Rodgers ready for tough December
Brendan Rodgers believes his Liverpool side face a stiff test of their credentials in the coming weeks.
The Reds turned in a disappointing performance as they slipped to a 3-1 defeat at Hull, drifting to fourth in the Barclays Premier League table and remaining seven points off pace-setters Arsenal.
They have six more matches in December, starting with Norwich on Wednesday, but will be without joint top-scorer Daniel Sturridge throughout.
The England striker faces six to eight weeks on the sidelines after spraining his ankle in training and Rodgers admitted that will pose a challenge of his squadâs depth.
âWe have a very busy period coming up and weâve got a squad that needs as many of its good players as possible so itâs not ideal,â said Rodgers after strikes from Jake Livermore and David Meyler, as well as a late own-goal from Martin Skrtel, rendered Steven Gerrardâs first-half free-kick irrelevant.
âThis little period will test us now but players will come in and itâs a great opportunity to a stake a claim.
âDaniel is out for up to eight weeks which is a big blow for us and Phillipe (Coutinho) didnât train all week. He had injections just to get on the bench.
âThe quality of our squad isnât big enough to cope with two big players like that missing. No doubt it was a disruption.
âItâs difficult if you take those two out, two players who have been very efficient for us this season.â
For Hull, victory over a Liverpool side once again harbouring realistic Champions League ambitions represented one of the best results in their history.
Boss Steve Bruce was rightly chipper in his assessment of the match, but was forced to confront the thorny issue of the clubâs name in the aftermath.
Owner Assem Allam wants to rebrand the team as Hull Tigers â a proposal that has been met with fury by some quarters of the clubâs support â and an inflammatory newspaper interview on Sunday morning threatened to increase tensions yet further.
Bruce has largely tried to steer clear of the subject for most of the season but now plans to intervene in an attempt to bridge the gap between Allam and the unhappy supporters.
âI think the chairman has put something like ÂŁ70 million into this club, so without him there wouldnât be a club or a âHull Cityâ, it would be down the tubes,â he said.
âHowever, Iâve got to have a conversation with him. I donât think he understands quite what it means to the history and the tradition.
âAll he thinks about is going forward. He thinks the brand would be better and thatâs his opinion.
âWhat we canât let happen is for is to fester on. At times when things arenât going so well it can create an atmosphere that no-one wants. We should be enjoying the Premier League rather than talking about a badge or a name change.
âThey (the Allam family) donât really want brownie points, I just donât think they quite understand what it means to a lot of people.
âIf weâre Hull City Tigers or Hull City, weâve got to stay together.â




