Rafa Team Selection Under Fire?

Last updated : 11 December 2017 By Footy Mad - Editor

Full of hope, building expectations and then knocking them down; on the 125th anniversary of Newcastle United’s formation, there could have been no more suitable a performance.

Image result for Newcastle 2 Leicester 3Leicester City arrived at St James’ Park to a backdrop of fondness and celebration; flags were waved and banners held high, but the situation required a tentative approach. Newcastle needed to win, not just for sentimental reasons, but to end a torrid run of six games without one.

In recent times, Newcastle have been one of the more frustrating clubs to follow. Clichés are such for a reason, because everybody uses them and, more often than not, they’re true. Three in particular, though, have not been for the Magpies.

‘Fortune favours the brave’, yet a 52,000-capacity crowd, which turns up week after week, suffered again on Saturday; ‘good things come to those who wait’, yet, in their 125 years of existence, Newcastle have been waiting for a trophy for the last 48; ‘what goes around, comes around’, yet there doesn’t feel like an end to the misery, despite fans deserving just that.

The 3-2 defeat at the hands of the Foxes was cruel, but served to show exactly why Mike Ashley must sell the club; days after he was spotted negotiating a deal over a curry with perspective buyer Amanda Staveley, his hand was weakened.

If Rafa Benitez doesn’t have a team full of the quality he wants, he certainly has one with the right amount of effort. They won’t stop battling and, like at West Brom a few weeks ago, they clawed their way back in. Gayle has suddenly hit form, which is a huge positive, and he looked to have snatched a point with just shy of 20 minutes left.

Mistakes prove costly, and again, as a perfect metaphor for Newcastle United over the last 125 years, the hope dissolved into disappointment.

Kevin Keegan is probably the most important man in the club’s modern history, making it all the sadder that neither he, nor record goalscorer Alan Shearer, were in attendance to mark the anniversary.

Mike Ashley’s treatment of the pair shows just how much he has tarnished the club, and as Keegan said, nothing will ever be achieved with him at the helm, before adding that patience would see the fans rewarded by his eventual exit.

Keegan is adored, and Benitez is on a similar path, but his old saying that the public of Newcastle would accept losing if they were entertained by a high-scoring affair could not be seen as true at the weekend, if only because of Mike Ashley’s latest show of negligence and apathy towards them.

The players’ lack of confidence again led to their downfall. Once they let their grip slip in the first half, it was hard to see them regaining it. Doom and gloom will inevitably follow, especially if they fail to beat another in-form, confident side in Everton on Wednesday.

Perhaps Benitez’s team selection was questionable, but Jonjo Shelvey and the returning Christian Atsu and Jamaal Lascelles should start, and that could make the world of difference. The captain will prove pivotal, with 16 goals conceded in six games and the team’s once uncharacteristic openness at the back, late in the game, justifying a quick return.

January can’t come soon enough because whoever owns the club needs to back Benitez. It is in no one’s interests to risk another relegation, and with a sale looking unlikely before the transfer window opens, the responsibility to strengthen may well lie with Mike Ashley.

The gap between Newcastle and the bottom three is just two points now, and a tough fixture list means they are limping towards the New Year. Something needs to spark them into life, and soon.