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I never said he deserves it. There are plenty of fantastic candidates out there, and I doubt he'll be the one with the best CV when the FA draw up their list. All I said was that I think that's what's going to happen.
In his defence, Liverpool have had 4 title challenges in the last 25 years, and he was at the helm for our closest run while playing the best football I've seen at Anfield since the days of Dalglish, Barnes & Beardsley.
His failings are obvious and well documented, but his successes can't be ignored when assessing his performance as Liverpool manager. Like I said the other day, if jumping from 7th and 30 pts off the pace to taking the title race to the final day within 12 months was such an easy feat to accomplish then Rodgers wouldn't have been the first to achieve it, and as has been discussed numerous times in here - Suarez was also playing great football when we were shite 12 months earlier so obviously it can't all be down to him. Rodgers wasn't a raging success as Liverpool manager, but he wasn't a total failure as many are making him out to be.
As I said, there are probably better credentialed options out there but I don't think Rodgers would be a bad choice by the FA, and my prediction is that rightly or wrongly he's the one they'll go with.
Rodgers when he got the Liverpool job did say to judge him after three years. Three years and over £250m later, were we really any better off? If he gets credit for the 2013/4 season then he deserves a fair portion of the blame for the rest of his tenure and so, overall. you would have to say that his reign at Liverpool was not successful.
The problem for Rodgers is that the one thing that he can't escape from is that he has never actually won anything in the game (excluding promotion with Swansea, which is not the sort of thing that is going to make or break his application when it comes to the jobs we are talking about here). Unless/until he does, there is going to be that credibility gap that follows him around. A title with Liverpool would obviously have changed that; even a League Cup along the way would have helped as it would show that he can take a team to glory and something tangible for him to hang his hat on.
Obvious jokes about England never winning anything anyway aside, can a nation with designs on winning tournaments appoint a manager who has no experience in winning things at the top level? It's why (and I posted exactly this at the time)I was amazed that Man United, a team so accustomed to winning trophies, would appoint David Moyes, whose greatest tangible achievement until that time was (and still is) achieving promotion into the Championship with Preston North End. It was never going to work, because, ultimately, who the hell was David Moyes?
Maybe it sounds harsh, or maybe it's just common sense, but a manager's CV has to come into it. That's not to say that, when appointing a manager, you necessarily pick the candidate who has won the most trophies, but a manager with a track-record of success has have an immediate advantage over someone who has yet to prove that he can win anything. So that means that you are going to have to be pretty bloody special and convincing in other areas to beat out candidates who seem on face value to be more suited to the position. Why would Wayne Rooney, for example, listen to Brendan Rodgers talking about what it takes to achieve success? Can players who have won multiple honours truly respect a coach who does not have a single trophy to his name?
He just hasn't done enough to be given another "top level" chance yet. I think he needs to go to Spain, or take over a Newcastle/Aston Villa, gain some wider experience in the game, hopefully win a trophy or two along the way and build his reputation to the point where he won't look out of place in vying for top jobs. The good thing for him is that he is still fairly young and that time is on his side. England will always be around. He needs to earn the opportunity.








