
Anfield Index
·13 de abril de 2025
David Lynch’s 5 Key Takeaways from Liverpool’s 2-1 Win Over West Ham

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·13 de abril de 2025
In the latest post-match breakdown from Anfield, Liverpool reporter David Lynch dissected the Reds’ narrow but crucial 2-1 victory over West Ham. Speaking on his podcast-style reaction from the press box, Lynch offered sharp insight into what this win means for Liverpool’s title charge, who shone under pressure, and where improvements are still needed. Here are his five key takeaways from a game that kept fans on the edge of their seats.
Lynch was impressed with the Reds’ opening half, stating, “I think the first half… was one of the best they’ve played for a while really. I thought they were popping it around, they looked really dangerous.” With Luis Díaz opening the scoring, it seemed Liverpool might enjoy a more comfortable afternoon. The stats backed up the dominance: “Liverpool chalked up 1.26 expected goals in that first half, and West Ham just 0.36.”
While the first half performance was assertive, Lynch acknowledged a significant dip after the break: “Liverpool not anywhere close to the first half level of performance… couldn’t get the second goal, didn’t really threaten.” However, he observed how the late drama reinvigorated both crowd and players: “Once the equaliser goes in, it kind of changes things… Anfield absolutely ramped up from that moment.”
That electricity culminated in Virgil van Dijk’s towering 89th-minute header, about which Lynch said, “He rises highest to nod that one in and the place absolutely erupts.”
Despite Van Dijk’s headline-grabbing winner, Lynch made a point to praise Alisson Becker: “Liverpool would not win the game today if it weren’t for some of the saves he pulls out in the most difficult moments.”
In midfield, Alexis Mac Allister’s contribution was immense. Lynch was glowing: “I just think he’s Liverpool’s best midfielder for me and he has been all season… a world-class player really.” Citing his six ground duels won, four shots, and two chances created—including the match-winning corner—Lynch underlined Mac Allister’s complete performance: “A big, big clutch moment he delivers in.”
Photo: IMAGO
In a rare critique of Arne Slot, Lynch reflected on the tactical changes that nearly derailed Liverpool’s rhythm. “One of the rare games this season where Slot’s subs haven’t quite worked for him,” he noted, singling out the decision to replace Conor Bradley with Jarell Quansah at right-back.
He explained: “Quansah… absolutely emptied it to no one under zero pressure. It just shows you, Conor Bradley would have kept possession.” Lynch concluded, “That one put Liverpool under pressure when they didn’t need to be.”
While some may criticise Liverpool’s second-half stumbles, Lynch offered perspective: “At this point of the season, it’s all about just getting over the line.” With the Reds now “13 points clear,” he urged fans to savour the moment, even if performances aren’t always fluent.
“If you want to accuse Liverpool of limping over the line… just think that there are 19 other teams who absolutely wish they were in Liverpool’s position.”
As the final whistle blew, the message was clear: results matter most in the business end of a title race, and Liverpool, led by Slot, have both the talent and tenacity to finish the job.