spiny wrote:It is hard to believe that Liverpool were runners up as recently as 2009. As a result, great things were predicted for them for 2009/2010 in the media, whilst ignoring the number of 1-0 and last gasp victories that had carried them through. A small shift in goals scored and against has since made a big difference and seen them quickly drop out of the top four. It will be hard for them to get back. They need to invest heavily, their revenues are declining and have found that it is prospects of trophies and rewards that attracts top players, and not history.
The rags are still a very good team but could find themselves in a similar situation. City are a team on the up, full of top players. United need to add several top players or could find themselves on the way down. Most of their exerienced players are near the end of the careers and will need replacing. Same with their manager. Debts still need to be serviced. It will be hard to stop a slide if it starts, as Liverpool have found.
Liverpool were fine as long as they were still buying well. They had real talent in their midfield in Mascherano and Alonso. They were always going to go backwards without them, especially Alonso.
They also havent acquired especially well. They don't have a major goalscorer and this is the real killer for them. Carroll has 4 goals in 33 league games. Suarez only has 11. They can't afford to waste that kind of cash. Not when Spurs have someone like Adebayor who has more goals that the two of them combined. Put that goal scoring record in for van Persie and see how Arsenal do, watch the scum drop 20+ points without Rooney. That's the fragility of it. Even our season, 3 matches without Aguero and we drop 7 points (Stoke-Arsenal).
Not having cash will hurt the rag's ability to power through any issues. They'll be fine when everything ticks, but when things go tock: tougher. They can't afford to buy and pay for Berbatov and got get anything from him, but they can manage when guys like Hernandez pick up slack.