Thursday, April 23, 2026

Liverpool vs Crystal Palace: Tale of the Tape

(A Short Story About Control, Fear, and Bad Omens)

Liverpool welcome Crystal Palace to Anfield this weekend in a match that, on paper, makes perfect sense. The stakes are obvious, the venue is familiar, the quality gap is real… and yet no one associated with Liverpool feels even remotely comfortable about it.

This is one of those fixtures where logic shows up early, gets laughed out of the room, and leaves behind a faint smell of impending nonsense.

Liverpool arrive needing results, not vibezz. Champions League qualification hangs in the air, heavy and very aware of itself. The football lately has been “fine” (sort of), which is to say dominant in possession, encouraging in xG, oddly stingy in actual tranquility, and mostly impotent. The attack still bristles with obscene talent — Salah remains Salah (again, sort of), Wirtz sees passes others don’t, Isak stretches back lines by existing (i.e., by not having a broken leg) — but none of it guarantees calm. Especially not when the goalkeeper situation currently reads like a plot twist no one asked for.

Palace, meanwhile, drift in unburdened. Mid‑table, functionally safe, faintly European but not stressed about it. They have the spiritual posture of a team that knows exactly who they are and is delighted to let you be uncomfortable about it. They will not press high. They will not panic. They will defend like a collective organism and then counterattack in a way that makes you briefly question every life choice that led to pushing both fullbacks forward at once. And those jerseys. I love ours, but theirs? Oh momma.

And this is where the muscle memory kicks in.

Because Crystal Palace have stopped being a quirky inconvenience in this fixture and started being that team — the one that doesn’t fear Liverpool, doesn’t overreact to Anfield noise, and doesn’t seem particularly bothered by the idea of ruining someone’s afternoon. Recent meetings have left scars. Nothing catastrophic, just enough to turn confidence into vigilance.

The expected rhythm of this match is already written. Liverpool will have the ball. A lot. Palace will sit, slide, block, and nod approvingly at each other as shots thud harmlessly into legs. The first half will pass with a faint hum of irritation. At some point — possibly once, possibly twice — Palace will break forward and make it feel wildly consequential compared to how little has otherwise happened. The commentators will lower their voices and say, “Liverpool need to be careful here,” which is football’s equivalent of seeing smoke and pretending it’s fog.

None of this means anything with certainty. That’s the problem.

This is not a match you predict. This is a match you endure. You respect it. You refuse to say outcomes aloud. You don’t tempt fate by checking the table mid‑match or texting “this feels okay” before it actually is.

Liverpool have the talent. Palace have the temperament. Anfield has the noise — but also the threat of revolt at the drop of a hat. The football has a way of doing whatever it wants anyway.

So we proceed as always: hopeful, mildly stressed, and deeply superstitious.


Wednesday, April 22, 2026

El Niño → El Jefe?

Not much news today.  Looks like Woodman will start between the stick against Crystal Palace this weekend.  The game is not a must win, but really, we must win the game.  

A few articles that piqued my curiosity: 

Spoiler alert - and it's amazing how many words (including my own, perhaps) are being spent on this, from what appears to be basically an off-hand quote from Fernando Llorente - but these articles all suggest that Fernando Torres - El Niño himself - will manage LFC at some point in the future.

I have no idea if he'd be a good manager.  It appears that he's currently managing Atletico Madrid B, which plays in the third tier of Spanish Soccer, and currently sits at 3rd in Group 2...do with that what you will.  As far as I can tell, that's like managing a MLS reserve team (made up of teenagers) playing against USL Championship team (second behind MLS in America) with mostly journeymen players...

My gut reaction is that these are just filler articles because there's nothing else to really talk about on a Wednesday.  But, at the same time, I don't see Slot staying around forever (or perhaps even to the end of next season if he can't turn things around) and it's nice to consider alternatives.  And, if the "El Jefe" moniker sticks, you heard it hear first.  

Monday, April 20, 2026

Freddie Woodman FTW

Dare I say it?  The perfect weekend for the Reds (apart from the Marmadashvili injury)?  

In the "Our Enemy's Enemy Derby" - ManU v. Chelsea - the Mancunians were victorious, keeping those scrappy blue-bloods at bay for the time being.  And then, of course, LFC delivered on Sunday thanks to a stoppage-time winner from my man, V "Calm As You Like" VD.  

Liverpool now sit on 55 points with five matches to go.  Chelsea (not Clinton), Brentford, and Bournemouth are nipping at our heels, all tied at 48.  Up the ladder Aston Villa and ManU have 58 apiece.  

Third is not out of reach, my friends.  

Onward and upward.  

In Woodman we trust.

Friday, April 17, 2026

The Friendly Derby

With the Merseyside Derby approaching its 248th edition, I thought it would be interesting to take a brief stroll through the history of one of sport's most storied rivalries.

The Merseyside Derby is often called football’s most unusual rivalry - not just because Anfield and Goodison Park sit less than a mile apart. It is unusual because it was never born of strangers or enemies. It began as a family dispute—and, in many ways, it has remained one ever since.

Origins and the Split

In the late nineteenth century, there was only one great football club in Liverpool. Everton FC, founded in 1878, were pioneers of the professional game. For nearly a decade, they played at Anfield, a ground owned by club chairman John Houlding. Over time, politics, personality, and money—forces that have split families before—began to pull the club apart.

Houlding, a brewer and Conservative, clashed with board members aligned with the temperance movement who were uneasy about his increasing control. When disputes over rent and governance escalated, Everton made a decision that would reshape English football. In 1892, they left Anfield, crossed Stanley Park, and built Goodison Park.

Houlding was left with an empty stadium and wounded pride. His response was swift and enduring. He founded Liverpool Football Club to occupy Anfield. Two years later, on an October afternoon in 1894, Everton and Liverpool met competitively for the first time. Everton won 3–0, but the scoreline mattered less than what the fixture represented: a city now permanently divided, yet still bound by shared roots.

A Rivalry of Affection

From the outset, the rivalry took on a different tone from others in England. Liverpool was not split by class, religion, or neighborhood; it was split by affection. Families contained Reds and Blues in equal measure. Fans often sat side by side, and for decades, there was little interest in forced segregation. The Merseyside Derby came to be known as The Friendly Derby, a label that puzzled outsiders but felt entirely natural within the city.

On the pitch, however, friendliness never meant restraint. Early twentieth-century derbies were bruising, emotional affairs played before enormous crowds. Dominance shifted back and forth, and the fixture produced moments of genuine chaos, including the highest-scoring derby of all—a 7–4 Liverpool victory in 1933. Still, even at its fiercest, the rivalry felt less like hatred than competition within a shared identity.

The Golden Era(s)

That dynamic reached its clearest form during two peaks—the late 1960s and the mid-1980s—when both clubs were dominant simultaneously. Bill Shankly transformed Liverpool into a modern force driven by collective belief, while Everton responded with technical brilliance and local pride.

In the 1980s, these parallel rises became unmistakable. Liverpool conquered England and Europe; Everton, under Howard Kendall, matched them stride for stride with league titles and continental success. Merseyside was no longer arguing about supremacy within the city - it was asserting supremacy over everyone else.

Cup finals from that era remain iconic. At Wembley in 1984 and again in 1986, supporters mixed freely, chanting “Merseyside” rather than trading abuse. It was rivalry without dehumanization.

Solidarity and the Modern Era

Then came Hillsborough. In April 1989, catastrophe struck Liverpool supporters, but its shockwaves consumed the entire city. Everton fans stood shoulder to shoulder with their rivals in grief. Scarves of both colors - red and blue - were intertwined across Stanley Park. The derby paused, humbled by reality. When it returned, it carried a weight it had never known before.

The Premier League era gradually changed the texture of the fixture. Football became faster and less forgiving. While the derby remained friendly off the pitch, it grew sharper on it, accumulating red cards at a rate unmatched in England. 

* * * *

More than 130 years after that first meeting, the Merseyside Derby remains football’s longest-running top-flight rivalry. More than that, it remains its most human. It is rivalry without exile, passion without annihilation. It survives because it is shared—across parks, across families, and across generations.

That is why it has always been called The Friendly Derby. Not because it lacks edge, but because beneath every challenge, chant, and celebration lies a simple truth: one city, endlessly arguing with itself.  YNWA.


Thursday, April 16, 2026

So...

Well, that was not the ideal result.  Or was it?  

Losing 0-2 to PSG (for the second time in two weeks) feels like, well, a loss.  But, methinks there's a silver lining.  Let's be real: this is not a team that can win the Champions League this season.  Getting dumped out of the CL means we only have one goal to achieve...a top four (or five)finish domestically. 

The Reds are currently fifth in the table, four points above Chelsea and three behind each of ManU and Aston Villa.  With six matches to go, we have to be able to focus on the Premier League.  

And now we can.

This weekend is the Merseyside Derby (away).  Then Crystal Palace (home), ManU (away), Chelsea (home), Aston Villa (away), and finally Brentford (home).  If you're keeping track, and excepting Crystal Palace, we finish out the season against our (current) table neighbors (one or two houses down on both sides).  It's going to be tight.  But, we control our destiny.  What more could you want?

I believe.  

