Mark Lawrenson: Internationals a bad break for Anfield momentum
LAST week all the talk was about the title momentum being with Liverpool. Well not any more, it's not. Because this international break could not have come at a worse time.
After scoring 13 goals in three wins against Real Madrid, Manchester United and Aston Villa, you want your team to get back out there as soon as possible while you're still in the groove.
You don't want the situation Rafael Benitez now finds himself in, just sitting there and waiting for his players to come back.
He'll be like a cat on a hot tin roof towards the end of the week, anxiously hoping his phone doesn't ring with more injury news from the continent.
The situation with Yossi Benayoun won't have done anything to reassure him over the risks of this particular round of games.
Instead of basking in the satisfaction of what Liverpool have achieved in getting back into the title race, he's deprived of building on that and working with his key players ahead of a massive - and very difficult - game at Fulham on Saturday.
That's the problem with the expanded number of sides in the World Cup qualifiers.
You never used to have the nuisance of a fortnight's break from your club. You'd go off after a weekend game and play in midweek, then you'd be back straight away for another club game the next weekend.
The break didn't need to be that long, maybe only four or five days compared to the 10 or 11 days that you're needed on duty in the modern era.
That time must feel like an eternity for Benitez, stuck back at Melwood with just Jamie Carragher for company on the training ground. Hardly the ideal way to stoke up your squad for an impending title run-in and all the intensity that goes with it.
But my big worry is not how it will affect Liverpool. It is how it will affect Manchester United.
They're in the exact opposite camp to Liverpool - they needed the break.
They needed the time away to recharge the batteries after two terrible results and they needed to get away from the pressure that went with them.
Pressure that would have been building up nicely now ahead of the Aston Villa game, which they could go into in second place in the table.
But the psychological doubts that creep in at this time will have been erased by this two-week break.
Yes, Alex Ferguson will have been short of players and unable to prepare them just like Benitez, but at least nobody has been talking about the Aston Villa game.
Normally, the papers and media would be full of stuff about the title race, like it was last week.
But by the time the aftermath of the World Cup qualifiers has died down it will be Friday before anyone even mentions the Premier League programme.
The scrutiny has been taken off United and the problems they had. And that's why the timing of this break will suit them far more than Liverpool.
* Mark Lawrenson was talking to NICK SMITH
Capello brings best out of Steven Gerrard
STEVEN GERRARD finally seems to have found a manager who can get the best out of him at international level.
Not that Rafael Benitez will thank Fabio Capello for that. The more vital he is to England, the more he runs the risk of picking up an injury while on international duty.
But I think Capello could get even better performances out of Gerrard if he played him in exactly the same role as he does for his club.
Just behind one striker is where he thrives so much when playing for Liverpool. It's in the middle where he makes everything happen and if he was playing off Wayne Rooney I reckon England would see the same results.
Especially as there is such a difficulty in finding the man who can play up front on his own.
Emile Heskey and Peter Crouch do okay for England but the world class forward who can really make a difference is Rooney.
And when Theo Walcott is fit, providing pace and danger from a wider area, then I think that makes the Benitez-style formation very workable, with Gerrard in the middle of three behind one forward.
If nothing else, it would help educate the England players to look beyond the same old rigid 4-4-2 formation that gets them to quarter-finals and then knocked out.
And Gerrard has to be central to that idea in more ways than one.
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'The scrutiny has been taken off United and the problems they had. And that's why the timing of this break will suit them far more than Liverpool.'
it really depends on how one looks at the situation. having lost 2 games in a row after a winning streak, fergies man would definitely want to quickly erase creeping doubts by winning the next game. man u in my opinion would definitely want to have the opportunity to turn thing around soonest possible and not wait for a fortnight. and what a fortnight that would be psychologically on man u after 2 morale sapping losses.
liverpool on the other hand after 3 superb displays have gone into the fortnight knowing that they have gained grounds in the title race while their main rivals have stumbled spectacularly.
the 2 defeat would be festering in fergies mind and there is nothing he can do till the break is over while rafa can sit back and plot his next move on the back of a morale boosting streak of victories.
so really, i dont see the break as a disadvantage to liverpool or advantage to man u.
Have to agree with Kelvin. Potential injuries, which is something that cannot be accounted for, will just be about luck. United's squad is filled with internationals, in fact, more first team internationals than Liverpool. That said, United have one more day of rest.
But they also have had to sit there and let the pressure fester for a forthnight, and if Liverpool beat Fulham, that pressure will come to a nice simmering point when they play Aston Villa. Mind you, of all the top five, Villa have the fewest internationals, and they will have been training hard for two weeks straight with only United in mind. I think things are in our favour.