Audio By Carbonatix
Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers admitted his team lack a big-game mentality after their reputation as the nearly men of English football was reinforced in a 2-1 FA Cup semifinal defeat to Aston Villa on Sunday.
The seven-times competition winners were outplayed in almost all departments by an Aston Villa side struggling for points in the Premier League.
It was a second semifinal defeat of the season for Liverpool, who were knocked out of the League Cup by Chelsea earlier in the campaign.
On the back of last year's runners-up finish in the Premier League, having stuttered in the final throes, Rodgers knows his team need to discover a winning habit when the pressure is on.
"We need now to have the courage and bravery to play better in the big games, because we didn't play well enough today," he told reporters after goals from Christian Benteke and Fabian Delph cancelled out Philippe Coutinho's opener for Liverpool.
"We weren't quite on it. We looked as if maybe the occasion and the energy got to us a bit today, but that's what can happen with young players...
"We have come up short in a few games and it is something we certainly need to improve. We are a team that is growing, but all these experiences will hopefully help."
At a club where winning trophies has been the most basic requirement for managers over the years, Rodgers will probably not need reminding of his own shortcomings in that department.
Sunday's defeat means he will become the first Liverpool manager since Phil Taylor in the 1950s not to win any silverware in their first three seasons in charge.
Should Liverpool fail to finish in the Premier League's top four and qualify for the Champions League, the lack of a trophy could count against Rodgers when the club's owners make their end-of-season assessments.
Sunday's defeat also ensured that Steven Gerrard's glittering Liverpool career would finish without a showpiece cup final send-off before he packs his bags for LA Galaxy in the close season.
Restored to the starting line-up after serving a three-game suspension, the midfielder was unable to produce any trademark heroics to dig his side out of the mire on the Wembley turf where he has so often shone in the past.
"I think he was doing everything he possibly could today to help the team," Rodgers said. "I thought he was excellent, collectively we did not perform well enough."
-
Latest Stories
-
Renewal of Foreign Exchange Trading Licenses contingent upon sustained compliance, regulatory requirements  – BoG to banks
10 minutes -
Black Princesses receive owed per diems for Tunisia World Cup doubleheader
23 minutes -
Gov’t plans GH¢10bn domestic infrastructure bond to fund roads, boost economic recovery
27 minutes -
Daddy Lumba estate battle deepens as Akosua Serwaah heads to Court of Appeal
32 minutes -
Bond market: Liquidity remains modest, turnover increases by 0.35% to GH¢1.59bn
37 minutes -
Bawku conflict:Â Court orders AG to justify continued detention of Seidu Abagre
40 minutes -
Boakyewaa Glover: To be witnessed
41 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: The CEO’s role in driving leadership accountability early in the year
42 minutes -
Bawumia campaigned for NPP in Adenta – Akosua Manu hits back at Kennedy Agyapong
1 hour -
Government’s reset agenda will take time to materialise – Ho Central MP
1 hour -
Police seize over 1,600 parcels of suspected narcotic drugs in major bust
1 hour -
Miguel Ribeiro Fiifi Brandful
1 hour -
Trade Minister storms Abossey Okai to enforce fair pricing ,curb middlemen exploitation
1 hour -
Hopeson Adorye calls for firm action against GWCL over persistent water shortages
1 hour -
Two burnt to death in fiery Offinso road accident
2 hours
