Liverpool 3-1 Leicester: Mohamed Salah seals comeback win as Reds go seven points clear in Premier League | OneFootball

Liverpool 3-1 Leicester: Mohamed Salah seals comeback win as Reds go seven points clear in Premier League | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: Evening Standard

Evening Standard

·26 décembre 2024

Liverpool 3-1 Leicester: Mohamed Salah seals comeback win as Reds go seven points clear in Premier League

Image de l'article :Liverpool 3-1 Leicester: Mohamed Salah seals comeback win as Reds go seven points clear in Premier League

Arne Slot’s side were given an early scare but recovered to take further control of title race

Liverpool moved seven points clear at the top of the Premier League as they came from behind to beat Leicester 3-1 at Anfield.


Vidéos OneFootball


The Reds made a sluggish start as Jordan Ayew gave Leicester a shock lead inside six minutes, swivelling and finishing well beyond Alisson after good work from Stephy Mavididi.

It was a lead the Foxes held until first-half stoppage-time, when Cody Gakpo was allowed to drift onto his right foot and curl in a brilliant finish from just outside the area.

That felt like a significant body blow and so it proved, as Liverpool stepped it up after the break. They led within five minutes of the restart, as Alexis Mac Allister’s cut-back was turned in by Curtis Jones from close range. a goal that was confirmed after a lengthy VAR review.

An even more painfully long check denied Gakpo his second, with Darwin Nunez offside in the build-up, but the result was effectively put to bed when Mohamed Salah scored in trademark fashion, finding the far corner with the left-footed strike.

With Chelsea losing to Fulham earlier in the day, Liverpool are now seven points ahead of the Blues with a game in hand. Arsenal have the chance to close the gap to the Reds to six points, but they too have played a game more.

For Leicester, who had slipped into the bottom three after Wolves' win over Manchester United, it is now one win from the last 10 in the league and Ruud van Nistelrooy has plenty of work to do, although he was not helped here by the absence of leading scorer Jamie Vardy through injury.

It looked liked Liverpool meant business from the off with Salah's volley from Gakpo's far-post cross just being kept out by Jakub Stolarczyk, making his league debut after former Liverpool goalkeeper Danny Ward was omitted from the squad having struggled in the defeat to Wolves.

But if the hosts thought that had set the tone they were badly mistaken after being opened up with such simplicity in only the sixth minute.

Stephy Mavididi broke down the left and his low cross picked out Ayew, who turned Andy Robertson far too easily, with his shot deflecting off Virgil van Dijk to take it just out of Alisson Becker's reach.

With a surprise lead to cling to Leicester knew they had to quell the storm heading their way and they began by trying to take as much time out of the game as they could, much to Anfield's frustration.

It took a further 18 minutes for Liverpool to threaten with Gakpo cutting in from the left to fire over, a precursor for what was to follow just before half-time.

That was the prompt for the attacks to rain down on the Foxes goal, with Salah's shot looping up off Victor Kristiansen and landing on the roof of the net and Robertson heading against a post.

Gakpo's inclination to come in off the left was proving a problem for the visitors, doing their utmost to resist the pressure, but when Salah curled a shot onto the crossbar on the stroke of half-time it appeared they had survived.

However, Gakpo once again drifted in off the flank to collect an Alexis Mac Allister pass before curling what is fast becoming his trademark effort over Stolarczyk and inside the far post.

Early the second half Darwin Nunez fired over Ryan Gravenberch's cross before Jones side-footed home Mac Allister's cross after an intricate passing move inside the penalty area involving Nunez, Salah and the Argentina international.

Leicester's ambition remained limited but Patson Daka should have done better from a two-on-one counter attack with Mavididi but completely missed his kick with the goal looming.

Nunez forced a save out of the goalkeeper before Gakpo blasted home what he thought was his second only for VAR to rule Nunez was offside in the build-up.

But Liverpool's third was eventually delivered by the left foot of Salah, who curled the ball outside Kristiansen, inside Jannick Vestergaard and past Stolarczyk inside the far post.

Additional reporting by PA Sport.

À propos de Publisher