Irish Independent

Right-sided issues create defensive dilemma for Kl opp ahead of City show down

- Lawrence Ostlere

LIVERPOOL had already been warned before they gave away the penalty at Selhurst Park last Saturday.

Three minutes earlier, Wilfried Zaha zoomed in behind and nearly scored. They were warned three weeks earlier too, when Marcus Rashford sliced along the same diagonal at Old Trafford.

So when Zaha made an untracked run and drew the penalty, chasing after a simple Christian Benteke header, it had been coming.

Afterwards Jurgen Klopp was reluctant to criticise his defenders, dismissing the obvious comparison with Rashford’s goal.

“Yes, the goal and the penalty and the situation before we can defend better, even when it’s very difficult,” Klopp said.

“Benteke or Lukaku in these situations are really good, and yes we have spoken about positionin­g, but it was a different position here compared to the match against Manchester United.”

Palace’s penalty didn’t matter in the end – strikes by Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah turned the match around – but these are potentiall­y defining days, with the first part of a juicy Champions League quarterfin­al against Manchester City tomorrow night before the Merseyside derby and the second leg against City all within a week.

It is a bad time for Zaha to expose the fallibilit­y in Liverpool’s right side.

Young right-back Trent Alexander-Arnold struggled, though he was partly a victim of what makes Klopp’s teams so compelling to watch – a full-back stationed so far forward that his defensive duties always begin with a scramble back home like a man who’s left the gas on.

Then there was Joel Matip; twice in the first half he sent passes aimlessly off the pitch before flailing his arms accusingly at no one in particular.

One or both could lose their place for tomorrow’s match against City at Anfield.

Klopp’s defensive dilemma is heightened by the fact that, in Leroy Sane, Liverpool face one of the most dangerous wingers in Europe – a player of undetectab­le movement, prowling off the grid, barely registerin­g a blip before beginning his assaults.

Pep Guardiola loves to stretch his opposition and that is when Liverpool are most susceptibl­e, as the individual components of

Klopp’s supercharg­ed machine become exposed.

Klopp must decide whether to stick with the 19-year-old Alexander-Arnold, throw in the unsharp Nethaniel Clyne or perhaps turn to the ever-reliable James Milner, and the manager also must choose whether to partner Matip or Dejan Lovren with Virgil van Dijk. It is a team game, but against Guardiola games tend to be won and lost in isolated duels.

“We should finish the game with 11 first of all, that would be cool,” said Klopp of his plans for City.

“We know it’s difficult. Did we think before the first (league game against City in September) that we would lose 5-0? No.

“Did we think before the second (in January) that we would win 4-3? No.

“Do we know we have a chance? Yes. But Manchester City are the favourites.

“At specific moments I think we are on a similar level but they have been much more consistent and that’s why they are about 20 points higher in the league.

“I have no problem with respecting that. But we all know that in this game it doesn’t mean too much. “We see our chance but we know it will be unbelievab­ly difficult.” Just like those two league encounters, tomorrow’s match promises plenty of goals, and how Klopp sets up his team will go some way to deciding who scores them.

It promises to be a special spectacle, above all, because these two managers only know one way to play.

“If I would have had the choice to watch a Champions League game on Wednesday, I would watch this one,” added Klopp.

“It is about tactics, but there will be fire in the game. So that’s cool.” (© Independen­t News Service)

 ??  ?? Vulnerable: Trent Alexander-Arnold
Vulnerable: Trent Alexander-Arnold

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