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Date:
Sat 5th May 2001, 3.00pm.
Venue:
Anfield
Conditions: Beautiful
blue skies and sunshine above, but storm clouds gathering
below....
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Liverpool |
3
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Newcastle
United |
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Teams |
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25
mins. A through ball came through the middle of our
badly-positioned defence, and Michael Owen had time and space to
run on to it and beat Shay Given at the Anfield Road End .0-1
Half time: Liverpool
1 Newcastle 0
72
mins. Owen - see first goal, at Kop End 0-2
81 mins. Owen
- see first goal, at Kop End 0-3
Full time: Liverpool 3 Newcastle 0
Uncle
Bobby defended his positive tactical selection, saying:
"I don't really think we took a risk. Both
Solano and Quinn worked well out wide and they tucked back in when they
had to. Quinn did all right and Nobby was back to have one of his best
games.
"We were doing well before
Michael Owen scored their first goal after 25 minutes and at 1-0 we were
not too far away. Then at the start of the second half we looked to be in
control and were the better side.
"We looked like getting back
into it and seemed capable of a draw and at that stage I was really
enjoying the game.
"But Owen had the biggest
amount of space I have ever seen a striker have when he scored his second
goal. And quite frankly Shay Given did not deserve that type of defending
in front of him.
"We defended very badly
although to be fair to Michael Owen he put three goals past a very capable
goalkeeper.
"Some of our defending was
very poor and until the players realise this and respond to it we will
always concede goals.
"That's why I was angry on
Saturday night because I care about the result. Yes it was great for
Michael Owen, but it was not great for Newcastle United or for our
defenders."
Turning to the substitution:
"I took Carl Cort off to wake
him up. Yet Kevin Gallacher ran all over the place and he is 34 years of
age.
"I thought Gallacher was
fantastic and he gave a marvellous display. He showed what movement is all
about.
"When Cort, Shola Ameobi and
Lomana Lua Lua look at Gallacher they should be embarrassed by the runs he
is making and they are not.
"In fact all our young players have to take a
lesson from him as he has shown them what they have to do."
Andy O'Brien admitted:
"Shay
never had a chance. Apart from my own performance that's what disappointed
me most because our keeper had his usual great game.
"We desperately want to get to
the point where Shay is actually getting low marks and average reports
because he never has anything to do. That's not happening at the moment,
but it will. As soon as we learn to play consistently well in front of
him, then he will start to get the breaks he deserves.
"I'm never satisfied with my
own performance but on Saturday it was nowhere near good enough. Like all
of the players, I was very disappointed when I walked off the pitch and
I'd be a fool to think there was anything positive which I could take away
from a 3-0 defeat.
"There are always going to be
fingers pointed at the defence when a team concedes three similar goals
and we have to face up to that criticism.
"There are no excuses and I
would not dream of trying to make any."
From the official LFC website,
their transcript of Houllier's post-match remarks:
Press: How important is that victory today?
GH: At this stage of the season, very important. Newcastle
played very well in the second half but we managed to keep our heads up and we
resisted what they threw at us. I thought we should have been further ahead by
that stage but credit has to be given to the opposition. I was pleased with
the effort of my players and I thought they were magnificent today. My players
deserve a lot of praise for what they are doing at the moment.
Press: When you were 1-0 up was it difficult to decide what tactics to use?
GH: When you don't take your chances, like we didn't in the
first half, there is always the possibility that you will come under pressure.
They had something to hope for until Michael Owen's second goal killed the
game.
Press: Michael wasn't bad today, was he?
GH: He was very good. He has played well over the last couple
of goals and he always seems to do well against Newcastle. He usually scores a
few goals against them. He took the goals extremely well and really looked the
part. I am pleased for him because he has come back well after injury problems
and now looks very sharp.
Press: Your substitutes made a big impact again today
.
GH: I thought they were brilliant, absolutely outstanding.
When the subs came on they won the game for us. Patrick gave a goal to Michael
and then Robbie did the same. I am delighted with the mental strength our side
is showing. Everyone involved in the squad is in the right frame of mind to
win games.
