Liverpool
striker Mario Balotelli says he is unfazed by criticisms of his performances
this season and that he now plays football with more verve than ever before.
The Italy
striker has yet to open his scoring account in the Premier League since joining
the ‘Reds’ from AC Milan for £16m last summer.
And with
Daniel Sturridge not expected to be back before the New Year due to a niggling
injury problem- most recently a thigh injury set-back- there is added pressure
on the 24-year-old alongside his strike partners, Rickie Lambert and Fabio
Borini, to justify Brendan Rodgers’ faith.
But
Balotelli thinks opinions of himself by those outside his inner circle are
trivial. “I don’t
need people to believe in me so long as I believe in myself,” he told Fox
Sports Australia. “The important people for me are my family and my few close
friends.” .......
Criticism
of Balotelli has centred not only around his lack of goals but the apparent
unwillingness to put in the effort on the pitch. However, the striker insists
he is working harder than ever before and rated his overall performance as 7/10
– a half-point increase on the assessment of himself two years ago.
“I run
more than before,” he added. “I’ve never run like this…so I give a half point
more. Goals, they will come. It is something that’s just not coming at the moment.”
Sturridge’s
latest injury setback has prompted a full medical investigation. The England
international has made only three appearances this season and Liverpool have
won just four out of 14 games in his absence.
Rodgers
revealed the Anfield club’s medical staff are all hands on deck to unearth the
source of his repeated problems, which has had him miss 30 of 82 matches since
joining from Chelsea in January 2013.
Sturridge,
who only returned to full training last week, suffered a tear in his thigh which
is expected to keep him on the sidelines until early 2015.
“It’s
hugely disappointing to lose a player of that quality,” the Northern Irish boss
told the Liverpool Echoe. “It happened in a session and it was quite innocuous.
He did it when he just flicked the ball, it wasn’t a shot or anything that
looked serious.
“Obviously
he felt the pain and then when the medical team told me the next day after the
scan it was disappointing.
“I think
that’s his ninth injury on that thigh from previous clubs and here so there is
an issue there somewhere.
“Most
players you’ll find want to play through an injury to get onto the field. Very
few go out there and are 100 per cent. The scan shows a slight tear just below
where he had a previous injury.”
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