“Trust in me, just in me
Shut your eyes and trust in me
You can sleep safe and sound
Knowing I am around.”
Kaa the Python – The Jungle Book
—
Trust.
Right now, that’s the word that rings around my head whenever I think about Liverpool football club. It’s all that’s missing. And it’s all that’s missing not just on the park, but in relation to everything about the club full stop at the minute.
Trust.
On the park, our players need to rediscover it a little. We’re all analysing the recent home results against so-called lesser teams tactically, statistically, and psychologically, but Saturday’s game maybe showed why that one word – trust – is central to the contrast between the sides in both games.
After the Swansea game, Kenny had this to say.
“Anything that we were good at, we certainly didn’t do too much of today… We usually do passing and movement, but there wasn’t a great deal of that, when we got it back we gave it away quickly and most of the times when we gave it back to them they got up the pitch quite well… The problems that are there are problems that we can solve ourselves. We’ll sort it behind closed doors. We can pass it a lot better than that. That’s certainly one thing we can work on, but we work on it every week.”
“We’re not little old Swansea City anymore. Teams are seeing the way we play football and our beliefs and are giving us respect. We just have to keep doing that.”
Trust.
Under successive managers (and I’m no expert particularly, but certainly since Martinez was at their helm), Swansea City have committed as a club to a certain brand of football. They’ve recruited to fit its needs, their system is set up to allow it best to flourish, and they’re four years along that path, having committed to the approach throughout their entire set up. Why are they enjoying relative success? Well, trust.
A substitute takes the field for Swansea City, and when interviewed after the game, he uses the words “we just have to keep doing that”. What? Trusting in their approach, trusting each other with the ball, trusting their team mates to take up the slack when they’re out of position. Trust.
Meanwhile, flip the script to Liverpool FC’s part, and you’ll find Kenny making much the same references, albeit from the flip side of the same coin. He starts by making clear reference to what he believes we’re good at – pass and move football, and retaining the ball. The stuff the Swansea players were doing. He then said we’d sort it, but by doing what we already do every week. So what does that allude to? A blueprint that’s in place, recruitment that in the medium-to-long term will fit the needs of that approach. And, gradually, settling on the systems that will best allow the approach to flourish.
Swansea have trusted their process and are several seasons in. We saw the result of that on Saturday. Liverpool? Well, we’ve seen what happens when everything’s aligned properly. We saw Fulham away last season. We’ve seen a few glimmers of the same this season. At times the football’s been fluid and powerful, and against good sides to boot. But do we have what it takes to trust that it’ll flourish?
On the pitch, when we see a side like Barcelona play its football, we see footballing maestros manipulating the ball with one and two touches while under the most intense defensive pressure imaginable, and finding their team mates with the ball. And when their team mates receive the ball, it’s almost as if they prefer to be tightly marked, or ideally double-teamed, because they trust their own ability to move it on and take those opposing players out of the game. That disrupts their opponent and creates space and opportunity. And it’s all founded on trust.
And it’s easy to trust Xavi or Iniesta to control a ball when you ping it at them at speed, or to flick it into the stride of a runner in space, but it’s far less easy to trust Carles Puyol, Javier Mascherano or Victor Valdes. But they do – just watch them. Even the less able players are trusted and expected to play their game, and more often than not, they rise to that challenge and meet the expectation. That’s something intangible that compounds itself over time within a club. And it’s arguably what Swansea are enjoying right now to a far lesser extent.
Of course, they’re blessed with far less quality in their squad than most clubs, but the players they’ve assembled are all trusted and expected to do the simple things well, and to keep a disciplined shape that maintains the right kind of foundation. We saw a side on Saturday that played one-twos, that remained calm when under pressure, because they knew they could expect an open man who’d happily demand the ball from them. That pervaded their entire side. And it’s not down to world class ability; it’s down to trust. Commitment and trust.
