Torres / Carroll moves make for interesting summer

Andy Carroll and Fernando TorresThe £50 million Chelsea paid for Fernando Torres to move from Liverpool was surprising, but the £35 million Liverpool then paid Newcastle for Andy Carroll was completely insane. Such is the January transfer market though, and you have to say Liverpool needed to get SOMEONE in to replace their talisman striker. Chelsea needed a boost to try and recover their stuttering season and in Torres and Benfica’s David Luiz you would think they have it.

The only thing that doesn’t make sense, apart from the transfer fees, is Newcastle’s agreement to let Carroll leave. But what these moves mean for the summer transfer window is what is really interesting.

For Newcastle, a star striker is an absolute must. The fact they would already have had to strengthen other areas will now be overshadowed by the search for a new goalscorer. And that assume they now survive in the Premiership. Without Carroll, that is not a certainty. Their ability to attract the best is not what it was, the loss of their best player will not help that, and it’s going to be a difficult summer for them in the transfer market.

Liverpool, on the other hand, will be hoping they’ve resolved the loss of Torres with Carroll. Personally, I feel that’s unlikely but the addition of Luis Suarez is inspired. He had a fantastic World Cup for Uruguay and impressed me. If he can bring that form and talent to the Liverpool side they can look forward to a much brighter second half of the season and beyond. The Anfield side will be looking at other areas of their squad instead, notably the defence, I’m sure.

At Chelsea there will be significant changes I feel. Ancelotti will no doubt look to rebuild his side around new signing Torres and you can expect some significant departures as he does it. I also feel that Abramovich will insist on some sort of return following his £70m outlay on Luiz and the Spanish striker. So who will go?

Drogba, it seems, is past his best and at 32 could be deemed surplus to requirements unless he sparks off a stunning partnership with Torres this season. He would still command a decent fee too. Chelsea’s other striker, Nicolas Anelka is a year younger, which isn’t much and has had a less significant impact on the side in terms of goals. He still offers quality and pace, though, and Ancelotti will have to decide between the two as to which is best to partner Torres.

Or he could choose to jettison them both, raising some £10-£12m in the process and seek out a new, younger model. At the same time, he’ll be looking at his midfield and wondering what to do. Is the current set up of Lampard, Essien, Kalou and Mikel, supported by Malouda and Ramires, the right one? For me, it actually is but Ancelotti may see it differently (especially with the usually indestructible Lampard showing his age in terms of injuries) and a summer transfer wouldn’t be a summer transfer window without Abramovich splashing the cash!

In defence, Chelsea look to have plugged a huge gap with the signing of Luiz so the only possible change there would be at right back. Terry, Alex and Luiz will share the centre back roles, with Terry bowing out to age and letting Chelsea form a potentially superb Luiz/Alex axis, while Ashley Cole will remain first choice left back for the Londoners and England for at least a couple more years. Only Bosingwa, Ivanovic and especially Ferreira (how is he still there?!) need worry.

Could Drogba and / or Anelka end up at Newcastle then, as Chelsea look to forge a strike partnership of similar success with Torres? It’s possible that at least one could end up there.

Outside of these three you can fully expect Manchester United and Arsenal to be as frugal as ever. United NEED a goalkeeper now van der Sar has announced his retirement in May, while Wenger will be confident about his current squad, if not his chances of holding on to Fabregas for yet another season.

Sir Alex Ferguson will find that goalkeeper but his search for replacements for Giggs and Scholes will go on. And on. As the players are themselves. Wenger will need to look for a Fabregas replacement, just in case, and he must surely look to replace the inept (but oddly lucky) Bendtner too. Outside of that, the current top two in the Premier League will consider themselves healthy in player terms.

The only other side who will be looking for real quality to push on to real success is Tottenham. Redknapp stated he was only one or two players from winning the League. I don’t think he’s too wrong with that, but who and what those two players are is a debate for another article!

In the meantime, there’s a title race on that Manchester United look to be cruising through, unbeaten as they are this season while the other challengers slip up around them. But nothing is ever certain, especially in this league. Liverpool, Chelsea and Newcastle proved that on January 31st.

How has Hodgson convinced Torres to stay at Liverpool?

Roy HodgsonSpanish star striker Fernando Torres has pledged his (immediate) future to Liverpool, claiming new manager Roy Hodgson’s plans are the main reason for doing so. Liverpool fans, understandably, are delighted. But what are Hodgson’s oh-so-convincing plans?

Liverpool are a team in decline, whether the supporters want to hear it or not. The ownership issue isn’t likely to go away any time soon and until it does there’s no real way the club can move forward. On the training ground and on the pitch Hodgson can work his magic but he will always be hampered by what happens upstairs.

Clearly he will build his team around the epic duo of Torres and Stephen Gerrard, now likely to see his career out at Anfield, and will attempt to bring the best out of some of the club’s underperformers as he is so good at doing. The addition of Joe Cole was an unexpected boon, helping the loss of Benayoun to Chelsea, and once Hodgson has got rid of the increasingly disruptive Mascherano there’ll be more scope for moulding a team in his own image.

This is a job that requires time, however, and it seems to me to be unlikely that Torres would be prepared to wait. Yet he has said he will, for another season at least. Has Hodgson promised something then? Like Champions League qualification THIS season? Quite a claim to make, given the current state of the club.

More likely it’s one of those “stay a season, if we don’t qualify I’ll let you go” deals. Because Roy Hodgson is no fool and he must know that rebuilding Liverpool is a task that will require seasons, not season. It’s possible he is shrewd enough to drag the team to fourth spot, his success with Fulham suggests he can, but it is far, far from a given and competition is fierce in the Premier League now.

Getting back to Gerrard, one wonders why he is still at Liverpool. He hit his peak two seasons ago and his standards have steadily dropped since. Don’t get me wrong, he is still a fantastic player and would be a boost for any squad, here in England or in Europe. Nevertheless, his best is behind him, bar an Indian summer, and he must soon regret not moving on from Anfield in pursuit of more success than he has enjoyed so far. We must admire his devotion to the club he supports, but we must also question his desire to stretch himself.

Too late now? Probably, in all honesty. “One more season” he’s been telling himself for at least five years and he has again. Partnered with a fit Torres, Liverpool will be a force – just not one on a par with Chelsea, Manchester United or Manchester City (but maybe Arsenal). Fail again and Torres will likely depart. What does Gerrard do then? Resign himself to being a hometown hero or attempt to seek that Indian summer abroad? We’ll have to wait and see.

In the meantime, we must see if Hodgson’s magic can galvanise a squad deep in depression enough to finish fourth and potentially retain their two stars. Succeed and the only way is up for Liverpool. Fail and one fears for the future even more.

The odds are against it – but they were against Fulham ever appearing in a European final too…

Liverpool FC set to lose Torres as well as Gerrard?

Various reports around that Fernando Torres may need surgery on a groin problem and could be out for up to two months. Under pressure manager Rafa Benitez, however, is prepared to put his star striker at risk and he travels to Lyon for the Champions League tie this evening despite the injury.

Already shorn of captain and talisman Gerrard, it seems a strange decision to jeopardise Torres’ immediate future as far as Sporting Fare is concerned – but then Rafa’s decision making this season hasn’t exactly been brilliant, has it.