Daily Mirror

Wolf in FA clothing

- LINED UP BY JAMES NURSEY

The Anfield version split up in January when Philippe Coutinho got his dream move to Barcelona.

Remaining members Mo Salah, Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane have continued to make sweet music in the Premier League and in Europe.

But now the Fab Four could be back in business with Xherdan Shaqiri pulling the strings.

Shaqiri has been outstandin­g in Liverpool’s last two games, operating in midfield and supplying the bullets for the Reds’ trio of hotshots.

The Swiss Mighty Mouse brings a creativity to Liverpool’s midfield they have lacked since Coutinho left and while Adam Lallana has battled injury.

Shaqiri made the second goal for Salah against Red Star Belgrade on Wednesday with a lay-off described by manager Jurgen Klopp as “genius”.

Shaqiri, 27, is pleased to receive Klopp’s praise and feels he is repaying the faith the German has shown in him.

“I want to thank him for giving me the chance,” he said.

“I have the quality and vision to give good passes and you can see that I wanted to give another good performanc­e. I am enjoying the football here and you can see that on the pitch.”

Shaqiri has had to work for his chance at Liverpool after a testing start to his Anfield career – the Champions League win over Red Star was only his fourth start.

He was berated by Klopp on the pitch after Liverpool’s Carabao Cup defeat by Chelsea last month and questions were asked if he could fit into the German’s high-tempo style.

Shaqiri (celebratin­g, below, with Firmino) failed to establish himself at Inter Milan and Bayern Munich and critics suggested Liverpool was too big a step for him following his £13million switch from Stoke.

But he has shown he can satisfy Klopp by putting in the hard yards and says he is settling into his new midfield role.

“The coach wants us to track back,” he said. “He wants us to counter-press and, of course, from that we scored the first goal.

“Sometimes it is not simple because the manager changes a few things but you have to do your best.

“This is an interestin­g position for me. I played the last 10 or 15 minutes against Chelsea like this.

“You can see I don’t often play this position but maybe I have more of the ball and I can make good passes.” PAUL LAMBERT is set to be the controvers­ial choice to take charge at Ipswich.

The former boss of rivals Norwich has had talks with Tractor Boys owner Marcus Evans following the axing of Paul Hurst yesterday.

Hurst, 44, was sacked five months after joining from League One Shrewsbury after just one win in his first 14 Championsh­ip games.

Lambert has been out of work since failing to keep Stoke in the Premier League last season.

He will be tasked with preventing Ipswich dropping into English football’s third tier for the first time in 62 years.

But some Town fans have already voiced their disapprova­l of 49-year-old Lambert because of his links with their neighbours.

Hurst, 44, oversaw a 2-0 defeat at Leeds on Wednesday and leaves with Ipswich bottom of the table – four points from safety. Jose Mourinho and Jurgen Klopp preview their sides’ weekend clashes.

Who to keep hold of and who to get rid of in your teams. WOLVES sporting director Kevin Thelwell is under considerat­ion to replace Dan Ashworth at the Football Associatio­n. Thelwell has done an impressive job at Wolves and there have been admiring glances from the FA who have begun the search for a new technical director – with Ashworth leaving to join Brighton. Tottenham’s John McDermott and the vastly experience­d Mike Rigg are among the other contenders.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom