How Gerard Houllier, the father of modern-day Liverpool, revolutionized a club drowning in nostalgia

Gerard Houllier and his technical staff hoGerard Houllier and his technical staff hold the trophy after winning the UEFA Cup final against Deportivo Alaves - one of three trophies won in the 2000/2001 season. (AFP/File Photo)ld the trophy after winning the UEFA Cup final against Deportivo Alaves - part of a treble-winning season in the 2000/2001 season. (AFP/File Photo)
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Updated 15 December 2020
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How Gerard Houllier, the father of modern-day Liverpool, revolutionized a club drowning in nostalgia

  • The treble-winning Frenchman died on Monday at the age of 73

DUBAI: There’s a famous banner that Liverpool fans unfurl on the Kop before home games.

Above images of Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley, Joe Fagan, Kenny Dalglish and Rafa Benitez, it says: “Success has many fathers.”

It has one glaring omission, however. Missing is the man who in many ways is the father of modern-day Liverpool Football Club — Gerard Houllier, who died on Monday at the age of 73.

It is often overlooked that the man who himself had stood on the Kop when teaching French in Liverpool during the late 1960s, revolutionized a club that was in danger of drowning in its own nostalgia.

Before his arrival in the summer of 1998, curiously to co-manage with Roy Evans, the club had since Shankly’s arrival five decades earlier experienced a long, unbroken lineage of managers who had been promoted from within, served the club gloriously as players or, in the case of Dalglish, both.

When Evans left in November of that year, the fabled “Boot Room” era at Anfield was well and truly over. Houllier immediately set about modernizing a club that had won no league championships since 1990 and only a League Cup and FA Cup during that time. Having feasted on one trophy after another in the 1970s and 80s, this was a famine for Liverpool fans.

Out went players he thought disruptive, the last lingering influences of the so-called Spice Boys, bad diets and ill-discipline on and off the field.

Having been technical director of the French national team that had just won the World Cup, he brought in modern coaching expertise, professionalism among the squad, healthy eating habits and a revamping of the club’s training facilities.

Above all, he bought or developed players who would end up serving Liverpool gloriously, and oversaw the rise of two who would become all-time club greats.

The team he would build was one that married strength, discipline and devastating football.

Sami Hyypia and Stephan Henchoz formed a formidable central defensive partnership, with the brilliant German Marcus Babel filling in at right-back. Left-back John Arne Riise joined a few years into his reign and became a cult hero. Didi Hamann was a trusted midfield pivot, and the young Danny Murphy flourished under Houllier’s mentorship.

Gary McAllister became arguably the club’s best-ever free signing, and the Czech duo of Patrick Berger and Vladimir Smicer would each contribute to some of Liverpool’s greatest triumphs, especially in Europe.

Up front, the beloved Robbie Fowler shone on and off before his departure and Emile Heskey was bought from Leicester City to act as the perfect foil for the jewel in Liverpool’s crown at the time; Michael Owen enjoyed the finest years of his career, and won a Ballon d’Or no less, during the Frenchman’s reign.

But perhaps Houllier’s greatest gift for the future of the club was his development of two youngsters who would go on to conquer Europe and become club legends; Jamie Carragher and Steven Gerrard.

As tributes poured in after the news of his death, the duo posted near identical messages that reiterated just what he meant to them and the club.

“Devastated to hear the news my former manager Gerard Houllier has passed away. I will never forget what this man did for me and my career. Rest in peace Boss. YNWA x,” Gerrard posted on Instagram.

On Twitter, Carragher wrote: “Absolutely devastated by the news about Gerard Houllier, I was in touch with him only last month to arrange him coming to Liverpool. Loved that man to bits, he changed me as a person & as a player & got @LFC back winning trophies. RIP Boss.”

When those trophies came pouring in, after a dry first full season in charge, it was in glorious, historic fashion.

In 2000-01 Houllier led Liverpool to the treble of League Cup, FA Cup and UEFA Cup, as well as backing the Champions League. For the only time in the club’s history, Liverpool would play the maximum amount of games they could possibly take in.

First Birmingham were beaten on penalties at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium to secure the League Cup, the club’s first trophy since the same competition was won in 1995 under Evans.

Then, on a wonderfully sunny day in Cardiff, Liverpool were utterly outplayed by Thierry Henry and Arsenal in the FA Cup final. And yet somehow, thanks to the spirit Houllier had instilled in his team and to Michael Owen’s genius, one of the competition’s most memorable comebacks was completed in the dying moments in front of hysterical Liverpool fans.

