The fall and rise of Jordan Henderson - and the player he actually resembles
It says a lot about the progress Liverpool are making under Brendan Rodgers (edit : cautious progress. I don’t want to jinx it!) that most LFC discussion boards have seen 8 or 9 names put forward for Player of the Month. The exercise moved along predictable lines : Daniel Sturridge with 3 goals, and Simon Mignolet with a series of match-winning saves, were both front-runners. Jordan Henderson comes a close third - which should be no surprise to anyone who has watched him over the last twelve months.
Like Aaron Ramsey at Arsenal, Henderson has run a full cycle: from promise to disappointment to redemption. Towards the end of last season, he was being hailed as a hard worker who had earned the right to start matches, but there were still doubts over his consistency. Given his first season at the club, those doubts weren’t misplaced. A 180-degree change has occurred since June 2012, however – he is now a hugely improved player and an Anfield favourite.
Whether it is Brendan Rodgers’ tutelage or the natural maturity that comes with experience (as in the case of midfield partner Lucas Leiva), the change is noticeable. He has transformed into a reliable utility player who can operate in midfield with confidence and finesse, linking attack and defence with ceaseless running; winning the ball back within Rodgers’ six seconds and harrying the opposition midfielders with untiring tenacity even in the 86th minute. He may not be the best player on the pitch, but he works hard so that others can play to their fullest.
When he arrived at Liverpool, the young Sunderland academy graduate was far from being a complete player. He was a strapping lad who could run around all day and aggressively press high up the field – useful traits, but not reason enough to field him in the first team. He was highly rated at Sunderland and captain of the England U-21 squad, so he had proven his pedigree; but the ideal next move was a spell in the Liverpool reserves, where he could mature as a player and learn the graft, away from the unsettling gaze that follows a 16-million pound signing.
Instead, he was thrown straight into the Liverpool first team and played out of position, a decision that contradicted the very premise on which he was acquired – Henderson was a player for the future, not the present. Kenny Dalglish shuffled him all round the field in multiple formations. A sustained lack of success broke the youngster’s confidence and he soon earned fan ire, becoming the motif for everything that was wrong with LFC’s selection policy and tactics. In addition, he was suffering impossible comparisons with Steven Gerrard.