Monthly Archives: December 2014

Liverpool can finish in top four, says Lallana

The Reds stormed to an impressive 4-1 win over Swansea City on Monday and the England midfielder is convinced that Brendan Rodgers’ side can secure Champions League football


Adam Lallana is confident Liverpool can secure a top four finish after they ended 2014 on a high by beating Swansea City at Anfield.

Two goals from the former Southampton star helped inspire Brendan Rodgers’s side to a 4-1 victory on Monday night, a result that moved them up into eighth place, five points behind Southampton in fourth.

And despite an indifferent first half of the season, Lallana has seen enough in Liverpool’s recent performances to suggest that they are capable of claiming a Champions League spot.

He told Sky Sports: “Of course there is [a belief Liverpool can get top four]. Especially because we’re finding performances now and we’ve had a couple of good results.

“We’ll take it game by game but that’s our target, to finish in the top four. It’s where the fans want us to be playing and the players themselves.”

Liverpool 4-1 Swansea City: Lallana scores twice as Reds climb to eighth


Two goals from Adam Lallana inspired Liverpool to a comfortable 4-1 victory over Swansea City at Anfield on Monday evening.

Alberto Moreno handed Brendan Rodgers’ side a half-time lead with a goal before the break, while Lukasz Fabianski gifted the hosts a second when his attempted clearance hit Lallana and looped into the net.

Gylfi Sigurdsson pulled a goal back one minute later but Lallana’s superb individual effort restored Liverpool’s two-goal advantage before Jonjo Shelvey headed Jordan Henderson’s cross into his own net.

Liverpool head into 2015 with just one defeat in their last 10 games in all competitions and move above Swansea into eighth place on goals scored.

Simon Mignolet was recalled to the starting line-up to replace the injured Brad Jones and captain Steven Gerrard dropped to the bench as Rodgers made four changes to the side that won at Burnley on Boxing Day.

Wayne Routledge replaced the injured Jefferson Montero in one of three changes to the Swansea team following the home victory over Aston Villa.

Swansea were allowing Moreno too much space on the left in the opening stages and the Spaniard whipped in a cross that Raheem Sterling met with a first-time strike that brought a fine reflex save out of Fabianski, then Lallana fired over the crossbar following up.

Liverpool appeared to have lost their way in the first half after a promising start, but Moreno put them in front after 33 minutes.

The former Sevilla man was left unmarked and had the simple task of turning in Henderson’s ball in from the right to round off a slick passing move.

Swansea boss Garry Monk criticised Shelvey’s “laziness” ahead of the game and urged him to cut out “silly mistakes” from his game, but the midfielder failed to heed the warning as he caught Can with a swinging arm and got away with it.

There was very little to get the crowd on their feet in the first half, but the game burst into the life in an action-packed start to the second period.

Fabianski was first left red-faced as he gifted Liverpool a second goal when his attempted clearance struck Lallana and looped into the net six minutes after the break.

Liverpool conceded just after scoring against Arsenal recently and they were guilty of switching off again, as Mamadou Sakho beat Wilfried Bony in the air, but could only head the ball into the path of Sigurdsson and he fired home from close range just a minute after the hosts had doubled their lead.

Sterling came close to restoring Liverpool’s two-goal advantage soon after when his right-footed strike came back off the post after Henderson picked him out with a superb cross.

Lallana was fortunate with his first goal, but there was nothing lucky about his second as Philippe Coutinho laid the ball off to the midfielder with a deft flick and he waltzed past a couple of Swansea players before finishing with his left foot after 61 minutes.

Liverpool were out of sight eight minutes later when Shelvey got a head on Henderson’s corner and could only watch on as the ball looped just inside the far post.

Sterling was lucky to get away with swinging an arm at Federico Fernandez after the ball had gone out of play and substitute Bafetimbi Gomis’ strike rattled the crossbar as Liverpool ended the year on a high note.