Press: How do you choose your teams at the moment? Is it a case of picking
who is the freshest?
GH: It doesn't really matter who plays. We want to be
successful and you cant be successful with only eleven players. We have
played nearly 60 games and we wouldn't be in contention for a Champions League
spot or in three finals without using all of our players. We have an excellent
spirit around the camp and that is serving us well at the moment.
Press: With that victory over Newcastle, you can now make sure of a Champions
League place by beating Chelsea on Tuesday
.
GH: It will be a good night and we know the position. With
Leeds losing at Arsenal, and with our superior goal difference, if we beat
Chelsea it means we will finish the season in third place. That is what we
have been aiming for all season and we have to take the chance now that it has
come along.
Magpies @ Anfield: Premier League era:
2001/02: Lost 0-3
2000/01: Lost 0-3
1999/00: Lost 1-2 Shearer
1998/99: Lost 2-4 Solano, Andersson
1997/98: Lost 0-1
1996/97: Lost 3-4 Gillespie, Asprilla, Barton
1995/96: Lost 3-4 Ferdinand, Ginola, Asprilla
1995/96: Won 1-0 Watson (LC)
1994/95: Lost 0-2
1993/94: Won 2-0 Lee, Cole
Number of shirts thrown in the face of a
Newcastle manager presiding over a team being tonked 0-3 = 0 (see a
previous Anfield extravaganza.)
We've managed just one solitary goal in our final PL away game in the eight
seasons that we've participated in the competition: Peter Beardsley at the
City Ground in 1996.
Final away game results - Premier League:
2000/01: lost 0-3 at Liverpool
1999/00: drew 0-0 at Derby County
1998/99: lost 0-2 at Leicester City
1997/98: lost 0-1 at Blackburn Rovers
1996/97: drew 0-0 at Manchester United
1995/96: drew 1-1 at Nottingham Forest
1994/95: lost 0-1 at Blackburn Rovers
1993/94: lost 0-2 at Sheffield United
If you've somehow come to this
site under the impression it's in any way shape or form
professional, you'd probably expect something along the lines of:
"It's a story that's been told
several times before but Michael Owen never gets tired of writing
it. Another hat-trick (his second in three seasons) made it twelve
goals in six games that he's put through our leaky defence."
However, back in the
restricted view stood up for 90 minutes/someone peed on me boots reality
of the away end, neither Owen nor the 'pool played particularly well
and yet they seemingly picked us off at will without getting into
third gear, let alone fourth or fifth.
Three times Owen waltzed through
the heart of our defence and three times he tucked the ball past a
helpless Shay Given. Strangely, Dabizas and O'Brien had reasonable
games and look to be forming a decent partnership but with Hughes
and Barton at their sides we looked very vulnerable. The shape was
lost time and time again as slip-ups were covered for and moves
down our flanks broke down.
Midfield was again very weak and
another tireless performance from Gallacher caused little or no
threat, with Cort looking decidedly disinterested. Acuna and
Speed's contributions were conspicuously absent and subs: LuaLua,
Bassedas and Ameobi quite frankly, made a bad team look worse.
Shola could do with learning the words to his song, "You put
your left leg in"....
A good 20 minute spell at the
start of the second half almost produced an equaliser and the rejuvenated
Solano caused one or two problems, notably with a header cleared
off the line (or was it over?) However, the plucky spell of resistance crumbled and Owen made it
two before Bobby's double substitution could break any rhythm we'd
found.
Had it been 1-1 with twenty minutes
remaining, an unexpected point could just have been ground out, but when the
second Liverpool goal roused the Kop from it's slumbers, it was game over for
the Mags.
A noisy away following deserved
better and although chants became annoyingly repetitive
("Liverpool slums", "never get a
job", "shall we sing a song for you") it
has to be said Anfield has never been so quiet. Perhaps like us,
they knew from the first whistle that victory was never in doubt.
Just like old times here: came, saw, flattered to deceive, sang,
went home.
At least it wasn't on Sky.
Niall Mackenzie
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