Liverpool avoided an embarrassing early exit from the FA Cup
with a fairly comfortable win in their third round replay away at Plymouth. The
scoreline ended up being a narrow one, but the visitors looked in control for
most of the game – no mean feat for what was not far away from being an u23s
side. Some of the young players to whom Klopp gave a chance have come under
criticism following the match: this is extremely harsh. To put in a
professional display and come away with the desired result against a senior
football league side desperate for a result is a testament to the calibre of
the players.
As in the initial game at Anfield, Klopp selected a
second-string starting eleven. This included a handful of senior players –
Origi, Sturridge, Coutinho, Moreno and Lucas – but was largely made up of
products of the youth system. In fact, it was the youngsters who impressed the
most in the early exchanges: Alexander-Arnold and Woodburn looked particularly
assured, whereas Moreno floundered and Sturridge and Origi struggled to
influence the game. Daniel Sturridge must be getting increasingly frustrated;
he has now failed to take the last few chances he has been given to impress,
and in a squad with as much attacking talent as this one he cannot bank on
getting too many more. Fortunately, his lack of goals was compensated for
through the most unlikely of candidates – Lucas Leiva of all people opened the
scoring midway through the first half. Coutinho showed the benefits of having a
competent set piece taker back in the side, and Lucas got on the end of his
teasing corner to power the ball into the net. It was his first goal in seven
years, and in the end proved to be the goal that saw Klopp’s side safely
through to the fourth round.
There were chances to add to the lead – Origi had the most
blatant of these, seeing a tame penalty saved late on. However, the failure to
extend the gap never really looked like being punished. Alexander-Arnold had to
make one excellent last-ditch challenge and Karius had to be on his toes to
keep out a sweetly struck long-range effort, but on the whole Plymouth were
contained professionally and effectively. This makes some of the criticism of
the performance even more odd: it wasn’t the most exciting, end-to-end game of
all time, but if anything this is a testament to the temperament of our young
talents. The questions asked of Sturridge and Origi are a little more valid –
they would undoubtedly have wanted to have made a bigger impact against a
League 2 outfit – but facing a deep line who undoubtedly had specific
instructions to keep close tabs on them, the performances were certainly
forgivable. In any case, performance was always going to be secondary in this
fixture; nobody really wanted the extra game in an already congested schedule,
so the goal was simply to get through it with minimal fuss.
The next round sees Liverpool host Wolverhampton Wanderers.
It will be interesting to see what kind of team Klopp puts out – it will be an
even tougher challenge for the young players than Plymouth, but it seems likely
that they’ll be given a chance. Perhaps Harry Wilson will have won himself a
long-awaited start: he has been in excellent form for the under 23s side all
season, and impressed after coming on in the Plymouth game. Whatever the exact
personnel, on paper at least Liverpool have been handed a strong chance of
progressing further. The FA Cup is clearly not the priority, but it serves the
dual function of blooding youth talent and giving the team a shot at some
silverware. In the meantime, Liverpool return to the test of league action: a
win against free-falling Swansea is a must in order to keep title ambitions
alive.
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter @JamesMartin013
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter @JamesMartin013
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