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This appeared on SB Nation first.
Charlie Adam may or may not be on the verge of a move to Liverpool. That’s not what’s important. Liverpool’s interest in him is what matters. It matters because it makes talk of them employing Moneyball strategy look off; and it points towards more failure. The thing is, Charlie Adam probably shouldn’t be what comes out when you create a formula for signing footballers.
Adam had an excellent first season in the Premier League with Blackpool. The self-perpetuating cycle of anti-consensus backlash, anti-backclash and anti-anti-backlash doesn’t disguise a contribution which came very close to stealing Blackpool another season in the top flight. 12 goals and eight assists won his team points they weren’t entitled to win.
Yet the fact remains that Liverpool are looking into buying him for his potential, not his past record. At 25, Adam has only just begun to show and sustain his top form, and even last season kept a degree of inconsistency that clubs looking to win things probably can’t afford to carry. On top of that, most people will tell you that one year in the Premier League with a team only hoping to stay there proves relatively little about a player’s quality.
His potential is what Liverpool, if they are indeed offering a nod to Moneyball strategy, are interested in. Moneyball teaches that potential is still, despite recent inflation, undervalued because it’s difficult to predict. Proponents of it believe that by analysing the stats, they can find bargains in the basement.
Damien Comolli has been hired in as director of sport to partner Kenny Dalglish in identifying targets. He has forged a reputation for implementing the new method.
That partnership arouses suspicion though. Dalglish and Comolli together smacks of compromise – new wave brought in, whilst fans are appeased with a taste of old school. The problem is, there’s no place for compromise: analysing players on stats, not instinct, requires full commitment.
Charlie Adam might have some outstanding figures for last season, but if he was to be compared to anyone in the Liverpool squad, it wouldn’t be a recent Moneyball signing like Luis Suarez or Andy Carroll; it would be Steven Gerrard. Who knows how discussions between Comolli and Dalglish work, but Adam seems to be a mixture of some statistical potential, and, far more, old-fashioned Anfield fantasism – that love of watching someone hit the ball as hard as they can and seeing it go in sometimes.
That kind of player is being lost to the statistical revolution, and it’s a shame, but for Liverpool, it has to be one or the other. Adam, the numbers will tell you – look at the limited distance he covers in a game, for example – is not the kind of player that will win midfield tussles against Luka Modricor Yaya Toure. He’s good to watch, but it’s difficult to believe that Comolli’s analysis picked him out as a league winner.
Time will reveal all, of course, but there isn’t room to compromise in the transfer market. Done well, and Comolli has proved himself capable already, working through the facts will win league titles. Fantasy players like Adam will always be enjoyable to watch, but they are, in the age of fitness regimes and possession football, best left to the fantasists. Actually, maybe he’ll fit in well at Liverpool.
July 6, 2011 | Filed under FILTH, Opinion and tagged with Anfield, assists, Auto, backlash, bargains, blackpool, compromise, consensus, contribution, cycle, Draft, fantasy player, footballers, inconsistency, inflation, interest, kenny dalglish, league winner, Liverpool, Moneyball, move, Nation, new wave, nod, old school, partner, partnership, place, Player, potential, premier league, proponents, reputation, Strategy, suspicion, taste, Team, top flight, value, verge, winner, work, year.
Tags: Anfield, assists, Auto, backlash, bargains, blackpool, compromise, consensus, contribution, cycle, Draft, fantasy player, footballers, inconsistency, inflation, interest, kenny dalglish, league winner, Liverpool, Moneyball, move, Nation, new wave, nod, old school, partner, partnership, place, Player, potential, premier league, proponents, reputation, Strategy, suspicion, taste, Team, top flight, value, verge, winner, work, year
All content © 2012 by Surreal Football
Bugger me, we invented fantasy football , Daniel Agger blaster, Pepe Reina Best goalkeeper in Spain, Sean Dundee , best thing out of S Afrika since the British Army, Luis Garcia , sangria guzzling “goal that never was ” merchant, need I go on but HOW DARE YOU INSULT DJIMI TRAORE…I have it on good authority (the Missus) he was an absolute gent in the Suites Hotel (he talked to fans)not like the other up yer arse cunts that posed as LFC players, so leave DJIMI alone or else you will have my missus to face. YNWAgain
Maybe his free-kicks and corners make him the ultimate moneyball signing? Joey Barton had a big influence on Andy Carroll this season, so Liverpool might be looking at ways of getting the most out of him.
People jabber on about his low pass completion but they’re kind of missing the point.
i can guarentee if you take away penalties adam gave away more goals than he scored and assisted. the typical blackpool game last season was adam passes to opposition centre forward who then scores. adam then scores a last minute penalty to equalise and is heralded as the game saving hero.
This was rather a vague and lazy article.
Fuck off then, Ronit.
Good point.
I think he’s a fantastic signing. If Adam, Henderson, Downing and Carroll aren’t the core of a title winning team then I don’t know what is.