90min
·23 febbraio 2025
Man City 0-2 Liverpool: Match report & 4 talking points as Reds put one hand on Premier League trophy
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Yahoo sports90min
·23 febbraio 2025
Liverpool are 11 points clear at the top of the Premier League table after beating Manchester City by a 2-0 scoreline in the Premier League on Sunday afternoon.
Mohamed Salah and Dominik Szoboszlai each scored in the first half, with City largely failing to trouble the visitors from Merseyside despite dominating possession and shots.
City are so far off the pace – a full 20 points – that simply qualifying for next season’s Champions League is the real challenge for the remainder of the season.
It was a cagey start to the contest as both sides attempted to gain a foothold. Early attacks showed initial promise, fizzling out before becoming a real threat at either end.
Alisson dealt with a couple of straightforward City corners, with a set-piece then doing the damage for Liverpool. Alexis Mac Allister’s low delivery to the near post initially looked like a miss-kick, but it immediately became clear it was a deliberate pass to Szoboszlai. His flick behind him found Salah, whose strike in the middle of the box benefitted from a helpful deflection past Ederson.
The goal didn’t really serve to ignite the contest. Alisson comfortably gathered attempts struck outside the box from Omar Marmoush and Phil Foden. Marmoush then had the ball in the net, a fine low finish across Liverpool’s goalkeeper, but he was clearly offside and the flag went up.
The Reds were playing it perfectly and then built on their lead in the closing stages of the first half. It was another simple but well executed move, with Salah latching onto a long ball forward down the right. He drove into a dangerous position and then squared for an unmarked Szoboszlai to blast in.
Liverpool were happy to let City control the ball in the knowledge that chances would come on the counter attack. In that respect, the hosts mounted several attacks in the early stages of the second half without amounting to much, before the visitors had the ball in the net for the third time. Curtis Jones applied the finish, but VAR intervened after catching Szoboszlai offside in the build-up.
City responded to that reprieve by fording Alisson into action, denying Marmoush, while a spectacular Ederson save from a Luis Diaz curler soon followed. Virgil van Dijk needed to be alert to intercept a cutback on a plate for Marmoush, Rico Lewis fired the rebound into the side netting.
With City still pushing to get back into the game, Slot favourite Wateru Endo was brought on for the final 17 minutes plus stoppage time to lock things down in midfield, with the left-back position also freshened amid Andrew Robertson starting to get beaten by Savinho.
It's a passing of the torch / James Gill - Danehouse/GettyImages
Liverpool have dropped points twice in recent weeks against Everton and Aston Villa, which could have been the opportunity that the chasing pack needed to close the gap.
But Arsenal’s own struggles, Chelsea and Manchester City falling apart, and Nottingham Forest’s recent inconsistency, means that hasn’t happened.
Liverpool have played a game more than the rest, pre-emptively facing Villa to avoid needing to catch up due to next month’s Carabao Cup final, but only a dramatic and unforeseen collapse could now prevent them from claiming a second Premier League title in six seasons.
This would be number 20 overall, moving the Reds level with English record holders Manchester United, who don’t look like moving onto 21 any time soon.
Mohamed Salah was on the scoresheet again / Catherine Ivill - AMA/GettyImages
Mohamed Salah has now scored 30 goals in a season for the fifth time as a Liverpool player, having only been the club for eight. It’s remarkable consistency at the highest level, especially from someone previously written off as a Premier League flop at Chelsea.
With 241 Liverpool goals to his name overall since 2017, Salah is now joint third with Gordon Hodgson in the club’s all-time list. Only Roger Hunt (285) and Ian Rush (346) have now scored more often in Liverpool history. Rush’s record is probably safe, but Salah could likely reel in Hunt by the end of next season – if he can agree a new contract.
Salah’s pass for Dominik Szoboszlai took his Premier League assist tally for the season to 16. That’s just four shy of the single season record of 20, jointly held by Thierry Henry and Kevin De Bruyne. Liverpool’s Egyptian King needs five more assists in 11 remaining games to break it and, in current form, it’s hard to believe that won’t happen.
Erling Haaland was absent / Alex Pantling/GettyImages
Erling Haaland was again missing from the City lineup following last weekend’s knock, not even making the bench this time over a lack of match fitness.
City don’t have another similar ‘number nine’ striker, with January signing Omar Marmoush doing his best work as an inside forward operating in the left channel.
For this one, Phil Foden was pushed forward as a ‘false nine’, with Marmoush supporting from slightly deeper and allowed the freedom to pull to the left where he is most comfortable.
There isn’t another Haaland and City lack a focal point when he’s not playing. Changing the system was the only way to go about it and didn’t yield the result.
Kevin De Bruyne has reached his best before date / Shaun Botterill/GettyImages
The average age of Pep Guardiola’s starting XI was 25 years and 68 days, the joint youngest side he has ever named in a Premier League game. That’s even with Kevin De Bruyne (33), Ederson (31) dragging it up.
City’s new generation aren’t as polished as the veterans who have delivered four successive Premier League titles. Jeremy Doku could have had Trent Alexander-Arnold for breakfast here, easily dribbling past the Liverpool full-back at will, but lacked final third decision making. Savinho is in a similar boat and 20-year-old centre-back Abdukodir Khusanov isn’t ready to be thrown in at the deep end.
De Bruyne is reaching the end of the road at City. The Belgian has served the club incredibly, but he was left out of the starting XI against Real Madrid in midweek and was the first player Pep Guardiola withdrew when there was still enough time for his team to do something.