The Guardian (USA)

Everton’s mood is Green Day. For Liverpool it’s more Dire Straits

- Michael Butler REDS GET THE BLUES FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

“You lost the league at Goodison Park,” serenaded the Everton fans as Liverpool’s players trudged off the pitch on Wednesday evening after their 2-0 defeat, the footballin­g equivalent of Nelson Muntz giving his teacher a wedgie and yelling: “Ha Ha!” And while Football Daily is convinced that Jürgen Klopp understand­s the literal translatio­n of schadenfre­ude, it’s rare that the Liverpool manager has been on the receiving end of the concept. This defeat at Goodison was the first and last of Klopp’s nine-year tenure, and Liverpool’s first defeat at their neighbours’ ground since 2010.

What a game associatio­n football is. In almost no other sport could a losing team “win” every other statistic – possession, chances, etc – and deservingl­y lose the game. But Liverpool did just that, and can really have no complaints. Make it make sense. Last Monday Everton were thrashed 6-0 by Chelsea (Chelsea!), which left the Toffees hovering above the bottom three like a nervous potty-training toddler using the toilet for the first time. But after two crucial wins over Forest and

Liverpool, Everton are now eight points clear of 18th-placed Luton with four games to go. It’s nearly time for Sean Dyche to ditch the touchline tracksuit for his Glastonbur­y outfit (bucket hat, Superdry T-shirt, Billabong surfer shorts, Adidas Sambas) and push Ian Woan into the mosh pit with Premier League survival secured.

For Liverpool, out of the FA Cup, dumped out of Big Vase and now seemingly out of the title race, the mood was less Green Day and more Dire Straits. “It’s a mix of everything,” lamented Virgil van Dijk. “You can’t put a finger on it. It’s confidence, inexperien­ce, challenges, maybe afraid to make mistakes in this part of the season. I don’t know … we have to stick together. We can’t have groups blaming each other.” Which is convenient, because fans could be forgiven for blaming the backline after letting Dominic Calvert-Lewin have a free run at the back post and give Everton a 2-0 lead in what was one of the most predictabl­e corner routines of the modern era.

Arne Slot seems like a popular choice to replace Klopp and, mercifully for Football Daily, the new man has a name that is easy to spell, has no umlauts and rolls off the tongue like a pound coin disappeari­ng into the nearest fruit machine. Slot also “fits the Anfield profile”, with Liverpool’s data nerds handily identifyin­g the Dutchman as being quite good at “winning”. Feyenoord, last season’s Eredivisie winners, won this season’s Dutch Cup on Sunday but as Afonso Alves, Vincent Janssen, Alireza Jahanbakhs­h, Davy Klaassen, Jürgen Locadia, Jozy Altidore, Bryan Ruiz, Davinson Sánchez, Andy van der Meyde and Luuk de Jong have proved, being a hit in the Netherland­s does not a Premier League great make. You might want Arjen Robben in a Ferrari, but end up with Marco Boogers in a caravan. The future is not always orange.

Attention now turns back to Liverpool’s title rivals Manchester City – who will be looking not to slip on the banana skin that is Brighton on Thursday evening – and Arsenal, who face a daunting trip across north London to Tottenham this weekend. The Gunners famously won the league at the Lane 20 years ago. Mikel Arteta will be hoping he doesn’t trudge off at full-time on Sunday to the chant of “you lost the league at Tottenham” ringing around his ears.

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QUOTE OF THE DAY

27 January: “It wears you down terribly, in terms of health, of mental health, your mood, your emotional state. I am a positive guy but the energy goes down, down, down, until the point at which you say: it makes no sense, no sense to continue” – Xavi announces he’ll leave Barcelona at the end of the season.

25 April: “It wasn’t a question of ego or money, it’s a question of the club’s wellbeing and a matter of confidence in what we are doing” – Xavi’s new fount of energy means a U-turn. Sid Lowe has more.

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 ?? Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA ?? Virgil van Dijk with Jürgen Klopp at fulltime.
Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA Virgil van Dijk with Jürgen Klopp at fulltime.
 ?? ?? The freedom of Goodison Park, earlier. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images
The freedom of Goodison Park, earlier. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

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