Friday, July 27, 2012

Liverpool 1-2 Roma – Match Review


Liverpool continued their pre-season preparations as they met AS Roma on Wednesday night at Fenway Park in Boston. After a first half littered with misplaced passes and scuffed chances from both sides, the game picked up in pace and quality in the second half. Michael Bradley opened the scoring in the 63rd minute, before Alessandro Florenzi extended the lead seven minutes later. Charlie Adam fired in a consolation goal for the Reds with ten minutes remaining but ultimately Roma ran out deserved winners.

The first half began in unspectacular fashion, with both sides struggling to create clear-cut chances. Pablo Osvaldo spurned a great chance when played clean through on goal after an error from Jay Spearing with Peter Gulacsi diving to his right to deny the Italian striker – the first of a number of impressive saves from the Hungarian stopper.

This woke Liverpool up as returning loan stars Alberto Aquilani and Joe Cole both began seeing a lot of the ball and looking dangerous. The two combined to good effect in the 32nd minute as Aquilani’s chipped ball over the top found Cole whose lobbed finish clipped the crossbar before going behind.

20-year-old midfielder Jonjo Shelvey was undeniably the star performer of the first half, as he ran the Liverpool midfield and showed excellent footwork on two separate occasions to create space for a shot inside the Roma area but was denied by goalkeeper – in both instances.

The defense looked shaky to say the least. 17-year-old Ryan McLaughlin made his debut at right-back, and looked composed and confident on the ball, if a bit suspect defensively. Veteran Jamie Carragher struggled to deal with the movement of Osvaldo, with center-back partner Martin Skrtel bailing out his Captain several times. Jose Enrique looks to have enjoyed his holiday a bit too much as he looked out of shape and vulnerable yet again after a poor showing against Toronto.

Spearing complimented the attacking instincts of Shelvey and Aquilani to good effect, nipping around in front of the back four in typical fashion.

Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers chose to start with a front three of Cole, Nathan Eccleston and Raheem Sterling. While Cole impressed the most with his quick changes of pace and good close control, Eccleston and Sterling struggled. Manchester-born Eccleston did a decent job running channels and winning a few free kicks, but struggled to see the ball anywhere near the goal. Sterling on the other hand saw quite a lot of the ball without really doing much with it. The youngster has great pace but for whatever reason would rather make runs with the ball at his feet than make runs behind the defense in order to receive the ball in greater space. This reluctance slowed down several counter-attacks and allowed Roma to regroup.

After a number of changes at half-time, the quality and tempo of the game picked up in the second half. Brad Jones replaced Gulacsi in goal, Jon Flanagan took the place of Ryan McLaughlin at right-back, Daniel Agger saw his first minutes under Rodgers at the expense of Carragher, Adam replaced former Roma midfielder Aquilani, Suso replaced Cole, Adam Morgan played through the middle in place of Eccleston and Dani Pacheco replaced Sterling.

Roma made a number of changes too, with young prodigies Bojan Krkic and Erik Lamela both entering the fray.

Flanagan offered more offensively than McLaughlin, overlapping consistently throughout the second half and linking up well with Suso. Skrtel and Agger renewed their domineering partnership, while Enrique and later Wilson continued to struggle.

Spearing patrolled the midfield well before being replaced by Lucas who looked like his old self, going into challenges without fear and shrugging off the attentions of Roma midfielders on numerous occasions. Shelvey continued his dominant performance and was extremely unfortunate not to score with a free kick that swerved just wide. Despite scoring, Adam looked off the pace and other than a few nice passes did not have a particularly good game. He looked lethargic from the start and gave up on his defensive responsibilities.

Suso showed why he should be playing in central midfield, not the right wing, as he cut inside on his left foot every time he received the ball and tried to play-make. This caused an imbalance in the team as Suso crowded the middle of the field and mainly ran into trouble. Pacheco on the other hand hugged the left touchline for most of the game which gained him a lot of space to work some magic when he did see the ball. He had a number of impressive runs and shots, and looks likely to be part of Rodgers plans this coming season. Morgan posed an entirely different threat to Eccleston, with his tireless running and great attitude. He hassled and harried the Roma defense from start to finish, upsetting former Manchester United defender Gabriel Heinze in the process.

The referee and his linesmen had an atrocious day out, making a number of poor offside calls and awarding Roma constant soft free-kicks.

Considering Roma are much further along in their pre-season schedule than Liverpool, and have most of their first team back, while Liverpool still have the likes of Reina, Johnson, Kelly, Gerrard, Henderson, Downing, Carroll, Suarez and Borini to welcome back, a single goal defeat is not necessarily a poor result. Many positives can be taken from the game, and the system that Rodgers is attempting to introduce will only look better and better once Liverpool’s key and best players slowly but surely enter the fold over the next few weeks.

Line-up: Gulacsi (Jones 45’); McLaughlin (Flanagan 45’), Skrtel (Sama 59’), Carragher (Agger 45’), Enrique (Wilson 59’); Spearing (Lucas 59’), Shelvey (Adorjan 59’), Aquilani (Adam 45’); Cole (Suso 45’), Eccleston (Morgan 45’), Sterling (Pacheco 45’).

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