The Jerusalem Post

Little tiff among Liverpool forwards leads English soccer’s Round 4 takeaways

- •By SIMON EVANS

LONDON (Reuters) – Sadio Mane’s stroppy reaction to being taken off late in Saturday’s 3-0 Liverpool win over Burnley on Saturday in Premier League action – due to Mohamed Salah’s failure to pass to him in a goal-scoring position – grabbed plenty of media attention.

Manager Jurgen Klopp’s lightheart­ed reaction to questions about the incident was a textbook example of how to defuse a negative story, but it was much easier to pull off given that the German was not worried by the incident.

If the biggest problem facing your team is one of your prolific strikers being a little greedy for a goal when you are 3-0 up, then things are going pretty smoothly.

The fact is that the trident of Mane, Salah and Roberto Firmino, is absolutely deadly and unique in the modern game.

Plenty of teams play with two “narrow wingers” alongside a center-forward, but Liverpool’s trio are all genuine strikers, with brilliant ability in front of goal.

Firmino became the first Brazilian to reach 50 goals in the Premier League and he showed why he is so fundamenta­l to the way Liverpool play.

With no “number 10” creative midfielder in the Liverpool system, Firmino drifts deep into the space between the opposition defense and midfield and has the skill to deliver the killer balls as well as find openings for himself.

When Firmino is not on the field, you realize his central importance to Klopp’s league-leader.

Leicester is back

Two wins out of four, including Saturday’s impressive 3-1 victory over Bournemout­h, have Leicester in third place and it would be no surprise if it stays around the top-four this season.

After its remarkable title win in 2016, the club lost its way with Claudio Ranieri, Craig Shakespear­e and Claude Puel all failing to succeed.

But former Liverpool and Celtic boss Brendan Rodgers has had an instant impact at the club and built a team which plays attractive and effective soccer.

It is a very different team, playing a different style, to the one which provided that astonishin­g season but there is at least one element that is the same – striker Jamie Vardy.

His opening goal, a long range lob, brought back memories of that campaign and with him on form then the Foxes are surely in the hunt for a Champions League spot.

VAR goes AWOL

The worst decision of the season so far was the ruling out of Henry Lansbury’s late potential equalizer for Aston Villa at Crystal Palace on Saturday.

Referee Kevin Friend got it all wrong when he penalized Jack Grealish for “simulation,” along with a booking for the midfielder.

Under VAR regulation­s, the video officials were not allowed to review the goal because the referee had blown his whistle before Lansbury fired home. That is an error in the VAR protocol which is certainly “clear and obvious.”

Blades show more steel

Two of the three promoted teams, Villa and Norwich City, are already inside the relegation zone, another reminder of just how tough it is to make the move up to Premier League level.

Sheffield United was the least fancied of the new arrivals, but its five points, including the 2-2 comeback draw at Chelsea, showed that while Villa spent the money and Norwich has charmed the purists, it is the Yorkshire side, well led by Chris Wilder, which has found the more effective approach so far.

Serie A sweeping up United ‘rejects’

Italian clubs seem to be the favored destinatio­n

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