And having dispatched Barcelona in the semifinal of the UEFA Cup,Houllier’s “tireless team,” as one commentator called them, completed a unique treble with an astonishing 5-4 win over Alaves in Dortmund.

The image of Houllier and his players singing “You’ll Never Walk Alone” in front of what for the day had turned from a yellow to a red wall, remains one of the highlights of his time at the club.

A second place finish in 2001-02 had Liverpool fans dreaming of reaching the promised land of the Premier League title. Sadly, a heart operation that season meant Houllier had reached his peak, though there was yet another great day out in Cardiff as Liverpool beat Manchester United in the 2003 League Cup final.

In his last two seasons there would be some low points too. Selling crowd favorite Fowler was one. A failure to even qualify for the Champions League following the runner-up finish was another. Strangely, Benitez and Brendan Rodgers would suffer similar fates, respectively finishing 7th and 6th after second-place Premier League campaigns, a curse finally broken by Jurgen Klopp last season.

What Houllier and his team provided by the bucket load, beyond the silverware, was magical individual moments.

Michael Owen’s match-winning performance in Rome on the way to the UEFA Cup triumph, Anfield erupting as Houllier emerged from the tunnel for the first time after heart surgery to help inspire a famous Champions League win against the same opponents, and Murphy’s three match winners at Old Trafford come to mind.

But perhaps no moment sticks in the memory quite like McAllister’s absurd injury-time winner against Everton on April 16. As the Liverpool players celebrated at a stunned Goodison Park, the look on Houllier’s face was one of joyous disbelief. It’s how most Liverpool fans will remember him.

In his last season, Houllier ensured Liverpool returned to the Champions League before being replaced by Benitez. The Spanish coach would go on to mastermind Liverpool’s greatest-ever night in Istanbul.

The miraculous Champions League triumph against AC Milan was achieved with many of Houllier’s players, though he would never have dreamed of taking credit for it. His post-match visit to the dressing room at the Ataturk Stadium to congratulate Benitez and his players was misconstrued by many as an attempt to grab some of the glory.

It was nothing of the sort, simply the act of a man still in love with the club. Though Liverpool would endure some dark days in 2010s, Houllier’s contribution to future successes should never be forgotten.

Perhaps that banner can find space for one more father of Liverpool’s success.


Stellar Starc fires Kolkata to third IPL title

Updated 13 sec ago
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Stellar Starc fires Kolkata to third IPL title

  • Kolkata bowled out Hyderabad for IPL’s lowest total of 113 in a final as Australia’s left-arm quick Starc returned figures of 2-14
  • Rahmanullah Gurbaz, 39, and Venkatesh Iyer, 52 not out, helped the team home with 9.3 overs to spare after a partnership of 91

CHENNAI: Mitchell Starc bowled a sensational opening spell to fire Kolkata Knight Riders to their third Indian Premier League title with a eight-wicket thrashing of Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Sunday final.
Kolkata bowled out Hyderabad for IPL’s lowest total of 113 in a final as Australia’s left-arm quick Starc returned figures of 2-14 to live up to his top billing in the world’s most lucrative T20 tournament.
Starc went to Kolkata for a record $2.98 million in the December auction and ended the IPL with two stellar performances, including a match-winning 3-34 in the first play-off to hammer the same opponent.
Kolkata’s batsmen had it easy and despite Sunil Narine’s early departure, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, who made 39, and Venkatesh Iyer, on 52 not out, helped the team home with 9.3 overs to spare after a partnership of 91.
Iyer, a left-handed batsman, reached his 50 in 24 balls and hit the winning runs to trigger celebrations for Kolkata, who remained the most dominant team after they ended top of the table with 20 points in the league phase.
Skipper Shreyas Iyer was unbeaten on six, and at the other end, when Kolkata players came rushing on to the pitch and the stadium fireworks went off.
“My mom is watching from home,” said Afghanistan’s Gurbaz, who left the tournament midway through to be with his ailing mother back home and returned for the play-offs.
“She is feeling good now. I asked mom before the match if she wanted anything. She said just the win,” added the wicket-keeper-batsman.
“This win is for the fans who turned up year after year and waited for ten years,” Venkatesh said on his team’s first title win since 2014.
Kolkata’s co-owner and Bollywood superstar actor Shah Rukh Khan was in attendance and congratulated his champion players after he suffered from a heat-related illness in the first qualifier in Ahmedabad.
It was Kolkata’s second title triumph at the venue, after they won their first trophy in 2012, and a near-capacity crowd at the 36,000-seater stadium cheered on.
Apart from the big signing of Starc, they got Gautam Gambhir as mentor after the former India batsman led the team to two titles.
Hyderabad skipper Pat Cummins won the toss and elected to bat first and go with his team’s strength of scoring big, after they racked up IPL record totals of 277 and 287 in this year’s edition.
Hyderabad took Cummins for $2.5 million in the same auction and made him captain after he led Australia to two titles, including the World Test Championship and the ODI World Cup last year.
But Starc took the limelight as he struck in his first over when he bowled in-form Indian batsman Abhishek Sharma, for two, on a delivery that pitched in the middle and caught the top of off stump.
Travis Head followed his fellow left-hand opener Abhishek to the dug-out, caught behind for his second duck in three matches off fast bowler Vaibhav Arora.
Starc struck again and the opposition top-order was in disarray at 47-4 inside seven overs.
Andre Russell took down Aiden Markram for 20 and wickets kept tumbling as fellow South African Heinrich Klaasen fell for 16.
Cummins, who was dropped on 10 by Starc, took the team past 100 before falling for 24 off Russell, who ended with figures of 3-19.


