Yesterday, Liverpool
travelled to the Liberty Stadium in Wales
to face Swansea City . Before the match they were 3rd,
level on points with Arsenal and Tottenham. Any result better than a loss would
put them back on top of the league. After Swansea ’s
poor start to the season and our strong one, most Liverpool
fans were hoping for a 4th successive win, but it wasn’t to be.
After a match jam-packed with action, the game finished 2-2.
It was the worst start Liverpool could have hoped for. After less than 2
minutes, Swansea
managed to get in front. After completely mis-kicking the ball, ex-Liverpool
player Jonjo Shelvey kept ploughing through the defence, unchallenged by
anyone. Eventually, having run deep into the penalty area, he curled the ball
past Simon Mignolet. Debutant Mamadou Sakho was the nearest to Shelvey just
before he placed the ball in the net, but did not make a challenge, looking
fearful of conceding a penalty. This is a problem the team as a whole need to
work on- if the alternative is conceding and the ball is there to be won, you
have to try and dispossess your opponent. It was a very scrappy goal to concede
from Liverpool’s point of view; not a nice way to end the run of zero goals
conceded in the season.
Liverpool pushed on from
this, and were soon all over Swansea .
They were dominating possession, and more importantly were creating some good
chances. Debutant Victor Moses was playing especially well, showing some great
skill and putting good balls into the box. Liverpool
eventually got their reward, though it would be untrue to say that it came
through pretty build-up play! It was, once again, put on a plate for Liverpool courtesy of Jonjo Shelvey. Another poor pass
was picked off, this time by Moses, who fired it into the bottom corner, well
beyond Vorm’s reach. The half ended without further incident, and Liverpool went into the break with a deserved 2-1 lead.
It could well have been more, but Swansea
had defended well (with the exception of Shelvey) and Vorm had made some great
stops, including blocking a point-blank header from Sturridge.
In the second half, everything
went downhill. Swansea
came out on the front foot, and stayed there. The situation was not helped by
the forced departure of Philippe Coutinho on 52 minutes, due to an injury
caused by a foul challenge from Ashley Williams. The little Brazilian had been
playing well, and his replacement, Aspas, never really got into the game. This
raises more questions as to whether the Spaniard can cut it in the Premier
League, but that’s another story (see my article on that here: http://jamesmartinblogs.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/iago-aspas-early-impressions.html). Swansea
looked a constant threat and, almost inevitably, they managed to equalise with
just under 30 minutes to go. Shelvey was key in the scoring of the goal
(surprise, surprise), heading it down perfectly for Michu to tuck home. Liverpool made no attempt to get back in front, and in
all honesty were quite lucky not to concede again. Based on the game as a whole
a draw was probably the fairest result, but Liverpool
were simply outplayed in the 2nd half.
To sum up, the result in
itself is nothing to complain about, but Liverpool ’s
second half performance is worrying. They have looked weaker in the second
period than the first in all of the games so far this season, and it leaves us
vulnerable. At the moment nobody has read too much into it, as the results are
going our way and we are top of the league, but if we want to maintain a
genuine challenge for 4th or higher then we will have to start
sustaining performance for the full 90 minutes. If our team had better stamina
then they would have beaten Swansea ,
and come the end of the season 2 points may be all that separates us and the
Champions League. Even though this result is acceptable in isolation, its wider
implications are not good. We cannot have many more games like this. The harsh
truth is, if we want to become one of the ‘big’ Premier League teams again,
we’re going to have to start playing like one for the full 90 minutes.
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter
@JamesMartin013
No comments:
Post a Comment