Friday, 10 July 2015

Raheem Sterling's spiteful, cowardly attack on Brendan Rodgers is disgusting


When Luis Suarez joined Barcelona, he sent two messages to people back at Anfield,thanking them for helping him achieve what was, unarguably, a dream move.
One was to Steven Gerrard, his friend and mentor, and a footballer for whom the South American superstar will always have the most incredible respect and admiration; stating simply his heartfelt thanks for everything the Liverpool captain had done for him over the past years.

The other was also a genuine expression of gratitude, this time to Reds boss Brendan Rodgers. Without him, Suarez admitted humbly, he would not be bracketed amongst the world's greatest with wages to match.
That display of class was pure Suarez, a man who – for all his demons – possesses humility and generosity. He knew that his time at Liverpool crucially took him up a level, turned him from a player of admirable skill to one of ruthless goalscoring prowess.
He knew that Rodgers and Gerrard had a massive role in that.
When Luis Suarez joined Barcelona, he sent two messages to people back at Anfield,thanking them for helping him achieve what was, unarguably, a dream move.
One was to Steven Gerrard, his friend and mentor, and a footballer for whom the South American superstar will always have the most incredible respect and admiration; stating simply his heartfelt thanks for everything the Liverpool captain had done for him over the past years.
The other was also a genuine expression of gratitude, this time to Reds boss Brendan Rodgers. Without him, Suarez admitted humbly, he would not be bracketed amongst the world's greatest with wages to match.
That display of class was pure Suarez, a man who – for all his demons – possesses humility and generosity. He knew that his time at Liverpool crucially took him up a level, turned him from a player of admirable skill to one of ruthless goalscoring prowess.
He knew that Rodgers and Gerrard had a massive role in that.

Contrast that with Raheem Sterling's actions in trying to force a move to Manchester City. Let's be fair to the young man, he isn't the demon many Reds fans now imagine him to be. He's a nice kid, quiet even, who also possesses a certain humility.
But his actions towards Rodgers are so far beyond unfair, they border on the criminal, and so far beyond ungrateful, they border on despicable.

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers , Raheem Sterling and Steven Gerrard
Without his Anfield manager, Sterling wouldn't be in the position he now finds himself, sitting on an offer of £50m in wages from Manchester City. That figure bears repeating. If he goes to the Etihad, then he will comfortably pick up a five year contract worth almost £200,000 a week... which even those who played football and didn't study maths can work out is an eye watering sum.
No one should begrudge him that figure. Football clubs are earning billions on the back of their players' talents, so why shouldn't the most exciting, most promising amongst them pick up a share?
It is simple economics, and doesn't deserve the tidal wave of bile and disgust that has flowed his way. What SHOULD inspire that level of disgust though, is his spiteful attack on Rodgers in recent days.
He has used the media to suggest the manager is the reason he is leaving – and make no mistake here, that is not a media invention, they are merely reporting the words that have come directly from the Sterling camp.

what do you think?

No comments: