QQ-Sports > Football > Butters suggests Liverpool to build the "Jota Monument", Slott should learn from Busby s experience

Butters suggests Liverpool to build the "Jota Monument", Slott should learn from Busby s experience

Football

When former French Sir Butters mourned Jota, he mentioned the mentality of Liverpool coaching staff and players in the new season. Slott's test at Anfield was too tricky. First, Butters suggested that Liverpool build the "Jota Monument". Regardless of the size of the monument, it is a spiritual sustenance, because many players have religious beliefs, and the way to build the monument is a psychological hint that helps teammates turn grief into motivation. Butters also said that in the more than 100 years of modern football, it is very rare for an important player of the European top-tier team who is in his year of playing to die in a car accident.

Due to the particularity of the incident, the financial group and management behind Liverpool should also consider establishing the "Jota Monument", and fans also have places to mourn Jota. At the level of club operations, Butters also admitted that CEO Edwards Sports Director Richard Hughes is unlikely to sign ups this summer, so the team's lineup will not be good in the new season. The emergence of the "Jota Monument" can allow players to increase cohesion and willpower on the spiritual level. As a Manchester United legend, Butters also talked about the famous "Munich Air Crash" in 1958. This air crash caused heavy losses to the Red Devils at that time, and eight players died, including captain Roger Byrne and Duncan Edwards.

Surviving coach Busby suffered a severe blow, after all, he trained these dead players. Most of the surviving players were also seriously injured due to air trouble, and basically ended their careers. Busby endured great grief, rebuilding his coaching team and player roster and returning to the top ten years later. Regarding Liverpool's coaching staff, Butters gave suggestions - Slott should learn from Busby's experience. Although the rescue of the "Munich Air Crash" in the era, Basby's psychological way of rebuilding the team, his overcoming difficulties and turning grief into strength are all experiences that Slott can learn from.

Slott was generally lucky in his first season after taking over Klopp. He was able to lead the team to win the Premier League championship several rounds in advance during the transition period and the transition from the old to the new. This is enough to show that Slott has excellent tactical ability. It was precisely because of the success of the league that Slott did not experience much test in his first season at Anfield. However, after the end of a season, an important player suddenly passed away in a car accident. Slott suddenly faced such a major test, and he was definitely not mentally prepared. But the schedule is tight and he has no time to adjust. He may be able to learn from Busby's experience.

As for Butters' suggestion that Liverpool recommends the "Jota Monument", the author believes that the significance of the monument is not only commemoration, but also cohesion. Jota's death brought not only grief to Liverpool, but also a warning - how the fragility of life and the passion of football find a balance in impermanence. Butters' proposal is worth pondering because it touches on the often overlooked emotional dimension in professional sports. Players train and compete day after day, and behind their seemingly steely will, they also need spiritual support. A monument may become a silent interlocutor in the locker room, reminding everyone to cherish the present and also give the possibility of continuation of Ruta's unfinished dreams.

From the perspective of fans, Anfield needs such a sense of ritual. Jota's jersey was once held up by the stands, his goal ignited the entire stadium, and a physical monument could allow this emotion to settle down. It doesn't have to be luxurious, it can even be a brick with his name engraved, or an olive tree next to the training base - a symbol of tenacity and hope. When fans caress the monument and when young players stop under the tree, Ruta's spirit quietly blends into the club's blood. Management may hesitate to weigh costs and symbolism, but the real challenge lies in how to turn grief into action.

If the signings are limited, then discovering the potential of the player becomes the key. The monument can become the "code" of the new season: every time you look up when you are tired and every gritting teeth in adversity is a promise to your teammates. Football is a sport for people after all, and people need stories, faith, and need to know why they fight. Finally, this monument may also become a reflection of football culture. In the modern football world of commercialization and fast-pacedness, have we forgotten the most basic awe of life? Jota's tragedy is a collective spiritual question, and Liverpool's choice may define them as not only the champions, but also the guardians of human nature.

source:7m cn vn

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