I appreciate 1Password

Every Thanksgiving the team at Agile Web Solutions give a present to their customers. This year the present was up to three licenses of 1Password to give away to family or friends. Not cut down, limited or expiring after one update licenses but regular, same as paid licenses. I love this application, it’s a huge time saver, and so I found three Mac users who somehow hadn’t even heard of this great tool and gave them the licenses.

For those of you who don’t know about it, 1P “is a Password Manager that uniquely brings you both Security and Convenience. It is the only program that provides Anti-Phishing protection and goes beyond password management by adding Web Form Filling and Automatic Strong Password Generation. All your confidential information, including passwords, identities, and credit cards, is kept in one secure place provided by Apple’s OS X Keychain.”

Comes with an iPhone app too, which is especially handy for quick logins on the small screen.

How will they top this next year?

Passings: Jorn Utzen

The great Danish architect died in his sleep last night at the age of 90. While Utzen designed many other buildings over a 50 year career his fame came from a building which he was unable to complete due to politics: the Sydney Opera House.

This magnificent structure is my favorite architectural design and, for my money, one of the top four or five works of art created in the modern world. The others: Picasso’s Guernica, Springsteen’s Jungleland, Asimov’s Foundation trilogy and a toss up between Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather (part 1) and the collaboration among Damon Runyan, Frank Loesser, Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows on Guys and Dolls.

TS1 in front of the Opera House

My assessment is based on the pure physical beauty, innovative and sophisticated practicality and Wrightian suitability to location of the Opera House. Few casual observers realize that the interior contains not one performance space but half a dozen, each tuned for a different use, and as such is much larger than images might lead you to believe.

An important, if smaller, aspect is Utzen’s design of the roof tiles. Think about how difficult to clean the steep, slippery angles of the roofs must be– or would be, except that the material and shapes Utzen created are kept sparkling but the region’s normal rainfall!

Forced off the project by politicians offended that something which would clearly become the nation’s icon in the global conversation, Jorn was not able to have much of a hand in the interior other than broadly shaping the division of spaces and some of the muscular ribbed ceilings.

Decades later Australia’s leadership attempted to reverse their predecessor’s poor judgment by asking for his assistance in updating some of the interior and by awarding him an honorary degree but Utzen was to ill to travel around the world and so never saw his magnificent creation with his own eyes.

With Thanksgiving just the other day I will say that spending time in and around the Sydney Opera House twice in the last decade are memories I will treasure however much longer I have here myself.

To my Dad on his 80th

We were back east last weekend visiting with my family to celebrate my dad’s 80th birthday. Great time was had by all, except for the flight there when the white guy with dreadlocks kept flipping his nasty hair over the seatback into my face.

Here’s a couple of snaps, one of dad blowing out the candles and the other of the whole Lazar/Rentz brood (including my sister, her husband and his four very tall kids), taken at the big shindig we had)

Dad blowing out the candlesThe whole Lazar/Rentz brood

At the party my sister read a beautiful poem she wrote for dad and I delivered this, er, oration:

Let me start by saying I cannot imagine a person better suited to being a father than mine.

A great father must be in turns a teacher, mentor, friend and task master. This is, unfortunately, not widely understood and even then one or more of the roles is at best paid lip service but my dad has been all four almost all the time.

My father taught me many things but his best lesson was teaching me to read–and understand what I read–by 7 or 8, when I started a lifelong love affair with the written word and the power of thinking.

As a mentor my dad guided me through many life lessons and difficult times. He showed me that morality, ethics are to be valued for their own end and not some distant reward.

As friends we’ve shared many wonderful experiences. We traveled to Israel for my Bar Mitzvah. We watched Star Wars with a rapture rarely matched since. The two of us took a great trip to Italy a few years ago and have had hundreds of great conversations over the years.

I still don’t, however, understand his late in life passion for golf.

Let me sum up by leaving your with this thought: My father has been one of the great joys in my life and one of the most terrific persons I’ve been fortunate to have in my life. So please lift your glasses with me and celebrate your friend and my dad, Richard Lazar.

Liverpool: Unbeaten in 10, 86 and out!

What an awesome start my Reds are having to the season, eight wins, two draws and… and nothing! Not one loss, even throwing in Champions League and Cup play. First in the table and the best opening run in club history. It’s early days, no doubt, but for the first time in this decade the team is in the Premiership title mix.

86 and out refers to our win last Sunday at Stamford Bridge, 86 being the number of league home matches played there since Chelsea last walked off the grass losers. Only 1-0 but I will take it unreservedly, especially with Fernando Torres injured. Sweet, sweet news.

A trip to White Hart Lane this weekend will test us against the resurgent, Harry Redknapp-led Tottenham. Spurs have taken more points in his two games in charge than the eight previous under Ramos. I question the wisdom of paying in the neighborhood of $9 million for the right to sign another team’s manager but Juande Ramos never got his legs with the team and surely had to go.

Redknapp will get them out of the relegation battle, that late comeback yesterday against the Arsenal is proof, but I do wonder if three games in seven days is a bit much to ask of his squad. If Torres is fit, I favor us to take all three points on the road.

Speaking of Arsene enger’s boys, does this year’s model seem a little less than expected? The loss to Fulham and yesterday’s late giveaway make me hopeful that his team will spend this season battling Aston Villa and Hull for the four through six slots. Walcott is coming of age on the right and Adebayor is a monster in the middle but the backline may not be up to the challenge.

Manchester United are revving up now that the engine man is back from injury, getting both goals in yesterday’s 2-0 win. So far you have to put their record down to the many injuries, plus the adjustment to Berbatov up top, but I do wonder a bit about discontent among the players. Tevez appears the most vocal now but when Hargreaves and Scholes get healthy where will that leave Fletcher, Anderson, Park and Nani?

Chelsea are doing fine under Scolari, better than I thought they’d start off, but again they may have too many world class stars to avoid that trouble. The Blues will be strong and challenge all year but I wonder if in May the title will be down to Liverpool and Man United.

One can but hope!

Update, 1 Nov.: Sadly the ‘Pool fell victim to the Redknapp Revival, losing out near the death when Daniel Agger lost his man well inside the six yard box. I’d have thought the lesson Arsenal provided, that you cannot let up until the whistle against these guys, would have sufficed, especially with Arsenal’s loss early today to Stoke City as compound. But no.

Aptana Launches Cloud, Jaxer, and Studio 1.2

To quote my smooth-talking co-worker Ian: “We’ve been hard at work on a big-ass milestone for Aptana: Three products launched… most notably our cloud initiative.” Personally I managed to publish the new Jaxer Guide, tweak the Studio and PHP documentation, redesign the Support Center, put in place new support processes plus front-end incoming customer success issues.

Here’s a quick run-down of each product:

  • Aptana Cloud – Aptana Cloud is the ultimate in ease and efficiency – a suite of online services integrated right into Aptana Studio 1.2 that puts the power of cloud computing to work for you. Streamline your deployment and development processes at costs far less than doing it yourself.
    Learn More
  • Aptana Jaxer 1.0 – We’re pleased to announce that Jaxer 1.0 is official! Jaxer is the world’s first Ajax server, and an emerging server-side JavaScript solution built on the Mozilla Firefox 3 engine. Best of all, we’ve also included it as a free option in our cloud offering.
    Learn More
  • Aptana Studio 1.2 – Aptana Studio offers unprecedented support for Ajax combined with today’s popular Web platforms. Download Studio yourself or plug it into Eclipse to see for yourself. We’ve also added great new support for PHP, Ruby on Rails, and Jaxer.
    Learn More

I’m really enjoying the work at Aptana, Paul and Uri have set up the work environment and culture so that BS is at a minimum with people knowing they have freedom to execute as they see best as long as the results come.

We have a number of engineering-oriented openings; unlike some companies we aren’t cutting back. If you want to join a company creating innovative products and services take a look at our career page to see if you fit our needs.


Our little Cloud 1.0 ship momento

Levi Stubbs: Standing in the Shadows no more

The lead singer of the Four Tops passed away Friday after years of bad health, leaving behind a massive legacy of great Motown soul made with his partners Abdul “Duke” Fakir, Renaldo “Obie” Benson and Lawrence Payton. Fakir is the lone survivor, still touring more than 50 years after the group came together as the Four Aims. Stubbs is survived by his wife of 48 years, an amazing achievement in business where marriages seem as transient as last summer’s catchy pop hit.

The group’s music was a staple on the old WABC AM Top 40 radio of the late ’60s and I fondly remember seeing their televised ‘battles’ with fellow Motown hitmakers The Temptations. Levi had a strong baritone which added weight to the often poignant lyrics of hits like Baby I Need Your Loving, It’s the Same Old Song, Standing in the Shadows of Love and, my favorite, Reach Out I’ll Be There.

Thanks for the great music and the reminder that It’s All in the Game.

The Mask Slips

In an amazingly stark essay called The Mask Slips in the Op-Ed section of today’s NY Times, Bob Herbert writes without an ounce of subtlety, politeness or indirection what so many of my friends and I have been saying to each other for years now:

“For the nitwits who vote for the man or woman they’d most like to have over for dinner, or hang out at a barbecue with, I suggest you take a look at how well your 401(k) is doing, or how easy it will be to meet the mortgage this month, or whether the college fund you’ve been trying to build for your kids is as robust as you’d like it to be.”

Reading that word nitwits–the quote is the second paragraph of the essay–took my breathe away!

The few hundred words Herbert uses felt like a sculptor’s chisel, straight to the point and unerringly profound, the undeniable truth revealed from the normal nattering of pundits and apologists.

The Democrats should simply buy reprint rights, run off a few million copies and put them on windshields of cars parked at school playing fields and churches throughout the so-called battleground states.

Headline from the (near) Future: Homeless Army Leaders Detained by FBI

(San Diego, CA, 16 June 2009) Six leaders of the self-style Homeless Army of Americans were arrested by a combined FBI, state and local police task force this morning minutes before the HAA organizers were to take the podium at a group rally at which attendance was estimated to be well over 100,000 people.

Those arrested include Sam Stross, 42, Peter Humphries, 43, Gerry Torres, 31, all residents of the San Francisco Bay Area, Gemma Lam, 33, of San Diego, Diego Stevens, 38, of Santa Fe, NM, and Bankos Hamesh of New York City. Their attorney, Jorge Chen, told this reporter that more than four hours after the six were taken into custody he had yet to be allowed any communication with his clients.

“Today’s action by the McCain Administration violates both the First Amendment as well as constitutional protections and other legal protections but are in no way a surprise to any supporter of the Homeless Army,” Chen said during a phone conversation. “In the five months since John McCain took office over nine million Americans have lost their homes and he has done nothing except staff up local and federal police forces and begin construction on what can only be enormous holding camps, with today’s illegal arrests only the first of many.”

Before news of the HAA 6 arrests became public, thousands of police officers from San Diego and surrounding areas, California State troopers and California units of the Army National Guard were deployed to the streets and the rally participants were herded down prepared paths to be dispersed out of the downtown area.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation would not provide a spokesperson to answer media questions but instead released a statement on the FBI press release website, which begins:

“No American’s rights were illegally impeded in San Diego today and any physical force used by law enforcement officers was in response to explicit physical attacks by this unauthorized gathering. The six individuals arrested prior to their participation in this unauthorized gathering were detained on charges of conspiracy to incite terroristic violence, threats of violence against the elected leadership of the United States and conspiracy to commit fraud.

“[The arrested individuals] are charged under the recent revisions to the Patriot Act and as such have been detained without access to counsel until the investigating officers determine that all participants in this complex conspiracy have been identified and, to the extent possible, arrested to stand trial with their comrades. Neither the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Justice nor local or state police commands will have further comment on these individuals until further notice.”

Stross, Humphries, Torres, Lam, Stevens and Hamesh have been very public faces of a movement that grew out of the debacle which last fall’s $700 billion bailout was supposed to prevent. The bill, according to the Bush Administration, was the only way to avoid a horrific economic crash; since the measure did nothing to assist borrowers, though, the huge number of so-called toxic mortgages remained untenable for homeowners to repay and banks began foreclosing in massive numbers days before the new administration was inaugurated in January.

The Homeless Army has drawn support across the country and today’s rally was expected to be the first big showing by the group ahead of a political campaign to pressure Congress and the Administration to find a solution that would return homes to the millions of families forced out by armed squads of temporarily deputized private security company employees.

HAA.org attempted to post prepared remarks by Mr. Humphries, who is the group’s primary public spokesperson, but the site was unreachable due to denial of service attacks. He has previously issued calls for the impeachment of President McCain and Vice President Palin for executive orders that authorized financial instutions and other mortgage owners to obtain foreclosure and eviction orders despite state laws that would otherwise protect homeowners for at least some period of time.

Miss Lam has written articles for the Huffington Post website laying out a case for the prosecution of leaders of the previous Administration for what she termed “the most outrageous fraudulent, illegal transfer of wealth in modern economic history” when almost all of the bailout money went to wealthy individuals and the balance sheets of the handful of large banks that remain in the aftermath of last September and October’s string of failures and near-failures.

