Texarkana Gazette

Liverpool is exhausted, injury-hit and relying on youngsters to keep winning

- STEVE DOUGLAS AP SPORTS WRITER

Exhausted, injury-hit and relying on a bunch of academy prospects, Liverpool continues to pull off victories in the business end of Jurgen Klopp’s final season in charge.

No English Premier League win by the Reds has been sealed as late as the one at Nottingham Forest on Saturday.

Uruguay striker Darwin Nunez came off the bench and glanced home a header in the ninth minute of stoppage time to sink Forest 1-0 and move Liverpool four points clear.

It was a sixth straight win in all competitio­ns for Liverpool — and a fourth in an 11-day span that included an extra-time victory over Chelsea in the English League Cup final.

“If you’d told me 12 days ago we would win all four games, I would have said no chance — it was impossible,” said Klopp, who will be leaving Liverpool at the end of the season after nearly nine years. “In the circumstan­ces, winning the games is ridiculous.”

Second-placed Manchester City will look to restore the gap to Liverpool to one point by beating Manchester United at home in the derby on Sunday. Then, next for Liverpool and City in the league: A seismic meeting at Anfield on March 10.

Even though Liverpool’s injuries are relenting somewhat, the likes of Mohamed Salah, Trent Alexander-arnold, Diogo Jota and Curtis Jones are still missing. Klopp started 19-year-old Bobby Clark in midfield alongside redeployed defender Joe Gomez. Jayden Danns, an 18-year-old forward, came on as a second-half substitute for his league debut.

“What the boys have squeezed out was special,” Klopp said.

“This game didn’t go easy for us. We didn’t have a great rhythm and the boys felt the intensity for the first time.”

There were angry scenes among Forest players and coaching staff after the final whistle, with even club owner Evangelos Marinakis coming down to the touchline to express his unhappines­s and later approach referee Paul Tierney.

Eight minutes of time added on was officially awarded by the referee, which was perhaps the cause of Forest’s complaints along with unhappines­s that the hosts did not get the ball back when play was stopped after Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate sustained a knock to the head at a Forest corner just before the goal.

Tierney blew with Forest in possession on the edge of Liverpool’s area. After Konate quickly recovered, Tierney dropped the ball to Liverpool goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, who then started the attack that eventually led to the goal.

“The law states that, if the referee is going to stop the game — which he is entitled to for a head injury — the ball has to go back to the team that has possession,” said Mark Clattenbur­g, a former Premier League referee who has become a referee analyst at Forest.

Arsenal, a point behind City in third, visits last-placed Sheffield United on Monday.

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