Anfield Index
·24 January 2026
Match Preview: Liverpool set for tricky AFC Bournemouth test

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·24 January 2026

Date: Saturday, 24 January 2026
Venue: Vitality Stadium
Kick-off: 17:30 BST
Following a much-needed European release valve in Marseille, Liverpool head south for a fixture that asks a very different set of questions. The 0–3 win in France came against a side built to attack, press high, and leave space behind — conditions that finally allowed Liverpool’s technical superiority and athletic power to breathe. Bournemouth will offer none of that generosity.
This trip to the south coast is uncomfortable by design. Tight pitch, compact crowd, and an opponent well-drilled in denying space. For Arne Slot, whose footballing instincts lean toward rhythm and control through possession, this may be one of the most testing league fixtures left on the calendar. Bournemouth will not chase. They will wait.
Momentum is fragile. Liverpool needs to prove that Marseille was not just a stylistic gift but a platform to build on.
Bournemouth at home has made a habit of disrupting bigger sides by shrinking the game. Their defensive block is disciplined, their distances are tight, and their patience without the ball often frustrates teams that want to dominate through territory rather than incision.
Expect a low-to-mid block, aggressive triggers in wide areas, and a heavy emphasis on second balls. Bournemouth will happily concede possession, trusting their structure to funnel Liverpool into predictable patterns. The channels will be protected, the central zones congested, and transitions ruthlessly targeted if Liverpool overcommits.
This is the kind of setup Liverpool has struggled against all season. When the ball moves slowly and movement ahead of it is limited, Bournemouth thrive. If Liverpool falls into the trap of sterile dominance, the hosts will grow in belief with every minute that passes.
Slot does not enjoy low blocks — and neither do his players — but solving them is non-negotiable if Liverpool are to secure a top-four finish. The challenge here is not intensity; it is intelligence.
Dominik Szoboszlai’s role will be critical again. His running power, pressing triggers, and willingness to shoot from distance can disrupt compact defences that otherwise settle into rhythm. Alexis Mac Allister must dictate tempo without slowing it, while Ryan Gravenberch’s off-ball movement could be key in dragging Bournemouth’s midfield out of shape.
Florian Wirtz remains Liverpool’s most important problem-solver. His ability to drift inside, receive under pressure, and create angles where none appear will likely decide whether Liverpool unlocks this game or drifts through it. But he needs runners. Hugo Ekitike’s movement across the line must be constant, and Szoboszlai’s late arrivals need to be timed with conviction.
Defensively, Liverpool cannot be careless. Bournemouth will wait for moments — loose passes, overextended fullbacks, lapses in rest defence. Virgil van Dijk and Joe Gomez must control space behind the midfield, not react to it.
GK – Alisson Becker
RB – Jeremie Frimpong
CB – Joe Gomez
CB – Virgil van Dijk (c)
LB – Milos Kerkez
CM – Dominik Szoboszlai
CM – Alexis Mac Allister
CM – Ryan Gravenberch
RW – Mohamed Salah
CF – Hugo Ekitike
LW – Florian Wirtz
This is a litmus test of Liverpool’s growth. Marseille was about execution in space; Bournemouth is about creating it. If Liverpool moves the ball with speed, commits bodies intelligently, and avoids emotional impatience, they have enough quality to win.
If they don’t, this becomes another afternoon of possession without purpose — and another reminder of how thin the margins remain.
Bournemouth 2 – 2 Liverpool
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