In the first half Leon Britton could receive a difficult pass with two players closing him down in his own half, feign a forward movement, and let the ball run before completing an easy pass to the Swansea right back. Why? Because he could trust, when he did that, he’d have options available looking to give him an option for the pass. Is Leon Britton up there with Sergio Busquets? Well, no – obviously not – but when your system’s set up that way, and your players have that kind of expectation and mutual solidarity, it’ll tend to tick over nicely. It’s that mutual trust and confidence that founds their current position. If that breaks down – the individual and collective belief in their right to be where they are – only then will they run into problems. We saw hints of that near the end, as the teams fell into the more natural patterns expected of them, and Swansea retreated into their shells a little.
That confidence and mutual solidarity takes time to grow, and it’ll seldom grow in an uninterrupted linear way. The team will face challenges and it’ll need to respond. Will it always respond positively? Well, no – at least not in the early stages – the habitual positive response is something that takes years to bed into a club – it’s sense of itself – of who and what it is, and what it stands for – is something that takes time to fully establish (or in our case, to rebuild). It’s why Manchester United have for years now tended to win games in “Fergie time” when they’ve next to no logical right to do so. They believe that things will be a certain way. When events unfold to the contrary, something often clicks into gear to restore what they believe to be the status quo. Self image is everything – both individually and collectively.
And if you can extend that to include your staff, your besuited decision makers, and last but not least, your fans, well – then you’re really on to something.
But it’s not all that easy.
The quote that opens this article is the perfect example. It reads like a lullaby – a soothing sugary stanza to make you feel safe in the witching hour. But pan back a little and you remember it’s taken from the Jungle Book at the point where Kaa the Python is trying to lull Mowgli to sleep, with a view to having him for a light supper.
Trust involves a leap of faith, and if you make the Koreshi style mistake of trusting the wrong fella and the wrong ideas to commit yourself to, then you’re in trouble.
So it all comes down to this – do you trust the men in charge to get it right? Do you trust the players to find the right patterns on the park?
I trust you do.
Good article, but surely trust has to be earnt. Players can hardly trust each other when some of them have been at the club for so little time. Especially when you consider some new additions haven’t quite gelled yet. Players like Downing and Henderson can earn trust from their teammates by putting away chances when they’re presented with them. The longer they wilt under pressure the longer players won’t fully trust them.
It’s the recruitment part of all that where I’ve lost a bit of trust in Kenny tbh. Early as it is, i simply don’t think we’ve bought the right players for the style of football we’re going for, if that style is what we perceive it to be, pass and move. That’s not Andy Carroll, it’s not even Charlie Adam, who needs far too much time and space on the ball for that. Henderson I can see it, even if he has been incredibly mediocre for us, he’s mobile, he’s always look for a quick give and (sometimes)go. Downing we only seem to want to get down the byline, rather than coming inside and getting involved, which is ironic seeing as earlier on in the season when he was doing just that, he looked a player.
I just worry that if results keep going against us, we’ll continue to creep further and further back into that shell.
Great post, Roy. It is all about trust. And despite people thinking that all these players should be used to each other by now, well that’s not very realistic. Most have only played roughly 10 games together. Some even less because of injuries and such. I see the great football this team can play, and while it’s not being played as often or consistently as we’d all like, we know it’s there. We do all have to trust that Kenny and the players will get it right.
I trust in them to do it, and I while I’m confident they’ll come good, I also have to keep reminding myself that that kind of belief takes a long time to build. The example of United is the best one. They always manage, with very few exceptions, to get a result in games that they don’t deserve to. That’s because of years and years of trust and belief molded into the team and players.
We’ll get there, it just might take some time.
Nail on the head. Trust is key. The owners trust Dalglish. Leading up to this season he signed a three year deal. Not because the owners thought he’d win us three league titles, but because they thought he’d win us one, and three years is how long it takes.
People want us to be like City and buy the most expensive players regardless of style, and have immediate success. I on the other hand want success to last over the next decade and for this to happen we need to be more like Barcelona. Building a team with a mindset to win, not just a bunch of talented individuals that will move on after we win one trophy.
Does anyone think that the City players take great pride in putting on that pale blue shirt? I want a team that’s full of pride. That’s what the history of Liverpool football club is about. And we definitely have the right people in charge to bring back that pride.
Great piece, I trust in Kenny and co to lead LFC onward and upward. I also trust that Roy Henderson is wearing a wig in his mug shot above, no?