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      Damien Comolli has been sacked

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      lerpwl_am_byth
      • Forum Billy Liddell
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #506: Apr 16, 2012 05:30:54 pm
      I'm starting to wonder what the 'Big News' that some ITK reported to be coming out after the Everton game is...
      Joe88
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #507: Apr 16, 2012 05:43:11 pm

      Although what was his last major deal at Barca?

      (Ibra for £40M + Et'oo  :lmao:)
      srslfc
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #508: Apr 16, 2012 05:43:38 pm
      I'm starting to wonder what the 'Big News' that some ITK reported to be coming out after the Everton game is...

      Was that not Comolli's sacking which was due to be after the game but brought forward?
      stuey
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #509: Apr 18, 2012 10:02:10 am
      In his reaction to Comolli's exit, KK looked shocked and disappointed.  His statement that he himself chose the transfer targets was strong.  He certainly has displayed great faith in Henderson, for example, choosing him ahead of Dirk Kuyt in an unfamiliar position from Day 1.

      I think it's very embarrassing for FSG to sack the first man they appointed to a key role in the new structure.  Who advised them in making that appointment, I wonder?  Will they be any better advised second time around?  Werner's comment that Comolli "probably wasn't the right person" doesn't inspire confidence.
      The fact that Comolli was given the bullet is an indication that FSG are willing to admit to their shortcomings in a footballing context and that can only be a positive for LFC.
      The knee jerkers, wum's and bullshitters have been calling for Kenny's head on a plate from day 1 putting all the bad results, questionable signings and match day weather on his shoulders.
      For the owners to see sense and make what can only be seen as a good footballing decision is proof of their honesty and commitment to LFC, furthermore I would venture that the learning curve being undertaken by the owners can only be seen in a positive light that should inspire confidence.
      ruthcity
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #510: Apr 18, 2012 11:02:08 am
      Great owners. Wise investors. Very decisive in cutting losses. They do posess encouraging attributes that can take the club forward.
      stephenmc9
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #511: Apr 19, 2012 09:27:28 pm
      Sacking Comolli was the right thing to do but FSG must also forget about “moneyball”, at least for now.
      April 19, 2012
      By DaveHendrick

      Liverpool owners FSG shocked many last week when they dismissed Damien Comolli from his position as Director of Football as part of a day of dismissals at Anfield which also saw, among others the Head of Sports Science and Medicine, Dr. Peter Brukner, find himself heading towards the unemployment queue.

      Whilst initially Commoli’s departure was announced under the guise of “mutual consent”, Liverpool Chairman Tom Werner made it quite clear that Comolli have been sacked for failing to do the job he had been appointed to do in a manner which FSG deemed acceptable.

      Comolli was, it must be assumed, appointed to implement the “moneyball” philosophy which FSG are apparently hoping to bring to Liverpool. Moneyball is an interesting phenomenon who stems from baseball, a sport in which John Henry in particular has a very successful past after being the part owner of the Florida Marlins team which won a world series, and the majority owner of the legendary Boston Red Sox who have won two world series since his bought the club in 2003.

      Moneyball is based on a number of ideas. First and foremost there’s a buy low, sell high philosophy. This requires extensive scouting to buy young players at minimal expense and nurturing their talent so that you get the best out of them before moving them on in return for a bigger reward. It also involves finding underappreciated and under-rated experienced players who have specific attributes to bring to your team from a statistical point of view as moneyball incorporates a lot of sabermetrics, or statistical performance analysis.

      There are a number of problems with trying to run a football club, specifically a football club of the stature of Liverpool by using moneyball ideas. First and foremost is the challenge of acquiring young players. In American sports there is an annual draft where the best young players become available to professional teams having either spent time nurturing their talents in college, or often in Europe. Some are drafted direct from high school in baseball. In these circumstances clubs have scouts watching players for a minimum of two years before they become draft eligible meaning that you’ve had plenty of time to look at every aspect of the game. Also in baseball they have a complex minor league system where a player will move up through 3 to 4 different levels of play before making their Major League debut which ensures that only the cream rises to the top. The system in football is obviously completely different and players coming from youth academies and reserve teams into first team football are far less experienced or proven than their baseball counterparts.

