If that is indeed the case (I would genuinely like a breakdown of those record breaking transfers every season for his first seven seasons), how does it matter to the overall picture when his success was essentially built on kids ?. In other words, if you have a record transfer once a season, for seven seasons, you'd think they would make up at least 5 of the starting 11, and yet as mentioned it's those kids who did it for him, so how can that be ?.
From Wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Ferguson#1986.E2.80.9390:_The_first_years(And this is by no means a comprehensive list)
Steve Bruce, Viv Anderson, Brian McClair and Jim Leighton, (87-88)
Mark Hughes (88-89)
Neil Webb and Paul Ince, as well as defender Gary Pallister (a national record £2.3million signing from Middlesbrough). (89-90)
Dion Dublin and Eric Cantona (91-92)
So you can see that not only were there a ton of very pricey transfers (Webb was also in the £2million plus bracket, and given £2.3 as a national record then the likes of Bruce, Cantona, Ince and more are all the equivalent of £10-£20million pound players).
So, let's be fair, your take of only '5' bought in palyers is utterly wrong (Bruce, Pallister, Irwin, Parker, Schmeichel, KanChelseas, Ince, Hughes, Cantona all key parts of initial triumph), and even if it weren't, those 5 were all massively expensive, and he had the luxury of record breaking flops like Webb, as many (or nearly) of those as he had successes.
This is clearly a matter of opinion, to you, nothing has thus far seemed like a significant failing, others see things differently. If you truly think Rafa's tenure has been a beacon of perfection, and no significant mistakes have been made or failings observed, then I suggest you don't share the opinion of most.Both points above are conjecture. You cannot claim to know how well someone will do in a position, unless they are actually placed there. You can make a guess, but you cannot talk about potential replacements unless they are there. How many people had heard of Fergie or Wenger before they took over ? it's not always just about your X's and O's, sometimes, it's how well you get on with upper management, how you communicate players, again, not saying Rafa should be replaced, nor that those are his failings, but you simply cannot write people off as potential replacements without seeing what they can do.Again, you see things through your eyes (which you are entitled to). You would say coming from the Houllier era, we have significantly improved. Others would say we simply haven't improved enough given how many years have passed, or a club of this magnitude has no business being in this position in the first place (and this is a criticism of the club in general, not just the manager). It's good if you're Villa, but this is Liverpool. Some would say "we have no right for the title, we have to earn it" my response would be "SO EARN IT", go out and show you want it, 38 games, mostly against the likes of Boro, West Ham, Hull, Stoke, and Fulham, win them, you don't need £150m for that, play the reserves for both the Carling and the FA, and save the best for the league, stick 2 fingers up at anyone who'd argue, and shut them up with no.19 in May.Jol wasn't broken, he was sacked. Other clubs sack. Rafa has had a torrid time with the ownership, and continues to do so, but they have (politically motivated or not) stuck by him. I don't know of any other club across Europe that would stick by a manager as much we do, without winning their league (and that goes for Houllier as well). You can counter argue that he hasn't helped with certain press conferences that took place, managers performing under pressure is nothing new especially in today's climate, others coped, and I'm sure Rafa can cope as well.
You've actually missed my point completely. My point was that critical articles never seem to bother to answer all of those questions, never mind add to that the kind of 'big picture' reasoning that I expect of any good article, be it critical or positive. Where's the vision for post Rafa? At best these critical articles are just a list of perceptions, which as you say about the things I've pointed out are dismissable as opinion (though I would contend that the pro Rafa have at least compelling evidence, such as Rafa's CV, his trophies, the current squad and Liverpool's inferior pre Rafa performance to point to. The BEST anti Rafa 'evidence' is EXACTLY the sort of 'If my aunty had balls' type reasoning you are so dismissive of here.
To take just one example...NO, we can't say that manager X wouldn't come in and do a better job. Of course not.
However, neither can we dismiss the possibility that manager X would oversee a shocking decline that would have massive reprucussions for our future. With Gd we had two seasons of looking like we were definitely going backwards in each. Can't say that for Rafa.
Instead, looking at the evidence, such as we have, (EG our finances, Rafa's CL performance, players who have signed for us who wouldn't without Rafa or equivalent in charge) any sensible betting man would say it's MORE likely that we'd do worse, not better, with a new manager.
Oh, and just to pick up on another little bit of that:
"Play the reserves for the Carling and FA cup."
See, it's exactly that sort of, I'm sorry to say, utter and complete shite that so called 'reasonable' criticisms are so often filled with. Look at what happened in the FA and Carling Cups this year.
Play the reserves. Yeah right. I'm sure you and the thousands like you would have been the FIRST on here praising Rafa for prioritising the league had we played our reserves against Everton. I'm sure you'd all have been queueing up to sing his praises and state your 100% backing of the man. FFS.
I'm sorry, but if Hooded Claw's comment made you "heartily, heartily sick" then I would like to cry foul of the same symptoms.
Yet again, let me start by saying I am against Rafa being shown the door, but I'm equally against giving him a free pass without questioning what's going on.
What are you sick of exactly? I'm not objecting to questions, or criticism, I'm objecting to the fucking laughable and, as far as i'm concerned, often spoiled and ignorant view that this site is somehow intolerant of criticism of Rafa. Here you are, criticising. Are you being banned? Censored? No. You've picked a passionate person on the wrong day who is strongly arguing his case against you, different day, different thread you've got plenty of passionate supporters.
Don't like the positivity here? Well why not go and visit one of the (every single other, more or less) Liverpool sites that are more critical, or post in one of the now (long ignored) threads specifically set up to post your criticism in.
No problem with criticism (at least not well put together, rare though it is) do have a problem with those who try to make out like they're some kind of persecuted minority. It's not true, and it's highly irritating to read given just how much criticism there actually is on here.
This fear mongering however, has been trumpetted by many and I truly believe it has been one of the most significant factors of us falling behind the times so much. Fear of the unknown; look out, we don't want to be a Leeds do we ? we don't want to be a Newcastle, and we certainly don't want Reina, Alonso, Torres walking out on us if Rafa goes. To me, this is hysteria equal to the post match "Sack Rafa" rants that come out on here.
Small peas compared to the 'UNITED ARE GONNA TAKE OUR RECORD' fear mongering, as far as I'm concerned.
I also think you are hugely exaggerating the number of those kinds of posts in order to justify your own outlook.
I challenge you again, take a brief look around this site, even after a WIN like Pompey, and tell me that there are more positive posts than negative ones.
It simply isn't true. It's an argument, but a false and pernicious one right up there with the likes of 'Rotation doesn't work'.
Simply put, it's more conjecture. What I do know is, if you don't dare, if you don't take risks, you won't know, and that can be as bad as it can be good. Did Barca/Madrid/Chelsea/Juve(Who were relegated)/Bayern feel scared their players would walk out if their manager was let go ? did we fear an exodus the day king Kenny stepped down ? Do you think the Mancs would fear their players walking out on them now if Taggart steps down ?.
Yes, but at least it's (being pro rafa) conjecture based on a nigh on an excellent CV, a great manner, success at this club having attracted top tier talent to the club, rather than conjecture baased on NOTHING beyond 'well, the grass might be greener'.
Give me one manager, just one, where you could genuinely give decent evidence that he could overtake Utd/Chelsea given the lesser resources and boardroom SHITE that Rafa has put up with and I'll start listening.
Oh, and as for Jol...he wasn't sacked instantly was he? Know. He was hamstrung in the summer, didn't have full control of transfers and had his job touted behind his back (sound familiar). He then spent several months battling relegation. Rafa took us to 4th and another CL semi.
I truly believe that 19 years or so of being 2nd, 3rd, and 4th best has kicked a lot of the ambition and courage out of us, and for me, that is a crying shame.
Not convinced by that one. Could just as easily argue that it's given us a real persistent core of fans who have massively inflated expectations (like the 'We are Liverpool' bit you said yourself. What's that supposed to mean? Yes we are - and that means we have a stadium smaller than Newcastles taking in vastly less money from it than they do, a wage bill closer to the likes of Spurs than Utd and Chelsea, a tiny area to draw local talent from compared to our main rivals...this isn't a hollywood film. Having a 'legend' to go with your name doesn't mean you can beat the vastly better funded and equipped 'bad guys' just by 'being Liverpool') without any of the actual knowlexdge and experience of what title challenges are really like...ask most of the 'Arl arses if this side is up there with the better ones in our history. They'd say it is. Ask them if we've had much worse sides bring home the title. They'd say we had. Ask them if any of our teams ever really won while being 'glorious' in the way so many seem to think is some kind of bottom line below which is only failure...the only one that usually gets mentioned is Dalglish's 88-89 side...one that because of the Euro ban is actually impossible to truly judge if that would have worked in Europe, or if we could only be that 'glorious' thanks to lack of real challenge and competition.
Personally, the obsession with one man as opposed to a club started with Houllier, that's when people started throwing themselves under lorries in his name, they would shout "but he gave his heart to the club" all the while we were clearly regressing into something of a footballing tragedy everytime Djimi tried a dragback in the penalty box.
And there was me thinking that (IE the cult of the manager) actually had quite a lot to do with Shanks, but whatever. Suffice it to say, if you think backing the manager to the hilt is a tradition that started with Houllier you are very, seriously wrong.
'Big picture' points to me would discuss how the club has fared against similar clubs domestically and across the continent, to see the likes of Chelsea/Mancs/Milan/Barca/Madrid constantly win their leagues or be in contention, and to ask why can't we have that, we used to at one point, and this season's been encouraging, hence my saying it is wrong to let go of Rafa, but I want us to sit and review at the end of the season, I welcome discussion and dissection of why certain players were brought for so much money and let go after a few months, why our backup winger/striker positions have been a revolving door since Rafa took over, why we can't sustain a league challenge past February. What I will not do however, is back one man, no matter who he is, without considering counter arguments, then call it the 'big picture'.
Ok, if I think your saying what I think you are then there's a simple answer.
We've been FUCKING IMMENSE compared to clubs of a similar stature across Europe. Absolutely FUCKING IMMENSE. No one is anywhere NEAR to punching above their weight as far as we have. Funnily enough, the last team that really did comparably were Rafa's Valencia.
Who has dominated since Rafa took over?
Barca, Chelsea, Man Utd, Bayern, Inter.
We've beaten ALL of them in terms of CL consistency, and only behind Chelsea and Man Utd domestically. Our comparative financial muscle is tiny compared to those teams (with the possible exception of Inter, who have a sugar daddy so don't need to generate their own cash). There are no teams who have a financial gap as large as ours is to the teams we are expected to overtake who are dominating, or even regularly challenging for domestic or European honours.
So in short, the closest there is to the kind of club you describe is actually US.
I for one welcome questions, and will welcome discussion, what I won't do is pretend that everything is rosey,nor is it really calamitous.
No, it's not all rosy for sure, but forgive me for thinking that when Liverpool's future is so in the balance, when Rafa's future is in the balance, when there's so much to be positive to be about and when there are so many vultures within and without the club looking for any opportunity to pick our carcase clean that it might actually be an idea to try and minimise the sniping and maximise the positivity and support...thus telling our owners and the media and indeed our rivals loud and clear that we are united...we believe...we back our manager and we won't be torn apart by those who would like nothing better than a destroyed Liverpool.
At the very least we could be focussing our doubts and anger onto the real problems at the club...IE the two Yanks, instead of letting them essentially bask freely in the warming glow generated by the stupendous heat being put on Rafa.
Sorry if I haven't met all your points head on, may come back in more detail later but I think I've dealt with the gist of your arguments...time to go home for me