Despite being some way off their scintillating best,
Liverpool were able to stroll past Southampton without any significant
problems. Nobody epitomised the cool control more than Virgil Van Dijk, who put
in a supremely composed performance against his former club to help secure the
clean sheet. At the other end, Firmino and Salah combined twice in the first
half to get the goals. More should probably have been added, but ultimately the
lead never looked in any real danger.
Southampton have become something of a thorn in Liverpool’s
side in recent times, shutting them out four times in the previous five
meetings prior to this encounter. There was consequently a sense of relief when
Firmino fired Klopp’s side in front inside ten minutes. The hosts did not seem
ready for such a high-intensity start, and Salah’s aggressive pressing forced a
turnover; the mercurial Egyptian then squared the ball cleverly for his
teammate, who fired past McCarthy. Home fans could have been forgiven for
fearing the worst at this point; Liverpool’s potent front three have routed
opponents on more than one occasion this season. However, credit has to go to
Pellegrino’s men – the goal seemed to settle them down rather than unnerve
them, and they began to exert surprising amounts of control on proceedings. The
threat to the Liverpool defence remained fairly negligible, save for a couple
of dangerous deliveries from James Ward-Prowse, but the ease with which
Southampton were stroking the ball about was certainly not typical of a team in
the relegation zone. Indeed, they comprehensively won the midfield battle: Milner,
Can and Oxlade-Chamberlain offered very little, a worrying trend in recent
games, and Southampton ended the game with more possession.
Liverpool were chasing shadows for large periods, and were eager
for the referee to blow for the half-time whistle so as to regroup. However, it
was they who struck before the break – in stark juxtaposition to a fairly
underwhelming half, the second goal was sheer quality. Matip strode forward
from the back and struck a pass into the feet of Salah, who moved it on to
Firmino before carrying on his run. The Brazilian then produced an inspired
backheel flick around his marker and back into the path of Salah, who slotted
the ball past the keeper for an astounding 22nd league goal of the
campaign. Harsh on Southampton, perhaps, but a thing of beauty: when they link
up like that, Liverpool’s attackers are amongst the best in world football.
Unusually for Liverpool, the two-goal lead seemed secure
from this point onwards. Part of this was down to the lacklustre response of
Pellegrino’s side – if the first goal invigorated them, the second deflated
them. The relegation-threatened team seemed, understandably, to be lacking in
belief. The loss of Mario Lemina early in the second half also hit them hard;
the former Juventus man had been influential in the first period. However, it
would be unfair to put the absence of threat to Karius’ goal entirely down to a
poor second half showing from Southampton; the visitors’ defence also looked
highly assured, marshalled by January signing Virgil Van Dijk. The Dutch
colossus was supremely unconcerned by his frosty reception – in the face of the
boos he got on with his defensive duties, smirking as he did so. This kind of
elite mentality has been lacking from Liverpool since Gerrard and Suarez left
in 2014; many of the personnel to pass through the doors since then have been
highly talented, but lacking in the kind of arrogant swagger that makes a
winner. It is clear that Van Dijk is going to be quite the asset for the club:
his presence in the back line is at least part of the solution to what has been
a pressing problem. There is a genuine sense that this is now a team which is
not too far from greatness.
For now, the focus is firmly on securing a second
consecutive finish in the top four. This was another step in that direction;
Liverpool have the fewest games left to play against the current top six, and
must be considered favourites to hold onto a Champions League place while their
rivals take points off each other. United’s slip-up to Newcastle earlier in the
day served to further this cause, but also to reinforce the importance of
remaining focused – particularly given the amount on the line for the myriad of
teams embroiled in a mass relegation scrap, every match is a potential banana
skin. No doubt Klopp will be doing all in his power to ensure that his players
stick to the task; the next league challenge is up against West Ham, who have
enjoyed a decent spell since David Moyes took charge. Before this, though, is
the minor matter of Liverpool’s first Champions League knockout match since
2009. The trip to Porto has been highly anticipated by fans – the draw could
certainly have been tougher, but again it would be folly to underestimate the
opposition. Motivation should certainly not be an issue: the prospect of a
place in the last eight for the winner of the tie is a highly tantalising one. One
thing is for sure: the likes of Firmino and Salah have proved that they have
the requisite quality to win any game.
No comments:
Post a Comment