Lagging Liverpool FC’s season slipping away so quick and fast
Their attacking spark has gone. Their
opponents seem to have figured them out. Their chances of silverware are
reducing by the week.
For Liverpool’s players, there’s concern that a season of high hopes is slipping away from them altogether.
January
has been a month to forget for Liverpool, which has plummeted from
title contention after earning only one point from a possible nine in
the Premier League and then being eliminated from the League Cup at the
semifinal stage by Southampton. It’s one win in seven games so far in
2017, and that came in an FA Cup replay against a team from the fourth
division, Plymouth.
Realistically, Liverpool’s only chance to
end a five-year wait for a trophy rests with winning the FA Cup.
Second-tier struggler Wolverhampton Wanderers visits Anfield on Saturday
for a fourth-round match that suddenly has taken increased importance
for Liverpool.
A number of factors have
combined to make Liverpool look like a shadow of the team that blew
opponents away in the first half of the season.
The
departure of Sadio Mane to the African Cup of Nations with Senegal in
early January has deprived Liverpool of its most lively, energetic
forward – he might not be back for another two weeks – while another key
attacker in Philippe Coutinho is still recovering his match sharpness
after returning from a 6 1/2-week injury lay-off.
It
has forced Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp to shuffle his attacking
personnel, with Roberto Firmino and Adam Lallana playing in various
positions across the front four, and the result has been only six goals
in seven games from the highest-scoring team in the Premier League.
Meanwhile,
rivals are realizing that the best way of playing Liverpool and
neutralizing its prolific strikeforce is to sit back, pack the defence
and hit on the counterattack. Klopp said after the two-legged loss to
Southampton that 70-80 per cent of teams are deploying this tactic and
that his team must adapt to it.
“It’s the most difficult thing in football,” Klopp said. “We are a good footballing team, that’s why this happens.”
Liverpool’s
defence has long been its weakness and is proving susceptible to the
counterattack, as shown against Southampton and in the damaging 3-2 loss
to Swansea in the league last weekend.
Also,
it remains to be seen whether Klopp’s high-energy pressing tactics are
taking their toll on is players, especially after such a packed month
that still has two more games left. Liverpool has, however, not had any
competition this season so should be fresher than some of its main
rivals.
Yet, the players certainly look
jaded and lack the zip of previous months, leading to more sideways
passes and fewer incisive breaks. Liverpool lack a “Plan B” – Manchester
United , for example, can introduce tall forward Marouane Fellaini from
the bench to cause a different kind of problem – so is limited in that
respect.
Not that Klopp is too concerned.
“If
we doubt the way we are after these little, little problems we have
now, it would be a strange thing,” Klopp said. “We didn’t have the
points, the results, but we know what we have to do, we know what we
want to, the football we want to play. So it’s all good.”
Expect
Klopp to play his youngsters and fringe players again in the FA Cup
this weekend, with a crunch home game against Chelsea coming up in the
league on Tuesday. That increases the prospect of more woe for Liverpool
in a month when its season is threatening to implode.
Here’s what else to watch out for in the fourth round of the world’s oldest knockout competition:
Non-league hopefuls
There
are two non-league sides still in the competition, with fifth-tier
clubs Sutton United and Lincoln both getting home matches against teams
riding high in the second-tier League Championship.
Sutton,
which knocked out top-tier Coventry in the third round in the 1988-89
season, is host to Leeds on Sunday. Lincoln, which last reached the
fifth round of the FA Cup in 1976, is at home to Brighton on Saturday.
Standout match
The
most eye-catching game in the last 32 sees Arsenal visit Southampton,
fresh off reaching the League Cup final by beating Liverpool over two
legs.
In another all-Premier League
matchup, Manchester City is at Crystal Palace. Manchester United,
Chelsea and Tottenham all have home matches against lower-league
opponents in Wigan, Brentford and Wycombe Wanderers, respectively.
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