Cape Argus

Salah will keep on looking for more goals in a Reds shirt

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MOHAMED SALAH predicts there will be no let-up in his goalscorin­g after netting his 30th for Liverpool in a prolific season. The 25-year-old took 36 games in all competitio­ns to become just the 13th Liverpool player to notch up the landmark in a single season and the first to do so since Uruguay striker Luis Suarez four years ago.

“It is a great feeling to have scored 30 goals in a first season at a club like Liverpool,” he said.

“It’s something huge, so I am very happy about it - but I have to carry on and keep looking forward to score many more goals. I feel good, and that’s the most important thing - and 100 percent, there is still more to come.”

He has reached the 30-goal mark quicker than any other Liverpool player since George Allan 121 years ago and he has more than two months left to add to this season’s total before heading off to the World Cup with Egypt.

Few expected such a prolific strike rate when Salah joined in a 36.9 million pounds ($51.8 million) deal from AS Roma last year.

But he is already being compared with the club’s most celebrated goalscorer­s and, with 22 Premier League goals from 26 games, is second only to Tottenham Hotspur’s Harry Kane, pictured, in Europe’s top five leagues this season.

Yet while Kane is an out-and-out striker, Salah is a winger, who has also created chances, particular­ly for Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane in what has become one of Europe’s deadliest strike forces.

Wednesday’s 5-0 win over Porto establishe­d Liverpool as the Champions League’s top scorers this season with 28. With such a first-leg advantage, they are seemingly certain of a place in the quarter-finals.

Although Salah was upstaged by three-goal Mane on the night, he said he is constantly working on improving his game.

“In my mind I am always trying to improve and I’m doing it every single day. Every day I look at myself and try to improve myself all the time,” he said.

Liverpool next play West Ham United at Anfield on Feb. 24.

Meanwhile, the VAR system faced criticism again as Manchester United had a goal contentiou­sly ruled out for offside by the video assistant in their 2-0 FA Cup fifth-round victory over Huddersfie­ld Town on Saturday.

United midfielder Juan Mata put the ball in the net on the stroke of halftime with his side already leading 1-0 but his effort was eventually ruled out following a lengthy stoppage.

The goal had initially been given after the linesman had kept his flag down, but after long-winded deliberati­ons with the video assistant, referee Kevin Friend scrapped his original decision.

Replays suggested that if Mata was offside, it was only by the tiniest fraction and not a clear mistake by the officials.

Despite having the goal chalked off, Spaniard Mata said he was in favour of the VAR system, but Huddersfie­ld manager David Wagner, whose team benefited from the decision, said it was “killing the emotion of the game”.

“I think the line was very tight,” Mata told the BBC after two goals from Romelu Lukaku sent United into the quarter-finals.

“I did what I had to do which was to score and celebrated. Then after I saw the referee speaking to someone and you look silly when the goal is denied.

“I’m up for VAR and I think it is good for football especially to make important decisions and make it a little bit fairer but it seems like today it was not a very clear the decision against us and me.”

Wagner was less enthusiast­ic about VAR even though it kept Huddersfie­ld in the match before Lukaku, who gave United a third-minute lead, sealed their victory with another clinical finish following a defence-splitting pass by Alexis Sanchez. “Yes, the decision went in our favour but this VAR for me kills the emotion of the game,” he said.

“This is why I don’t like it but I am not the person who makes the decision.”

With one eye on Wednesday’s Champions League last 16 first leg away to Sevilla, United manager Jose Mourinho rested several starters and was happy after his makeshift side, also missing the ill Paul Pogba, cruised into the last eight.

“It was hard but we started really well,” said the Portuguese coach, who denied reports earlier in the week that he was at loggerhead­s with the out-ofform Pogba.

“With that second goal in the second half I think we killed the game and from that moment we were in control.

“Good counter-attacks, twice attacking the space well. Twice cold in front of the keeper, good decisions, good shots, good goals, important goals from us.”

United will host Brighton and Hove Albion in the quarter-final. – Reuters

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