Premier League: Blackburn Rovers 0-0 Liverpool

The return of Big Sam following heart surgery to oversee a Blackburn team whose previous outing was the Carling Cup penalty shoot-out elimination of Chelsea produced a performance that adhered to Allardyce’s managerial stereotype.

Unfortunately for Liverpool they were also a little dour, functional, lacking in zip, and, by the close of the goalless draw, it was Rovers who were worrying the visitors.

Liverpool had arrived at Ewood minus Fernando Torres. And while their other stellar name, Steven Gerrard, insisted throughout he might turn the game he appeared surrounded by too many team-mates who are just not in his class.

A drag of Gerrard’s right boot took him clear of traffic inside the area after 13 minutes, but Blackburn’s rearguard cleared. However, they had been warned. Before the break it was the Liverpool captain again, this time wandering from his central berth in Rafael Benítez’s midfield over to the left. He collected and, from a difficult angle, opened his body but could only manage a corner with a deflected shot.

Overall the half had been deficient in action, with Blackburn sporadically threatening, and Torres illustrating the effervescence he drains from Liverpool when absent.

Alberto Aquilani is rumoured to have bucket loads of that stuff, too. But with nearly a month now passing since his sole glimpse (seven minutes) of the Premier League what the £20m Italian midfielder might offer is fast becoming a myth.

When first Alberto Riera, then Yossi Benayon were replaced during the second half, Benítez continued to blank Aquilani. It cannot be long, surely, before questions are asked about a possible bust-up with the manager, or it emerges that he has contracted some mysterious injury which allows only bench-warming action.

David Ngog – on for Riera –came closest to grabbing victory for Liverpool, but the ball appeared to bobble as the striker connected and he could only bend Paul Robinson’s bar.

Minutes later Benni McCarthy, who had an excellent game, had a clearer chance, but he failed to finish. It was that kind of afternoon.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversLiverpoolJamie Jacksonguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Fulham 3-0 Blackburn Rovers

It may be an inappropriate cliche in the week Sam Allardyce goes under the knife, but the least you expect from his Blackburn Rovers is a little blood and guts. However, Blackburn offered little resistance as Fulham recorded their first victory against the Lancashire club since 2005 thanks to a second-half brace from Clint Dempsey after Erik Nevland had given them a half-time lead.

Allardyce’s wife Lynn has confiscated her husband’s mobile phone ahead of his angioplasty this weekend, which may explain how his assistant, Neil McDonald, managed to field a daring 4-4-2 formation away from Ewood Park. Franco di Santo partnered Jason Roberts in attack and the Argentinian very nearly rewarded McDonald’s adventure in the second minute when he raced onto Keith Andrews’ well-measured through ball, however Mark Schwarzer raced from his line to extinguish the danger.

Looking for their first win since last month’s 3-1 defeat of Liverpool Fulham could have offered more in attack, their only notable effort before the opener coming in the seventh minute. A fine pass from Jonathan Greening broke to Damien Duff on the edge of the area and the Ireland international lofted a cross to the back post that Dempsey, regardless of the presence of Andrews, should have managed to get a cleaner connection upon.

There was a little more endeavour at the other end, but not much. El Hadji Diouf, operating on the left, found the space to cross and when the ball broke off Roberts, Andrews – who seemed to find himself in the few places the action was occurring in the first half – should have done better than scoop it over the bar.

Two minutes before the break Fulham, with their first shot on target, were ahead. Erik Nevland rounded off a splendid move that began with the Norwegian playing a neat one-two with Bobby Zamora and moving the ball wide for Duff. The winger played the ball back into the striker’s path and he rolled it under the advancing Paul Robinson.

Just like the opening half Fulham’s first chance after the break fell to the head of Dempsey, and just like the first half the American failed to make a reasonable connection on the ball – this time weakly heading a Greening free-kick wide when the former West Bromwich Albion midfielder found him unmarked at the far post.

Chris Baird drew a save from Robinson in the 57th minute and the erstwhile England No1 very nearly allowed the tricky bouncing effort to rebound to Zamora, but gathered at the second attempt.

Use of the head had not been working for Dempsey so he switched to his feet and duly doubled Fulham’s lead with his right foot, getting the final touch to a shot from Duff that, having picked up a deflection from Pascal Chimbonda, may have snuck past Robinson on its own. Four minutes later Nevland should have sealed the win after another swift one-two, this time with Dempsey, but he scuffed his 12-yard shot wide.

A surprisingly timid Blackburn never looked like salvaging even a point, though Chimbonda should have scored but he failed to make a clean connection on a mis-hit from Andrews. The Irishman’s half-hearted challenge on Dempsey in the 89th minute summed up their performance, and was insufficient to prevent the American converting Simon Davies’ cross.

Premier LeagueFulhamBlackburn RoversRoy HodgsonMikey Staffordguardian.co.uk

Sam Allardyce stands by Sir Alex Ferguson | Paul Wilson

Blackburn’s manager takes his side to Old Trafford and has enormous admiration for his Manchester United counterpart

Roberto Martínez may be squirming with embarrassment over what he is reported to have said about Sir Alex Ferguson and his friends within the Premier League, though in implying Sam Allardyce will be having a convivial drink with his old pal whatever the result of Blackburn Rovers’s visit to Old Trafford this evening the Wigan Athletic manager was not exactly revealing a state secret.

“Yes, I’m a Fergie lover,” Allardyce can exclusively confirm. “A loyalist, an admirer, call it what you like. Why wouldn’t any manager in the English league look up to the best in the business, probably the most successful manager this country has ever seen? He’s built six or seven great sides, won two European cups and 11 titles, so why shouldn’t a manager like me admire that?

“What Roberto said is not really a problem for me, but I think he has just learned a harsh lesson about life in this league. If you start departing from your own club’s business, for whatever reason, to talk about other matters, it can easily rebound on you. I don’t know quite what happened and what exactly was said but I don’t need to. Roberto has apologised to me and I have accepted his apology.”

The fact that Ferguson and Allardyce have long been buddies was demonstrated last season, when following Rafael Benítez’s attack on the United manager, Ferguson did not fire back directly but later accused his Liverpool counterpart of being disrespectful to Allardyce with seemingly little cause. Martínez’s somewhat clumsy attempt to lend support to his increasingly isolated compatriot on Merseyside only ended up reinforcing an older north-west allegiance.

Ferguson is in regular contact with Allardyce by phone and the pair meet often at charity lunches and functions and regard each other as allies, perhaps because, in his capacity as Bolton and now Blackburn manager, Allardyce has long been in Ferguson’s neighbourhood without being parked on his lawn. The Manchester United manager is never going to be bosom pals with the City manager, for instance, or find it particularly easy to call up whoever is in charge at Liverpool for a chat. Allardyce is more likely to socialise with younger managers such as Steve Bruce and Peter Reid, though in a professional context he and Ferguson are close.

Martínez possibly feels most sheepish about appearing to suggest Allardyce is lining himself up for Ferguson’s job, though he has only given today’s opponents something else to chuckle about in their post-match get together. And Bruce too, who will be there in spirit. As if to confirm Martinez’s suspicions that the three are in cahoots Allardyce revealed he had spoken to Bruce following Sunderland’s impressive performance at Old Trafford earlier this month, when they had to settle for a 2-2 draw but were close to claiming all the points.

“Brucey said they caught them on an off day, Sir Alex was having to pick a team with one eye on the league game and another on the European match in midweek, and that’s going to be the situation again today,” he said. “Sunderland nearly took full advantage and that’s what we’ll be hoping to do. Possibly this is a good time to be playing United, but if you look at our league record you will also see it is a good time to be playing Blackburn. We haven’t picked up a single point [away from home] yet, so unless we can improve on that fairly quickly it doesn’t really matter what form Manchester United are in. I didn’t get any specific tips from Brucey, we all know what we have to do when we go to Old Trafford. Most of the time will be spent trying to stop them playing.”

Allardyce was an Old Trafford winner in his time at Bolton, describing the feeling of beating United on their own turf as one of the best days of his life, though he goes into today’s game on the back of heavy defeats away to Arsenal and Chelsea, as well as an outbreak of swine flu. “When we get the United match over we will have three of the big boys out of the way for the rest of the season, at least away from home,” he said. “October was a pretty heavy month for us but we have some winnable games coming up in November. At the moment, if I am honest, I think Chelsea is the most daunting ground to visit, even more daunting than Old Trafford. Everywhere is daunting for a team with an away record like ours, of course, but Chelsea made mincemeat of us last week. They are in great form at the moment and United are not quite at their best If you were making an assessment now you would possibly say Chelsea look more like title contenders, but it is much too early to be writing off United. They know how to pace a season, and unlike Chelsea, they will not be losing key players to the African Cup of Nations in January.

“All you can safely say at the moment is that United have lost a little of their old ability to kill a game with the departures of Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez. Some players are capable of winning a game on their own, sometimes with a single act. That is exactly what Fernando Torres did at Liverpool last week. Very few other players would have scored that goal, maybe Steve Gerrard could have done it, but I don’t know. The point is that when you lose players of that calibre, they are hard to replace. Ronaldo and Tevez were both like that, they could just come up with something to stun you, and United presently lack something they had last season. Antonio Valencia is a good player, no doubt about that, but he is not going to pop up with those sort of goals. Dimitar Berbatov might, but United are still waiting for him to turn into that kind of player.”

Ronaldo scored just such a goal in the 2-1 win over Rovers in the corresponding fixture last season, though Allardyce thought the referee was at fault in not awarding his side a penalty. He has not been studying Ferguson all these years for nothing. “A 2-2 draw was taken away from us,” Allardyce said. “Mr Webb failed to be brave enough to give us a penalty at Old Trafford. It is not unusual.”

Blackburn RoversSam AllardyceManchester UnitedSir Alex FergusonPremier LeaguePaul Wilsonguardian.co.uk