Sports

A Villa 1 – 2 Liverpool


Sadio Mane earned Liverpool a come-from-behind 2-1 win at Aston Villa to keep the Premier League title race alive.

Douglas Luiz’s early goal had left Jurgen Klopp’s side up against it inside three minutes but Joel Matip soon equalised and Mane completed the turnaround midway through the second half. The win moves Liverpool back level on points with leaders Manchester City.

Pep Guardiola’s side still have a game in hand and the victory at Villa Park also came at a cost – Fabinho trudging off injured in the first half. But Jurgen Klopp will just be glad to have come through this test as former Reds hero Steven Gerrard certainly had Villa fired up.

Player ratings

Aston Villa: Martinez (6), Cash (7), Konsa (6), Mings (6), Digne (6), Luiz (7), McGinn (6), Nakamba (6), Coutinho (7), Ings (5), Watkins (7).

Subs: Chukwuemeka (6), Buendia (6), Traore (6).

Liverpool: Alisson (5), Alexander-Arnold (6), Matip (6), Van Dijk (6), Tsimikas (5), Fabinho (6), Jones (6), Keita (6), Diaz (7), Jota (6), Mane (8).

Subs: Henderson (6), Thiago (6), Salah (6).

Man of the match: Sadio Mane.

How Liverpool turned it around

Liverpool, having named Mohamed Salah among their substitutes in a nod to their congested fixture list, were under pressure from the start and fell behind from the first attack amid a frenzied atmosphere. There were a series of errors in the build-up.

Kostas Tsimikas, in for Andy Robertson, tumbled to the ground and was joined by Matip, allowing Luiz to have a free header from Lucas Digne’s left-wing cross. Alisson spilt it when he might have pushed the ball away and the Brazilian put in the rebound.

Douglas Luiz gives Aston Villa an early lead against Liverpool
Image:
Douglas Luiz gives Aston Villa an early lead against Liverpool

With Klopp looking on bemused, it was all the encouragement Villa needed – but they undid their good work with some hapless defending of their own moments later. Tyrone Mings failed to clear and though Virgil van Dijk’s shot was saved, Matip prodded in the follow-up.

That seemed to settle Liverpool and there were chances for Diogo Jota and Mane soon after as the Champions League finalist began to crank up the pressure. And yet, there was danger too when Alisson’s woeful clearance struck Ollie Watkins and more panic ensued.

Team news

Aston Villa made two changes to the side that beat Burnley with Philippe Coutinho starting against his former club, replacing Emiliano Buendia. Marvelous Nakamba came in for Callum Chambers.

Mohamed Salah dropped to the bench to be replaced by Diogo Jota in one of five changes made by Jurgen Klopp. Curtis Jones and Naby Keita came in for Jordan Henderson and Thiago in midfield. Kostas Tsimikas replaced Andy Robertson at left-back, while Joel Matip returned for Ibrahima Konate.

Liverpool were playing football on the edge, knowing that another slip could gift the title to Man City, and when Danny Ings headed over the bark from John McGinn’s cross with Alisson off his line grasping for the ball and the goal gaping, Villa were almost ahead again.

Fabinho’s hamstring injury added to the awkwardness of Liverpool’s task and though Mane had the ball in the net – Luis Diaz was offside in the build-up – and Naby Keita spurned a clear chance, they went in level at the break with their title hopes fading.

As so often, it was Mane who came up with the key moment, his cute header from Diaz’s measured left-wing cross evading the sprawling Martinez and sparking wild scenes of celebration in the away end. It was the goal that reignited the title race.

Villa still had chances, the best falling to the former Liverpool forward Ings. Twice he was through on goal only to waste the chance before finally finishing and seeing the flag go up, much to the anguish of the Holte End. For Ings and for Villa, it was not to be their night.

For Liverpool, bigger nights lie ahead. In the FA Cup final on Saturday and in the Champions League final in Paris later this month, for sure. But maybe in the final stages of this Premier League season as well. Thanks to Mane’s goal and the resolve shown at Villa Park.

Analysis: Fabinho injury presents problem

While Pep Guardiola has been bemoaning his team’s injury problems, Liverpool’s loss of Fabinho could have ramifications beyond the Premier League title race. Will he be fit for this weekend’s FA Cup final? How about the Champions League final that follows?

The importance of the Brazilian can hardly be overstated. A towering figure at the base of Liverpool’s midfield, Jurgen Klopp leans heavily on him to protect the defence in the air and on the deck, particularly when covering for those marauding full-backs.

Indeed, Klopp has only gone without Fabinho in his starting line-up on three occasions in the Premier League since the turn of the year – against Norwich, Watford and Newcastle.

The only Champions League game that he has sat out in 2022 was the second leg against Benfica – which just happens to be the only time this year that Liverpool have conceded three goals in a game. A swift return could be crucial to his team’s hopes.

What’s next?

Aston Villa are back in action at Villa Park on Sunday against Crystal Palace before Burnley are the visitors on Thursday of next week. Gerrard’s side wrap up their campaign with a trip to the Etihad Stadium to take on Manchester City.

Liverpool’s next game is the FA Cup final against Chelsea at Wembley on Saturday, before they return to Premier League action at Southampton next Tuesday. Their final league game is at home to Wolves before they prepare for the Champions League final against Real Madrid in Paris on May 28.





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