In the most prosaic terms, Steven Gerrard’s goal for Liverpool against Bolton Wanderers on Saturday was enough to win a football match and earn his team three much-needed points. But, as has so often been the case in the career of a genuine sporting tour de force, Gerrard’s strike meant so much more than that.
It rendered criticism of his early-season form if not futile, then certainly misplaced. Gerrard may not have hit the heights in Liverpool’s opening fixtures, but with one majestic swipe of his right foot the midfield player again underlined his importance to a team who are utterly reliant on him.
“That’s why he’s the captain and, for me, the best midfielder in the world,” Dirk Kuyt, the Liverpool forward, said of his team-mate’s latest rescue act.
“Everybody expects that from him. If the team is in a difficult position, we expect something from him. He brings something special. Once again he did it for us against Bolton and we’re all really happy to have him.”
Perhaps the criticism that hurt Gerrard most after Liverpool’s defeat by Aston Villa eight days ago was that of his own manager, Rafael Benítez, who ordered his captain and his senior players to take more responsibility. Tellingly, and perhaps disappointingly for Gerrard himself, the censure did not come in the confines of the dressing room, it came in a post-match press conference, an uncharacteristic departure by the Spaniard.
Kuyt, though, says that Gerrard did not allow the situation to get to him. “Stevie didn’t worry about Villa,” the Dutchman said. “That’s why he’s such a good player. He is always looking forward to the next game. No matter if he’s playing bad or good, he always wants to play better in the next game. That shows what a good professional he is.” Jamie Carragher is in full agreement. “He has taken a bit of criticism this week and it’s never a clever thing to write Stevie off because even when there are times when he doesn’t play well, he will produce a goal like that,” the defender said.
It rendered criticism of his early-season form if not futile, then certainly misplaced. Gerrard may not have hit the heights in Liverpool’s opening fixtures, but with one majestic swipe of his right foot the midfield player again underlined his importance to a team who are utterly reliant on him.
“That’s why he’s the captain and, for me, the best midfielder in the world,” Dirk Kuyt, the Liverpool forward, said of his team-mate’s latest rescue act.
“Everybody expects that from him. If the team is in a difficult position, we expect something from him. He brings something special. Once again he did it for us against Bolton and we’re all really happy to have him.”
Perhaps the criticism that hurt Gerrard most after Liverpool’s defeat by Aston Villa eight days ago was that of his own manager, Rafael Benítez, who ordered his captain and his senior players to take more responsibility. Tellingly, and perhaps disappointingly for Gerrard himself, the censure did not come in the confines of the dressing room, it came in a post-match press conference, an uncharacteristic departure by the Spaniard.
Kuyt, though, says that Gerrard did not allow the situation to get to him. “Stevie didn’t worry about Villa,” the Dutchman said. “That’s why he’s such a good player. He is always looking forward to the next game. No matter if he’s playing bad or good, he always wants to play better in the next game. That shows what a good professional he is.” Jamie Carragher is in full agreement. “He has taken a bit of criticism this week and it’s never a clever thing to write Stevie off because even when there are times when he doesn’t play well, he will produce a goal like that,” the defender said.
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