WWE stars praise ‘passionate and excited’ fans after epic showdown shakes Jeddah

Updated 28 min 8 sec ago
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WWE stars praise ‘passionate and excited’ fans after epic showdown shakes Jeddah

  • WWE makes history with double-header in Red Sea city
  • Superdome filled as 20,000 people cheered for their favorite WWE stars

JEDDAH: WWE made a historic return to Saudi Arabia with the double-header of “SmackDown” and “King and Queen of the Ring” this weekend at Jeddah’s Superdome.

Superstars such as Sami Zayn, Randy Orton, Cody Rhodes, and Logan Paul performed in front of thousands of fans at the Jeddah venue.

The historic double-header showcased WWE’s commitment to its partnership with the General Entertainment Authority, with this being the tenth event of the partnership.

In total, 20,000 passionate fans flooded the arena, marking a historic moment in WWE’s legacy in the Kingdom.

Gunther, a WWE Superstar, who defeated Randy Orton and became the King Of The Ring on Saturday evening told Arab News that Saudi fans always display an immense level of passion and enthusiasm whenever WWE visits the Kingdom.

Syrian Canadian WWE SuperStar Sami Zayn, who is much loved in Saudi Arabia because of his Arab background, told Arab News: “It’s always good to be back in Jeddah. Especially after last year (“The Night of Champions”), which was amazing, it was my first time back here in a few years. I'm just always excited to perform in front of these fans because they’re very, very excited fans, and they have been particularly nice to me.”

He continued: “I plan on successfully defending the Intercontinental Championship in front of my people.”

Sami won the title match and defended his title against both Chad Gable and Bronson Reed in a Triple Threat Match.

It was a festive feel for fans, as they enjoyed the complete WWE fan experience.

Aziz, who is a Saudi pro wrestler and owner of Future Federation Wrestling, said: “We are pumped, we are hyped to be here tonight, my favorite wrestler is the ‘American Nightmare,’ undisputed champion, Cody Rhodes — I want to thank GEA for making tonight special.”

Khalid, a teenage fan from the Kingdom who attended with his family, said: “I am very excited to see my favorite wrestlers, I want to thank the GEA for organizing this event.”

As the final bell rang and the last fireworks faded in the world’s largest geodesic dome, fans left with lifetime memories of witnessing a historic double-header. For one magical evening, WWE had transported them to a world of excitement, drama, and pure adrenaline.

WWE is renowned globally for its larger-than-life production values, and Jeddah’s historic double-header of “Smackdown” and “King and Queen of the Ring” was no exception.

WWE is taking its sports entertainment offering worldwide and plans to visit more destinations in the Middle East and Europe. Recently the company announced an inaugural tour to Berlin with their upcoming “WWE Bash” event in August this year.


‘Truly exceptional’: Jorge Jesus hails Al-Hilal players as champions lift Roshn Saudi League trophy in glitzy ceremony

Updated 26 May 2024
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‘Truly exceptional’: Jorge Jesus hails Al-Hilal players as champions lift Roshn Saudi League trophy in glitzy ceremony

  • Club can secure an invincible league season if they avoid defeat at Al-Wehda on Monday
  • Al-Hilal beat Al-Tai 3-1 on Thursday through Salem Al-Dawsari, Michael and Malcom goals

RIYADH: After newly crowned Roshn Saudi League champions Al-Hilal lifted the league trophy in a stunning ceremony at Kingdom Arena on Friday night, manager Jorge Jesus says the season may be the best ever in the 66-year history of the club.

