Sunday 26th August 2012, just after quarter to
five on a lovely summer’s afternoon on Merseyside. At Anfield, Brendan Rodgers’
Liverpool side lead champions Manchester City by a goal to nil at half-time. Martin
Skrtel has scored the only goal but it is the performance of Joe Allen that has
most caught the eye.
Standing at just 5’6”, the Welshman seems the least likely player on the pitch to tame City’s towering midfielder Yaya Toure and take control of the centre of the park, yet that is exactly what Liverpool’s number 24 has done. 45 minutes into his home debut and Allen literally hasn’t misplaced a pass.
The game ended 2-2 and the then 22-year-old did eventually
give the ball away, ending the game having completed 93.5% of his passes. It
was very early in the season but the Reds seemed to have bought themselves a
gem.
Indeed, Reds boss Brendan Rodgers stated his belief that the
former Swansea midfielder would soon be worth double the £15m the club had
spent to bring Allen to Merseyside.
The next few weeks will have done little to change the
Northern Irishman’s opinion as his new man’s performances earned him rave
reviews and the Standard Chartered Player of the Month award for August, voted
for by the fans. All of this playing in a deeper holding role rather than his
preferred central midfield position, that had allowed him more freedom to get
forward.
As opposition sides started to target Allen in an attempt to
stop Liverpool building from the back and his shoulder injury, at this point
unknown to the fans, got progressively worse, the Welshman’s form started to
dip.
Allen remained a player the Reds could rely on for much of
the time before it was decided surgery was necessary to resolve the on-going
issue with his left shoulder, but, by his own admission, never quite reached
the levels he managed earlier in the season.
Now, almost a year on from his arrival at the club, the
Carmarthen-born playmaker is due to resume his Liverpool career when the Reds
return to Melwood for pre-season training next month. Tabloids all over the
country are readying themselves to type the words ‘will be like a new signing’
after the 23-year-old’s name.
Cliché it may be, but the simple fact is they could well be
right.
The quick, accurate passing that Allen provides is a given
and, with the midfielder likely to be played slightly further forward, as is
his preference, now Lucas has returned, Liverpool fans may see more evidence of
the full range and incisiveness of that passing.
Additionally, his drive and ability to run with the ball is
something Kopites have been treated to only glimpses of –that could well be
remedied upon his return.
The Welsh international also possess an astute football
brain and his reading of the play allows him to nip in to intercept the ball
when defending and the ability to know almost instinctively where his teammates
are when he is on the ball.
Perhaps most importantly, with his shoulder problem now
behind him, the Anfield faithful are set to witness one of the attributes often
referred to by Rodgers when alluding to Allen’s strengths – his body work.
“He is a unique player in that he is a British player who
doesn’t give the ball away,” said Rodgers on Allen’s arrival.
“You will see
when he comes into this team the difference he can make. He’s incredible on the
ball, his body work and intelligence for a 22-year-old is frightening.
“He is in love
with the football,” he added. “He wants the ball all the time, and he has so
much courage to get on the ball and play.”
It is this that
highlights just how much the shoulder injury, certainly considering the
severity of it, is likely to have affected Allen’s game.
Brendan Rodgers
confirmed that pressing on the shoulder with your thumb would have broken it in
the final weeks before the operation. Bearing that in mind, it is clear to see
why Allen didn’t scale the heights he did in the opening months of the season
as the season wore on and the condition of his shoulder deteriorated.
Knowing the
slightest contact could result in a serious injury, it is surely little wonder
the Welshman was loathe to go into challenges with the tenacity he showed in
August or use his body to shield the ball as effectively as he did before the
chronic shoulder injury took its toll, even if only subconsciously.
Without such
concerns, Liverpool are likely to benefit hugely from a fully fit, unburdened
Joe Allen. The quality on the ball that has been evident throughout his first
season in the North West is now likely to be complimented by a physicality and
resolve somewhat surprising for a player of such a slight stature.
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