Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Kid Harvey has started a love affair with Kop... and sealed it with a kiss

- NEIL SQUIRES

IT is enriching to see a young talent grow in front of your eyes and Anfield had that pleasure with Harvey Elliott yesterday.

Thrown in for his first Premier League start, the 18-year-old evolved from little boy lost against Sean Dyche’s tough guys to a man made for the stage in the space of 90 nourishing minutes.

By the final whistle the nervy, mistake-ridden teen of the first half had been replaced by a figure of authority who crowned his afternoon by helping to set up Sadio Mane for Liverpool’s winner.

He walked down the tunnel blowing kisses to the crowd as they applauded back.

Respect to Jurgen Klopp for picking an English prospect and for sticking with him when it threatened to unravel yesterday.

Elliott’s elevation fitted neatly into the narrative from Klopp before the season kicked off that while their title rivals spent big Liverpool could not spend what they did not have.

They would just have to make do with what they had and grow their own.

Elliott is an academy product who, while born in Chertsey, has the credential­s for home-town hero status as a lifelong Liverpool fan who was taken to his first game at Anfield at the age of just three.

As Elliott walked out to the strains of You’ll Never Walk Alone he picked up some grass, crossed himself and looked to the heavens.

This was his childhood dream made real. Burnley though, the team that ended Liverpool’s 68-game unbeaten home league run last season, are not about romance.

Within two minutes of Elliott kicking the game off, he was writhing on the ground after being taken out by Josh Brownhill.

If there is one opponent in the Premier League primed to examine a teenager’s physical credential­s it is Dyche’s robust collective.

The no-nonsense undercoat to Burnley was reflected in a throwback exterior coat yesterday which saw Dyche put out a starting side wearing numbers 1 to 11. It

The 18-year-old evolved from little boy lost to a man made for the stage in the space of 90 nourishing minutes

was the first time the Premier League had seen such a thing this century. Liverpool, by contrast, were a bingo card with a No.66, a 32 and, in Elliott, a 67.

For Liverpool this was supposed to be the day to celebrate the return to post-Covid normality with old friendship­s rekindled around the ground and familiar rituals renewed – but the queues to gain entry were horrendous with some fans missing kick-off.

The new ticketing system at Anfield clearly needs some work.

A 12.30pm kick-off made for a curiously sleepy atmosphere, too, with Burnley’s resilience helping to draw the

Anfield sting. The noise Elliott heard early on was the booing of the Burnley fans when he touched the ball – because he spent last season on loan on Blackburn.

He was also on the end of a Jordan Henderson roasting after twice losing out in tackles near his own penalty area.

There was one nicely-weighted ball to Mo Salah in the 27th minute which the Egyptian despatched only for the goal to be ruled out for offside by VAR, but on the whole it was not an easy introducti­on. Salah, Virgil van Dijk, Mane – such company can be intimidati­ng even for a player who is an old hand at this sort of thing, having played in the EFL Cup as a 15-year-old and come off the bench against Fulham in the league at 16.

Gradually, though, Elliott began to find his feet – and space – on the right-hand side of midfield and to combine ever more dangerousl­y with Trent Alexander-Arnold. The touch grew more assured, the composure on the ball more measured.

And after briefly switching to the left to deliver a lovely cross to

Salah, who fired off a shot which Dwight McNeill blocked on the line, his big moment arrived.

Demanding a crossfield ball from Van Dijk, Elliott brought it down beautifull­y on his chest and offloaded instantly to Alexander-Arnold, who slid in Mane.

Control, vision, class – in a flash the game was done, Anfield was in full voice and a bright future was revealed.

GLOVE IT! Alisson celebrates after Sadio Mane scores to make it 2-0

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CLINCHER Mane strikes to make the game safe
ONE AHEAD Jota nods Liverpool into the lead
IN HARV’S WAY Burnley’s defence crowds out Elliott
CLINCHER Mane strikes to make the game safe ONE AHEAD Jota nods Liverpool into the lead IN HARV’S WAY Burnley’s defence crowds out Elliott
 ??  ?? THAT’S BOSS, LAD Elliott gets a hug from Jurgen Klopp
THAT’S BOSS, LAD Elliott gets a hug from Jurgen Klopp

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom