Rafa Benitez looks a broken man... just like his ragged Liverpool team

15 January 2010 00:47
The now infamous email Tom Hicks Jnr sent to a disgruntled Liverpool fan last week is starting to look like some kind of exit strategy as well as an indecent proposal. A win-win tactic that was going to ease his pain, whatever the response from the recipient.[LNB] The supporter reacted the way one might expect when receiving such a shameless invitation, outing the Anfield part-owner's son and so ensuring that he was quickly out of the club.[LNB] Ton of trouble: Benitez has brought in close to 100 players in his five-and-a-half years at Anfield[LNB] But Hicks might just have seen the writing on the wall, might just have realised that things were only going to get worse rather than better. Reading in an FA Cup replay?[LNB] The days of nipping down The Sandford for a few pints were most definitely going to be numbered after his dad's team had lost to the visitors on Wednesday night.[LNB] Rafa Benitez is not the same animal, however. He's as stubborn as a mule, a Texan like Hicks would no doubt say, and he has no intention of making it easy for his employers, and a good deal cheaper, by quitting.[LNB] 'I will fight until the end,' said the manager last week, even if the end appeared to be a good deal further away than it does now.[LNB] But Benitez has the protection of a lucrative five-year contract and an unbreakable confidence in his own ability, drawn, as you might expect, from the success he has achieved in the past.[LNB] He conquered the Spanish duopoly of Real Madrid and Barcelona whenhe guided Valencia to two La Liga titles. He guided Liverpool toChampions League glory in his first season at Anfield. Not to mentionthe UEFA Cup he won while in Spain, the FA Cup he won here and a secondChampions League final appearance.[LNB] It was only a year ago thathis team were top of the Barclays Premier League and he probablyreminds himself of that before he goes to bed each night.[LNB] Hedoes not think he's bought badly, even if a lack of quality in a squadhe has spent more than £250million assembling is a principal reason whyit has been such a disastrous season.[LNB] For all the good players he has recruited, and in Fernando Torres, Pepe Reina and Xabi Alonso he has bought some gems, he has signed up far too much rubbish.[LNB] And before he starts listing the money raised by the sale of certain players, the net spend is still somewhere approaching £120m and that is more than Manchester United's.[LNB] If you include some of the kids who were sent straight to the academy, Benitez has brought in close to 100 players in the five-and-a-half years he has been on Merseyside. Almost 100 players, but not enough decent ones to cope now that Torres and Steven Gerrard, indeed Yossi Benayoun, are back in the treatment room.[LNB] Things, as Hicks Jnr would seem to have anticipated, are only going to get worse when Champions League qualification now remains the only serious objective. Can they climb from seventh in the Barclays Premier League table, having already suffered seven defeats, and secure a place in the top four when the team is so lacking in confidence and the competition from teams like Manchester City, Tottenham and Aston Villa is so intense? At this moment the answer would appear to be no.[LNB] In the absence of Torres and Gerrard more defeats are likely because look what's coming up next.[LNB] First, it is Stoke away, then Tottenham at home and, after meetings with Wolves and Bolton, they then take on Everton, Arsenal and big-spending City. [LNB]Alberto Aquilani? Against Reading he looked like a player with plenty of style but no substance.[LNB] So what are Liverpool to do? Push the button now or soldier on in the knowledge that a desperate situation probably won't improve, and that, for all Benitez's strength of mind, the mindset of his team is all wrong? Even the fans who have been so remarkably loyal to their beloved Rafa are starting to turn.[LNB] There is a solution in the form of Guus Hiddink. His romance with Russia is over and an opportunity to return to the Premier League is something he would take once he has cleared it with Roman Abramovich, and the fine job he did at Stamford Bridge would suggest that he is perfect for the role.[LNB] The solution? Could Hiddink take over at Anfield?[LNB] Not even the expense of firing Benitez and his staff should be too much of a consideration when you begin to weigh it up against the cost of missing every target they set themselves at the start of the season. Bringing in Hiddink now actually makes an awful lot of sense.[LNB] Yesterday, however, the message from the Anfield hierarchy remained much the same as it has been for the last three months.[LNB] It was delivered with less confidence - they are hurting as much as everyone else at a time when they continue to stress the need for stability during their search for new investment - but the intention at this moment is to stand by their man in the vain hope that he can revive his team. If he does, and Liverpool somehow end the season ahead of City, Tottenham and Villa, then it will go close to equalling anything Benitez has achieved since arriving in England.[LNB] This, after all, is half-time in Istanbul. A time when nobody is giving Liverpool chance. A time when Benitez looks as bereft of ideas as his players. In Istanbul, Liverpool somehow managed to bounce back but on this occasion it seems even more unlikely.[LNB] Benitez is too stubborn to admit the problem is with him but he looked like a broken man when he gave his post-match press conference on Wednesday night and his team looked broken, too.[LNB] So much so that, for all their desire to resist it, a less indecent proposal to Hiddink might not be too far away. [LNB] Hiddink closes in on Liverpool as Dutchman admits he would jump at Kop jobAndy Townsend: This bunch at Liverpool are just so mediocre!Benitez debate: Liverpool icons on whether Rafa should goLiverpool crisis: No Torres for six weeks as Gerrard and Benayoun out[LNB] [LNB]  

Source: Daily_Mail