Unbeaten domestically this season, Al-Hilal — who created world history by winning 34 matches in succession between September and April across all competitions — clinched the title with three games to spare. The champions are 14 points ahead of second-placed Al-Nassr.

An invincible league season will be secured for the Saudi Super Cup winners if they avoid defeat in their final match at Al-Wehda on Monday. The King’s Cup final against Al-Nassr concludes Al-Hilal’s campaign.

Jesus said: “This season has been truly exceptional for the team — arguably our best ever. The credit goes to the immense talent within the squad and the incredible sense of unity that transcends both on and off-field interactions. We’re currently vying for three local trophies this season. We’ve already secured two and are determined to win the last one.”

Al-Hilal’s latest victory saw them beat Al-Tai 3-1 on Thursday thanks to first-half goals from Salem Al-Dawsari and Michael, and a goal on the hour mark from Malcom. Andrei Cordea netted a consolation strike for Al-Tai.


Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc wins first home F1 Monaco Grand Prix

Updated 26 May 2024
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Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc wins first home F1 Monaco Grand Prix

  • McLaren’s Oscar Piastri followed the man from Monaco across the line with Carlos Sainz in the other Ferrari in third

MONTE CARLO: Charles Leclerc finally broke his Monaco Grand Prix curse on Sunday as Red Bull had an off weekend with Max Verstappen sixth and Sergio Perez crashing out on the first lap.
Leclerc ended years of frustration at his home race by taking the jewel in the Formula One calendar from pole at his third attempt.
A tearful Leclerc said: “No words can explain this. It means a lot, it’s the race that made me dream of becoming a F1 driver.
“Tonight is going to be a big night!“
McLaren’s Oscar Piastri followed the man from Monaco across the line with Carlos Sainz in the other Ferrari in third.
Leclerc had started at the front of the grid at the circuit he used to travel along on the bus to school as a kid in 2021 and 2022 only for misfortune to stop him winning on both occasions.
With Ferrari now a much smoother run ship under Fred Vasseur this was a far slicker Ferrari team than then, and Leclerc dictated the pace perfectly from the front, until the end of the first lap.
That was when the red flag had to come out to stop the race after a three car pile-up with Perez’s Red Bull ripped apart.
Perez spun after being hit hard from behind by Kevin Magnussen’s Haas.
Nico Hulkenberg in the other Haas was a third innocent casualty.
The race on the narrow streets of the Principality was interrupted for around 30 minutes to allow debris to be cleared off the circuit.
All three crash victims were missing at the restart along with Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, who joined this unhappy group of onlookers after he was forced to retire following a tangle with his team-mate Pierre Gasly.
Leclerc escaped all the drama and led for the rest of the race to claim a hugely popular success.
With three-time world champion Verstappen only sixth, Leclerc moved to within 31 points of the Dutchman ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix in a fortnight’s time.


Countdown to glory: Riyadh Season’s ‘5 vs. 5’ boxing spectacle set to thrill global audiences

Updated 26 May 2024
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Countdown to glory: Riyadh Season’s ‘5 vs. 5’ boxing spectacle set to thrill global audiences

  • Russian powerhouse Dmitry Bivol leads the pack as fight world’s biggest names prepare for Kingdom Arena showdown

RIYADH: In a thrilling culmination of Riyadh Season festivities, boxing enthusiasts are eagerly awaiting the “5 vs. 5” global showdown at the Kingdom Arena next Saturday. 

Featuring a stellar lineup of top boxers from around the world, the spectacle promises to deliver unparalleled excitement and fierce competition. 

Leading the pack is Russian powerhouse Dmitry Bivol, a dominant force in the ring and holder of the World Boxing Association super light-heavyweight title since 2017.

Joining him is British fighter Hamzah Sheeraz, the reigning Commonwealth and WBC Silver middleweight champion, alongside American prodigy Austin Williams, the top-ranked amateur boxer on the US team.

The roster boasts an array of international talent, including Libyan champion Malik Zinad, holder of the WBA Mediterranean continental championship, and Chinese fighter Zhilei Zhang, ranked among the world’s top heavyweights. 

Big names such as Deontay Wilder from the US, British pro Daniel Dubois, Filip Hrgovic from Croatia, Willie Hutchinson from Scotland, and British champions Craig Richards and Nick Ball round out the formidable lineup, promising a showcase of skill and athleticism that is sure to captivate audiences worldwide.

The high-profile fight showdown highlights Riyadh Season’s commitment to positioning the Saudi capital as a premier global destination. Drawing spectators from all corners of the globe, it affirms the capital’s growing prominence on the international stage, and reinforces the city’s reputation as a hub for world-class entertainment and sporting excellence.