The National - News

SALAH AND SON’S EXITS COULD ADD BIG TWIST TO TITLE BATTLE

▶ A number of key Premier League players will be unavailabl­e as they head to Afcon and the Asian Cup

- IAN HAWKEY

On the first day of Mohamed Salah’s sixth new year as a Liverpool player, he marched past another milestone. His 150th Premier League goal for the club had been briefly postponed by a penalty being saved.

He made full amends in the second half of Liverpool’s 4-2 victory over Newcastle United with two goals of his own and two superb passes in the immediate lead-in to two more.

Quite a souvenir for a fan base anticipati­ng what might be 30 days of Salah’s absence, should Egypt, spearheade­d by their iconic superstar make it to their third Africa Cup of Nations final in four attempts.

Salah certainly intends to be in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, on February 12 for the final.

“I want to win this competitio­n, would love to win it,” he said on departing a rapturous Anfield, bound for Africa. “It’s a great feeling every time I step on the field with the national team jersey, something I cannot take for granted.”

Nor can Salah take it for granted that Liverpool will still be on their elevated perch by the time he returns, as many as eight club games later, including four in the league. Thanks to an exhilarati­ng performanc­e against Newcastle, there is a cushion of three points between their top place and Aston Villa in second, but the cluster of teams around the top is still tight.

Salah was generous towards his colleagues: “We have fantastic players, who can play in my position, and who can do what I am doing,” he said.

But while Diogo Jota, on a Salah-like counter-attack, won one penalty on Monday, and Luis Diaz, with some nimble, Salah-style footwork another and Trent Alexander-Arnold produced a glorious moment of daring and enterprise from Salah’s favoured right flank, nobody departed Anfield imagining Jurgen Klopp’s team are as reliably potent without their main man.

Cody Gakpo was among those thanking him – for the sheer quality of the Salah cross that allowed him to convert Liverpool’s third even with a miscued connection. As was Curtis Jones, sweeping in a Jota centre after Salah’s superb angled pass had played him behind the Newcastle defence.

“Mo can change a game,” Klopp said, before adding a key observatio­n. The fluffed penalty had left a dominant Liverpool without reward at half-time, an anxious situation in such a knife-edge title race, one where Liverpool’s current advantage owes as much to two successive wins as to Arsenal losing twice within three days.

“Mo can improve in a game, because he’s done it hundreds of times,” said Klopp of Salah’s reaction to the saved spot-kick. “The more goals you have the more you are used to missing chances and to understand­ing what you have to do to keep going, and improving. That was what Mo did.”

There’s a subtext of advice in that remark for Darwin Nunez, the young forward whose barren spell in front of goal has been broken just once in his last 14 games. While Klopp emphasised Darwin’s coolness in supplying the pass for Salah’s first goal, the Uruguayan will now assume a share of the responsibi­lity of compensati­ng for the Egyptian’s goals.

The weight of Salah’s contributi­on is spelt out by statistics. More than half of Liverpool’s

Premier League goals so far this season have involved him as finisher or assister.

Across competitio­ns, his 18 goals from 27 appearance­s are twice as many as the next best, Jota’s nine. Ominously for Liverpool, there’s a historic tendency, during the tenure of Klopp, to be less effective in their Januarys than during their Decembers, although they have been relatively blessed in how far Salah’s

Afcon absences have previously hurt them.

The 2019 Cup of Nations was a summer tournament, played outside the domestic programme; in 2022, when Egypt suffered heartbreak, losing to Senegal on penalties in the final, Salah was away for just two Premier League matches.

The impact on this season looks potentiall­y greater. Salah’s absence is coupled with that of Wataru Endo, increasing­ly influentia­l in Liverpool’s midfield, who will be on duty with Japan at the Asian Cup in Qatar, which runs simultaneo­usly with Afcon.

Tottenham Hotspur, in fifth place, are also counting up departures, the most prominent, Son Heung-min, on his way to Qatar with South Korea.

Like Salah at Liverpool, Son is Spurs’s leading scorer this sea“When

son by a distance. He likened his imminent absence to Harry Kane’s periods out injured in the years Son and Kane used to lead Tottenham’s attack.

“When Harry was missing with injuries, I felt like I needed to step up in previous years,” said Son. “I hope our players feel they need to step up for this kind of situation. I hope everybody who is playing attacking positions can score as many goals as possible and bring us to a better position.”

Call-ups by Senegal and Mali for Afcon of Pape Matar Sarr and Yves Bissouma will also hit Spurs’s midfield.

Around 40 players from England’s top division are due to participat­e in either Afcon or the Asian Cup. Manchester United wave off goalkeeper Andre Onana with Cameroon and midfielder Sofyan Amrabat with Morocco. Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers will miss the energy and goals of Korea’s Hwang Hee-chan.

To measure the potential impact of African and Asian football’s bi-annual showpieces on the Premier League, glance only at the leaderboar­d of scorers. Salah, Son and Hwang are three of the six men to have reached double figures so far in the global playground that is elite English football.

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