Saturday 11 January 2014

After The Gold Rush

[Originally published in Well Red magazine, September 2010]






I remember the first time I saw Ian Rush in a Liverpool shirt.  1981.  The League Cup Final Replay.  West Ham in the role of plucky yet ultimately doomed opponents.  Kenny Dalglish provided a moment of sublime invention, latching on to a probing McDermott through ball to hook a subtly executed volley over a bemused, immaculately coiffed Phil Parkes.  Alan Hansen headed the winner, via the outstretched thigh of luckless Hammers skipper, Billy Bonds.  And a scrawny 19 year old from North Wales gave a tantalising glimpse of the future, a future that was to be defined by an almost supernatural capacity for scoring goals and a largely unprecedented accumulation of silverware.

 

Unusually, Rush didn’t score in that game. Indeed, it wouldn’t be until his ninth outing that he managed to open his account for the club, a typically instinctive strike against Finnish minnows, Oulun Palloseura.  Given that the match took place the day after Bill Shankly’s untimely death, the significance of Rush’s goal was not immediately apparent.  But for those who believe that football, on occasion, has the capacity to transcend its populist, media-fuelled status and attain a sense of the mythic, it seemed to represent the passing of the Anfield torch from one glorious generation to the next.  Shankly, more than anyone, would have appreciated the symbolism.

 

From that moment on, there was no stopping Ian Rush.  With a game based on an explosive turn of pace, unmatched anticipation and a calmness in front of goal not seen since the days of Jimmy Greaves, he quickly established himself as the most clinical striker in the country.  For the next six seasons it was a genuine privilege to witness Rush consistently terrorise opposition defences in tandem with the peerless Dalglish, a partnership which came to redefine the concept of a ‘telepathic relationship.’  Where Kenny crafted and probed, all guile and artistry, the consummate sorcerer, his apprentice applied the rapier thrust.  Time and again Rush was on hand to pierce even the most stubborn of rearguards, with a predictability that would have bordered on the monotonous if it hadn’t been so uniquely thrilling.

 
 


Five times in this spell he exceeded the elusive ‘30 goals in a season’ target; twice he reached the 40 mark.  Last minute winners, hat-tricks, crucial cup final strikes, all were included in his repertoire. You didn’t just hope that Ian Rush would score - you expected him to score, you knew that he would score.  More often than not, he didn’t disappoint.

 

Examples of Rush’s goalscoring proficiency spring readily to mind.  There was the historic four-goal haul against habitual victims Everton at Goodison in 1982, a performance later to be immortalised in enduring Kop anthem, ‘Poor Scouser Tommy’; a devastating triple strike on a frozen pitch at Villa Park, including a fiercely lashed volley and a delicate lob bordering on the facetious; a decisive pair in a bitterly fought European Cup semi-final in Bucharest; and, of course, the goals that twice denied Everton the FA Cup, each a masterpiece of composure, execution and timing.  

 

For many Liverpool followers though, even these towering achievements were eclipsed one murky afternoon in October, 1983.  With Luton Town playing to perfection the part of sacrificial lambs, Rush gave arguably the most complete exhibition of the striker’s art ever seen at Anfield.  It wasn’t just the fact that he found the net five times that day.  Nor was it simply the quality and diversity of the strikes, which encompassed instinctive close-range finishes, a flying header and a thunderous volley taken at full pace to despatch a 60 yard Rubble through-ball (one of the great ’forgotten’ Liverpool goals).  No, what was most profoundly memorable for me was that this was the first time I saw an entire defence consumed by fear.  Rush’s mere presence provoked the kind of outright panic seldom displayed on a football pitch, his every touch causing visible consternation and dispute in the Luton ranks.  It was like watching a skilled matador toying with a confused bull, patiently circling his forlorn prey before administering the fatal attack.  It was a brutally efficient, coldly clinical demonstration, showcasing a master craftsman at the peak of his powers.

 

It’s probably fair to say that Ian Rush’s second spell at Anfield, after a troubled though not entirely fruitless season with Juventus, never quite reached the same predatory heights. In fairness, he’d set a standard that was impossible to live up to.  Liverpool’s style of play had evolved in his absence, with the attacking emphasis now largely focused on the power and delivery of John Barnes from the left wing.  Rush, who was accustomed to feeding on the kind of defence-splitting, slide-rule passes perfected by the likes of Dalglish, Molby and McMahon, did not initially appear comfortable in this formation.  However, as with all truly great players he was able to adjust and develop his game and was, within two years of his return, once more the goalscoring fulcrum of a Championship winning team.

 
 


So, just how good was Ian Rush?  Was he as fearsome a finisher as his domestic contemporary, gurning crisp whore, Gary Lineker?  Did he match up to Geordie Messiah, Alan Shearer?  Could he really be classed ahead of Red icons like Hunt, Fowler, Owen (in the days when his integrity was still untarnished) and Torres, as our finest ever striker? 

 

For me there is no debate.  I have never seen a forward more incisive in front of goal, more selfless in support of the team aesthetic, or more reliably consistent when called on to prove his worth than Ian Rush.  It is a tribute to his quality that, in a team overflowing with genuinely world-class performers, he was the most sought after and the most feared talent, as highly regarded on the continent as he was on home shores.  He could be kicked, buffeted, barged or elbowed, marked man-to-man or targeted for intense provocation.  But, at his peak, he could not be stopped.  He just carried on doing what he did best. 

 

He scored goals.