Fabregas chasing records & a first for Manchester United in 85 games – Opta’s Weekend in Numbers

The Chelsea midfielder has recorded 13 assists after 18 games – the most of any player at the midway point – while Louis van Gaal named a rare unchanged team against Tottenham


By Duncan Alexander

THE ARCHITECT

In the end, Chelsea saw neither of the Manchester clubs gain on them despite two dropped points at Southampton. The Saints took an early lead and dominated the opening 45 minutes, so much so that Chelsea did not record a single shot until injury time at the end of the first half.

Sadly for the home side this opening shot from the league leaders resulted in an equaliser, with Cesc Fabregas once again recording an assist. The former Barcelona man now has 13 assists this season, more than any player has previously managed after 18 Premier League appearances, and as many as anyone recorded in the whole of 2013-14.

Fabregas now has a possible 19 games to record eight more and set a new Premier League record (currently held by Thierry Henry with 20 in 2002-03). It would be a major surprise if he didn’t manage it.

CITY SLIPPERS

The shuffled kick-off times in the Premier League on Sunday meant that by the time Manchester City came in at half-time against Burnley, two goals to the good, they would have known that Chelsea were about to drop two points in their game on the south coast.

Whether that had in a psychological impact on City in the second half will remain a mystery but what is crystal clear is that the Clarets became the first visiting side since Fulham in October 2009 to trail by two goals at the Etihad Stadium and rescue a point.

The result meant that Manuel Pellegrini’s side squandered the chance to set a new club record of 10 successive wins, but perhaps more importantly for a side who have won one Premier League title on goal difference and another by two points, it is the fact they failed to close the gap on Chelsea that will smart the most.

Burnley deserve huge credit and their players deserve a good rest: the game vs City was the fourth in a row Sean Dyche has named an unchanged starting XI and he didn’t even make any substitutions as his hard-running troops pulled off the surprise of the day.

WINNING UGLY

So far Arsenal are one of only two Premier League sides to win on both Boxing Day and matchday 19 and they did so at West Ham in the sort of scrappy style that probably says more about their chances of achieving a top-four finish than the sort of comfortable home win they experience so often.

Away at Sam Allardyce’s pumped-up West Ham, the Gunners only completed 66 per cent of their passes (the second lowest figure Opta have ever recorded for Arsenal in a Premier League game) but came away with a 2-1 win, a record 11th Premier League victory at Upton Park by a visiting side, and are now only out of the Champions League spots on goal difference.

The Hammers took advantage of Arsenal’s defensive weakness in the air in the second half but 10 points from four games is slowly erasing memories of the Gunners’ dismal opening 45 minutes against Stoke at the start of the month.

NO DEFENCE

The progress Everton made under Roberto Martinez last season ebbed further away in their game at Newcastle.

A team who conceded only 39 goals in 38 games in 2013-14 have now conceded 31 times at the halfway stage a year on and find themselves a mere five points above the relegation zone and with the same W-D-L record as a struggling Aston Villa team.

The Toffees are repeatedly hamstrung by defensive errors and their total of 10 errors leading directly to goals is more than any other side has recorded. That is already four more than they made in Martinez’s debut season and the feeling persists that the Spanish tactician initially benefited from the well marshalled defence constructed by David Moyes and is struggling to maintain the iron discipline that Everton once enjoyed most weeks.

RECOVERY CATS

Sunderland’s defensive recovery since their 8-0 destruction at Southampton in October has been remarkable. In five Premier League away games since the thumping on the Solent, the Black Cats have conceded just once and a 0-0 at Villa Park on Sunday saw them record four successive clean sheets away from home in the Premier League for the first time.

Now they are secure at the back, manager Gus Poyet will surely look to strengthen up front in the transfer window. This game was Sunderland’s sixth goalless draw of the season (there have only been 17 in total this campaign) which is already a record for the Wearside in a single Premier League season.

There may not be much excitement (derby wins against Newcastle aside), but there is stability at last.