The OFFICIAL Liverpool FC thread - Arne to Slot right in?

Started by Gabriel_Hurl, February 05, 2009, 03:47:16 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Dave

Ah maybe you are right so, thought I read it somewhere though.

Minder

Quote from: Farrandeelin on April 21, 2011, 07:54:39 PM
Ye are the team to watch for next season. God only knows how ye'd be doing if Roy Hodgeson was sacked earlier on.

What about the experts on here that reckoned Hodgson was doing a grand job with the players he had to work with and Liverpool fans needed to readjust their ambitions to being a midtable team?
"When it's too tough for them, it's just right for us"

GalwayBayBoy

Quote from: Dave on April 21, 2011, 08:28:45 PM
Quote from: Farrandeelin on April 21, 2011, 07:54:39 PM
Ye are the team to watch for next season. God only knows how ye'd be doing if Roy Hodgeson was sacked earlier on.
I read somewhere that if the season started in January or at least since Dalglish took over then Liverpool would be 2nd behind Manchester United. Amazing what Dalglish has done for them.

They had the best record at one point but may have fallen a little from that in recent weeks.

Blowitupref

Quote from: Minder on April 21, 2011, 09:30:43 PM
Quote from: Farrandeelin on April 21, 2011, 07:54:39 PM
Ye are the team to watch for next season. God only knows how ye'd be doing if Roy Hodgeson was sacked earlier on.

What about the experts on here that reckoned Hodgson was doing a grand job with the players he had to work with and Liverpool fans needed to readjust their ambitions to being a midtable team?

Hasn't Hodgson done a good job at West brom including a win over Liverpool? real work starts for Dalglish next season & it looks like no European football to distract him.
Is the ref going to finally blow his whistle?... No, he's going to blow his nose

EagleLord

Love the way clubs call european football a distraction when they arent in it, making it out as if they don't care they aren't there.  :D

Minder

Quote from: Blowitupref on April 21, 2011, 09:43:59 PM
Quote from: Minder on April 21, 2011, 09:30:43 PM
Quote from: Farrandeelin on April 21, 2011, 07:54:39 PM
Ye are the team to watch for next season. God only knows how ye'd be doing if Roy Hodgeson was sacked earlier on.

What about the experts on here that reckoned Hodgson was doing a grand job with the players he had to work with and Liverpool fans needed to readjust their ambitions to being a midtable team?

Hasn't Hodgson done a good job at West brom including a win over Liverpool? real work starts for Dalglish next season & it looks like no European football to distract him.

What relevance has how he is now doing to how he did at Liverpool? West Brom is probably his level.
"When it's too tough for them, it's just right for us"

Two Hands FFS

Hodgson 20 Games 25 Points  Average of 1.25 points per game
King Kenny 13 Games 24 Points Average of 1.84 points per game

Thats all

Gabriel_Hurl

Liverpool sign largest kit deal in British football - 25 million quid a year.

QuoteLiverpool have secured the biggest kit deal in English football history, the £25 million-a-year contract with Boston-based Warrior Sports more than doubling the Anfield club's present agreement with adidas.

The Times understands that Warrior, a subsidiary of New Balance, will take over production of Liverpool kits in time for the 2012-13 season. Adidas, which launched a new away kit last week as part of its £12 million-a-year contract with the club, had the chance to match the offer but was not prepared to meet the American company's price.

The link between Liverpool and Warrior is believed to be a long-term relationship and outstrips the £23.3 million per year that Nike pays Manchester United, the previous British record.

John W. Henry, the Liverpool owner, has insisted since taking over at Anfield in October that the club would only spend money that it generates. With Liverpool unlikely to qualify for the Champions League this season, some had questioned their ability to compete in the transfer market.

However, the agreement with a brand better known in the lacrosse world would appear to have solved the short-term cashflow problems caused by failure to qualify for Europe's premier club tournament.

Sources inside Anfield have been increasingly bullish about their summer spending power and Kenny Dalglish is likely to have a considerable war chest when the transfer window opens.

Although the Liverpool caretaker manager believes that the crop of youngsters emerging from the academy has the potential to continue making a positive impression on his squad, he maintains that investment is necessary during the close season if the club are to become competitive again.

"It's important that there is room for development for players, but it's also important you don't use it as an excuse not to spend money and not improve what you've already got," Dalglish said.

"Age does not determine their ability to play. So if we're convinced we have young players who are maybe better than what's available, then we'll keep our younger players.

"But that does not say we don't want to improve as a football club. We do need to leave some path open if we do think there are players who can come in. If they develop then fine, if they don't, we've got a problem. But if you buy a player in and he doesn't produce, you've got a bigger problem."

According to PR Marketing, a German market research company, Liverpool are the fourth-biggest replica kit seller in football, behind United, Real Madrid and Barcelona. About 900,000 shirts are sold annually and, in the adidas stable, only Real sell more jerseys. Liverpool's defection has come as a huge blow to the manufacturer.

Fenway Sports Group (FSG), Liverpool's owner, has in recent months become increasingly close to Jim Davis, the chairman of New Balance. This month New Balance, previously best known for its running shoes, announced a multiyear partnership with the Boston Red Sox, who share the same owner as Liverpool. Along with a kit deal, New Balance is thought to have paid in the region of $1 million (about £600,000) for a 70-foot illuminated logo inside Fenway Park, the home of the Red Sox.