      Moneyball works if your aim is to be slightly above mediocrity or if you’re a smaller club looking to punch well above your weight. The Oakland A’s are the pioneers of moneyball. They have won a total of ZERO American League Championships and ZERO World Series during the moneyball era. Their aim is simply to make the playoffs each year, the equivalent of Liverpool simply aiming for a top six finish. Billy Beane is the man who has become famous for his moneyball theories at the Oakland A’s. He’s become famous for making a mediocre team slightly less mediocre. He’s the "The Chosen One" of baseball and his club are the Everton of Baseball.  Their idea of success doesn’t involve winning anything. The Tampa Bay Rays are one of the smallest franchises in baseball and their aim is to punch above their weight, move their best players on to other clubs when they become too expensive to keep and then aim to rebuild through the draft. If they have success along the way, great, but they concern themselves more with balancing the books and keeping the production line of talent ticking over. In footballing terms the Rays are similar to Club Athletic of Bilbao. The aims of a club like Liverpool are significantly higher than either Everton, or Club Athletic. Or at least they should be.

      It should be noted that whilst FSG proclaim moneyball as their way of doing things, the fact of the matter is that they don’t practice what they preach. The Boston Red Sox might posture about moneyball but what they do is not moneyball. They spend big to win big. We need to do the same. The Red Sox went out in 2011 and signed two of the premier free agents to massive contracts. Carl Crawford and Adrian Gonzalez are superstars who will spend their prime years with the Red Sox and are unlikely to ever play elsewhere given their ages and the contracts they were given in terms of both the money they are being paid, and the lengths of those contracts. Liverpool need to spend big this summer. A transfer kitty of £30million simply isn’t going to get the job done unless a number of big name players are sold.

      I’ve heard talk of FSG’s strategy being about sustainable success, that’s all well and good but you have to have success before you sustain it. You simply can’t have sustainable success without first having success, it’s just not possible in any way. You can’t be mediocre and then spend less and expect that to pass as sustainable success. Speculate to accumulate.

      And forget this low wage structure talk as if it’s their way of doing things which they are bringing from America, the Red Sox always have one of the highest wage bills in baseball. The idea that top class players will come to play for Liverpool without Liverpool paying the big wages is just utter nonsense. We’ve been left behind by the top clubs because of this type of ideology to be honest. Not willing to pay the big wages? Won’t sign the big players. Plain and simple. It has far less to do with Champions League than is it does with wages.  If Liverpool want to bring in Christian Eriksen, Iker Muniain or any of the other top class attacking talents they have looked at in the last year they can do, as long as they pay the wages that make the move attractive to those players.

      In fairness, whilst Liverpool have been talked about as a club who are implementing moneyball, they really haven’t in at least one aspect. The transfer market, specifically on the purchasing side of things. Liverpool failed in the purchasing side of the transfer market under Comolli. Not just that, they’ve failed miserably not just in terms of moneyball but in terms of doing anything close to a good job. Andy Carroll was worth no more than £12million, Liverpool paid £35million. Stewart Downing was worth no more than £12million, Liverpool paid £20million. Jordan Henderson was worth no more than £8million, Liverpool paid £16million. People say Liverpool have paid for their potential but Carroll and Downing will never be worth close to what Liverpool paid for them. People say they were bought for their resale value, but Carroll and Downing are going to be players Liverpool lose huge money on. Henderson has the talent to become worthy of his price tag, but Liverpool won’t make profit on him. That’s not how resale value works under the ideas of moneyball. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. Regardless of Kenny Dalglish claiming responsibility for the signings, a tactical move on Dalglish’s part in my view, Comolli did the negotiations and finalized the deals, overspending massively in the process.

      If you include Charlie Adam with the three that I’ve mentioned, Liverpool have spent £77million or so on four players, none of whom are or ever will be world class. They could have bought three world class, or potentially world class like Luis Suarez, players for that type of money as well as an undervalued gem like Yohan Cabaye, but they didn’t. One argument for this is that they spend big money on British players because the wages would be lower. It is a valid argument but it shows immense stupidity on the clubs behalf. Between the four players mentioned they are earning roughly £11million a year. Three players of the Suarez calibre would have cost roughly £3-4million a year more. Is it really not worth paying that little bit extra when those players would give you a far better chance of qualifying for the Champions League and the riches that tournament would bring? Are the ambitions so small time?

      Another argument is that they want Premier League proven players who wouldn’t need a settling in period. If that’s true then why are people still using settling in as an excuse for the poor seasons those players have had? It’s utter nonsense. And the fact is that Adam, Henderson and Carroll weren’t proven to be good players in the Premier League. Adam had one season in the league and was hugely inconsistent, Carroll had half a season and was nothing more than a flash in the pan, Michael Ricketts-esque sensation at the time, and Henderson, whilst he’d had two full seasons, was only 20. No player is proven at that age. Downing had proven he was a good player for a mid-table team but he’d also proven that he was incapable of having two good seasons back to back. The strategy of who they targeted was just poor and Downing, Adam and Henderson were all signed based of strong statistical reports which moulded well with building a team around Carroll.

      There’s really little point in me getting into the statistical side of things in depth because that’s an article in itself, I’ll just say that football is a more dynamic and unpredictable sport than baseball with more intangibles to consider. Due to the stop start nature of baseball as well as the fact that most baseball players are specialists in merely one position, it’s a totally different ballgame and much easier to analysis statistically. If you want to judge a football player, go and watch footage off him from fifteen or so matches over the course of about three years. You’ll get a far better idea of what he’s like that you will by simply watching him two or three times and then looking at statistics.

      When you’re in the position Liverpool are in you need to bring in top class talent who can improve the team substantially, rather than second rate talent who make minimal difference, or players who are viewed as being “for the future”. You can’t spend £51million on two players and then talk about seeing the best of them in 3 years or so. You sign two top players now, and then each season you sign one or two top class 17 or 18 years who can be brought into the team slowly. People seem wrapped up on players like Hazard and Cavani, and those two we can rule out. They are too expensive and too highly sought after. But what about Muniain, Eriksen, Ramirez, Jovetic, Torje or Belhanda as alternatives to Hazard? What about Huntelaar, Dzeko, Negredo or Adebayor as alternatives to Cavani? I could go on and on naming players that Liverpool could attract but the club aren’t hiring me as a scout anytime soon so there’s no point.

      FSG bought Liverpool for peanuts and have a net spend of roughly £40million on transfers thus far. It’s time for them to step up and spend big this summer. They must appoint a CEO to run the club because they’re rarely in the country and Ian Ayre is a Commercial Director and nothing more. He’s CEO in title only. He’s out of his depth trying to run a football club. They must go out and find the right man to run the club. David Dein would be perfect but seems unlikely.

      They must then, or better yet the new CEO must then, appoint a new Director of Football to put in place a proper transfer strategy for the summer. A Director of Football with proper contacts, the respect of the world wide footballing community and the ability to bring top class talent into the club. Former Barcelona Director of Football, Txiki Bergeristan is probably the best choice. He’s available, he knows people within the club, he’s got respect throughout the game and he knows how to get the job done.

      Sacking Comolli was the right move to make but others, including Kenny Dalglish, must also have their positions reviewed and adjusted to keep the club moving in the right direction. That direction must not include moneyball, not at the minute anyway.

      http://theliverpoolword.com/2012/04/sacking-comolli-was-the-right-thing-to-do-but-fsg-must-also-forget-about-moneyball-at-least-for-now/

      Good read that Wonder who will be next in???
      Reprobate
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #512: Apr 19, 2012 09:31:24 pm
      But what about Muniain, Eriksen, Ramirez, Jovetic, Torje or Belhanda as alternatives to Hazard? What about Huntelaar, Dzeko, Negredo or Adebayor as alternatives to Cavani?

       :gt-happyup:
      (although I'd love Hazard and Cavani, obviously)
      Diego LFC
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #513: Apr 19, 2012 09:40:32 pm
      What we did last season wasn't Moneyball. Yes, apparently we used statistical analysis to make decisions, but the concept of Moneyball isn't just that. More than anything, it's about exploring inefficiencies, acquiring under-valued talent and/or using under-valued tactics.

      We did none of this. No matter how good you think Hendo or Carroll or Downing are, clearly none of them came at a lower price than their productivity would suggest - if anything they were all over-valued by us.

      So it's not a Moneyball approach just because we're looking at some stats, actually I would expect every top club in England to use stats at least to some extent these days.
      HeighwayToHeaven
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #514: Apr 19, 2012 09:42:02 pm

      Good read that Wonder who will be next in???

