Rodgers and Liverpool daring to dream big

Emphatic victory over Southampton merely emphasises Merseysiders’ credentias as genuine title contenders

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers acknowledges his side’s fans during the  English Premier League defeat of  Southampton at St Mary’s Stadium.  Photo: Andrew Winning/Reuters
Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers acknowledges his side’s fans during the English Premier League defeat of Southampton at St Mary’s Stadium. Photo: Andrew Winning/Reuters

The old songs are being aired again and

Brendan Rodgers

is delighted that his players are humming along. Towards the end of another high-scoring victory for their team, the away fans launched into a chorus of

We’re going to win the league

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.

It has been 24 years since Liverpool were champions of England and at times since then the club's players have seemed daunted by the demands to return to the top.

But Rodgers says he has changed that. “That’s what we can now do, deal with expectancy,” says Rodgers. “When I came in here there was a huge expectancy but the players couldn’t cope with it. But now we enjoy it, we relish it.”

The Northern Irishman believes the method he has applied since arriving at Anfield in May 2012 has liberated the players by fostering a conviction that they can keep excelling even when the stakes soar.

“We’ve created a culture which is about learning and improving. I try to keep the pressure off the players in terms of focusing on performance. Because winning is a process,” he said.

" You don't just turn up and win. So we take the focus from the players, we ask them to concentrate on individual performance. It's my job to take that pressure off them so that they can go and perform. Go play with energy, play with commitment, play with quality and they have done that."

Title rivals
Liverpool are increasing their rhythm at the right time. They have won seven and drawn two of their last nine matches, making the sort of surge that ensures they can exploit any slowdown by their title rivals. Alex Ferguson always used to stress that Manchester United got better in the second half of the season and Rodgers points out his teams do too.

“That’s the idea,” Rodgers said. “I think over the years people have expected us to tail off. Actually now I think we’re getting stronger. Last year I said how my teams work, we always get better in the second half of a season. Last year we did the same. This year we do the same. Our numbers are good so we’ve just got to keep it going.”

Liverpool captain, Steven Gerrard, who completed the victory at Southampton with a late penalty to add to goals by Luis Suarez and Raheem Sterling, is pleased his side are contenders for landing the trophy he has craved.

“It’s very nice that people are talking about us and we are in the title race,” he said. “There’s no getting away from that, we’re in it. Manchester City and Chelsea are still the favourites if you like because they’ve got that experience of going on to win it but I think they know, listening to Jose Mourinho and Manuel Pellegrini, that we are a big threat because we’ve got no Europe and we can be fresh every game.”

Being spared European action gives Rodgers time to hone tactical tweaks like the one that helped beat Southampton, introducing a midfield diamond and restoring Suarez to a central role alongside Daniel Sturridge.

"We've got a lot of time to prepare," says Gerrard. "We worked on this formation all week, we chose to play a diamond and I think it shocked Southampton."

Long periods
For all that, Southampton looked a match for Liverpool for long periods and it was easy to see why they are almost as strongly represented in the England squad to take on Denmark on Wednesday.

Rickie Lambert and Jay Rodriguez played well and Adam Lallana was as intrepid a schemer as ever. But perhaps the most impressive home player was their newest England squad member, the left-back Luke Shaw.

The 18-year-old’s performances all season have been so mature it is easy to forget how quickly he has matured.

"Stevie Gerrard just had a little word after the match just to congratulate me and say 'I will see you tomorrow'. For me, it is great for the England captain to say something like that to me," said Shaw, who knows what he has to do to impress Roy Hodgson.

“ Roy said that when I spoke to him on the phone. He said ‘you’re here on merit, keep doing what you are doing’.”

Guardian Service