United's groundbreaking 13-year deal with Nike expires in 2015 and the Old Trafford club will expect an even bigger cheque when the time comes to negotiate with kit manufacturers.

GalwayBayBoy

Quote from: Gabriel_Hurl on April 22, 2011, 01:20:19 AM
Liverpool sign largest kit deal in British football - 25 million quid a year.

QuoteLiverpool have secured the biggest kit deal in English football history, the £25 million-a-year contract with Boston-based Warrior Sports more than doubling the Anfield club's present agreement with adidas.

The Times understands that Warrior, a subsidiary of New Balance, will take over production of Liverpool kits in time for the 2012-13 season. Adidas, which launched a new away kit last week as part of its £12 million-a-year contract with the club, had the chance to match the offer but was not prepared to meet the American company's price.

The link between Liverpool and Warrior is believed to be a long-term relationship and outstrips the £23.3 million per year that Nike pays Manchester United, the previous British record.

John W. Henry, the Liverpool owner, has insisted since taking over at Anfield in October that the club would only spend money that it generates. With Liverpool unlikely to qualify for the Champions League this season, some had questioned their ability to compete in the transfer market.

However, the agreement with a brand better known in the lacrosse world would appear to have solved the short-term cashflow problems caused by failure to qualify for Europe's premier club tournament.

Sources inside Anfield have been increasingly bullish about their summer spending power and Kenny Dalglish is likely to have a considerable war chest when the transfer window opens.

Although the Liverpool caretaker manager believes that the crop of youngsters emerging from the academy has the potential to continue making a positive impression on his squad, he maintains that investment is necessary during the close season if the club are to become competitive again.

"It's important that there is room for development for players, but it's also important you don't use it as an excuse not to spend money and not improve what you've already got," Dalglish said.

"Age does not determine their ability to play. So if we're convinced we have young players who are maybe better than what's available, then we'll keep our younger players.

"But that does not say we don't want to improve as a football club. We do need to leave some path open if we do think there are players who can come in. If they develop then fine, if they don't, we've got a problem. But if you buy a player in and he doesn't produce, you've got a bigger problem."

According to PR Marketing, a German market research company, Liverpool are the fourth-biggest replica kit seller in football, behind United, Real Madrid and Barcelona. About 900,000 shirts are sold annually and, in the adidas stable, only Real sell more jerseys. Liverpool's defection has come as a huge blow to the manufacturer.

Fenway Sports Group (FSG), Liverpool's owner, has in recent months become increasingly close to Jim Davis, the chairman of New Balance. This month New Balance, previously best known for its running shoes, announced a multiyear partnership with the Boston Red Sox, who share the same owner as Liverpool. Along with a kit deal, New Balance is thought to have paid in the region of $1 million (about £600,000) for a 70-foot illuminated logo inside Fenway Park, the home of the Red Sox.

United's groundbreaking 13-year deal with Nike expires in 2015 and the Old Trafford club will expect an even bigger cheque when the time comes to negotiate with kit manufacturers.

Never heard of Warrior Sports but apparently it's worth over twice what Adidas were paying to produce the kits. Could look desperate though but we'll see.

Gabriel_Hurl

Could care less what the shirts look like in fairness.

deiseach

Quote from: Blowitupref on April 21, 2011, 09:43:59 PM
Quote from: Minder on April 21, 2011, 09:30:43 PM
Quote from: Farrandeelin on April 21, 2011, 07:54:39 PM
Ye are the team to watch for next season. God only knows how ye'd be doing if Roy Hodgeson was sacked earlier on.

What about the experts on here that reckoned Hodgson was doing a grand job with the players he had to work with and Liverpool fans needed to readjust their ambitions to being a midtable team?

Hasn't Hodgson done a good job at West brom including a win over Liverpool? real work starts for Dalglish next season & it looks like no European football to distract him.

It'll be interesting to see how Liverpool do without the 'distraction' of European games. Personally I think it's bollocks - highly trained, well prepared professional sportsmen should be able to to cope with the dozen or so extra games that come from playing in Europe each season, and I think it's a lame excuse used by managers who can't face up to the fact that the problem is with their performance (see: Arsene Wenger). Then again, I was one of those who thought that Hodgson was doing as well as he could with the players at his disposal and that digging up a dinosaur like Dalglish was a recipe for disaster. So expect Liverpool to roar up the table as they benefit from the lack of 'distraction' ;)

The Worker


gawa316

Great news on the new kit deal. That will be 45 mil coming in a year from it and our sponsership deal with Standard Chartered. You have to hand it to Ayre and the new owners, that despite us not performing on the pitch as we would like, they are certainly pulling off deal after deal.


EagleLord

Jesus lads I am seriously worried about what that shirt will look like.. Im thinking Prostar, azzuri, errea here..

laoislad

Quote from: EagleLord on April 22, 2011, 12:40:09 PM
Jesus lads I am seriously worried about what that shirt will look like.. Im thinking Prostar, azzuri, errea here..

Some of the recent jerseys haven't been too great though in fairness.
I think the current home one is rank.
When you think you're fucked you're only about 40% fucked.