Aimar turns back the clock as Liverpool eye another bad move

Aimar turns back the clock as Liverpool eye another bad move


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The past two weeks have been especially unusual in the strange world of Portuguese football, and four stories in particular have caught the PortugeezerâÂÂs attention.


Former Portuguese international Ricardo Sá Pinto seems hell bent on prolonging his career in football, despite his disastrous spell as SportingâÂÂs sporting director. Known for his short


temper, it will be interesting to see how long heâÂÂll able to withstand playing second fiddle to the relative unknown Pedro Caixinha, for whom he'll be acting as assistant manager at


União Leiria.


For those less familiar with PintoâÂÂs public displays of errâ¦affection, letâÂÂs just say heâÂÂs famous for his assault on then-Portugal manager Artur Jorge and more recently for his


physical confrontation with Liédson that ultimately signalled his departure from the Lions.


HereâÂÂs a not-so-bold prediction: Caixinha, already struggling to deliver, will sooner or later get the dreaded axe, at which point Ricardo the Lion Heart will most likely step into the


void - and thatâÂÂs when things could get really interestingâ¦


Seriously, itâÂÂs not like the Portugeezer has a beef with Liverpool. But after overpaying for Raul Meireles, theyâÂÂre now apparently ready to break the bank for the Paraguayan forward


Cardozo.


If these rumours contain a single iota of truth - and that is a big âÂÂifâÂÂ, granted - then it is official: Liverpool are the most ill-managed club in the world. No doubt Cardozo was


pivotal in BenficaâÂÂs successful bid to the title last season, but the formation employed and the supporting cast helped him a lot. â¬25 million would be a lot to pay for a player still


yet to convince his current clubâÂÂs fans of his own ability.


At 27, he would struggle with the language, the pace and physical nature of the English game (heck, heâÂÂs even dead slow for the Portuguese league) and the insurmountable pressure of


having to share the goalscoring burden with some guy named Fernando Torres. Not that Benfica wouldnâÂÂt mind ripping Liverpool off, but even snake-oil salesmen would be amazed at such


improbable deal.


For Sporting chairman José Eduardo Bettencourt the grass is definitely greener on the other side, because according to the 50-year-old, the pitch at Estádio Alvalade XXI is holding back


the team.


Dazed and confused? Well, in an unorthodox move - at least for a team in Southern Europe - Bettencourt said that next year the club would replace the current playing surface with an


artificial one, simply because the club has found it difficult to create perfect playing conditions, having had to replace the pitch six(!) times.


ThatâÂÂs fair assessment and it would actually be very interesting to see the economic impact of such decision, because it is well-known that artificial pitches have lower maintenance costs


and allow the owner to use them for just about every day of the year if he intends to. And while strange, itâÂÂs not like Sporting would be the first club at top level to play in an


artificial pitch, with Young Boys and Spartak Moscow being two prime examples of clubs whose stadiums possess a FIFA-approved state-of-the-art artificial turf.


But that canâÂÂt cover the fact that Bettencourt is only touting the notion as an excuse to justify sub-par results. If Sporting were to go ahead with the scheme, it would come as no


surprise to hear the very same man complain that away pitches were too different to the one his players are used to, following a defeat on the road for the Lisbon side.


Unlike the English or the Spanish League, itâÂÂs not every weekend fans in Portugal witness jaw-dropping goals that make the admission fees seem worthwhile. But it just so happens that this


past weekend witnessed two of those moments.


As Benfica entertained Paços de Ferreira at home, Pablo Aimar decided it was probably about time to remind people why he was once regarded as one of the most gifted playmakers in the


world.


The Argentinean â whose undoubted technical finesse still manages to hide his visible physical limitations â made a run from inside his teamâÂÂs own half, dribbled past two opponents


before unleashing a powerful, well-placed shot that lifted the entire stadium. An absolutely gorgeous goal that paved way for the 2:0 victory.