"Rodgers' gospel is a seductive one. Having spent
more than 20 years on training pitches all over Europe since his playing
career was ended by a chronic knee injury, he passionately believes
that all footballers can be substantially improved through a combination
of technical coaching and shrewd man-management, particularly a group
he considers to have been unfairly aligned: home grown English players.
Rodgers treats the disciplines of coaching and man-management with equal
importance and is excelling at both. Rodgers has the Mourinho-like
knack of raising confidence to improve performance - Swansea players
rave about how he made them feel 'a million dollars'.
Matt Hughes, The Times
"Rodgers put together a team who played the game in a
way that patrons of the Camp Nou would recognise, pursuing an ideal of
composed interplay that maximised the potential of a set of players who
arrived in the top flight without fanfare but enhanced their reputations
individually and collectively. On their day, no midfield in England
provided more of a treat for the eye than the one consisting of Leon
Britton, Gylfi Sigurdsson and Joe Allen. Up front the combination of
Nathan Dyer, Danny Graham and Scott Sinclair posed a threat to the very
best defences. The team drew praise from all quarters, including other
managers, for the purity of their football."
Richard Williams, The Guardian
"For 20 years, Brendan Rodgers has been preparing
for the moment when he is appointed by one of the biggest clubs in
Europe. Liverpool's new manager is leading edge, one of Britain's
brightest young coaches with the confidence to match the qualifications.
This is his time. At 39, he is all about forward thinking and
flexibility, conveying top-class coaching habits that he has picked up
on a fascinating journey all over the continent. Soon Steven Gerrard,
Martin Skrtel and Luis Suarez will be skimming the ball across the
surface, feeding off his enthusiasm and enjoying the opportunity to
express themselves. This will be the Anfield way from now on, trading on
Rodgers' tactial acumen and taking the culture of passing and
possession football to another level. In a typical match Barcelona make
around 1,000 passes and Liverpool players will be expected to dominate
their opponents by producing similar statistics."
Neil Ashton, Daily Mail
"A re-education is required, building blocks put in place and the
appointment of one of the best up-and-coming British managers to oversee
that process makes sense. Rodgers' footballing values, based on
possession, passing and moving, fit neatly with the Liverpool of old.
Back in the Sixties when black and white TVs were the order of the day,
there was once a banner on The Kop which screamed: "For those of you
watching at home, Liverpool are the ones with the ball."
Paul Joyce, Daily Express
"In the simplest terms, Rodgers wants his team to get hold of the
ball as quickly as possible and then keep it. I spent a couple of hours
in his office at the Liberty Stadium last season when he talked me
through the logic behind his tactics, derived from various sources but
especially inflected with the Barcelona way. When going forward, the
best way to move the ball up the field is to create angles of diagonal
pass. If you have two banks of four across defence and midfield there
are no diagonal passes on. The system needs to be more fluid. So Rodgers
seeks to create as many 'lines' across the field as possible. In his
system you have a minimum of seven lines. He wants his goalkeeper to be
part of the play, then the centre-backs, then what he calls the
'controller' (a deep-lying playmaker), then the full-backs pushed on,
the two attacking midfielders, the wingers and then the centre-forward.
That allows you to draw seven horizontal lines across the pitch. Through
coaching, Rodgers ensures that every player knows his place in this
system. When a player receives the ball he should always have at least
two options for an 'out' pass. He gives the players confidence to make
those passes by taking the blame on himself when it does not come off."
Duncan White, The Telegraph
"A fiercely confident individual, with a refreshing and relentless
thirst for learning and self-improvement - he spent four days studying
the work of Spanish national coach Vicente Del Bosque earlier this
month, for example - Rodgers has earned plenty of admirers during two
hugely successful seasons with Swansea. His coaching style, based
loosely on the model of the Spanish national team but truly refined at
Swansea, where he found a chairman willing to back him and supporters
willing to support him, is exciting, dynamic, progressive. His teams run
hard, they pass the ball with confidence and imagination, they defend
from the front and attack from the back. They also know how to set, and
up, the tempo in games, especially on home soil."
Neil Jones, Liverpool Echo
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