Five things we learned from watching football this weekend | John Ashdown

Liverpool could be nervously looking over their shoulder, Sam Allardyce deserves more credit and Leeds aren’t chokers after all

Liverpool may be a long time gone

While Chelsea, 8-0 victors over Wigan Athletic, cavorted around Stamford Bridge with the Premier League trophy, Steven Gerrard, whose Liverpool side had shambled to a 0-0 draw at relegated Hull City, was scrambling through a mini-pitch invasion at the KC Stadium as a few overamorous Tigers fans attempted to cop a feel or make off with his captain’s armband. It was a finale somehow befitting of Liverpool’s season and not exactly the finale that the England midfielder would have pictured.

Arguably the crucial self-destructive period in the Reds’ campaign came between the end of September and Christmas when they picked up 12 points from 11 games (fewer, for example, than Portsmouth), although inconsistency has blighted them throughout – Rafael Benítez’s side won four games back to back in August and September, but won consecutive league games only three more times after that early spurt.

The only solution is an overhaul. Seventh is their lowest league finish since 1999 (and it’s a ‘depth’ they have plunged to only three times in the past 44 years). The team that ended the last season of the century under Gérard Houllier – Friedel, Staunton, Song, Matteo, Carragher, Berger, Redknapp, Ince, Leonhardsen, McManaman, Riedle – was rapidly broken up, the Frenchman spending over £30m the following season in an attempt to reinvigorate the club. Though it didn’t get them much closer to the title (they were 25 points off the pace in 1998-99 and 24 in 1999-00) it did at least bring a return to the top four.

The problem for Liverpool is that Benítez is unlikely to have even that fairly paltry sum (in Premier League terms at least) to spend this summer. With Manchester City revving up for another spree and Tottenham, already a better team than Liverpool, likely to be bolstered by an influx of Champions League money, those at Anfield may be nervously looking over their collective shoulder next year. If the season had started at Christmas, Everton would be third …

Sol Campbell shouldn’t go to the World Cup

Though it’s an indictment of the very average seasons endured by the likes of Joleon Lescott and Matthew Upson that Fabio Capello should even be considering England World Cup recalls for Jamie Carragher and Sol Campbell, the latter’s display yesterday should put the final nail in that coffin.

The Arsenal defender creaked against Fulham – and should have given away a penalty when compounding his heading error and grappling with Clint Dempsey in the box. It was always going to be an outside chance anyway, but Gary Cahill, Phil Jagielka or Michael Dawson have all done more to earn their chance.

Spurs may be in the Champions League but they’re still Spurs

Whisper it, but the Fiver might have got it wrong. Tottenham Hotspur really are still funny. Which other team could qualify for the Champions League and, in the same week, become the first team since West Ham in February to get beaten at Burnley? The last visiting team to concede four at Turf Moor? Bristol City, almost exactly a year ago.

Sam Allardyce deserves a bit more credit

Last summer the writing seemed to be on the wall for Blackburn. Rovers had finished 15th, as bad as it has been for them in the Premier League since relegation in 1999, and it had taken a Sam Allardyce escape act to save them from the drop. Roque Santa Cruz left for Manchester City, Stephen Warnock high-tailed it to Aston Villa, the reliable Andre Ooijer headed back to Holland and PSV Eindhoven, Tugay called it a day. Even perennial superbsub Matty Derbyshire took himself off to Olympiakos.

Yet Allardyce has turned his team around and steered them into 10th. Yes, 10th, ostensibly hardly the sort of finish to prompt the popping of champagne corks and ticker tape parades, but for a club of Blackburn’s side (and, more importantly, wealth) a real achievement. Despite the relative flop of last summer’s big purchase, £6m Nikola Kalinic, who has mustered two league goals all season, they’ve ended up level on points with Birmingham, and if Alex McLeish deserves a huge amount of credit for leading Blues into the top half on the back of promotion (and he does), then Allardyce deserves a bit too.

It can be eye-pokingly painful to watch at times, but in a league where cash, money and dosh are the holy trinity, the Rovers hierarchy will be more than happy to overlook aesthetics. “The difference those results make is four places in the league and four times £800,000,” Allardyce said yesterday. “That’s a big difference to our limited budget.”

Leeds United aren’t the chokers we thought they were

3 January 2010 was a good day to be a Leeds fan. United sat eight points clear at the top of League One with a game in hand on second-placed Norwich. They’d lost just once all season and, to top it off, Manchester United had just been vanquished at Old Trafford in the FA Cup.

But between the turn of the year and the start of April, 16 games yielded just 15 points. That run destroyed any hope of claiming the title and they went into Saturday’s final game of the season needing a win to be sure of clinging on to automatic promotion and returning to the division they departed through the trapdoor in 2007.

On Saturday they went down to 10 men – Max Gradel having utterly lost the plot – and then 1-0 down against Bristol Rovers three minutes into the second half at Elland Road, just as Charlton took a 2-0 lead at Oldham. At that point, with Millwall and Swindon drawing, the Addicks were heading for promotion. Jon Howson equalised at Elland Road, but just after the hour Gordon Greer’s own goal put Millwall 2-1 up, the Lions into the promotion places and sparked a mini-pitch invasion at the Den.

That might have been that. But within seconds Jermaine Beckford, the beneficiary of a horrendous goalkeeping error, bundled in the decisive Leeds goal and brought rapture to West Yorkshire. So Leeds aren’t chokers after all. The Championship’s top 10 next season is not an impossibility.

Premier LeagueLeague OneLiverpoolSol CampbellTottenham HotspurSam AllardyceBlackburn RoversLeeds UnitedJohn Ashdownguardian.co.uk

Football transfer rumours: Stephen Ireland to Manchester United?

Today’s debris was pulled from the wreckage of a serious computer crash

Several Premier League managers are preparing to undertake major reconstructions. Unfortunately the Mill does not mean that in the Crimewatch sense, so we are not about to see grainy CCTV footage of Sir Alex Ferguson brandishing an Uzi at some terrified young service station attendant and swearily ordering him to hand over all the cash and several boxes of Wrigleys. Similarly there will be no shots of Carlo Ancelotti toddling out of Barclays with a blue balaclava and a bulging swag bag and in all probability we will also not be treated to mobile phone camera pictures of Harry Redknapp and Chris Hughton happy-slapping Rafael Benítez.

Instead all Ferguson wants us to see is glossy photos of Karim Benzema and David Silva smiling cheesily as they sign for Manchester United. Oh, and another thing: still smarting from last summer’s shenanigans with Carlos Tevez, Ferguson desperately wants to knock Manchester City’s nose out of joint and intends to do so by pinching Stephen Ireland from right under it. Ah but the days of United pushing City around are over, so Ireland will only go if City want him too – which, inexplicably, may be the case – and if Ferguson can cough up £15m, which may not.

Redknapp reckons he can get £15m by selling Robbie Keane and Jamie O’Hara to Newcastle, possibly because Mike Ashley is a Tottenham fan. Redknapp will raise more millions by sending Alan Hutton to West Brom and Roman Pavlyuchenko to any one of the numerous clubs who see something in the Russian striker that Redknapp still steadfastly refuses to see. One of those clubs is Everton, who, if they don’t bag their man will instead turn their attention to Lille’s Ivorian striker Gervinho. David Moyes also plans to attract Sporting Lisbon’s Veloso and fervently hope the midfielder doesn’t find out that Internazionale want him too.

Redknapp will, of course, re-invest the earnings from those sales. He hopes to make his first signing Joe Cole – though he may prefer to spend a gap year on the Barcelona bench a la Eidur Gudjohnsen. Then Redknapp will go for Wolfsburg’s Eden Dzeko and, working on the principle that two Edens are better than one, will then try to lure Lille’s midfielder Eden Hazard. The young Belgian is also a target for Lyon, who are poised to sign Eduardo from Arsenal.

That deal has not yet gone through because Arsène Wenger is waiting to see where Lyon finish in Ligue 1 – fail to make the top three (or win the Champions League) and they will miss out on next season’s Champions League, meaning they may need to sell – so in will come Wenger with an uncharacteristically astute bid for a keeper, namely Hugo Lloris.

Meanwhile, If Newcastle fail to land Keane they will instead turn their attention to the Swindon striker Charlie Austin. Beyond that Hughton will have to content himself with shopping at the Fratton Park firesale, so in will come Marc Wilson, Nadir Belhadj and Kevin Prince-Boateng.

Wolves are another of the clubs who want Keane and if they don’t get him they will instead take James Beattie off Tony Pulis’s hea … sorry, hands. Then Wolves and Stoke will join Blackburn for a rumble over Cardiff’s Joe Ledley, with the losing duo set to continue their bickering over Hull’s Stephen Hunt.

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Premier League games will all go ahead despite snowfall in north-west

• Blackburn say snowfall around Ewood Park was ‘relatively light’
• Man City v Liverpool and Wigan v Tottenham also go ahead

All of today’s Premier League games are set to go ahead despite adverse weather conditions in Lancashire and Manchester. Overnight snowfall in the north-west had cast doubt over Blackburn v Bolton, Manchester City v Liverpool and Wigan v Tottenham, but all three home clubs released statements this morning confirming that the matches would not be postponed.

Blackburn’s statement said that the snowfall near Ewood Park had been “relatively light” ahead of their midday derby, while City reported that “traffic is moving freely around the City of Manchester Stadium”.

“The approaches immediately to the ground itself for those on foot are clear,” continued the City statement. “There is no problem with the playing surface and the game goes ahead at 3pm as scheduled. If you are coming to the game, the weather is set to remain cold and wet throughout the day, so please wear lots of layers and stay warm.”

Wigan, meanwhile, said: “The DW Stadium pitch undersoil heating has been functioning throughout the week, while snow ploughs and gritters have made the main access roads into the stadium passable. The club are warning, however, that it may be forced into some car park closures, depending on conditions later today.

“Supporters are being reminded that conditions remain potentially hazardous and roads throughout the region continue to be affected by the adverse weather.”

However, today’s racing at Sedgefield, Southwell and Naas has fallen foul to the weather while there will be inspections at Carlisle and Market Rasen to determine whether tomorrow’s meetings can go ahead.

Premier LeagueBlackburn RoversManchester CityWigan AthleticBolton WanderersLiverpoolTottenham Hotspurguardian.co.uk