Five things we learned from watching football this weekend | John Ashdown

Liverpool could be nervously looking over their shoulder, Sam Allardyce deserves more credit and Leeds aren’t chokers after all

Liverpool may be a long time gone

While Chelsea, 8-0 victors over Wigan Athletic, cavorted around Stamford Bridge with the Premier League trophy, Steven Gerrard, whose Liverpool side had shambled to a 0-0 draw at relegated Hull City, was scrambling through a mini-pitch invasion at the KC Stadium as a few overamorous Tigers fans attempted to cop a feel or make off with his captain’s armband. It was a finale somehow befitting of Liverpool’s season and not exactly the finale that the England midfielder would have pictured.

Arguably the crucial self-destructive period in the Reds’ campaign came between the end of September and Christmas when they picked up 12 points from 11 games (fewer, for example, than Portsmouth), although inconsistency has blighted them throughout – Rafael Benítez’s side won four games back to back in August and September, but won consecutive league games only three more times after that early spurt.

The only solution is an overhaul. Seventh is their lowest league finish since 1999 (and it’s a ‘depth’ they have plunged to only three times in the past 44 years). The team that ended the last season of the century under Gérard Houllier – Friedel, Staunton, Song, Matteo, Carragher, Berger, Redknapp, Ince, Leonhardsen, McManaman, Riedle – was rapidly broken up, the Frenchman spending over £30m the following season in an attempt to reinvigorate the club. Though it didn’t get them much closer to the title (they were 25 points off the pace in 1998-99 and 24 in 1999-00) it did at least bring a return to the top four.

The problem for Liverpool is that Benítez is unlikely to have even that fairly paltry sum (in Premier League terms at least) to spend this summer. With Manchester City revving up for another spree and Tottenham, already a better team than Liverpool, likely to be bolstered by an influx of Champions League money, those at Anfield may be nervously looking over their collective shoulder next year. If the season had started at Christmas, Everton would be third …

Sol Campbell shouldn’t go to the World Cup

Though it’s an indictment of the very average seasons endured by the likes of Joleon Lescott and Matthew Upson that Fabio Capello should even be considering England World Cup recalls for Jamie Carragher and Sol Campbell, the latter’s display yesterday should put the final nail in that coffin.

The Arsenal defender creaked against Fulham – and should have given away a penalty when compounding his heading error and grappling with Clint Dempsey in the box. It was always going to be an outside chance anyway, but Gary Cahill, Phil Jagielka or Michael Dawson have all done more to earn their chance.

Spurs may be in the Champions League but they’re still Spurs

Whisper it, but the Fiver might have got it wrong. Tottenham Hotspur really are still funny. Which other team could qualify for the Champions League and, in the same week, become the first team since West Ham in February to get beaten at Burnley? The last visiting team to concede four at Turf Moor? Bristol City, almost exactly a year ago.

Sam Allardyce deserves a bit more credit

Last summer the writing seemed to be on the wall for Blackburn. Rovers had finished 15th, as bad as it has been for them in the Premier League since relegation in 1999, and it had taken a Sam Allardyce escape act to save them from the drop. Roque Santa Cruz left for Manchester City, Stephen Warnock high-tailed it to Aston Villa, the reliable Andre Ooijer headed back to Holland and PSV Eindhoven, Tugay called it a day. Even perennial superbsub Matty Derbyshire took himself off to Olympiakos.

Yet Allardyce has turned his team around and steered them into 10th. Yes, 10th, ostensibly hardly the sort of finish to prompt the popping of champagne corks and ticker tape parades, but for a club of Blackburn’s side (and, more importantly, wealth) a real achievement. Despite the relative flop of last summer’s big purchase, £6m Nikola Kalinic, who has mustered two league goals all season, they’ve ended up level on points with Birmingham, and if Alex McLeish deserves a huge amount of credit for leading Blues into the top half on the back of promotion (and he does), then Allardyce deserves a bit too.

It can be eye-pokingly painful to watch at times, but in a league where cash, money and dosh are the holy trinity, the Rovers hierarchy will be more than happy to overlook aesthetics. “The difference those results make is four places in the league and four times £800,000,” Allardyce said yesterday. “That’s a big difference to our limited budget.”

Leeds United aren’t the chokers we thought they were

3 January 2010 was a good day to be a Leeds fan. United sat eight points clear at the top of League One with a game in hand on second-placed Norwich. They’d lost just once all season and, to top it off, Manchester United had just been vanquished at Old Trafford in the FA Cup.

But between the turn of the year and the start of April, 16 games yielded just 15 points. That run destroyed any hope of claiming the title and they went into Saturday’s final game of the season needing a win to be sure of clinging on to automatic promotion and returning to the division they departed through the trapdoor in 2007.

