The Reds looked like sweeping City aside in a dazzling opening half as goals
from Raheem Sterling and Martin Skrtel put Brendan Rodgers's team in complete
command.
City, who lost Yaya Toure to injury early on, mounted a superb recovery and
David Silva pulled one back early in the second half before his cross was
deflected in off Glen Johnson and Liverpool keeper Simon Mignolet to draw them
level five minutes later.
A gripping spectacle was decided 12 minutes from time when City captain
Vincent Kompany - an injury doubt before the game and clearly lacking some of
his familiar authority - sliced a clearance straight to Philippe Coutinho, who
shot low and unerringly past Joe Hart to put Liverpool in control of the title
race. It set up a nail-biting finish in which Liverpool's Jordan Henderson was
shown a straight red card for a late challenge on Samir Nasri, one which means
he will miss three of the last four games, and referee Mark Clattenburg missed
Skrtel's clear handball in the closing seconds.
The final whistle sounded seconds later and a wall of noise surrounded
Anfield as Reds players gathered in a huddle in front of the Kop, four wins away
from their first title since 1990. If Liverpool win those games they will be champions, but Chelsea also have to
visit Liverpool and there is every chance they will still be harbouring Premier
League title ambitions of their own.
City's impressive second-half showing demonstrated they must not be ruled out
and they left Anfield nursing a sense of injustice, also believing Luis Suarez
should have been sent off when Clattenburg declined to give him a second yellow
card for diving.
None of this will matter to the Reds, who were simply breathtaking in the
opening 45 minutes as they made it 10 league wins in succession. City had an injury doubt surrounding captain Kompany before kick-off after he
limped out of training on Saturday. He underwent a lengthy warm-up on his own
after being named on the team sheet and was fit to play. Liverpool's lightning starts have become their trademark and they were at it
again as Sterling gave them the lead after six minutes.
Suarez, who had already been booked for a late challenge on Martin
Demichelis, played a perfect pass into Sterling, who showed commendable coolness
to wait and wrong-foot Kompany and Hart before scoring in front of an ecstatic
Kop. And to make matters worse, Toure pulled up sharply with a muscle injury after
attempting a long-range shot, struggling for a few minutes before accepting the
inevitable and being replaced by Javi Garcia.
The hosts were overwhelming City with their pace, pressing and movement and
should have extended their lead when Sterling set up Daniel Sturridge, only for
the striker to glide a finish wide from eight yards. The only complaint Rodgers could have had was that his
team were not further ahead - but that situation was remedied as they scored a
second after 26 minutes. City's suspect marking at set-pieces allowed Gerrard a free header, which
forced a magnificent one-handed save from Hart. It kept Liverpool at bay for a
matter of seconds as Gerrard swung over the resulting corner and Skrtel rose at
the near post to head in.
Finally, City showed signs of life as half-time approached and Mamadou Sakho
was very fortunate to escape with a reckless lunge on Edin Dzeko in the area.
As Liverpool's pace relented briefly, the tiny figure of Sterling rose to
head Kompany's header off the line before Mignolet did very well to plunge and
turn away a snapshot from Fernandinho.
There was a very contentious moment early in the second half when Suarez went
down theatrically with, at best, minimal contact from Demichelis. Referee
Clattenburg gave no foul and City immediately questioned why Suarez had not been
given a second yellow card for diving.
City were a team transformed after the break, with the introduction of James
Milner for Jesus Navas a contributing factor. He helped Silva pull one back when
his run and cross gave the Spaniard a close-range finish. And as the Merseysiders suddenly rocked, matters were level five minutes
later when Silva's cross went in via a touch off Johnson and the legs of
Mignolet. Sensing the shift in momentum, City manager Manuel Pellegrini introduced
Sergio Aguero for Dzeko and he almost set up a third for Silva, who just had to
stretch too far to reach the pass and shot just wide.
Liverpool made City pay with 12 minutes left when Kompany's sliced clearance
fell to Coutinho, who sent a low finish past the stretching Hart. In a frantic finish, Henderson was sent off and Skrtel escaped with a
handball - but nothing could dampen the celebrations that swept around Anfield.
No comments:
Post a Comment