The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sturridge’s introducti­on an inspired decision

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– Daniel Sturridge (right) has had little to celebrate over several injury blighted seasons at Liverpool, but with one deft swipe of his left boot on Saturday he rescued a last-gasp point at Chelsea and reminded his manager of his rare finishing prowess.

Liverpool had been the better side for great swathes of the Premier League encounter at Stamford Bridge, but a combinatio­n of poor finishing and resilient Chelsea defending meant they entered the dying minutes trailing 1-0 to Eden Hazard’s superb finish.

Liverpool’s front three, who terrorised defences last season,

London

had looked strangely out of sorts before Sturridge was introduced with just four minutes to go.

It took him a matter of moments to make his mark, receiving the ball on the left, 25 metres from goal before turning and nonchalant­ly curling a superb effort out of the keeper’s reach into the top corner to secure a 1-1 draw.

It was his 50th Premier League goal for Liverpool and kept them unbeaten in the league this season, level with Manchester City on 19 points at the top of the table.

The quality of the strike also drew appreciati­ve words from his manager Jurgen Klopp, who has been at the club since 2015, but never been able to rely on a fully-fit Sturridge for any sustained period of time.

“He is a fantastic player and he had a good pre-season, and he is in the best shape since I know him,” Klopp told reporters.

Sturridge’s ability has never been in doubt at Liverpool, but his body has all too often let him down, with a series of injuries interrupti­ng his progress.

His goals and performanc­es this season, however, have raised hopes that he may be back to his best.

Saturday’s strike was Stur- ridge’s fourth goal in seven appearance­s across all competitio­ns this season, yet only two of those have been in the starting team, with the majority coming off the bench.

The 29-year-old’s razor-sharp finish rescued Liverpool after their establishe­d front three, Mohamed Salah, Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane, were unusually profligate in front of goal.

Liverpool’s worst miss, however, was by second-half substitute Xherdan Shaqiri, who inexplicab­ly sidefooted off target from an Andy Robertson cross late in the game. –

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