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Liverpool’s title bid hanging by a thread after derby defeat

Everton put dent in Klopp’s side’s hopes while bolstering survival bid

- MEL CAMERON

LIVERPOOL’S Premier League title bid was left in tatters after being bullied and beaten by a better side as Everton won a Merseyside derby at Goodison Park for the first time in almost 14 years. In doing so Sean Dyche’s side, 2-0 victors courtesy of goals in either half from Jarrad Branthwait­e and Dominic Calvert-Lewin, virtually assured their own top-flight future after moving eight points clear of 18th-place Luton with four matches to go.

Jurgen Klopp’s much-celebrated “last dance” is turning into an undignifie­d stagger towards the exit as his first defeat across Stanley Park came less than a week after they were knocked out of the Europa League by Atalanta.

The club have moved on his successor – Feyenoord’s Arne Slot – by opening negotiatio­ns with the Eredivisie club but this would not have made for a happy watch from his Netherland­s home.

Arsenal are now three points ahead with a superior goal difference and Manchester City a point behind with two matches in hand.

A third successive home league win for the first time since September 2021 means Everton can breathe easier at the other end of the table and bask in the warmth of a derby well won – only their second in the last 30 encounters in total.

They set about dominating the visitors physically and centre-back Ibrahima Konate, in particular, struggled against Calvert-Lewin, who was only passed fit a couple of hours before kick-off. But Liverpool were losing battles all over the pitch. In midfield Alexis Mac Allister was regularly hurried out of possession while the front three did not give the impression of knowing what the goal even looked like with Darwin Nunez woefully below the level required.

The hosts’ positive approach seemed to have paid off after just six minutes when Calvert-Lewin was brought down by Alisson Becker after nicking Jack Harrison’s outside-ofthe-boot pass past him but the penalty was rescinded after VAR ruled the striker was offside.

Ben Godfrey, who headed wide a Dwight McNeil free-kick, slid in to divert behind Mohamed Salah’s goalbound angled shot from Trent Alexander-Arnold’s delightful­ly-chipped pass into the penalty area with Curtis Jones and Nunez waiting to turn it in.

Having people in the right place at the right time was a theme of the first half as Jordan Pickford saved from Nunez, Luis Diaz and Andy Robertson – although the first two made his job easier by shooting straight at him.

The goal Everton deserved came in the 27th minute when Branthwait­e

forced the ball under Alisson and in off the post after Liverpool made a mess of clearing a free-kick with Konate getting in the way of Mac Allister. Pickford then came to the fore as Nunez blasted at him rather than opting for the more open left side of the goal, then blocked Diaz’s volley with his legs from Nunez’s nod on and finally stuck out an arm to repel Robertson’s shot from a narrow angle.

Another poor performanc­e from Salah saw him scuff a shot into Branthwait­e, sparing him the embarrassm­ent of seeing it sail wide, but then slashed the rebound into the Gwladys Street. In keeping with the emerging pattern over recent weeks Liverpool faded after the break after Virgil van Dijk headed straight at Pickford and when McNeil’s long-range shot was tipped over, Calvert-Lewin rose unchalleng­ed at the far post to nod home the resulting corner.

Dyche and his team had done a brilliant job of exposing Liverpool’s weakness as that was the sixth succes

sive time Klopp’s side had failed to win the first ball at a set-piece.

Branthwait­e could have added further embarrassm­ent but headed wide while the closest Liverpool came to a response was when Diaz’s curling shot rebounded off the post and they played out the final minutes with ‘you lost the league at Goodison Park’ ringing around the ground.

Elsewhere, Bruno Fernandes produced a captain’s performanc­e to save Manchester United’s blushes against rock-bottom Sheffield United, scoring twice and providing another in a 4-2 comeback win for Erik ten Hag’s misfiring side.

Three days on from making torturous work of their FA Cup semi-final triumph against Championsh­ip side Coventry, the Red Devils toiled against another side that will be playing in the second tier next term.

Under-fire Ten Hag’s side twice had to come from behind against Chris Wilder’s doomed Blades before Fernandes’ double inspired the end of the hosts’ four-match winless run in

the Premier League to move them up to sixth.

The hosts had started brightly enough, having 83 per cent possession and 11 attempts before Jayden Bogle capitalise­d on an Andre Onana error and opened the scoring in front of a stunned Stretford End.

Harry Maguire quickly levelled against his former club, only for the Blades to go back ahead through Ben Brereton Diaz early in the second half. Fernandes drew the hosts level from the spot as the Blades conceded a 90th goal of the season – the most ever in a 38-match Premier League season – and more were to follow.

United’s skipper fired home an 81st-minute rocket from 25 yards before setting up Rasmus Hojlund to add a another four minutes later.

Crystal Palace, meanwhile, defeated Newcastle 2-0 at Selhurst Park after a second-half double from Jean-Philippe Mateta, while Antoine Semenyo scored the only goal of the game for Bournemout­h in their 1-0 win over Wolves at Molineux.

 ?? ?? Jarrad Branthwait­e celebrates scoring Everton’s first goal of the game against Liverpool at Goodison Park
Jarrad Branthwait­e celebrates scoring Everton’s first goal of the game against Liverpool at Goodison Park

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