      Txiki Begiristain hopefully, for the reasons given in the article. And a proper CEO too, again as it says in the article.
      Reprobate
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #515: Apr 19, 2012 10:17:47 pm
      Txiki Begiristain hopefully, for the reasons given in the article. And a proper CEO too, again as it says in the article.

      Good point, let's get him in first before the window opens.
      AZPatriot
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #516: Apr 19, 2012 11:28:47 pm
      What we did last season wasn't Moneyball. Yes, apparently we used statistical analysis to make decisions, but the concept of Moneyball isn't just that. More than anything, it's about exploring inefficiencies, acquiring under-valued talent and/or using under-valued tactics.

      We did none of this. No matter how good you think Hendo or Carroll or Downing are, clearly none of them came at a lower price than their productivity would suggest - if anything they were all over-valued by us.

      So it's not a Moneyball approach just because we're looking at some stats, actually I would expect every top club in England to use stats at least to some extent these days.

      I have to agree with this Diego, I have been following the Red Sox for 20+ years and FSG's approach is not pure "moneyball" at all. I know FSG appreciates using statistics to identify "value" but as the article says payroll/fees with the baseball club have been in the top 5 of all teams for the past decade.

      FSG might appreciate some of the ideas of "Moneyball" but I think the model they use is a bit of a hybrid.

      I think for LFC the moneyball concepts we should zero in are this:

      -Use statistics to help verify what is seen in scouting a prospect. Do not base the purchase on the stats but use them in conjunction with the normal process of scouting.

      - The FSG way never would have given a contract like what was given to Carra, sure SG got a lifetime deal but he is a once in a generation talent that is the best we have had since Kenny so there were other reasons. In the end they are not going to hand out 5 year deals to 30 year old players on high salary.


      I do disagree with the above authors assessment of Carroll while I also think he is not worth 35M there is no telling that at the age of 27 he would not have improved to the point where if he were not to stay we could get 15-20m for him. 80-90k a week is not cheap but at the same time its not unreasonable, so 4 years from now if Carroll is sold for 20M did we really then in effect we paid 15M+ salary.

      Again on Carroll we on this forum have discussed time and time again that "big men" take longer to mature and when his contract does run out he will be in his supposed prime as a footballer, to me its way to early to say we have "lost" 35M on him.

      Sir Suarez
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #517: Apr 20, 2012 12:01:11 am
      only 11 more posts and this thread overtakes the "Damien Comolli confirmed as Director of Football." thread....
      MIRO
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #518: Apr 20, 2012 12:24:51 am
      In fairness, whilst Liverpool have been talked about as a club who are implementing moneyball, they really haven’t in at least one aspect.
      The transfer market, specifically on the purchasing side of things. Liverpool failed in the purchasing side of the transfer market under Comolli.
      Not just that, they’ve failed miserably not just in terms of moneyball but in terms of doing anything close to a good job.
       
      Andy Carroll was worth no more than £12million, Liverpool paid £35million.
      Stewart Downing was worth no more than £12million, Liverpool paid £20million.
      Jordan Henderson was worth no more than £8million, Liverpool paid £16million.
      People say Liverpool have paid for their potential but Carroll and Downing will never be worth close to what Liverpool paid for them. People say they were bought for their resale value, but Carroll and Downing are going to be players Liverpool lose huge money on.
       
      Henderson has the talent to become worthy of his price tag, but Liverpool won’t make profit on him. That’s not how resale value works under the ideas of moneyball.
      In fact, it’s quite the opposite.
      Regardless of Kenny Dalglish claiming responsibility for the signings, a tactical move on Dalglish’s part in my view,

      Comolli did the negotiations and finalized the deals, overspending massively in the process.

      Exactimundo.
      what-a-hit-son
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #519: May 10, 2012 07:10:04 am
      Somewhere between a shitload of adverts, a very annoying Scottish accent and lots of hand hair he will be on The Richard Keys and Andy Gray show on Talksport today.

      The programme is on from 10.00 - 13.00.

      Could be inciteful.



      Paisleydalglish
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #520: May 10, 2012 07:23:00 am
      Somewhere between a shitload of adverts, a very annoying Scottish accent and lots of hand hair he will be on The Richard Keys and Andy Gray show on Talksport today.

