![Icon: Anfield Index](https://image-service.onefootball.com/transform?w=96&dpr=2&image=https://filebucket.onefootball.com/2019/11/1574083488919-14_Anfielwatch.png)
Anfield Index
·12 February 2025
David Lynch’s 5 Key Takeaways from Liverpool’s 2-2 Draw at Everton
![Article image:David Lynch’s 5 Key Takeaways from Liverpool’s 2-2 Draw at Everton](https://image-service.onefootball.com/transform?w=280&h=210&dpr=2&image=https%3A%2F%2Fanfieldindex.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2025%2F02%2FDavid-Lynch-1.png)
In partnership with
Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·12 February 2025
Liverpool’s final Merseyside Derby at Goodison Park ended in frustration as Everton snatched a last-gasp equaliser in the 98th minute. While the Reds were on the verge of securing all three points, David Lynch, speaking on his podcast, reflected on a performance that never truly convinced.
Here are five key takeaways from the game, as analysed by David Lynch.
Photo: IMAGO
While a 98th-minute equaliser stings, Lynch was honest in his assessment of Liverpool’s performance:
“If you strip all the emotion out of the result and the way it came about, it did feel like I wanted to see a little bit more than I did from Liverpool this evening.”
Liverpool struggled to impose themselves on the game, and their inability to dominate the ball left them vulnerable. Lynch acknowledged that, while the nature of the equaliser was gut-wrenching, a draw was not an entirely unjust result:
“On the balance of the game, it probably was a fair result really.”
Photo: IMAGO
Everton set out to make life difficult for Arne Slot’s men, and Liverpool failed to rise above it. Lynch noted:
“I wanted them to maybe come here and dominate the game, show that they were a little bit smarter, a bit less… falling into the trap of being dragged down to Everton’s level.”
Liverpool were bullied in key battles, and Everton’s direct approach was effective in preventing the visitors from asserting control.
Even on a difficult night, Mohamed Salah still delivered. Lynch was effusive in his praise:“You keep coming in from week to week thinking at some point he’s going to have a game where he doesn’t score or assist… and yet he just consistently keeps delivering.”
Salah was directly involved in both Liverpool goals, providing a pinpoint assist for Alexis Mac Allister before showing his predatory instincts to fire home what many thought would be the winner. Lynch added:
“His goal—it’s a header that comes straight at him, the ability to get the touch out of his feet and then fire it in with such speed, that just shows the class he’s got.”
Photo: IMAGO
Lynch does not like to dwell on refereeing decisions, but he couldn’t ignore the sense of injustice surrounding the match. He questioned the decision not to review a possible foul in the build-up to Everton’s equaliser:
“There’s a clear shove on Konaté in the build-up to that goal… When the ball is right near him, he probably would have got a head on it.”
The red cards for Arne Slot, Sipke Hulshoff, Curtis Jones, and Abdoulaye Doucouré in the dying moments also reflected the frustration in the Liverpool camp. Lynch suggested that the tension stemmed from more than just the final incident:
“I think they probably were annoyed by a buildup of incidents they felt had gone against Liverpool.”
The foul count was particularly revealing, with Everton conceding just nine fouls to Liverpool’s 20, despite the Toffees’ physical approach.
Despite the disappointment, Lynch urged Liverpool to focus on the bigger picture:
“They’ve now got to move on from this game… They’re seven points clear at the top of the league and for me, still the best side.”
With crucial fixtures against Wolves, Aston Villa, Manchester City, and Newcastle on the horizon, Slot’s men need to regroup and avoid allowing frustration from Goodison to linger.
As Lynch concluded:
“The fact is, none of us expected Liverpool to be perfect this season… sometimes you’re going to accept that there’ll be ups and downs.”
The Merseyside Derby may have ended in frustration, but Liverpool’s season is far from derailed. Now, it’s about how they respond.