FROM a psychological standpoint Liverpool hold an advantage over Spurs this weekend in that they’re certain they are a team mired in genuine plight.
“So many things are unlike us in this moment,” Jurgen Klopp admitted after his side lost for the second week running, both times against misfiring opponents who hadn’t won since August, and if that analysis overly simplifies what we’re all witnessing, it at least acknowledges there are problems to solve; an identity to reclaim.
It has been a steady decline into the ordinary that has both structural and individual issues, the latter epitomized by the woeful and sustained poor form of Fabinho, a player who usually holds the easel steady while Mo Salah and co. Jackson Pollock their masterpieces. The Brazilian has looked off-it all season and in the role he is tasked with fulfilling that was always going to be costly.
Trent Alexander-Arnold meanwhile has proven beyond all reasonable doubt that he is the best and worst of Liverpool, a flying full-back who is an enormous asset when the sun is shining at Anfield and a liability when it rains. Twelve games in last season, the 24-year-old boasted six assists and was being feted as a world-class talent. This time out, he has yet to assist and every opposition manager makes a point of targeting his weaknesses in their pre-match team-talk.
Lastly, we come to Virgil Van Dijk, who remains an imperious defender blessed with an innate reading of danger. Still, unquestionably the towering Dutchman has lost his fear factor these past few months and with Liverpool’s risky high-line that once amounted to an extra man.
Virgil Van Dijk loses his first-ever Premier League match at Anfield.
The unbeaten streak ends at 70 games ❌ pic.twitter.com/8432RS1UQt
— B/R Football (@brfootball) October 29, 2022
Regarding the Reds’ structural concerns, a key flaw has been the struggle to assimilate Darwin Nunez into a set-up that has not previously housed a striker with his skill-sets. Yet, for all that rival fans delight in mocking his misses, and for all that Liverpool fans defend his attributes, it is not Nunez’s presence that inhibits Liverpool but rather a player no longer there. Goodness, how they’ve missed Sadio Mane this term.




