This has been a much talked about topic for the last few years now and im watching 'you're on sky sports' and some of the stuff Graham Stuart is saying is just simply stupid.
There are 2 points i just wanted to make regarding this talk of rotation, 1 of which being pretty crucial and i would imagine will suprise a few people.
1. Firstly people don't seem understand the reason why Benitez does rotate (Andy Gray in particular); you keep hearing people going on about Benitez thinks players are tired and can't play 3 games in a week when in actual fact Benitez has came out and said that players can play 20-30 games in a row but if you want them to be fresh enough to compete at the business end of the season when trophies are up for stake then you must give them rests during the season. Now thats a matter of opinion but if you look at Liverpool's record towards the back end of the season, particuarly in the cups and there performance over the Christmas period where the fixtures are all piled up, Liverpool have had that freshness and our results have shown that.
2. Secondly i keep hearing people (press and on here) that the reason why Chelsea and Utd have had more success in the League is because Fergie and JM kept a stable side and Benitez kept making changes, well thats simply just bs. I don't want to take too much credit for this because i was a bit suprised at this when i read it but there was an article a while back that brought up a few stats that prove this talk that Rafa rotates more is bs:
Hopefully this will stop some of the bs about Benitez rotating, i doubt it though
There are 2 points i just wanted to make regarding this talk of rotation, 1 of which being pretty crucial and i would imagine will suprise a few people.
1. Firstly people don't seem understand the reason why Benitez does rotate (Andy Gray in particular); you keep hearing people going on about Benitez thinks players are tired and can't play 3 games in a week when in actual fact Benitez has came out and said that players can play 20-30 games in a row but if you want them to be fresh enough to compete at the business end of the season when trophies are up for stake then you must give them rests during the season. Now thats a matter of opinion but if you look at Liverpool's record towards the back end of the season, particuarly in the cups and there performance over the Christmas period where the fixtures are all piled up, Liverpool have had that freshness and our results have shown that.
2. Secondly i keep hearing people (press and on here) that the reason why Chelsea and Utd have had more success in the League is because Fergie and JM kept a stable side and Benitez kept making changes, well thats simply just bs. I don't want to take too much credit for this because i was a bit suprised at this when i read it but there was an article a while back that brought up a few stats that prove this talk that Rafa rotates more is bs:
http://www.liverpoolfc.tv/news/archivedirs/news/2007/aug/8/NG156624070808-1304.htmPaul Tomkins said:Rather than rotation being the rot that eats away at the core of Liverpool’s title challenges, it’s the criticism that’s rotten. You don't believe me? Read on ...
In his new role as Setanta Sports' analyst, ex-Red Steve McManaman stated a few weeks ago that Benítez needed to rotate less to win the league. He was far from alone in expressing that belief; I don't mean to single him out, but he was just the first to mention it this pre-season.
I can barely turn on a sports channel or read a newspaper opinion piece without hearing it trotted out like some brainwashing mantra. No wonder people believe it. I even stopped reading the Premier League previews, and just searched for the word 'rotation' within. A couple of times it didn't appear in a piece; upon further investigation, another phrase had been chosen to explain Benitez's 'folly'. Same accusations, different wording.
It's become received wisdom, passed on in acts of laziness that pass as analysis.
Rotation is by its nature difficult to assess, as often you cannot say for sure if players were rested, suspended, injured, or left out for essential tactical purposes. Only the management know why team selections are made, as well as how the players were looking in training in the build up. Long gone are the days of settled sides and 14 players featuring all season long. For Benitez, any team change is labelled 'rotation'.
And of course, rotation is only mentioned after defeats, never after long runs of victories. Benitez was criticised during 2006/07 for having named his 99th consecutive altered line-up, but none of the critics bothered to check that he'd actually won a stunning percentage of those 99 games.
Obviously everyone knows Benitez rotates more than anyone else? (Ergo: way too much.) It's a known fact, right?
Except, of course, it's not true.
Manchester United won last season's league title with Alex Ferguson having made a total of 118 changes to his Premiership line-ups throughout the campaign, at an average of 3.11 changes per game. The season before that, Chelsea won the league with Mourinho also having made 118 changes to his Premiership line-ups throughout the campaign, again (obviously) at an average of 3.11 changes per game.
So how many changes did Benitez make in 2006/07?
You guessed it, 118 changes to his Premiership line-ups throughout the campaign, at what the eagle-eyed among you will know recognise as an average of 3.11 changes per game.
Ah, but in 2005/06, Benitez must have gone crazy with the rotation? Indeed he did, with an outrageous and outlandish 119 changes, at an average of 3.13 changes per game: a miniscule 0.02 more than the last two title-winning teams.
So why is there this unerring torrent of punditry telling us Benitez rotates so much more than his rivals? As an example, in the pre-season friendly against Shanghai Shenhua last Friday, experts Trevor Francis and Gary McAllister (who can be partially excused on account of being a hugely likeable Liverpool demi-legend, and also for being a fellow member of the bald community) both noted that Benitez rotated too often. So did the game's commentator.
Of course, the above figures don't take into account rotation that occurs in other competitions, in games played between Premiership matches. In that sense, it is indeed true that Benitez changes his team fractionally more than Mourinho and Ferguson, freshening things up for the cups.
And, the Spaniard could argue, with some justification, given the Reds' record in Europe and the FA Cup in that time.
But the fact remains that Benitez has kept his Premier League team selections as consistent as Ferguson and Mourinho. In terms of rotation, there's been nothing to separate them.
Yes, Benitez's line-ups are often difficult to predict. But there is far more consistency to his league selections than he is given credit for. This is proof that rotation has not been what has cost Liverpool the league title.
The fact that Ferguson named an unchanged team in the league four times last season - something Benitez never did - suggests the United man's ability to keep a settled side at least on the odd occasion.
But in those four games United's results were well below their overall season average, and way below the ultra-high average racked up on the nine times he made three changes.
So for Ferguson, three changes were far better than none. Indeed, it's worth pointing out that Liverpool's best points average came when Benitez made four changes from the previous league match: at an average of 2.5 points in those six games, it shows a rate consistent with a final total of 95 points. That doesn't mean he should make four changes every game, just for the sake of it, but it does highlight that for him, making the right changes worked.
So perhaps Benitez's fault is that he rotates his key players more often? Or switches his strikers around more than anyone else? Surely this has to be the case? As Gary McAllister said on Sky, Ferguson keeps a core of his players in the team at all times, something Benítez never did.
Well, the truth is very different.
It's clear that whenever Jamie Carragher, Pepe Reina and Steven Gerrard were fit, they were almost always selected, at least up until the April/May 'ease off'. As his three most indispensable players, they were never rotated, just rested on occasion or absent through injury. Finnan, Alonso, Riise and Kuyt also started the vast majority of games.
Indeed, Gerrard started a whopping 92 per cent of Liverpool's league matches, and was on for a 100 per cent attendance record until Benítez rested him on the 35th, 36th and 37th games of the season, with Athens looming. Pepe Reina also started 92 per cent of the matches.
Neither Manchester United or Liverpool had a player with a 100 per cent league-starts rating during last season, but out of United and Liverpool's squads, Gerrard and Reina came closest, with the Reds' Carragher next in line, with an 89 per cent start rate. United had no one who started more than 87 cent of league games. So it was Benitez who had a more settled core of indispensable players.
Overall, both teams had six 'ultra-key' players who started in the vast majority (76-99 per cent) of league games; Chelsea, by contrast, had only four (injuries to Petr Cech and John Terry lowered this from the expected six).
Then come the fairly indispensable players: those who started 50-75 per cent of matches.
Again Liverpool had six players in this category, but United only had four (Chelsea had six). So, while Chelsea and Manchester United only had ten players who started the majority of league matches, Liverpool had 12. (As an example, centre-backs Agger and Hyypia both started 23 league games, but Carragher was the main man with 34. Agger and Hyypia tended to be rotated, but on four occasions all three started.)
This can be looked at in one of two ways: Ferguson had a slightly smaller core of key players he would always call on; while Benitez had two more 'important' players who featured very heavily.
While Benitez used 26 players in total, Ferguson used 25, so there's little difference there. Even looking at those who were little more than bit-part players, it's virtually identical; both had 10 players who started less than 25 per cent of Premiership games, many of these in the dead rubbers in late April and early May.
As for strikers, Benitez only really rotated between three - Kuyt, Crouch and Bellamy - until the final three games of the season; before then, the fourth striker, Robbie Fowler, started only three times, and only once between the fourth and 35th matches; as such, for the league
Hopefully this will stop some of the bs about Benitez rotating, i doubt it though
