English football; beautiful decay

Picture this: Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson staring into the distance with the Kop at his back and the wind in his hair. His eyes are a picture of melancholy, and his right bicep is conspicuously flexed where it meets his armband. He’s just driven through a scattered Manchester United defence to face David De Gea, and then scuffed the finish with a comical flourish. Everything about him that can be changed screams Stevie G, but the intangible fact that he simply isn’t as good hovers infallibly above. Gerrard would have buried the finish, Gerrard was a class above – Henderson’s Liverpool, and Sunday’s opponent Manchester United, are heading in the opposite direction.

Henderson
A negative transition

Despite the lack of recent success, there’s still been a certain panache to fixtures between Liverpool and United. The most successful team of the pre-Premiership era against the side whose dominated the new league since its inception. Until now, the fact that the Reds haven’t won a title since 1991 hasn’t seemed to matter. The atmosphere at Anfield is always turbocharged before kickoff, and never more so than when United rolls into town. If the Merseyside Derby is ‘friendly’, than this makes up for the crosstown niceties by being anything but. When the Liverpool supporters rise for a rendition of You’ll Never Walk Alone, most visiting supporters take it in and watch. When they sing it before this fixture, its met with the defiant and repetitive chant of ‘United, United, United’. The roar as the whistle is blown is closer to a World Cup knockout fixture than it is to a Premiership match. There’s always the sense that something might happen.

That sense endured until yesterday, and then something snapped. Whether it happened when it became clear that United had no intention of actually playing entertaining football, or when Jurgen Klopp named a midfielder up top and left Belgian battering-ram Christian Benteke on the bench is irrelevant. Something was lost last night. The grandeur of the fixture was met with some of the drabbest football seen this season. An early bout of handbags threatened to get something started, but then it lapsed into nothingness again.

The most exciting passage of play in the first half, excluding a few of Anthony Martial and Emre Can’s more valiant efforts to kickstart something in spite of their teammates’ malaise, was the introduction of Cameron Borthwick-Jackson after Ashley Young decided he had had enough. Not only did it give the commentators the chance to tell us that he shares the title for the longest name in Premier League history (26 characters!), and that he drives a Vauxhall Corsa which sticks out like a sore thumb amidst the Aston Martins at United’s training ground; but we got to sample his unorthodox running style as he entered the field of play. Its not his fault, because he’s built like a twig and, at 18 years old, should be refining himself in reserves matches in front of 10 people on Wednesday evenings rather than in front of 45,000 at Anfield. In Alex Ferguson’s day, it was Paul Pogba that couldn’t get a starting berth in his teens: a ridiculous decision that has cost United, though it probably wouldn’t have mattered if he was still manager. In Van Gaal’s, its Borthwick-Jackson and Paddy McNair – young men who look so raw that it would feel unfair to even start discussing whether they’re actually good enough to play at this level – that hold up the side when injury hits. Ferguson recalled the retired Paul Scholes during times of crisis, Van Gaal will be struggling to recall the last time United actually looked like owning a match for the majority of the 90.

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Pogba couldn’t get a game under Ferguson, so he left for Juventus and became the best midfielder in the world

It was a harking back to when English football knew it was grim. Roast lamb, congealed gravy, in-laws for lunch, Thatcher… Except they were all driving Vauxhall Corsas, the players weren’t sat in five jackets each on the bench (it actually was a bench), and there was the sense that everyone involved had a reason and a duty, rather than an obligation, to care. Or at least enough pride to pretend that they did. The players still walked out to thumping music on Sunday, the Kop still sung their anthem; but this is where the theatre stopped, and the decaying reality of English football began. Because neither side looked like it was taking the rough and ready all too seriously, nor did they look as though they fancied putting on an exhibition, even in light of the fact that all but two of the 22 starters, Jesse Lingard and Ander Herrera the exceptions, were capped internationals. It was the old first division football without the bark, and Premier League football without the bite. The worst of both worlds.

The Ballon D’or 11’s much publicised failure to include any Premier League players was a shock to some, but to many others it was a familiar indication of a downwards trend that shows no signs of resurrecting. The league has lost Gareth Bale and Luis Suarez in recent years, and replaced them with Mesut Ozil and Alexis Sanchez. Fine players at the forefront of Arsenal’s title bid, but the reality of their departures from Real Madrid and Barcelona respectively can not, and must not, be ignored. They were the castoffs; the expendable individuals that Spain’s big two felt they could do without. Whether they always make the right decision is questionable, as Barca misfit Yaya Toure might attest, but also inconsequential. In the battle for relevancy, English football is falling fast.

Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil
World class, rejects

Marouanne Fellaini is what £30m buys in the Premiership these days. The Belgian is an excellent footballer, with the exception of when the ball is at his feet. Or Adam Lallana, the £26m man who, with every appearance he makes in red, calls into question why Liverpool didn’t take the cheaper option and exhume Harry Houdini if they were looking for someone to disappear. The 27 year old has managed four goals and eight assists in his 37 league starts since moving from Southampton, with none of the former and just two of the latter coming this campaign. I fear that even the hallowed magician would struggle to stay hidden for the 76 minutes that Lallana managed on Sunday.

“Manchester United, yet to register an effort on target” called a glib Jon Champion midway through the second half, as the camera panned onto a miserable looking Van Gaal, looking snug in his parka on parka on parka, “and now they’re struggling to muster a corner taker.”

The deadlock was broken on 78 minutes, when Fellaini’s post-bound header was finished on the rebound by United captain Wayne Rooney. He crashed it into the net with all the frustration of somebody who’d had to watch 78 minutes of this match, and still had 12 to go. In the process, he eclipsed Thierry Henry’s Premier League record of most goals for one player at one club. A grand record, in the least glorious circumstances.

Ultimately, the most poignant moment of the match was saved until its last throes. With injury time approaching and his side down a goal, Klopp brought on QPR loanee Steven Caulker to play up top. Yes Klopp, the world’s most fashionable manager, using the skeleton in the closet of old-school English managers; what to do when you’re just not sure – lumping the centre half at centre forward. It didn’t work for Klopp. It never works.

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The last of the old breed, we just didn’t know it at the time

Still, as sad as it is to watch the fall of two clubs that we’ve loved to hate, and hated to love to envy; there have been reasons for optimism. Eddie Howe, every bit the old-school manager sans the restrictive stubborn streak, has led his unlikely Bournemouth side into mid-table in their first season of top flight football. In front of 12,000 fans, the Cherries still have players that were part of the campaign to stop them from entering administration and shutting up shop just six seasons ago in the fourth tier. Or West Ham United’s enigmatic collection of Frenchmen looking for a EURO berth, headlined by the enchantingly excellent Dimitri Payet, who have led them into a European qualification spot. Mark Hughes’ Stoke City is another worth mentioning. They’ve taken two outcasts from Barcelona, one from Bayern Munich and another from Inter, and turned the Premiership’s version of a school yard bully into an oddly attractive and thoughtful unit.

I don’t need to waste column space on leaders Leicester City, or rather I just don’t have enough of it. Riyad Mahrez and Jamie Vardy’s exploits this season have started a story that will be spoken of for years to come. Whether they can muster the title, or even just a top four spot, is irrelevant (to everyone but Leicester supporters) – because they’ve been the strongest signal yet that a change is coming.

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Dier, Alli, Kane – forward thinking

Another still is Tottenham, perennial top four bridesmaids that sit just a point off fifth but have had so much written about them in such positive tones. They play expansive, entertaining football and are led by a youth-team striker, a division three teenager and converted centre back who’ve come together to form the spine of a team that takes itself seriously and tries to play decent football. No James Milner or Ashley Young, players who’ve been in the modern trade long enough to see what a falsity it is; just young English footballers, barely out of school, with a bit of an idealistic streak that we can only hope is still present in the next generation. After watching Sunday’s debacle, I’m not convinced there will be.

Hoist that Grand Old Flag

Maybe I should be working right now. In fact, I know I should be working. I have 3 exams in the next week, but I don’t care.

This tanking fiasco has ruined my week, again…and its time to resolve it once and for all.

Here’s an opening statement for you: Melbourne tanked in 2009. Of course they bloody well did…it’s just a fact. They threw the game against Richmond in Round 19, they belted Fremantle the next week and then lost to eventual finalists Carlton and grand finalists St Kilda to secure a priority pick.

The football world knew this, just like they knew that Fremantle, St Kilda, Hawthorn, Collingwood, Carlton, West Coast and even Greater Western Sydney have all dabbled in what are now seen as the dark arts of list management. Whilst they may not have had a buffoon like Chris Connolly threatening jobs in the Football Department; each of these clubs made enough suspect moves in their respective years of cellar-dwelling to make them worthy scapegoats for investigation.

