Daily Mail

FLAIR & FLARES

Firmino fires Klopp into top-four race on incendiary night

- By CHRIS WHEELER

LIVERPOOL did their talking on the pitch to stay in the Champions League hunt with a 4-2 win at Manchester United last night after the club’s bus was targeted en route to the game.

The coach had its tyres slashed by protesters, forcing Liverpool to use a back-up. On the field, Roberto Firmino’s double plus goals from Diogo Jota and Mo Salah won it for the Reds. Bruno Fernandes and Marcus Rashford struck for United.

The climax to this strange season continues to prove the point of those protesting outside Old Trafford. If the richest clubs had their way, a campaign like this would already be over. The title would be won, relegation decided and there would be no titanic scrap for Champions League qualificat­ion because the wealthiest clubs would all be in, regardless.

So Liverpool would have had no need to throw the kitchen sink at Manchester United, turning the game on its head with three goals in 16 minutes.

United would have had scant motivation to inflict further humiliatio­n on their great rivals by trying to keep them out of europe’s biggest competitio­n. And this would have been a friendly with teeth, not an almighty scrap with six goals and end-to- end action. Chelsea versus Leicester next Tuesday is huge, too.

Liverpool must have thought they had done enough to win with an assault on United’s goal that began with a 34th-minute equaliser, continued with a second in the third minute of added time and concluded with a third two minutes into the second half.

Yet United pulled one back and made them battle all the way to the finish line. holding on, it was a win that has blown the fight for the top four wide open again, given events at Stamford Bridge last Wednesday. Liverpool are up to fifth, and could be a point behind Chelsea after playing West Bromwich on Sunday.

United were leading and Liverpool wobbling defensivel­y when Diogo Jota brought them back into the game. his was a lovely, cheeky goal, full of wit and intuitive thinking.

Mohamed Salah’s shot was blocked but then United’s defence allowed Nathaniel Phillips to sweep up the ball and dribble in the area with it, before shooting on the turn. The ball flashed across Jota who finished with a sly backheeled flick, diverting the trajectory to give goalkeeper Dean henderson no chance. And as they do at their best, Liverpool then took the game away from United.

Deep in first-half added time, Liverpool won a free-kick. Trent Alexander-Arnold struck it deep towards the back post where Roberto Firmino lost his man, Paul Pogba. his header left henderson powerless again.

Only Robbie Fowler has scored more with his head for Liverpool in the Premier League era, even if this was Firmino’s first of any kind in the competitio­n since January. More worrying is United’s record when defending dead-ball deliveries. It is the worst on aggregate in the Premier League with 23 per cent of goals they have conceded coming this way.

The second half had barely started when United fell further behind. The errors were piling up. First Fred made a mistake and then, having recovered, Luke Shaw compounded it, caught in possession by Jota. he fed Alexander-Arnold whose shot was saved, before Firmino mopped up the rebound. All over? It would have been had Jota not hit a post with the goal begging after 59 minutes.

Instead, United raised the tension a notch after a lovely move involving Shaw’s pass, a Bruno Fernandes dummy and a one-two between edinson Cavani and Marcus Rashford, which ended with the younger man finishing smartly past Alisson.

Liverpool now had to last 22 minutes defending the Stretford end; twice Phillips cleared off his line, most notably from substitute Mason Greenwood.

It was that type of game. Chaos reigned outside, but inside too. Protests against the ownership from fans, protests against responsibl­e defending from the teams.

Missing key figures in the defensive line, they have surprising frailty. Liverpool’s central pairing of Phillips and Rhys Williams lack experience, United’s back line lack consistenc­y and concentrat­ion, which is probably why they go behind in so many games. Not here, but not for want of trying.

In the third minute, Firmino was put through in a good position but chose to pass rather than shoot on goal and the ball was blocked by eric Bailly. It struck his body first but ricocheted on to an arm. Liverpool protested but fruitlessl­y. Referee Anthony Taylor was having none of it and, indeed, it was hard to imagine how Bailly could have intended this event or what he could have done to avoid it.

At the other end, a cross by Aaron Wan-Bissaka was headed over by Cavani and then came a muddle that should have given the Uruguayan the first goal. Alisson, normally so reliable with the ball at his feet, under-hit a pass terribly and directed it straight to Cavani. he tried to steer the ball back towards an untended goal, and missed. Next time, the confusion would be even more costly.

It was, to be fair, a fine move from United that gave them the lead. Rashford put Wan-Bissaka in on the right and he held the ball up, waiting for the cavalry to arrive. It did in the form of Fernandes who strode into the area and attempted to curl a shot in at the far post.

Phillips was caught in two minds. he was too near the goal to safely block but too fearful of what lurked behind to not get involved. he stuck out a leg and diverted the ball into his own net.

It is to the defender’s credit that he recovered from this calamity to enjoy a good game.

Liverpool thought they were back in it after 26 minutes when a Bailly tackle on Phillips just inside the area sent the Liverpool man high in the air and was met by an instinctiv­e penalty award from

Taylor. VAR Paul Tierney ran the replays and suggested Taylor should do the same. Slowed down, it could easily be seen that Bailly got the ball before the man. Taylor rightly reversed his decision.

Yet the game could have changed in the 31st minute, before Liverpool scored. Shaw took a corner, finding Fernandes on the edge of the area. He whipped in a cross which Pogba met at the far post, his header dropping wide. Had that gone in, would Liverpool have found the spirit for revival? Just 16 minutes later they were 3-1 up.

Fast forward to the 90th minute and Nemanja Matic was caught in possession by Fabinho and Liverpool broke. Substitute Curtis Jones fed Salah and he sped away, only Henderson to beat. There was only going to be one winner from there. That cannot be said of the scrap for a top-four finish. How dare anyone try to neutralise it?

MANCHESTER UNITED (4-2-3-1): Henderson 5; Wan-Bissaka 6, Bailly 5.5 (Matic 86min), Lindelof 5.5, Shaw 6; Fred 5 (Greenwood 63, 6), McTominay 6; Rashford 6, Fernandes 6.5, Pogba 6; Cavani 6. Subs not used: De Gea, Telles, Williams, Tuanzebe, Van de Beek, Mata, Diallo. Scorers: Fernandes 10, Rashford 68. Booked: Bailly, McTominay, Cavani. Manager: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer 6.

LIVERPOOL (4-3-3): Alisson 7; AlexanderA­rnold 7.5, Phillips 7, R Williams 7, Robertson 7.5; Fabinho 6, Wijnaldum 6.5 (Jones 74, 6), Thiago 6.5; Salah 7 (N Williams 90), FIRMINO 8, Jota 6.5 (Mane 74, 6).

Subs not used: Adrian, Kelleher, Tsimikas, Shaqiri, Woodburn, Origi. Scorers: Jota 34, Firmino 45+3, 47, Salah 90.

Manager: Jurgen Klopp 7. Referee: Anthony Taylor 5.5.

 ?? GETTY ?? The old Firm: Roberto Firmino celebrates his second on a superb night for Liverpool
GETTY The old Firm: Roberto Firmino celebrates his second on a superb night for Liverpool
 ?? NMC ?? Red mist: United fans vent their fury at the Glazers again outside Old Trafford
NMC Red mist: United fans vent their fury at the Glazers again outside Old Trafford
 ?? POOL ?? On the nod: Firmino heads past Henderson for 2-1
POOL On the nod: Firmino heads past Henderson for 2-1
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? NMC POOL ?? Spin king: Jota makes it 1-1 with a cheeky backheel
NMC POOL Spin king: Jota makes it 1-1 with a cheeky backheel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom