Originally Posted by alancracker:
“Munch I am not your enemy, we are fellow LFC fans with perhaps a slight difference on some matters, that is not a problem to me but at times it does seem to be to you. If I may say so you sometimes can come across as someone who reacts badly if someone does not fully agree with you. I have no problem if you disagree with me.provided we can do it respectfully and not toss around nasty words to each other. I hope I have not done that in your direction but if you feel I have then I apologise unreservedly.”
I don't react badly at all. I've been respectful towards you throughout this, I'm fine with people disagreeing or having a different opinion, all I do is share mine. If I have something to say I'll say it. What I take issue with is when people react badly to me or get personal, or questions by support for Liverpool or my credibility as a fan, or asks if I understand Shankly's ideas when talking about the modern world. I should note only the Shankly thing applies to you in that little list, but I understand you didn't mean any offence so let's move on. You're not my enemy, either.
Quote:
“Where am I coming from? - I am a LFC fan first taken to a match by my Dad in 1962 when we were in the old 2nd Division just after Shankly took over and took LFC on a journey to success so that in the 50+ years since 1964 we have not finished outside the top 8 in the highest division which is a record without parallel. His influence tho was far more than just about success on the field, it was about the values that the club stood for. That is why I revere the man - above any other figure connected to our club - altho Kenny comes close. If that makes me stuck in the 60s and 70s then I am not unhappy about it, but I do not think I am, I also engage with the modern game too, football is a drug to me and I will never be cured from it
.
What special ideas did he have which he brought to LFC which made him so unique? - he embodied a living socialism borne from his background. This meant that he valued hard work and treating people (all people of all 'classes') well and he made special efforts to make sure he never distanced himself from his roots or the ordinary fans of the club. He tried to make sure his players thought in the same way as him. Humility was something he valued greatly - players who talked the talk without walking the walk did not go down well with him. Even in the mad world of football 2016 I believe those principles can still be applied in things like what the club expects of its players and how it treats its fans and even what players it signs.”
I'm a Liverpool fan, so I understand all about what Shankly brought to the club. We're still feeling the effects of him being at the club even now. Part of that is the effect he has had on the fans, which has been passed on to future generations, and I think it does have an effect on the club and the way it operates, within reason, since we saw with the Spirit of Shankly (apt. name, eh?) and recently with the ticket price increase, the fans still have power and we want the club to keep running in a way that would make Shankly proud.
I didn't live through the Shankly years so my experience of him is second-hand but I understand him.
Quote:
“The sentence which bothered me most in your long post was 'Liverpool are just like everyone else now' - I certainly hope not - altho sometimes i think you may have a point when I see some of the things which the club does.
”
But that's my whole point. We are. Don't get me wrong, I do think Liverpool are special in its own special way. It's just that we aren't run exactly the way Shankly had us run, we don't draft in 25 players from a local academy and build a title-winning squad because that just does not happen. We've spent a lot of money over the years, not all of it wisely. If we had spent it more wisely we'd have won things, and you'd probably have some jealous people saying we bought the league.
Football is different now to Shankly's day, it's not Liverpool itself, and for us to compete at the highest level you have to spend, and, as said, we've shown that we will if we can. I do think we would sign someone like Zlatan or Pogba if we could. The only reason we wouldn't sign Zlatan is because he wouldn't fit into the system, and there is his attitude that Klopp wouldn't like, but Balotelli has shown that another Liverpool manager would.
If a player of Pogba's quality become available and we refused to buy him because of some illusion that we're different to everybody else I'd have a crater in my head from face-palming. You'll have seen the criticism FSG and Ian Ayre get when we fail to sign players. Clint Dempsey, Mkhitaryan? Imagine the outrage if we could've had Pogba.
The reason I take issue with you asking me if I understand Shankly's ideas is because I'm talking about now, not then, and in the current market, if we want to compete at the top, Shankly's ideas might have to take a backseat sometimes.
Quote:
“On the positive side tho i do think Klopp has a lot of the same characteristics as Shanks in terms of attitudes to fans and what he values in players and so I look to the future both on and off the field with more real optimism than I have done for a while.
Here's to a good 2016/17 and beyond.”
Yes, Klopp's probably the closest we've had to Shankly, and a lot of what I've said is kind of excluding Klopp because he's different to other Liverpool managers. He wouldn't sign someone like Zlatan because their personalities wouldn't be compatible, and if we had the money I don't know if he would've gone for Pogba, but other managers would. Rafa certainly would have done. Klopp, however, does prefer to create the £80m player rather than buy them, but he's a special case.
TL;DR:
Football has changed from Shankly's day, and FSG has modernised how the club is run, they've made is into a successfully run business that is capable of competing at the top, but we're not quite rich enough to pay £80m for a player just yet. But we're a modern club now in modern times, whether Shankly would've signed certain players today is almost irrelevant because he didn't have to put up with the way the modern game is.