On Wednesday, Liverpool
hosted Norwich City . A win in their previous game had
seen Norwich climb out of the bottom 3, and
Liverpool came into the fixture on the back of a shock 3-1 defeat to Hull City .
This did not seem to knock their confidence too much, as they eventually came
out 5-1 winners in a victory inspired by Luis Suarez.
14 minutes later, he netted
again. This time it came from a corner- Gerrard looked as if he was going to
header, but pulled away at the last second. This caused confusion in the Norwich defence, and
Suarez was on hand to slam the ball emphatically into the roof of the net.
Though not in the same league as his first, this goal required a large amount
of skill, as it was tough to keep the bouncing ball down. It would have been
easy to completely sky it (just ask Torres), but Suarez made it look easy.
Just 6 minutes later, he was
at it again! On 35 minutes he completed his hat-trick, and completed it in
style. Having flicked the ball brilliantly over a defender, he then shaped to
shoot. Instead of hitting it straight away he delayed it slightly, creating
more space. Once he’d got the space he was after, he cannoned it home into the
corner, leaving poor Ruddy helpless once more. It was arguably even better than
the first goal, and that’s really saying something.
Contrary to what the article
may have had you believe so far, Suarez was not the only Liverpool
player to make a contribution. Coutinho was fantastic, creating a lot of
chances and dribbling round defenders with ease at times. Johnson also had a
good first half, though he faded off as the game went on. Sterling was very lively, and consistently
made extremely selfless runs and passes. His reward was a goal and assist. That
said, Suarez will rightly take all of the plaudits, because he was just
sensational. It was quite possibly the best individual performance I have ever
witnessed, and if we can hold on to him in January it should be regarded as the
biggest achievement of our season to date.
Obviously it would be
unreasonable to expect such stellar performances from Suarez every week, but
the fact that he was able to so emphatically step up to fill the void left by
Daniel Sturridge is promising. It shows that we can win, and win well, without
him- hopefully we’ll be able to retain our place in the top 4 during the time
he is sidelined.
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter
@JamesMartin013
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