With Andy Demetriou swearing black and blue throughout his reign that tanking didn’t exist and his right hand man Adrian Anderson (who reminds me a bit too much of Squealer the propaganda pig in Orwell’s Animal Farm) characteristically shuffling next to him in agreement: One has to wonder just how serious this AFL investigation must be to have driven the superb media agenda against the football club.

I don’t really buy the idea that the AFL forced clubs into exploiting the priority pick system, nor do I think that the alleged tanking by Melbourne is akin to Pakistani-style match fixing. If you were a stupid enough organisation to reward teams for losing, a stupid enough club to systematically exploit the system or a stupid enough punter to bet on Melbourne to win a football match in 2008 or 2009: You’re simply a fool.

I’m a passionate Melbourne man, there’s no need to hide it; which is why I propose this:

Whilst the afore mentioned clubs undoubtedly and very much frantically delete strings of emails from their computers and records of meetings from their databases, the Melbourne Football Club must be in discussion with the AFL to resolve this in a manner to best suit both sides.

Tanking is morally abhorrent, threatening jobs is completely illegal: In a court of law, however, and represented by that famous coterie of theirs, the Demons may find themselves victors. The only people to allegedly come forward so far to give evidence are sacked coach Dean Bailey, discarded reserve Ruckmen John Meesen and Paul Johnson, and, notoriously, former Demon turned Blue Brock McLean. Easy enough to discredit the statements of former, disgruntled, employees. Ricky Petterd, sacked as recently as Monday, was on Melbourne radio on Wednesday to assert that Melbourne didn’t throw games. Why does his statement, and its surety, hold any less weight than those listed above?

Maybe he just didn’t feel the same ‘vibes’.

Whilst Caroline Wilson, Mick Warner and Mark Robinson tap furiously on their poor keyboards to turn the playing of defenders as forwards, an approach which established David Neitz as a Melbourne icon and led to Colin Garland winning Melbourne’s only game against an established side last season, into a heinous crime – I think there is a better approach.

Lets avoid character assassinations of the dead, lets avoid investigating half the competition: Lets make a deal.

Let Melbourne keep their 2012 draft picks. Lets not lose sight of the FACT that Jack Viney has done absolutely nothing wrong to lose the chance to play with his fathers football club; this football department was not the same one that tanked football matches.

Hand Melbourne a fine, around the $1-$2 million mark; allowing all that money they had taken in from their gala dinner this season to evaporate…along with the promise of a ‘warchest’ that delivered the likes of Chris Dawes and David Rodan.

Strip them of their first round and second round draft picks in 2013, and a spot in the Pre-Season Draft for two years.

Make a statement that tanking will not be acceptable, but don’t punish the scapegoat too severely.

As a Dees man, I could accept this as a punishment. I would welcome this punishment.

After Jeff White kicked that infamous winning goal against the Bulldogs in Round 22 2005, he was asked by Christi Malthouse to explain what had changed to give Melbourne their ‘never say die’ attitude in the back end of this season.

The 2012 Melbourne team had no such motto. Even when the Dees supporters were cheering their team on unconditionally throughout a shocking year – I attended 11 games – the prospect of being awarded richly for the Tom Scully compensation picks still hung in the air like a rotten banana in a school bag.

Its time that attitude was murdered: Burned to the ground. The ONLY priority should be winning; there should be no reward for losing. As Mark Fine said on SEN on Thursday night, no club tanks to go from Pick 8 to Pick 7. but only to significantly profit from the draft.

Players like Cale Morton, Addam Maric, Jordan Gysberts and Lucas Cook: Top 20~ picks who have all left in recent years should be waning enough to Melbourne that their inability to develop youth is a big enough problem for them to steer clear of high picks.

Melbourne should pick up Oliver Wines with Pick 4 this year, Jack Viney with 27 and Josh Toy in the Pre-Season Draft and thank their lucky stars that they can do so.

They need to go into 2013 with the assurance to these elite kids that nothing but the best attitude will be tolerated in training and on game day. They need to enter the year knowing that the likes of Connolly, Cameron Schwab and Dean Bailey have been removed from football if their involvement is as serious as implied.

They need to know that the Melbourne Footy Club has been down long enough, and that whilst names like Smith, Barrassi, Flower, Stynes and Neitz are no longer on the field: They need to be emulated and they need to be bettered.

The grand old flag must stop hanging limply on the MCG roof and start standing proudly. 154 years of history, thousands of generous and dedicated supporters and the original tenancy of the MCG must mean something more than shattering losses and the promise of next year, maybe.