Liverpool extended their excellent home form against Everton
with a comprehensive 3-1 victory. Klopp’s men were clearly superior, and at
times left their opponents embarrassed. Certainly the visitors from across
Stanley Park have cause for some embarrassment: resigned to being outplayed,
they rapidly resorted to trying to take chunks out of their Liverpool
counterparts. A casualty of this physical play was Sadio Mane, whose injury
marred an otherwise wholly satisfying victory.
It was Mane who opened the scoring, picking up where he left
off with his late winner in the reverse fixture at Goodison. He cut inside and
ran parallel to the defensive line, drawing Everton’s back three hopelessly out
of position. While they tried to reorganise and cover the central run of
Coutinho, Mane unleashed an early shot – the left-footed drive caught everyone
unawares, and Robles could only watch as the ball ran past him into the far
corner. It was a goal that highlighted exactly what Mane brings to the side:
directness, ingenuity and a clinical streak. There is no denying that he will
be sorely missed if the injury he later picked up results in a prolonged
absence - January demonstrated just how integral the former Southampton man has
become to Klopp’s side.
Everton, too, are currently struggling with injuries. Given
some of the tackles they put in yesterday it is hard to feel too sympathetic
for their plight, but in any case a series of injuries on international duty
resulted in Pennington featuring in the back line. Briefly, things were going
very well for him. Despite almost total Liverpool domination he managed to bag
an equaliser, capitalising on more dreadful defending of the second ball at a
set piece to slot home. His jubilation turned to frustration just three minutes
later, however; Coutinho, who looked revitalised in this fixture, left Gueye
for dead before cutting inside Pennington and curling a beauty into the top
corner. The Brazilian will need to maintain this kind of form if Liverpool are
to cope with any long-term Mane absence – it is at least a possibility that
Coutinho was only able to thrive because of the makeshift nature of Everton’s
defence, but hopefully he has found the confidence to replicate this kind of
magical form against better opposition.
It was at this point that the nasty challenges really
started to fly. Of course everyone wants to see a bit of passion in the derby,
but that means committing to 50/50s: it does not mean flying in with specific
intention to injure. A Williams stamp on Can and a potential leg-breaker on
Lovren by Barkley were just two of a number of unpleasant incidents – neither
player should have been allowed to finish the game. To their credit, Liverpool
maintained their composure; they refused to be dragged down, and instead
continued to outclass their local rivals. The third goal looked an
inevitability, and it came through substitute Divock Origi. As with Coutinho’s
performance, this goal gives cause for some hope that Klopp’s team might be
able to cope without Mane this time around – it took the Belgian striker barely
any time to step up and increase the lead. It was a good goal as well: Coutinho
slotted him in with a lovely pass, and Origi blasted it home beyond a very
suspect Robles.
Coutinho, who featured a lot for Brazil over the
international break, was given a well-earned break with about twenty minutes to
play. Alexander-Arnold replaced him: this is the first time he has been given
such an attacking role in the first team, and he thrived. Perhaps he, too, was
making a pitch to replace Mane in the event of a serious injury – if so he gave
Klopp food for thought, managing three shots on target in his cameo. The first
of these was particularly good, forcing an excellent stop out of Robles. Derby
experience is the next step on the road for the youngster, who is slowly but
surely being eased into first team action. Many young players that have made it
to the fringes of the first team in recent times, but Alexander-Arnold looks
like he has what it takes to cement a regular starting spot before too long.
He could not extend the lead, however, and the game ended
3-1. This was not really a reflection of the superiority of the hosts, but they
will nonetheless be satisfied with a thoroughly professional win. Special
mention should be given to Lovren, who kept Lukaku almost entirely quiet – the
Croatian has his faults, but has always excelled against physical forwards.
Lucas, too, was surprisingly impressive back in his natural role of defensive
midfielder: even his more vocal critics were forced to concede that he had a
good game. The challenge now is to maintain the momentum: with United dropping
points as well, the top four is starting to look very achievable. Although the
lack of title challenge is disappointing given how Liverpool began the
campaign, securing a Champions League spot would undeniably be a success.
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter @JamesMartin013
-James Martin
Follow me on Twitter @JamesMartin013
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