something about it," Ferguson said. "We lacked a cutting edge."
Steven Gerrard argued that Liverpool had to beware the breakaway threat contained in the flying feet of Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo. "You have to be a bit cautious," the England midfielder said.
Little caution coloured the usual spiky backdrop. Liverpool's prolific banner-writers had been hard at work, even starting their exhibition with a tribute to the club's European Cups, five large stars, hanging from the bridge where the M62 melts into Merseyside.
An American flag was waved on the Kop, poking fun at the Glazers' club with the message: "We've only got five stars."
Old Glory met new joy from Istanbul with a long official UEFA banner purloined from the Ataturk stadium. United fans were not to be outdone or outsung. "City of Culture, you're having a laugh," they chorused.
Culture? The closest yesterday came to art was in the paint-drying department. Or still life. Frustratingly for a packed house and tens of millions more watching on television around the world, the usual creative springs ran dry.
Rooney appeared more mindful of watching his Ps, Qs and Fs. Ronaldo was largely well policed by the excellent Stephen Warnock, the young Liverpool left-back who put in two marvellous sliding dispossessions of the United attacker.
Gerrard was typically industrious, almost scoring from a free kick aimed to the far post.
As well as Gerrard and Warnock, watching England head coach Sven-Goran Eriksson must have been impressed by United's emergency left-back, Kieran Richardson, who rarely looked over-awed on his first league start for the visitors.
At least Eriksson will have appreciated that Premiership rarity, nine Englishmen starting in the outfield 20.
Jamie Carragher put in one magnificent first-half tackle on Ruud van Nistelrooy, who still created one chance, lifted over Jose Reina but also over the bar.
"Ruud said the 'keeper was so far off his line he bwas tempted to chip him," Ferguson said.
United's manager added that he felt the heavy history of this fixture, the enmity between the supporters, weighed on the players, so fostering negative thoughts. "These games are too intense," Ferguson said.
"Maybe this game is too important. It puts players under pressure. It's early season and the players are very fit. They close each other down early."
In an attempt to engineer a breakthrough, Rooney pushed closer to Van Nistelrooy after the break, and only a great tackle from Gerrard denied the teenager a clear run on goal. Gerrard and then Luis Garcia let fly, but to no avail.
Liverpool were improving, Benitez stressed.
"We lost to United twice last season, whereas this season we drew and controlled the game," the Spaniard said.
"We can't waste time worrying about the gap [with Chelsea]."
Ferguson agreed. "It's far too early," he said. "Games like this will not be easy for Chelsea."
Games like this will not be easy to watch again on the video - or DVD. © The Times, London
Bookmarks