      The programme is on from 10.00 - 13.00.

      Could be inciteful.

      Can't imagine that within the agreement he will have signed to get his pay off that he will be allowed to talk about the inner workings of the club or why he was really sacked..
      I'd imagine it will be all well covered stories and they will brush over the sacking. Seems to me someone who needs to have the publicity.

      Talk about himself and his career to date and his successes.. Public plea for clubs that may listen and want to employ him.. Have Richard Keys blow smoke up his backside.

      I'd be very surprised if his sacking was more than merely touched on and he says something along the lines of he was proud of what he achieved and that he and the club felt it was best now that the foundations are there to move on.

      He may touch on last years transfer activity and work done up til say the Carling Cup victory.

      Sorry for being an old cynic..
      racerx34
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #521: May 10, 2012 12:59:03 pm
      Don't know whether this was posted before but it seems rather fitting now.

      Directors Of Football and why Comolli was a worry
      by Roy Henderson // 1 May 2012 // 18 Comments

      ON this week’s “Soccer Report Extra” podcast, available HERE, we gained a glimpse of Damien Comolli’s perception of his methodology and approach to the Director Of Football role – a role he had, of course, filled at Spurs and Liverpool in recent years on these shores.
      It’s worth a listen.

      Before starting, I should make full disclosure: he worried me. He still worries me. And here’s why.

      A Director Of Football, for me, ought to act as the de facto day-to-day custodian of a football club’s ‘system’ of football. Ambassadorial ‘key stone’ roles aside, they should own the way (or ways) that football club plays the game. Sure, scouting methodologies, statistical analysis and research, fee and contract negotiations and so forth ought to be cornerstones of their work. But all that should take place while informed by, and founded on, what the club stands for in footballing terms.
      We’re led to believe that Liverpool Football Club, in the penultimate year under Rafa Benitez’s stewardship, put a blueprint in place that crystallised what many hoped would be done at the club: that they’d build on the foundation of 4-2-3-1 at all age groups to first team level (with, as Rafa himself stated, the capacity to play 4-4-2 and 4-3-3 as the conditions of the game dictated). It would form the basis of everything done at the club – a consistent theme and mode of play that Liverpool stood for, and one that had served it particularly well in recent years (and as Sean Rogers so eloquently argued on a recent Anfield Wrap podcast, one that Liverpool used throughout its peak in the late 70s and 80s).

      We came to refer to the document Benitez commissioned as ‘McPartland’s Blueprint’, and all the indications when NESV (later FSG) took over were that they and everyone they hired would buy into and work to that blueprint – that everything would be joined up. The coaching curriculum and style of competitive play at all levels would reinforce that blueprint, making the seamless transition to first team football far less problematic. The scouting and selection criteria would be informed by it, with square pegs chosen for square holes, and round ones for round.

      Lastly, at first team level, activity in the transfer market would be undertaken with reference to the framework that blueprint provided, taking into account factors such as home grown quotas, age and succession planning, long-term contract value, and salary… but always with the systemic blueprint in mind. Can the player operate in a 4-2-3-1? Does he have qualities the squad is demonstrably lacking that can’t be filled from the reserve or youth ranks? Will his attitude, aggression and team and work ethic reinforce or undermine the squad? But most of all, will he work for our system – our systems, and the broad balance, tempo and emphasis we’re trying to achieve in our play?
      Listening to Comolli, while we should always remember that a half hour podcast could never fully encapsulate a man’s entire methodology, one point jumps out – the system was never fundamental to him – it was never at the forefront of his thinking.

      Comolli makes a fair point when saying the success of the predominately European model depends on people, not simply on nations. But it also depends on the Director Of Football being capable of filling the remit of a Director Of Football. While the points he made rang true in many cases: that no-one in his position tends to fare better than a 50% success rate and that many of the players he recruited have done well; that when scouting you need to look at positions and their qualities in isolation; that when looking at metrics you need to delve deeper into context and take a more holistic view… they’re all good points. But they all relate to scouting. And a Diretor Of Football ought to have more in his locker than that.

      Of course, many expressed issues with his negotiation skills – issues that are already well-documented. But there’s a deeper issue even than that. If you’ve listened to the podcast, listen again – this time asking yourself ‘where’s the acknowledgement of how everything should fit into our system – our philosophy?’. And you’ll maybe arrive at the same worry as I did. Beyond a casual reference to whether a striker’s runs would suit the side’s best passer, there’s no fundamental reference to systems, or to the club’s footballing approach.

