- LVG Looks To Turn United’s Fortune Around At The Hawthorns
- Barcelona, Madrid Record Victories Ahead of El Clasico
- Gary Lineker Blasts Wenger: Says Arsenal Manager is ”Arrogant And Patronising”
- Liverpool Fans Attack Balotteli On Twitter After Shocking Miss Against QPR
- QPR Manager, Harry Redknapp Mocks ”Fat” Taarabt
- Swansea Manager Accuses Victor Moses of Cheating
- Swansea To Prevent Bony From Traveling to Sierra Leone For Fear of Ebola Virus
- Injured Theo Walcot Features For Arsenal Reserves After 286
- Liverpool Suffers Sturridge Set Back, As Returning Striker Picks Another Injury
- Keshi Recalls Moses, Enyeam as Super Eagles Face ”a Must Win” Match Against Sudan
Liverpool In Control After A Chaotic Sunday Against W/Ham
- Updated: April 6, 2014
Again, Liverpool could be grateful to Steven Gerrard for his nerveless precision from the spot as the captain scored his 10th and 11th penalties of the season in all competitions as his club maintained their Premier League title challenge and made light of a remarkable refereeing blunder into the bargain.
Sunday’s victory was different, a hard-fought scrap, complete with two bad refereeing decisions and a lot of nerves before Liverpool claimed a ninth straight win.
Steven Gerrard scored both from the penalty spot and in the meantime, Liverpool were obliged to withstand the classic Sam Allardyce treatment, a competitive physical team revved up on indignation and desperate for an upset. But this game could become one of those that is remembered forever, if it all ends with Gerrard lifting the one trophy to have eluded him thus far come 11 May.
Five games to play and if Liverpool win them all then they claim the 19th title of the club’s history. None bigger than Sunday, when Manchester City come to Anfield for what is, for now at least, the decisive game in the title race. Only City other than Liverpool can control the destiny of the title and for all their remarkable achievements thus far, it is the game against City that will test the true measure of Rodgers’ players.
“Fearless”, was the Liverpool manager’s assessment of how his players will approach this enormous game, with so much on it. His narrative all along has been that there is no pressure on his team, that this should be City’s title and that his young side are the surprise package in the title race. Even the cynical would have to concede that Rodgers has aced it this season, from the tactical switches midway through games – another today– to the measured, sensible responses post-match.
Asked about the erratic decisions of the referee Anthony Taylor, who should have disallowed Guy Demel’s West Ham goal for a foul by Andy Carroll in the build-up, the Liverpool manager thought about it for a split second and pointed out that his priority was not getting fined by the Football Association. At every opportunity he has sought to take the pressure off his players even, as it stands, with them just five wins from the title.
Rodgers described the player he sold as “the best on Europe” at what he did, although he did not go into too much detail into what it was Carroll did. Winning headers and roughing up defences is what Carroll does best, although his part in West Ham’s equaliser was pretty outrageous. At a corner a hand from Carroll struck Simon Mignolet in the face, he dropped the ball and Demel poked it into the goal.
The Liverpool players were outraged, especially as Taylor’s assistant Stuart Burt flagged in the aftermath and spoke at length to the referee before he decided for a second time to give the goal. Two minutes earlier, Gerrard had beaten the West Ham goalkeeper Adrian for the first time from the penalty spot after Suarez had hit a cross from the left side of the area and James Tomkins was judged to have handled.
Then on 70 minutes came the game’s decisive moment when Taylor, perhaps with his decision for the West Ham goal playing on his mind, awarded Liverpool a second penalty.
The replays showed that Adrian played the ball first as he came out to challenge Jon Flanagan, before making contact with the player and bringing him down. While the received wisdom is that if a player makes contact with the ball first it cannot be a foul, that is not the case under the modern interpretation of the rules. Taylor could potentially have judged that having won the ball there was a secondary movement of Adrian’s arms to then bring Flanagan down, with the ball still playable.
Even taking that into consideration, on balance it was a harsh decision, albeit not one that was impossible to defend. Allardyce took a long time coming in for his post-match press conference but by then the anger had subsided, especially with his team in relative safety. Gerrard dispatched the second with great confidence, his tenth successful penalty of the season although it was far from over then.
There have been more spectacular victories in this remarkable run, but for Liverpool this one had a special vintage all of its own.





