Friends of Liverpool
·8 Januari 2026
Can Hugo Ekitike Sustain his Good Form in the Premier League?

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsFriends of Liverpool
·8 Januari 2026

Hugo Ekitike’s first season at Liverpool hasn’t been straightforward. He’s scoring regularly, but the team’s still searching for consistency, dealing with injuries and adjusting to a new attacking balance. This has shaped how betting markets for top English football have evolved as the season has progressed.
The French forward has become one of Liverpool’s most reliable goal scorers. He’s already on eight Premier League strikes this season, and whilst that tally might not grab major headlines, the timing matters. In a team that’s struggled to control games or build momentum, Ekitike’s often provided the outlet they’ve needed.
Ekitike’s profile suits what Liverpool are trying to do. He’s mobile, willing to run channels and comfortable operating between centre-backs. He’s also improved his link-up play, which helps when Liverpool struggle to move the ball cleanly through midfield.
His strikes haven’t come from low-percentage shots or luck. Instead, he’s consistently getting into central areas, attacking the six-yard box and arriving at the right moment rather than forcing attempts from distance. These habits tend to stick, and they’re the kind of patterns you want to see from a striker finding his feet in English football.
There’s a flip side, though. If Liverpool’s struggles continue, strikers rarely maintain strong scoring numbers in teams that don’t create consistently. Without improved control in the middle third and better service from wide areas, Ekitike could find himself starved of the quality chances he’s been converting.
Fitness is another factor worth watching. The Premier League’s physical demands are relentless, and his high-energy movement means workload management will matter as fixtures pile up. Short bursts of form are common – maintaining them across months separates reliable scorers from streaky ones. Liverpool’s coaching staff will need to manage his minutes carefully, particularly during congested periods.

Isak’s broken leg has removed a major attacking option from Liverpool’s plans for the foreseeable future, shifting goalscoring responsibility almost entirely onto Ekitike’s shoulders.
This brings opportunity and pressure in equal measure. There’s clarity: Ekitike’s the focal point now, the player teammates will look to in the final third. But opposition defences can now tailor their approach around stopping him specifically. They’ll study his movement patterns, his preferred runs, his finishing tendencies. Sustaining form when you’re the obvious threat is far harder than scoring when attention’s shared between multiple forwards.
Liverpool’s next few matches will test whether Ekitike’s form can hold across different challenges. Leeds will look to disrupt him with intensity and physical pressure. In that environment, his ability to hold the ball up and bring others into play may matter as much as his finishing. He’ll need to win duels, protect possession and create space for runners.
Fulham present a different problem. They’re well organised and compact, particularly at home, and rarely give strikers clear chances in central areas. Ekitike will need patience, sharp movement and focus on second balls – where fine margins often decide things against a deep-lying defence. It’s the type of match that can frustrate forwards who rely on clear-cut opportunities.
The biggest test comes against Arsenal. As title contenders with one of the league’s strongest defences, they allow very few opportunities in the box. Facing defenders like William Saliba and Gabriel, Ekitike may only get one or two chances all match. Whether he takes them could say plenty about how sustainable his scoring run really is. These are the fixtures where top strikers make their reputations.









































