Saturday, October 01, 2005

[lfc-news] Foreign generals refuse orders to advance

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Foreign generals refuse orders to advance
http://sport.independent.co.uk/football/chelsea/article316421.ece
By Sam Wallace
Published: 01 October 2005
The inconvenience of international friendlies, the uncompromising fixture
schedule, the ghastly weather or the oppressive top rate of income tax -
whatever it was Jose Mourinho and Rafael Benitez seemed to be agreeing upon
in their pre-match pitch-side chat on Wednesday night, it was unlikely to
involve football. They have been here only one year but for all their
modern approaches, these managers could scarcely have embraced the English
culture of feuds and grudges more wholeheartedly.

From Mourinho came an attack on the "basketball football" that he
perceives to be at the heart of Liverpool's long-ball game and in return
from Benitez came the suggestion that Chelsea are "afraid" of his team.
They will have to abandon the cosy small-talk and perfect the art of the
handshake without eye contact to match the rancour of Sir Alex Ferguson and
Arsène Wenger's antipathy but there is a rivalry in the making between this
pair that promises to be just as engrossing and long-running.

Ahead of tomorrow's rematch, Benitez has given hints as to how he thought
Chelsea approached their first visit to Anfield since last season's
European Cup semi-final: the distinction he made was that Mourinho's team
were one of the "strongest" but there were no compliments for style.

"I like the way Arsenal played two or three years ago a lot, and I like the
way Barcelona and Milan play, that is much better football," Benitez said.
"But it is very difficult to say who is the best team in the world. What
about Santos, Boca Juniors?

"You don't have to play beautiful football to be the best although you have
to play as well as possible and you have to win. Real Madrid have won
trophies for a long time and Chelsea have only started. I hope people talk
about us like that soon, but with respect."

After the inconclusive nature of their Champions' League game comes a
return to the Premiership in which Mourinho dominates. The replica tin-foil
European Cups that the Anfield crowd waved in his direction on Wednesday
will count for little when Liverpool take stock of the 37 points that stood
between them and the Premiership champions last season. A defeat for the
home side and it might be over for them before the chill of the English
season sets in.

So what did we learn from Wednesday's game? That Chelsea can be pressed
back, that they can be stifled and they can be dominated but if Liverpool
want to score against them as well then they have to learn some new tricks.
It also became clear why Benitez, more than Wenger and Ferguson, is likely
to prove an irritant to the empire Mourinho is trying to build.

Tactically, and in the terms of their football culture, both men occupy the
same territory: they are both conservative in their approach to winning
football matches. Against Ferguson and Wenger, Mourinho can take that
position without fear of comparison. Against Liverpool, he and Benitez can,
at times, resemble two generals refusing orders to advance.

The difference comes in the gloss they place upon their methods. From
Benitez comes talk of careful development, gradual progress and the
rebuilding of a club that, despite their unlikely triumph in Istanbul, know
they have a long way to travel to become champions of their own country.
From Mourinho comes the rather less bashful assertion that Liverpool were
not worthy winners of the European Cup.

Tomorrow would be a good chance for Mourinho to start offering up evidence
to back the wide-ranging claims he made when he first arrived in Liverpool
this week, but especially those about Anfield's legitimacy to be champions
of Europe. Because for a team whose achievements he holds in so much
contempt, Mourinho's reluctance to commit so little to attack at Anfield on
Wednesday suggested that he has a higher opinion of the opposition than he
conceded.

If Chelsea are capable of ending the title race before Christmas, if they
are the club of the next decade with the resources of Roman Abramovich's
fortune, then tomorrow represents a chance for them to do more than play
for a draw at the home of the club that finished 37 points behind them last
season. The excuses for Wednesday's game - that it was a night for
Champions' League caution rather than Premiership abandon - no longer apply.

Mourinho will resent the pressure to attack without remorse but his
proclamations of supremacy will start to sound empty if he settles for a
point against an opponent he has spent so much time belittling.

