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8th November 2014
05:38am GMT

The Sky Sports' commentator/pundit has first-hand experience at being left out for certain games and he explains how his manager, Alex Ferguson, let the players know about being rested.
He remembered: "The furore took me back to when I was playing – especially in my later years – and the standing joke among some of the older ones. where one, or sometimes a few of us, would be left out almost every week.
"The manager’s policy on rotation was always that every single player would have the situation explained to him, partly to get him to buy into the wider strategy."
Naivety is a key issue that Neville raises in his column as he hammers home the importance for Liverpool to play with maturity this weekend and he points to last season's fixture with Chelsea at Anfield and the home game with Real Madrid as examples of Liverpool's naive state of mind.
Neville does offer hope for Liverpool though as he goes on to praise Rodgers' ability to adapt.
He said: "Last April, when they were going for the title, there was this belief that they could roll over everybody, destroy everybody. Chelsea did a job on them.
"In the home game against Real Madrid there was a drop in physical intensity after 20 minutes, where they tried to go punch for punch with Madrid. I think Rodgers felt that was the moment Liverpool had to change, and in these last two games we have seen him reacting to circumstance, to make the team more solid"
Neville's final point is a contemplative one as he wonders about the potential for British managers to reach the highest level in the modern football era in England.
He muses:"If every time there is a rough patch a young manager is battered, how are we ever going to reach the point where a British coach can match a Mourinho or an Ancelotti?"Explore more on these topics: