Belfast Telegraph

Mount strike prolongs Reds’ dismal home run

Chelsea take vital stride as Pool suffer fifth straight Anfield loss

- By Melissa Reddy

CHELSEA confidentl­y advanced their Champions League ambitions while slicing through Liverpool’s, spearing them to a fifth consecutiv­e defeat at Anfield for the first time in the club’s history.

Thomas Tuchel’s men were the superior side in all respects and never looked in danger of conceding, let alone succumbing to the malfunctio­ning champions.

Mason Mount’s individual brilliance was enough to decide the fixture, but Chelsea’s performanc­e was worth more than a solitary goal.

Having been compared to Jurgen Klopp for over a decade, never shifting his shadow at Mainz and Borussia Dortmund, Thomas Tuchel finally had the measure of his countryman.

The affair was not solely a pitting together of two managers whose careers have been juxtaposed, but teams with contrastin­g strengths that share the same issue and objective.

Where Chelsea had built their unbeaten streak under Tuchel on defensive solidity, with Takumi Minamino the only opposition player to have scored against them, Liverpool have had no rearguard stability.

Fabinho, fresh from a long lay-off, returned at centre-back for the injured Nathaniel Phillips. The Brazilian’s partnershi­p with Ozan Kabak was the club’s 20th of the season in the heart of defence.

With Champions League football on the line, and only a point separating them as well as Tottenham and Everton both securing pivotal victories ahead of kick off here, there was no margin to fluff lines at Anfield.

To that end, Tuchel opted to field Timo Werner because, as he emphasised, “Speed. Speed. Speed. Speed against the high line.”

The Germany internatio­nal had two chances in the opening 20 minutes. He first expertly controlled a Ben Chilwell diagonal pass, worked a yard of space and directed a hide just over.

Thiago then misjudged the bounce of a Cesar Azpilicuet­a hook and Werner found himself left unattended by the penalty spot, but couldn’t get good enough contact to trouble Alisson.

The striker thought it was third time lucky when he was sent clear after Jorginho was allowed to split Liverpool’s midfield with a simple pass.

Alisson rushed out to clear, but Werner reached the ball first, rounded him and rolled into the net despite a desperate last-ditch dive from Kabak.

VAR had ruled he was offside in one of the calls that make you wonder if you even know what football is anymore.

By this point, Liverpool’s best chances had fallen to Sadio Mane. He may have gotten a penalty had he gone down after Andreas Christense­n stuck out a lazy leg. Later, he could only connect with air when Mohamed Salah fed a delightful cross into the box from the right.

Liverpool were too passive and predictabl­e.

Their use of a high line without putting pressure on the man in possession was a tactic begging to be taken to task and Chelsea were happy to oblige. Their vulnerabil­ity to the high ball was an invitation to hurt them and the visitors rubbed their hands.

When their breakthrou­gh came, it wasn’t via Werner but the gifted Mount. Liverpool had lost possession, N’golo Kante allowed Chelsea to transition rapidly with a ball over the top that the midfielder collected, dropping his shoulder to motion past Fabinho.

He created more space for himself with a few touches, Liverpool players all backing off, before picking his spot past Alisson in the far corner.

The Merseyside­rs started the second period with more urgency. Roberto Firmino dribbled down the right, with his flick hitting the raised arm of Kante. VAR wasn’t interested in appeals for handball in one of the calls that make you wonder if you even know what handball is anymore.

Fabinho headed wide from the first corner Liverpool won, but Chelsea once again displayed more verve in their offensive play.

Alisson parried Ben Chilwell’s shot, which fell to Hakim Ziyech. His effort was darting in towards

the bottom right, but Fabinho cleared off the line.

Kloppthrew­ondiogojot­aand Alex Oxlade-chamberlai­n, but from the moment Mount scored, there only looked to be one winner. Forget a goal, the defending champions only registered their first effort on target on 85 minutes through a Gini Wijnaldum header.

Chelsea’s trajectory under Tuchel—unbeatenin­10matches across all competitio­ns — spells mixing it with Europe’s elite.

Liverpool’s immediate reality is far more bleak.

LIVERPOOL: Alisson, Alexander-arnold, Fabinho, Kabak, Robertson, Thiago (Milner, 80 mins), Wijnaldum, Jones (Jota, 62 mins), Salah (Oxlade-chamberlai­n, 62 mins), Firmino, Mane.

Unused subs: Keita, Adrian, Shaqiri, Origi, R Williams, N Williams.

CHELSEA: Mendy, Azpilicuet­a, Christense­n, Rudiger, James, Kante, Jorginho, Chilwell, Ziyech (Pulisic, 66 mins), Mount (Kovacic, 81 mins), Werner (Havertz, 90 mins). Unused subs: Kepa, Alonso, Zouma, Giroud, Hudson-odoi, Emerson

Referee: Martin Atkinson

Man of the match: Mason Mount

Match rating: 6/10

(© The Independen­t)

 ??  ?? Jurgen Klopp
Jurgen Klopp
 ??  ?? On the slide:
Mason Mount celebrates the goal that made it five home defeats in a row for Liverpool
On the slide: Mason Mount celebrates the goal that made it five home defeats in a row for Liverpool

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