Liverpool Thread - 2021/22

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Article on bbc.
Liverpool transfers
2 players out, 3 players in
Out:
Minamino £16m (but only £13m upfront)
Mane £35m (but only £27m upfront)
In:
Nunez £64m (but only the initial amount) £85m
Carvalho £5m (but only the initial amount) £8m
Ramsey £4m (but only the initial amount) £7m

Net spend trophy warriors see £22m outflow
If flipped and done on city terms £60m outflow

The optics are starkly different
I thought Klub Shop said this guy was one of the best subs in the world?
 
Was listening to TalkSPORT (I know, I know) on my way home from work last night and Danny Kelly was discussing the proposed kick in instead of throw in by Wenger.

He mentioned that Liverpool were the foremost proponents of the passback to the keeper during their period of domestic dominance and it made me curious about when the passback rule was changed to when the keeper was no longer allowed to pick it up.

Having played a lot of football in my younger years I thought the rule may have been introduced in the 80’s. I was surprised that the rule was brought in for the European Championship in 1992 and implemented in the Premier League’s inaugural year.

One top division title since the passback laws were changed. They‘ve really just become an above average cup team.
 
Was listening to TalkSPORT (I know, I know) on my way home from work last night and Danny Kelly was discussing the proposed kick in instead of throw in by Wenger.

He mentioned that Liverpool were the foremost proponents of the passback to the keeper during their period of domestic dominance and it made me curious about when the passback rule was changed to when the keeper was no longer allowed to pick it up.

Having played a lot of football in my younger years I thought the rule may have been introduced in the 80’s. I was surprised that the rule was brought in for the European Championship in 1992 and implemented in the Premier League’s inaugural year.

One top division title since the passback laws were changed. They‘ve really just become an above average cup team.
It was their main tactic in Europe back in the 70s & 80s. Away games were always hostile back in those days and they’d spend the first 20mins of every away match ‘taking the crowd out the game’ by passing back to the keeper incessantly, boring everyone to tears.
 
It was their main tactic in Europe back in the 70s & 80s. Away games were always hostile back in those days and they’d spend the first 20mins of every away match ‘taking the crowd out the game’ by passing back to the keeper incessantly, boring everyone to tears.
But they are the greatest team ever go wash your mouth out
 
I wonder whether Mane knows the lyrics to their dirge. He had heard it often enough. Clearly, he felt he was walking alone. Bayern do get themselves in the middle of acrimonious divorces often enough. Maybe that is their shtick.
 
It's always good to start the morning in work with a laugh.

Screenshot-20220622-044658-2.png
 
Was listening to TalkSPORT (I know, I know) on my way home from work last night and Danny Kelly was discussing the proposed kick in instead of throw in by Wenger.

He mentioned that Liverpool were the foremost proponents of the passback to the keeper during their period of domestic dominance and it made me curious about when the passback rule was changed to when the keeper was no longer allowed to pick it up.

Having played a lot of football in my younger years I thought the rule may have been introduced in the 80’s. I was surprised that the rule was brought in for the European Championship in 1992 and implemented in the Premier League’s inaugural year.

One top division title since the passback laws were changed. They‘ve really just become an above average cup team.
Finished Steve Redmond's career
 
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