Senator Joseph Leiberman, R-CT, spoke to the issue on the floor of the US Senate late in the day: “The so-called HAA6 are not honorable people attempting to redress some great wrong but thugs leading a mob unwilling to accept the consequences of their own greedy decisions and ready to bring the great American nation down around them unless the majority of law-abiding capitulate to threats of violence and disorder. We will not be intimidated and this Administration and our brave president will not allow such threats to stand.”

Senator Joe Biden, D-DE, responded to Leiberman: “Barack Obama and I would have blocked the massive expulsion of many hard-working homeowning citizens had we not been tragically prevented from taking office. Our Administration would never have approved the trampling of the Constitution and the Homess Army of Americans would never been needed. These people should be released immediately and President McCain should see this as a wakeup call from the reality he strives so hard to avoid.”

White House Press Secretary Gail Gitcho told reporters that the President had nothing to add to the FBI statement and would not be answering questions from the media, unsurprising as he has not met directly with reporters since three weeks after taking office and addressing the nation only sporadically and briefly in that time.

Headline from the (near) Future: Pelosi Sworn in as 44th President

(Washington, D.C., 21 Jan 09) Nancy Pelosi (D, California) was sworn in as this nation’s first female President by Chief Justice John G. Roberts on the steps of the US Capital building this morning after neither the House nor Senate were able to resolve last November’s Electoral College tie between Barack Obama and John McCain.

“The people of America must be able to rely on their elected representatives to fulfill the responsibilities set out in the Constitution of the United States. I will serve as President until such time as Congress settles this great question, guided by the results of the popular vote, the advice of my Cabinet nominees and in consultation with the two candidates. As already announced my Cabinet will by drawn from the ranks of qualified women and men of both parties.

“However, unless informed otherwise by relevant legal authorities, I intend to retain my vote in role calls and the Presidental resolution as a member of the California delegation in the House of Representatives and to return to the Speaker’s office once the House finds a majority will.”

Under the Constitution, a new President must be inaugurated by January 20 and as Speaker of the House of Representatives Pelosi was next in line for the top job. This unprecedented event came after both candidates won 269 Electoral College votes in the Nov. 4 balloting, throwing the race into the hands of Congress. Senator Obama won the popular vote by a nearly 2,000,000 vote margin.

The House is required to elect the new President but with conservative Democrats throwing support to McCain neither party could muster the 26 state block votes to win the post. The Senate was caught up by parliamentary procedures that enabled several senators to block Democratic VP Joseph Biden despite his party’s nearly 10 seat majority.

While both houses are expected to eventually make permanent selections, statements in recent days from Roberts clearly made today’s dramatic interim outcome necessary. Obama and McCain separately told reporters they accepted Pelosi’s elevation as important for an orderly transition from the Bush Administration but expect her’s to be among the shortest of Presidential tenures.

“America must have a Commander-in-Chief sitting in the Oval Office and through the wisdom of our Founding Fathers the answer to this crisis is simple,” said Senator McCain at the National Press Club this afternoon. “I thank President Pelosi for her prompt agreement to step in and expect the Congress to immediately put aside party politics and elect a new President and Vice President as their duty and the people of this great country require.”

Legislators have only had two weeks to decide this issue since the new Congress was sworn in just after the new year. The House of Representatives appear closer to breaking the deadlock, with rumors and unattributed news reports claiming that either Nevada or Rhode Island will switch from the Republican to Democratic columns within days.

“America’s Constitution has once again demonstrated its greatness and the foresight of its authors by providing for the difficult situation in which we find ourselves,” Senator Obama said on CNN this afternoon. “President Pelosi has my full support and confidence and I will work with her to ensure the nation moves forward without respite to deal with the huge economic and security problems left to us by President Bush.”

The Senate needs at least several days to perhaps a week to clear away several procedural matters presented by Republican senators from Wyoming, Alabama and Texas but once done Senator Biden should become Vice President with at least 53 votes. If this happens before the House completes work, he would immediately become acting President.

Should neither house be able to get a majority result, President Pelosi will remain in office until the 2012 elections. She can stand for the office in that race but under the 22nd Amendment having served more than two years in the current term would not be eligible to run again 2016.

Liverpool 2-1 Manchester United: Woo ha!