      I can only hope that when the void created by his sacking is addressed, this point is borne firmly in mind – it’s fundamental to a club’s long-term progress if it has genuine footballing ambition.

      Lazy references to Theo Epstein aside, I’d feel much better if a man was in place who wouldn’t overlook a Molby or a Dalglish. Raw pace is all very well in the modern game, of course, but the team’s spine needs regulative players both with and without the ball – players aware of space, and with the brain and technical tools to exploit it, even when very little of it’s available, and when defensive pressure is applied. Players who complement the system. Alonso and Lucas may lack raw pace in comparative terms, but they more than compensate with acute positional awareness and understanding of how to support and make themselves available when others have the ball. And team mates know with both players, even if their pass invited a pressing opponent in for the kill, that their touch and awareness would ‘shuttle’ the ball on to the right man in space. Alonso is phenomenal in this regard; Liverpool are lucky that Lucas has begun to emulate that quality.

      Read interviews with managers like Benitez or Mourinho, or with players like Alonso, Davids, Timoschuk… a side needs to work as an integrated system, with as many players who regulate the links between each component ‘part’ as possible. That a Director Of Football can operate seemingly without reference to that kind of insight points at a misunderstanding both of the game itself, and of what the role ought to entail.

      Comolli would do well to learn that aspect – it will stand him in good stead in his future career.

      http://www.theanfieldwrap.com/2012/05/directors-of-football-and-why-comolli-was-a-worry/

      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #522: May 10, 2012 01:13:23 pm
      Was getting interviewed just before on Talkshite by Keys and Gray and basically said he signed Suarez, Enrique, Henderson and Coates

      Kenny signed Adam, Downing, and Carroll.
      KS67
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #523: May 10, 2012 01:16:14 pm
      Was getting interviewed just before on Talkshite by Keys and Gray and basically said he signed Suarez, Enrique, Henderson and Coates

      Kenny signed Adam, Downing, and Carroll.


      I only caught some of it. Did he really say that? It's certainly more than I thought he'd say.
      Paisleydalglish
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #524: May 10, 2012 01:16:54 pm
      Was getting interviewed just before on Talkshite by Keys and Gray and basically said he signed Suarez, Enrique, Henderson and Coates

      Kenny signed Adam, Downing, and Carroll.

      Say anything else interesting Huyton?

      Surprised by the Henderson and Carroll parts of that in terms of who pushed those signings.
      Kenny has stuck with Jordan, obviously rates him, and the Carroll one in Kennys book he says Comolli came to him with Andy.
      bigmick
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #525: May 10, 2012 01:18:26 pm
      Was getting interviewed just before on Talkshite by Keys and Gray and basically said he signed Suarez, Enrique, Henderson and Coates

      Kenny signed Adam, Downing, and Carroll.

       At the end of the day, any player signed while a manager is in charge is "his" signing. They're all Kenny's signings, if they work then he deserves credit and if they don't then he doesn't, simple as that.
      andymac7565
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #526: May 10, 2012 01:19:06 pm
      He also said he thought we have lots more to come from Andy Carroll who at 23 is still a baby for a big centre forward.So fair play to him..
      Paisleydalglish
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      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #527: May 10, 2012 01:20:19 pm
      At the end of the day, any player signed while a manager is in charge is "his" signing. They're all Kenny's signings, if they work then he deserves credit and if they don't then he doesn't, simple as that.

      Kenny has said much the same.. They are his players.

      He will protect them and take away some of the pressure from them as any good manager would.

      I hate managers who hang players out to dry, even if they don't rate them there are ways to go about it and move them on.
      Diego LFC
      • Forum Legend - Paisley
      • *****

      • 19,334 posts | 2834 
      • Sempre Liverpool
      Re: Damien Comolli has been sacked
      Reply #528: May 10, 2012 02:19:06 pm
      Was getting interviewed just before on Talkshite by Keys and Gray and basically said he signed Suarez, Enrique, Henderson and Coates

      Kenny signed Adam, Downing, and Carroll.

      Is there any transcription of it? I would be interested in reading the whole thing

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