YWNA.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Week in Review

Last week was a "meh" roller coaster for the club (apparently).  The Reds lost 2-nil to PSG in the first leg of their Champions League quarterfinals tie.  I was traveling so wasn't able to watch the entire match, but only conceding 2 felt fortunate.  And the attack?  The word "impotent" feels appropos.  

Then on Saturday we had Fulham at Anfield.  I was also traveling so didn't catch a minute of the match but was glad to see that we came away with 3 points and that Rio and Mo scored.  I would like to say that there's some momentum to bring into the second leg against PSG but from all accounts we scored and then survived...

So, going into second leg, I'm not optimistic.  How do we score three without conceding?  It just doesn't seem like it's possible with the current squad/managerial philosophy.  And I know stranger things have happened (i.e., LFC 4-0 Barca in 2019), but we don't have Divock Origi this time around (although he appears to be available).



Monday, April 6, 2026

Restore the Core (Or, “How We Tried To Replace Salah And Died Trying”).

Every time Liverpool lose a defining player, the same instinct kicks in: who replaces him? It happened with Stevie G., Coutinho, and Mané. Now, with Mohamed Salah set to leave the books, it’s happening again, with the club linked to right winger after right winger.  It is the wrong instinct. Liverpool don’t need to replace Salah; they need to restore the calm that made Salah inevitable. This summer shouldn't be about chasing a new icon. It should be about restoring out core…building a cohesive squad that is designed with a solitary focus: collecting trophies.  We need to prioritize systemic reliability over individual brilliance.

The tropaeic-foundation is a high floor, not a high ceiling. We already have several key pieces: Van Dijk (I’ll never give up on you), Konate (I saw today that contract extension was progressing), MacAllister, Gravenburch, Szoboszlai (despite his antics over the weekend), Wirtz (maybe too cheeky in the first half against City), Ekitike, Isak (assuming no broken legs).  We also have under-rated and/or under the radar (for the moment) squad players: Chisea, Gakpo, CuJo (is that his nickname?...not to be confused with the great NHL goaltender from the 1990s/Stephen King novel about a scary dog), and Rio “great in 1v1s but couldn’t find the right pass to save his life (at the moment)” Ngumoha.  But at times this season, we’ve felt incredibly thin.  Especially at right back.  So with Salah poised to leave, I propose we look to the summer transfer window seeking reinforcements; seeking to “raise the floor. ”  

In this post, I present my “Christmas in July” Summer Transfer Window Wishlist.  

Let’s start in the back.  As has been said, the best offense is a good defense.  We have Van Dijk and Konate (apparently, for the moment).  Kerkez has great hair but he stresses Virgil out.  Let’s sell him.  Replace him with Antonee Robinson (Fulham).  At right-back, Connor Bradley is my starter, with Frimpong as his deputy (or, we sell Frimpong and build and invest those proceeds in building a brick wall on the 18).

Center back wise, let’s splash some cash.  I’m looking at bringing in Gonçalo Inácio from Sporting CP, Chris Richards from Crystal Palace, and Ronald Araujo from Barcelona.  This means we have to sell Joe Gomez (who I genuinely adore) but it’s not personal, it’s business.  

Which brings us to the midfield.  We need a 6 who wasn’t an 8 that we’re making a 6.  I’m looking at Alan Varela from Porto.  He’s not the most dynamic, but neither was Fabhino (before he lost his legs).  He’s the shield that let’s our 8s (Szoboszlai, Gravenburch, Mac Allister) to do their thang.  And, for a wild card, I bring in Tyler Adams (I can’t help but want Americans in the squad) to kill games.  This means we sell Endo but…

Taken all together, we’re giving our back 2/3s the stability that it needs.  VVD still has gas, but not when he’s playing two positions at the same time.  Chris Richards is Joe Gomez-plus (he’s at least scored goals) and can play in any CB role.  Araujo is not someone I’d want to meet in a dark alley and can play RB when called upon.  Inacio steps into Virgil’s role when he decides to hang up his cleats (or move to Atlanta United!).  The stress of Kerkez and unreliability of Frimpong is eliminated, for a “quieter” flanking tandem of Robinson (another “American”) and Bradley.  We’ve also got Leoni as for the Carabao Cup and I think someone else whose name escapes me at the moment (I think we signed on an academy deal in the January window).

The output vacuum left by Salah is replaced by tactical optionality. We need not replace Salah but rather reimagine what made him so effective in the first place, redistributing his 20+ goals across a rotating cast.  We make the team responsible defensively but difficult to game plan against offensively.  



Liverpool vs Crystal Palace: Tale of the Tape

(A Short Story About Control, Fear, and Bad Omens) Liverpool welcome Crystal Palace to Anfield this weekend in a match that, on paper, makes...