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Brendan Rodgers |
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Job Title: Manager
with 01.06.2012 |
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Date of Birth: 26.01.1973 |
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With the Reds: 2012- |
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Former clubs:
Ballymena United, Reading |
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Former clubs as
staff: Watford, Reading, Swansea City |
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Arrived from: Swansea
City |
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Signed for
LFC: 01.06.2012 |
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First game in charge:
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LFC league games as manager:
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Total LFC games as manager:
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Contract expiry: 2015 |
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Birthplace:
Carnlough, Northern Ireland |
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Honours as
Staff: |
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Former
Honours as Staff: 1 Division One Championship Play-Off 201011 (as Swansea
City) |
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The Managerial Record Brendan Rodgers
Competition |
P |
W |
D |
L |
F |
A |
% |
League |
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FA Cup |
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League Cup |
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Europe |
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Other |
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Total |
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Matches that are won or lost in a penalty shoot-out are counted as a draw
in those numbers. |
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STAFF
PROFILE
Brendan Rodgers was born in Carnlough, Northern Ireland on January 26, 1973 and was
educated in Ballymena, where he began playing for the local side as a youngster.
In 1990 he made the switch to England and to Reading; however, his playing career
was cut short by injury and Rodgers didn't make a single appearance in English football
during his year at the club.
Despite having his bourgeoning career ended at such a young age, Rodgers refused to
languish or contemplate a life outside of football.
He was keen to return to the game in another role and in 1995 his old team Reading
came calling. Rodgers would spend the next nine years as the club's academy manager,
honing the talents of players who sometimes were not much younger than himself.
Then, in 2004, the man who had spent almost a decade spotting and nurturing
footballing talent was talent-spotted himself by the self-proclaimed Special One.
Jose Mourinho saw the potential in Rodgers and brought him to Chelsea to play a key
role in Roman Abramovich's revolution. By 2006 the man from Northern Ireland had impressed
sufficiently to rise to the position of reserve team manager at Cobham.
Two years later, Rodgers made the step up to management - but to do so he had to
take a step down, to the Championship, and Watford. The Hornets hired him to replace the
outgoing Aidy Boothroyd and Rodgers took up the reins from caretaker manager Malky Mackay.
Rodgers steadied the Watford ship after a turbulent start to the 2008-09 campaign
and a convincing end to the season saw them finish 13th in the league.
Next for Rodgers was a return to familiar ground. Reading, the club who had signed
him as a young player, then again as a young coach, moved for the young manager to take on
the role in the dug-out.
Despite a fine start to the season, Rodgers parted company with Reading in December
2009 but seven months later he would make his return to management with Swansea.
Within a year Swansea were promoted back to English football's top division,
becoming the first Welsh team to play in the Premier League since its inception in 1992.
Rodgers had guided them to third place in the Championship playing an entertaining
brand of possession football.
The Swans beat Nottingham Forrest 3-1 in the Championship play-off semi-finals to
set up a meeting with Rodgers' former club Reading at Wembley on May 30, 2011.
A Scott Sinclair hat-trick on the day helped them to a dramatic 4-2 win and Rodgers
and his men were on the way to the Barclays Premier League.
If anyone thought they'd overachieved in doing so, the Swans were about to go much
further in impressing the neutrals.
Upon their arrival in the Premier League, Swansea's style of play was a widespread
revelation to fresh onlookers.
A fluid, entertaining brand of aggressive, possession football with the emphasis on
composure on the ball and support for teammates off it, captivated Premier League
audiences from the first game of the season to the last.
Teams had come up to the league before and played well, especially initially. They
had pulled off some memorable wins and managed to finish in a respectable position that
was at first thought out of reach, as Swansea did when they ended the 2011-12 campaign in
11th place.
But few, if any, teams gained promotion and spent their first season in the league
propounding such a cultured style of play in such a convincing manner so consistently.
The Swans did so well that pundits compared their footballing philosophy to that of
Barcelona.
Highlights included a win against Arsenal and a Luke Moore strike that sunk
eventual title winners Manchester City in March. A Danny Graham goal that edged Liverpool
on the final day of the season capped a wonderful season for the Swans.
The campaign had enhanced Rodgers' reputation to such a degree that he was now
regarded as one of the finest young managers in football, and so it was no surprise when
Liverpool registered their interest in his services after parting company with Kenny
Dalglish in the summer of 2012.
Rodgers began his tenure at Anfield on June 1 with the aim of returning the club to
the heights of English and European football.
Copyright of Official Site Liverpool FC
Players
sold & bought by Brendan Rodgers
Update 07.06.2012
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