Hawke's Bay Today

Hole gets deeper for Liverpool

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Liverpool fell further out of contention for the English Premier League title. That’s perhaps the least of Jurgen Klopp’s problems.

Just as upsetting for the outgoing Liverpool manager in a 2-2 draw with West Ham yesterday might be a touchline confrontat­ion with his star forward, Mohamed Salah, that Klopp tried to downplay after the match.

The incident happened as Salah was preparing to enter as a substitute soon after Michail Antonio’s 77thminute equaliser. It was the second time in Liverpool’s last three games that Salah has been benched.

Whether Salah remains at Liverpool beyond this season remains to be seen — he was linked heavily with a move to Saudi Arabia last year — but Klopp is sure to be going.

With three games left in the league, his successful Liverpool tenure might be ending on a sour note.

This latest setback came after recent losses to Crystal Palace and Everton, and left the team in third place — two points behind Arsenal and one off Manchester City. They both have games in hand over Liverpool.

Elsewhere, Zeki Amdouni’s 87thminute penalty earned relegation­threatened Burnley a 1-1 draw at Manchester United to increase the spotlight on under-fire United manager Erik ten Hag and his stuttering team.

Old Trafford has been a happy hunting ground down the years for Manchester City great Vincent Kompany, and his Burnley team made the short journey looking to boost their faint hopes of English Premier League survival.

Antony looked to have pushed Burnley further toward the drop with a 79th-minute opener, only for the otherwise impressive United goalkeeper Andre Onana to give away a late penalty that was converted by Amdouni.

There were boos at the fulltime whistle from some of the home faithful at Old Trafford, where the travelling support applauded their players’ efforts as they continue to scrap for survival.

Bruno Fernandes hit a post during a bright United start, but Burnley grew into the game and Onana’s spectacula­r reaction stopped Lyle Foster’s header.

United’s bid for Champions League qualificat­ion is all but over, with ten Hag’s sixth-placed team just one point above Newcastle in seventh.

Next-to-last Burnley moved two points from safety, but Nottingham Forest — occupying the spot just above the relegation zone — have a game in hand.

Meanwhile, Aston Villa squandered a two-goal lead to draw with Chelsea 2-2, denting their push for Champions League qualificat­ion.

It could have been even worse for Villa as Chelsea thought they had t grabbed a winner through substitute Axel Disasi in stoppage time. The goal was ruled out for a push in the buildup and that angered Chelsea’s players, who surrounded the referee after the final whistle.

Villa built a 2-0 cushion by halftime after an own-goal by Marc Cucurella in the fourth minute and a strike by Morgan Rogers in the 42nd.

Chelsea dominated the second half, with Noni Madueke reducing the deficit in the 62nd and Conor Gallagher curling in from the edge of the area for an equaliser in the 81st.

Villa, who are fourth, moved seven points clear of fifth-placed Tottenham and have three games left. Spurs have three games in hand on Villa but have the much tougher run-in.

Big-spending Chelsea stay in ninth place but also have games in hand over the teams they’re battling with for qualificat­ion for the minor European competitio­ns next season.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Goal scoring weapon Mo Salah is unused to sitting on the subs’ bench and that demotion perhaps triggered a row with manager Jurgen Klopp.
Photo / AP Goal scoring weapon Mo Salah is unused to sitting on the subs’ bench and that demotion perhaps triggered a row with manager Jurgen Klopp.

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