Because of the Setanta crap this game wasn’t available to the vast majority of American fans but I was quite happy to read this headline on BBC Sports just now:

Ferguson lambasts Man Utd display

Lovely words for any Reds fan, eh? Especially with Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres starting on the bench from injury, our captain only coming on at the 68th minute, and the Red Devils’ five years of league dominance continuing with a smart early goal by Tevez off a brilliant pass by newly bought Dimitar Berbetov, one would hardly have expected the result.

10 points off our first four Premier League matches has us at the top of the table (pending Chelsea’s outcome in a couple of hours) and Man Utd only four off three matches. We have an interesting run of five games, probably mostly winnable: at Marseilles for the opening Champions League game midweek, new boys Stoke City–who are beating Newcastle 0-2 after 70 minutes today–next Saturday, a Carling up tie with League One side Crewe, the ‘away’ derby with Everton and finally yet another CL clash with Dutch power PSV Eindhoven.

Is this the year the title drought ends? Sir Alex and his teams have taken 10 league title in that time to climb within one of Liverpool’s all-time record but one can only hope today’s hard working result foretells just that ending!

World Cup 2010 Qualifying, Day 1: USA look terrible

Even taking account of the downpour in Havana and very poor officiating–though nowhere as bad as that in the Hungary-Denmark match–USA played down to the level of competition and were lucky to get a 1-0 win over a team that has exactly zero players on club rosters outside their island nation.

Bob Bradley went with a five man midfield but despite the extra man were not able to get Brian Ching a single good opportunity. The one goal we had, from Clint Dempsey in the 40th, was down to a lucky bounce after the Cuban defenders beat Dempsey on the initial cross and Ching was able to touch it back to Clint.

The top goat, besides the coach, was Maurice Edu. Fresh off a decent performance at the Olympics and a $5 million transfer to Rangers, he was horrible all night with his passing. Either short, too soft, to the wrong place, wherever, if the US had given up a goal it would most likely come off a bad Edu pass.

Landon Donovan is next on my list. While I can’t point to the same kind of specific miscues as with his fellow midfielder, Landon was never the attacking engine he should have been. After all, of his American all time team record of 35 goals, six came in two previous matches against Cuba. Tonight the closest he came was a couple of shots well high from distance and, in general, he played too deeply to be the connection between balls out of the back and Ching.

Somehow Heath Pearce started at left back for the seventh consecutive game. I cannot believe that we don’t have a better option. Where are Jonathon Bornstein, Jonathon Spector or even Eddie Lewis? Heck, if Bradley wanted a five man midfield he could have gone with Onyewu, Bocanegra and Frankie Hejduk in a 3-5-2, pushing Dempsey up top with Ching and inserting Sacha Kljestan into the XI. We probably would have won by three or four goals!

Next up for the US is a much tougher match Wednesday against Trinidad & Tobago, who managed a 1-1 draw at Guatemala today. We’ll have Steve Cherundolo back (from a ridiculous two yellows in a game suspension), maybe see Kljestan, Marvell Wynne or Ricardo Clarke in the starting lineup and the game is in Chicago, so for once we may have more supporters than the visiting squad.

Elsewhere French soccer fans must be wondering the hell has happened to a team that won the World Cup/Euro double back in 1998/2000. They lost to an Austrian team 3-1 by giving up essentially two own goals and a penalty kick! How Domenech will keep his job if the lose the game against a very tough Serbian side==remember, he didn’t win a game in the Euros in June and the team went out at the first round–I do not know. Teflon coach or not.

Italy needed a last gasp score to beat Cyprus 2-1, England (missing the injured Steven Gerrard) could only manage two against micro-minnows Andorra and Spain (missing Fernando Torres) snuck past Bosnia-Herzegovina just 1-0.

Israel apparently has a decent shot of making it to the Finals and an injury time goal gave them a precious point against a very difficult Swiss side after going behind 2-0. Liverpool’s Yossi Benayoun got the first and Chelsea’s Ben Sahar the equalizer. The Sabras travel to Moldova midweek, so hopefully the full three points from that.

What’s the timde difference from the West Coast to Johannesburg?

Aptana swallows a Python

Work is going really well here, we are making big strides towards our goal of getting production releases across much of our product line during the second half of September (Studio 1.2, PHP plugin 1.0, Jaxer 1.0 and Clouds 1.0). Keeping us busy but we’ve had help in the form of some very strong new hires too.

This morning we also announced the acquisition of Pydev, the premier Eclipse plugin for Python. Fabio Zadronzy has developed a strong functionality base and a large enthusiastic set of users–the Big G themselves are global licensees of the product–and he’ll continue to drive the product forward as well as help us adapt features across our family of supported languages.

As part of the push to release several of our remote staff have flown in for a week or two, or in one case, permanently, giving me a chance to put a face to their voices.

Keep your eyes peeled, there is much more good stuff coming from Aptana soon!

Update: Don’t just take my word for it, check out the effusive blog post from Brit Gardner.

Job hunting: Asking for help on your lists

Unfortunately a friend asked last night about posting to a community mailing list we’re on as he got caught up in a restructuring at his company and was laid off. I encourage him to post and gave this (unsolicited) advice about how to get the best results.

Take care in phrasing your message, along these lines:

  • Short: Be brutal in filtering yourself.
  • Positive: Make it all about the special value add you bring to the table.
  • Concrete: Make everything as quantified as possible even if your precision is greater than the data; words like great, better and excellent are very nice but have very low actionable content quotients.
  • Concrete #2: Ask for assistance that is within the ability of the recipient and that will truly help you.
  • Do not be subtle: Be very explicit in stating what you want from the reader.

My best guess is that your message should not be any longer than mine (up to this line).

The last point is perhaps the most difficult one because most adults are uncomfortable about needing help on such an important part of life and exposing what they perceive as a weakness.

Most of us, after the age of 35 or 40 at least, simply don’t allow ourselves to believe that we might have difficulty finding work. Accordingly we’re reluctant to ask for help in a direct fashion that comes right out and exposes our status.

This is not a problem for me, of course, due to my recent work history but it used to be one. Participating in ProMatch let me see my own situation through the prism of the other members and exposed some emotional fallacies that hindered my efforts.

Additional suggestions I gave him:

  1. Post your resume on a real webpage, like I have at http://billlazar.com. Relying on Monster or HotJobs is useless these days though a blog at Blogger or WordPress.com, where the only post is your resume is a simple, free, good solution.
  2. Update your LinkedIn profile and use your network there aggressively to find people at target companies.

New season, same old goalscorer

Fernando! 33 goals last season and, though the game looked to end another 0-0 dreadful to pair with their midweek Champions League result, Mr. El Nino Torres unleashed his deadly boot in the 82nd minute and put the ball where it needed to be in the back of the Sunderland net for a 1-0 opening day win. Sweet, sweet, sweet!

Rafa put out an interesting lineup. Ryan Babel, Lucas Leiva and Javier Mascherano would have been in the XI except for being in Beijing for the Olympic quarterfinals so we had Damien Plessis paired with Captain Stevie in central midfield and Yossi Benayoun at left wing and the boss gave starts to new signing Andrea Dossena at right back and the longest tenured Red, Sami Hyypia, alongside Jamie Carragher.

Hyypia made the opening 10 minutes more exciting for Pepe Reina than they might have been but the backline tightened up after that and our goal was rarely challenged. On the attacking end we had quite a few chances that finished prematurely from good saves by Black Cats keeper Craig Gordon and centerback Nyron Nosworthy or shots just wide.

In the end we took all three points home, in stark contrast to last season’s opening day 0-0 draw. Next weekend we host Middlesboro. Gareth Southgate’s men took a surprising 2-1 win over visiting big spenders Tottenham so getting another victory will not be a walk in the park, though we may have at least one of our Olympians back in the squad and perhaps even see Gareth Barry’s debut (if Hicks and Gillette finally cough up the cash).

It is on: Seven Days to the EPL

Spain stunned plenty of soccer fans with their 1-0 win over Germany at the Euro 2008 in Vienna but that was six weeks ago and now the European clubs are getting into gear for the regular season. I posted a brief, opinionated view of the major transfers and manager situations for the EPL at the reborn SportsFilter but in this post I’ll focus on my team of choice, Liverpool FC.


Fernando Torres showed us he was worth every pence of his £21 million transfer fee, delivering 33 goals, second only to to Joan Laporta’s heart’s desire CRonaldo. Torres was arguably the second best player at the Euros as well and one can only hope that his goal tally was limited by the so-called adjustment that players new to the English style must go through.

