Another late goal is Liverpool’s undoing in loss to last-place Wolves

Another late goal is Liverpool's undoing in loss to last-place Wolves

WOLVERHAMPTON, England — Liverpool can’t say they weren’t warned. Even before a ball was kicked at Molineux on Tuesday night, the modus operandi of hosts Wolverhampton Wanderers was encapsulated in the banner draped over the centre circle, bearing the words: “Fear Nothing.”

Despite being rooted to the bottom of the Premier League table with virtually no chance of escaping relegation, Wolves’ recent triumph over high-flying Aston Villa suggested they are intent on not relinquishing their proud top flight status without a fight. Certainly, Rob Edwards’ side delivered a knockout blow to visitors Liverpool when midfielder André‘s strike deflected past Alisson Becker to consign the Reds to another chastening late loss.

The Brazil international’s 94th-minute winner means Liverpool have now lost five games to goals after the 90th minute this season — the most of any side in a single campaign in Premier League history. In addition to those defeats against Wolves, Manchester City, AFC Bournemouth, Chelsea and Crystal Palace, Liverpool have also conceded injury-time equalisers to Fulham and Leeds United, squandering nine precious points in the process.

In a season characterised by late drama — for good reasons and for bad — Liverpool’s propensity for exposing their soft underbelly has too often been their undoing. A heady cocktail of misfortune and poor defending paved the way for Wolves’ last-gasp winner, handing the reigning Premier League champions a 2-1 loss to the league’s last-place team.

But while the Reds can bemoan the missed foul on Dominik Szoboszlai and the heavy deflection off Joe Gomez, the alarming frequency of their capitulations this season means this is no hard luck story.


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Ahead of Tuesday’s trip to the West Midlands, Liverpool coach Arne Slot was asked for his opinion of the Premier League’s increasing focus on physicality and set pieces, and he gave a candid appraisal: “Do I like it? My football heart doesn’t like it.”

While his comments will have resonated in some quarters, there was very little about Liverpool’s play against Wolves that will have satisfied the football purists. The first half at Molineux was something of a non-event, with Cody Gakpo‘s tame effort on goal the only passable chance carved out by the visitors, who have been culpable of letting too many contests pass them by this term.

Wolves, meanwhile, were content to let Slot’s men have the ball and wait for an opportunity to pounce. They did so with a vengeance in the 78th minute when Tolu Arokodare outmuscled Virgil van Dijk and picked out Rodrigo Gomez, who expertly dinked the ball over Alisson to convert the hosts’ first shot on target.

According to Opta, it is the second-latest a team has scored with their first shot of a Premier League match, after Fulham vs. Newcastle in October 2022 (88th minute). Parity was restored just five minutes later when Mohamed Salah picked off a loose pass from Jean Ricner-Bellegarde and slotted past José Sá.

It was Salah’s first Premier League goal since Nov. 1 but while the Egypt international finally broke his drought, his overall lack of efficacy once again brought Liverpool’s lack of dynamism out wide into sharp focus. On the other flank, Gakpo’s most notable contribution came when he appeared to inadvertently prevent a certain goal from Curtis Jones in the second half, before being substituted shortly after the hour mark.

Despite last summer’s record-breaking spend of close to £450 million, Liverpool once again find themselves with major surgery to do to address the glaring gaps in their squad and assemble a creative unit capable of unpicking increasingly stringent Premier League defences. The return of midfielder Florian Wirtz — currently sidelined with a back problem — cannot come soon enough.

Still, Slot’s side should have had more than enough firepower to steer them past a team that, before Tuesday night, had won only two league games all season. Their desire to push for a winner — not for the first time this term — left them vulnerable in defence and opened the door for Andre to try his luck from the edge of the penalty area.

It was a gamble that paid off for the Brazilian, with his strike catapulting the home supporters into dreamland and sending manager Edwards sprinting down the touchline. That Liverpool’s ineptitude has incited such feverish celebrations on so many occasions this season is perhaps the most damning indictment of their topsy-turvy campaign.

“How do I sum this up?” Slot said in his post-match news conference. “Same old story. Recently we are picking up points because we score many times from set-pieces, but what didn’t change in the last five, six seven games is that we struggle and find it very hard to score from open play chances that we do create.

“Not as much as I would like from all the ball possession we have but enough and far more than the other team. But the end result is we scored one and they scored two and another one in injury time so it sums up our season again.”

It is a fair assessment from the Dutchman, but one that has been too often applicable this season.

Too many times this term Liverpool have encountered the “same old story.” They are fast running out of games to rewrite their campaign’s ending.

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