On Saturday they went down to 10 men – Max Gradel having utterly lost the plot – and then 1-0 down against Bristol Rovers three minutes into the second half at Elland Road, just as Charlton took a 2-0 lead at Oldham. At that point, with Millwall and Swindon drawing, the Addicks were heading for promotion. Jon Howson equalised at Elland Road, but just after the hour Gordon Greer’s own goal put Millwall 2-1 up, the Lions into the promotion places and sparked a mini-pitch invasion at the Den.

That might have been that. But within seconds Jermaine Beckford, the beneficiary of a horrendous goalkeeping error, bundled in the decisive Leeds goal and brought rapture to West Yorkshire. So Leeds aren’t chokers after all. The Championship’s top 10 next season is not an impossibility.

Premier LeagueLeague OneLiverpoolSol CampbellTottenham HotspurSam AllardyceBlackburn RoversLeeds UnitedJohn Ashdownguardian.co.uk

Heurelho Gomes an anxiety for Tottenham before Manchester City game

• Goalkeeper injured groin in dying moments of win over Bolton
• Second-choice Carlo Cudicini is also injured

Heurelho Gomes will represent a major selection gamble for Tottenham Hotspur if he plays at Manchester City on Wednesday night in a game that may determine fourth place, as he was unable to train today and is not expected to do so tomorrow.

The Brazilian goalkeeper injured his groin in the dying moments of Tottenham’s 1-0 victory over Bolton Wanderers on Saturday and the scans have shown there is no tear. Harry Redknapp, Spurs’ manager, is determined to give him as long as possible to recover and he hopes to see him make a marked improvement to declare his fitness.

The manager faces an anxious wait, though, and Gomes’s reaction on Saturday did not bode well. Having landed awkwardly, he immediately gestured that he needed to be substituted, suggesting that he knew he had pulled the muscle.

Redknapp is already without his second-choice goalkeeper, Carlo Cudicini, through serious injury and, if Gomes were to fail a fitness test, the manager would be forced to start his third choice, Ben Alnwick, who has made only two first-team appearances for the club. He was criticised after the first of them, the Carling Cup semi-final second-leg at Burnley last season, which Spurs lost 3-2 but progressed on aggregate.

Tottenham are hopeful that Ledley King, the captain and key central defender, will be fit although, as ever, they will not know until the last moment. King cannot usually play in midweek after a Saturday game and he played the 90 minutes against Bolton. Redknapp would have taken him off if the team had been in a comfortable position but Bolton were alive until the end.

There were optimistic noises, though, about King’s prospects for Eastlands, where a place in next season’s Champions League will effectively be at stake. He was not over-exerted in terms of running the defensive channels against Bolton while Redknapp man-managed him in the second half, instructing him not to go up for Tottenham corners. The club’s medics have been able to ease some of the swelling in his troublesome knee and the player himself does not feel too bad.

Redknapp’s other injury concern, the full-back Vedran Corluka, who has missed the last four games with ankle trouble, has had an injection in an attempt to settle the problem. In his absence, though, Younes Kaboul has deputised admirably.

Spurs have made a habit of falling frustratingly short in the past but Peter Crouch, the striker, said that it would be different this time. “That’s changed,” he said. “We have gone to places this season where maybe in the past we would have gone under but now we have a lot more physical and mental strength, the resilience is there. We have got results even when we have had to dig in and fight. Maybe that has not been the case in previous years. Having come this far, it would be a great disappointment if we didn’t make it. Perhaps the hardest part is getting over the line because no one here has done it before.”

Crouch’s mother, Jane, and all of her side of the family are City fans and he has been charged with securing tickets for them. “It will make it even sweeter if we can qualify, knowing it’s at the expense of City,” Crouch said, with a smile.

Tottenham HotspurManchester CityPremier LeagueDavid Hytnerguardian.co.uk

Harry Redknapp says Tottenham can seal Champions League spot

• Manager says his players have proved their resilience
• Redknapp says team has character of 1961 Double side

Harry Redknapp believes this is the year in which Tottenham Hotspur will lose the “underachievers” tag that has dogged them for more than a generation. The manager says he is in charge of the most resilient Spurs side since the one that did the Double nearly 50 years ago and is confident they will hold their nerve to finish fourth and qualify for the Champions League.

Despite high hopes and hefty investment Tottenham have never finished higher than fifth in the Premier League. Redknapp, however, feels the club’s current players have the mental toughness other Spurs sides have lacked and will not slip from their perch in fourth place, despite being chased by Manchester City, Aston Villa and Liverpool.

A defeat at Sunderland three weeks ago and a surprising loss to Portsmouth in the FA Cup semi‑final at Wembley spawned fears among supporters that another promising season was going to peter out. But Redknapp has been