Last Season’s Key Additions

  • Centerback Martin Skrtel, though if Daniel Agger is healthy again the two are likely to battle all season for minutes,
  • Alvaro Arbeloa and Fabio Aurelio at fullback pushed Steve Finnan and my boy John Arne Riise to the bench and then Riise last month all the way to AS Roma, but Rafa Benitez still wasn’t satisfied as he brought in two new men, Andrea Dossena and Phillip Degen, to strengthen the back line. Aurelio also added heft at left midfield on occasion in the late months.
  • Yossi Benayoun made his mark mostly in Champions League and coming off the bench, the Israeli’s speed and style when defenders tire resulting in 11 goals.
  • Ryan Babel had 10 goals including my favorite score of the year when the Dutch youngster used his buttocks to tap one into the Besiktas net during an 8-0 Champions League drubbing.
  • Lucas Leiva is an aspiring midfield playmaker, currently on the Brazil Olympic squad, who could be the biggest loser if our owners finally come up with the dosh to buy Gareth Barry.
  • Andriy Voronin is likely to find himself scraping for playing time again, despite the departure of Peter Crouch, because the team did not spend £20 million to sit Robbie Keane on the bench.

This Summer’s Changes

Here’s the BBC Sports in and out list for the Reds this summer, minus youngster loan outs:

Ins: David Ngog (Paris St Germain, undisclosed), Emmanuel Mendy (Murcia Deportivo, free), Diego Cavalieri (Palmeiras, undisclosed), Andrea Dossena (Udinese, undisclosed), Philipp Degen (Borussia Dortmund, free), Robbie Keane (Tottenham, £20.3m).

Outs: Scott Carson (West Brom, £3.25m), Peter Crouch (Portsmouth, £11m), Harry Kewell (Galatasaray, free), Anthony le Tallec (Le Mans, undisclosed), John Arne Riise (Roma, £4m), Danny Guthrie (Newcastle, undisclosed). Argentinean youngster Sebastian Leto had to be loaned out to Olympiakos, losing his work permit when his Italian passport was voided.

The significant departures are Crouch, Riise and Leto. I really felt that Rafa undervalued Crouch and Riise, neither getting enough minutes to be fully effective. Riise, to be fair, also seemed to have misplaced his booming left foot, his free kicks and shots from distance going wide or high all year. But the beanpole striker did the business when given an opportunity, unmatched on the squad in his ability to bring the ball down off long passes and keep it until a mate was in range, totalling 42 goals in 142 appearances for the Reds over three years. The only surprising aspect of Scott Carson’s deparure was the low price; early gossip had him going for nearly three times as much!

Who are the New Boys?

Robbie Keane is the known quantity, scoring 15 times for Tottenham last season, but surplus to Juande Ramos needs in the Spaniard’s first transfer window in charge. (More on Tottenham). Everyone seems to be drooling over the pairing of Torres and the Republic of Ireland captain and all-time goal scorer because Keane can create for his striking partner as well as he puts it in the net.

Degen and Dossena (Swiss and Italian internationals) as mentioned will replace Riise and Finnan in the primary fullback rotation. Finnan is still on the squad but he’s been mentioned as make-weight in more than one transfer deal or going out on his own in the £2-3 million range.

David Ngog is a hot young striker from France, only 19, but likely to be more bad news for Andriy Voronin’s playing time if he can get up to speed quickly. For sure he means that Babel and Dirk Kuyt will be mainly deployed on the wings and not their preferred place in the middle.

Cavalieri comes as veteran goalkeeper backup for Pepe Reina as apparently Charles Itandje did not suffice in the limited role allowed by Reina’s playing every minute of every EPL and FA Cup match plus most of the Champions League games.

Mendy is a young Spanish right back and hasn’t even been assigned a shirt number, meaning he’ll be playing for the reserve team at least this season. Benitez tends to sign a lot of these youngsters and so far not too many have pushed their way into the senior squad.

I’ll post some thoughts on what these changes may do for us in the upcoming season soon.

Some Thoughts on Tottenham

As I wrote on SpoFi, Tottenham has made the boldest money moves and the Spaniard will surely be under pressure to do better than last season’s water treading. He cleaned house, may still get a rumored $70M+ for Dimitar Berbetov from Sir Alex Ferguson and ultra-hot Russian playmaker Andrei Arshavin, and bought a lot of quality: Keeper Heurelho Gomes is a big upgrade from Paul Robinson, Luka Modric is coming into his own as a midfield commander, Giovani dos Santos showed flashes of greatness when he could get onto the field at star-studded Barcelona and David Bentley was the hottest winger available inside the EPL.