Steven Gerrard's assertion yesterday that Liverpool might be "a little more
adventurous in certain areas" suggests that they are ready to attack.
Chelsea might start by asking themselves why they are so afraid to do the
same.

The inconvenience of international friendlies, the uncompromising fixture
schedule, the ghastly weather or the oppressive top rate of income tax -
whatever it was Jose Mourinho and Rafael Benitez seemed to be agreeing upon
in their pre-match pitch-side chat on Wednesday night, it was unlikely to
involve football. They have been here only one year but for all their
modern approaches, these managers could scarcely have embraced the English
culture of feuds and grudges more wholeheartedly.

From Mourinho came an attack on the "basketball football" that he
perceives to be at the heart of Liverpool's long-ball game and in return
from Benitez came the suggestion that Chelsea are "afraid" of his team.
They will have to abandon the cosy small-talk and perfect the art of the
handshake without eye contact to match the rancour of Sir Alex Ferguson and
Arsène Wenger's antipathy but there is a rivalry in the making between this
pair that promises to be just as engrossing and long-running.

Ahead of tomorrow's rematch, Benitez has given hints as to how he thought
Chelsea approached their first visit to Anfield since last season's
European Cup semi-final: the distinction he made was that Mourinho's team
were one of the "strongest" but there were no compliments for style.

"I like the way Arsenal played two or three years ago a lot, and I like the
way Barcelona and Milan play, that is much better football," Benitez said.
"But it is very difficult to say who is the best team in the world. What
about Santos, Boca Juniors?

"You don't have to play beautiful football to be the best although you have
to play as well as possible and you have to win. Real Madrid have won
trophies for a long time and Chelsea have only started. I hope people talk
about us like that soon, but with respect."

After the inconclusive nature of their Champions' League game comes a
return to the Premiership in which Mourinho dominates. The replica tin-foil
European Cups that the Anfield crowd waved in his direction on Wednesday
will count for little when Liverpool take stock of the 37 points that stood
between them and the Premiership champions last season. A defeat for the
home side and it might be over for them before the chill of the English
season sets in.

So what did we learn from Wednesday's game? That Chelsea can be pressed
back, that they can be stifled and they can be dominated but if Liverpool
want to score against them as well then they have to learn some new tricks.
It also became clear why Benitez, more than Wenger and Ferguson, is likely
to prove an irritant to the empire Mourinho is trying to build.

Tactically, and in the terms of their football culture, both men occupy the
same territory: they are both conservative in their approach to winning
football matches. Against Ferguson and Wenger, Mourinho can take that
position without fear of comparison. Against Liverpool, he and Benitez can,
at times, resemble two generals refusing orders to advance.

The difference comes in the gloss they place upon their methods. From
Benitez comes talk of careful development, gradual progress and the
rebuilding of a club that, despite their unlikely triumph in Istanbul, know
they have a long way to travel to become champions of their own country.
From Mourinho comes the rather less bashful assertion that Liverpool were
not worthy winners of the European Cup.

Tomorrow would be a good chance for Mourinho to start offering up evidence
to back the wide-ranging claims he made when he first arrived in Liverpool
this week, but especially those about Anfield's legitimacy to be champions
of Europe. Because for a team whose achievements he holds in so much
contempt, Mourinho's reluctance to commit so little to attack at Anfield on
Wednesday suggested that he has a higher opinion of the opposition than he
conceded.

If Chelsea are capable of ending the title race before Christmas, if they
are the club of the next decade with the resources of Roman Abramovich's
fortune, then tomorrow represents a chance for them to do more than play
for a draw at the home of the club that finished 37 points behind them last
season. The excuses for Wednesday's game - that it was a night for
Champions' League caution rather than Premiership abandon - no longer apply.

Mourinho will resent the pressure to attack without remorse but his
proclamations of supremacy will start to sound empty if he settles for a
point against an opponent he has spent so much time belittling.

Steven Gerrard's assertion yesterday that Liverpool might be "a little more
adventurous in certain areas" suggests that they are ready to attack.
Chelsea might start by asking themselves why they are so afraid to do the same.

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