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Liverpool take smash and grab derby victory

Everton 0 Liverpool 2

By Paul Walker, PA

Liverpool produced a smash and grab Merseyside derby victory to claim fifth place in the Barclays Premier League on a day of raw tension at Goodison Park.

But they will have sighed with relief after being pounded for almost all of this very local showdown, but somehow emerged with the points.

An own goal from Joseph Yobo, deflecting a Javier Mascherano effort past Tim Howard saw Liverpool ahead at the break despite being almost permanently on the back foot as Everton poured forward.

But their eighth win in their last 10 visits to Goodison Park was secured with 10 minutes to go when Dirk Kuyt scored from close range after another Yobo error.

Everton were the dominant force, but could not turn their pressure into goals, with Liverpool now having lost just two of their last 20 league games against the old enemy.

Rarely can a Merseyside derby have been played out with both rival managers--David Moyes and Rafael Benitez--having had to handle questions over their longevity in their jobs.

The 212th clash between these bitterest of rivals certainly held the immediate futures of both seriously under-achieving clubs. Everton, fighting to get away from the relegation zone and Liverpool desperate to put their distressing season back on track.

Everton made four changes from the side that lost so poorly at Hull in midweek, Tony Hibbert, Jo, Marouane Fellaini and Diniyar Bilyaletdinov all returning with youngster Jack Rodwell the most notable omission with a groin injury.

Liverpool fielded the side that had won in Hungary against Debrecen, but could not save the Reds' Champions League lives.

And again there was no Fernando Torres in the squad, leaving young striker David Ngog to continue his Premier League education in the unforgiving glare of a derby battlefield.

With so much at stake, the opening exchanges were even more ferocious than usual. Mascherano and Tim Cahill traded kicks and warnings from referee Alan Wiley, with Cahill finding himself dumped on the track by the Argentina captain.

But it was Mascherano who was soon celebrating, having had a major part in Liverpool's 12th-minute lead.

Everton criminally allowed the midfielder to advance towards their box, where he lashed in a 20 yarder that deflected off Yobo and into the opposite corner than had been intended with Howard hopelessly wrongfooted.

It was the lead Liverpool had craved, but one that ignited a fierce and sustained response from Everton.

Twice they had the ball in the net before the break, but two efforts by Jo were ruled out for offside, the second when Fellaini blocked Jose Reina right on the line.

But there were other chances for Everton, with Bilyaletdinov managing to mis-hit wide from six yards when it would have been easier to score.

Reina saved from Russian winger, while the excellent Steven Pienaar was twice close as Everton surged forward in search of an equaliser they fully deserved.

Liverpool were barely noticeable up front, although Kuyt fired over and Howard made a fine save from Emiliano Insua's close-range header.

But they were rare excursions into enemy territory for Liverpool in a one-sided first-half.

Everton came out after the break intent on more of the same. They hurled themselves at Liverpool's creaking defence in which Jamie Carragher and Daniel Agger were working overtime to keep the blue waves at bay.

Liverpool were hanging on under the most searching of examinations. Saha replaced Jo after 66 minutes, still Everton rolling relentlessly forward.

Yobo managed to deflect an Ngog effort wide, but that was a rare venture out by Liverpool.

Reina produced a stunning double-save from Cahill and then Fellaini, Liverpool penned back and defending with increasing desperation.

In all of this, Steven Gerrard was a peripheral figure. Clearly short of pace and movement he was unable to influence what was going on all around him, until taking a hand in the critical second goal.

Ngog was finally withdrawn with 15 minutes to go, Yossi Benayoun arriving to play on the right with Kuyt taking the central attacking role. Albert Riera was next into the fray, in place of Fabio Aurelio, somehow Liverpool still ahead.

But with 10 minutes left, all Everton's brave efforts came to nothing as Liverpool dealt them a sickening blow.

Reina's long clearance was headed down by Kuyt with Yobo slashing wildly at the ball. It fell to Gerrard who set up Riera for a shot that Howard pushed into the path of Kuyt, who stabbed home the second.

Ayegbeni Yakubu came off for Cahill, and Lucas Neill for a crestfallen Yobo. But it was all over for Everton, who will never know how they lost this one.

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Comments

Some objective reporting please
[info]zulu2010 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 05:24 pm (UTC)
Liverpool defended well and apart from the double save from Reina, when did Everton actually create any clear chances. Neither did Liverpool but they got their goal when they were pushing forward and then decided to defend their lead. If Everton had obtained the reverse result at Anfield, it would have been all about the professionalism of the Everton defense. How biased! We didn't play well and gave the ball away too easily and sat back until Riera and Benayoun came on but Everton were poor too.
Pressing
[info]snotcricket wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 05:27 pm (UTC)
The comment:

"Rarely can a Merseyside derby have been played out with both rival managers--David Moyes and Rafael Benitez--having had to handle questions over their longevity in their jobs".

The press have been rabbiting on about Benitez being sacked for the last two seasons & still they continue in their attempts to create news rather than report it.

Throughout this press instigated campaign Liverpool consistently told the cloth-eared journo's that Benitez job is not an issue, indeed they gave the ultimate reply in March when giving Benitez a contract until 2014.

Just what will pacify these hungry sensationalist Southern journo's? Well of course the sacking of Benitez, after which they'll say the rumours (they created) were well founded. Disgraceful journalism & should stay in the gutter along with its scribe's whose talent or idleness is such their match reports are of a depth the page is filled with pictures, perhaps in the hope we are as stupid as they would like us to be. Match reports should be exactly that, but the reports is so thin in narrative one often wonders if some of these journo's actually manage to stagger from the bar/hospitality area's to view the game.
nothing positive to take other than 3 undeserved points
[info]partridge_41 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:15 pm (UTC)
we didn't deserve anything out of that, not even a point. Nick a fluke goal and defend desperately for 90 minutes - the sort of shithouse football that opposition teams play against us meaning every game at Anfield is a moanfest. We could barely string 3 passes together. Everton played virtually all the football and must have won most of the 50/50s. We just could not handle Fellaini, who apart from his aerial dominance showed a lot of nice touches on the ball, and if it wasn't for Reina's heroics we'd have got our just desserts ; nothing. I bet Moyes wishes Fellaini could perform like that every week and not just randomly.

Everton will be fine with Jagielka back in the centre, although Moyes really needs to sign a right back, or move Neville (when fit) or Heitinga back there. It's been the weak position in their side for years now. Hibbert is incredibly error prone and Neill is possibly the worst footballer in the Premiership. Check the highlights of Everton conceding three to Hull midweek. Neill just walks around as though he couldn't give a monkeys. He probably can't. All he seems to care about is his next paycheque.

As for Liverpool, I'm far from convinced we can kick on from this. I'd be more confident about kicking on if we'd played well but lost. Over the years I've learned to pay more attention to how we're playing than the points getting tallied up. On paper, Blackburn away doesn't look particularly daunting, but there seems to be real malaise in our play currently.

It's pretty clear to me and others that Gerrard should not be playing for us at the moment. He looks extremely tentative in everything he does, and looks as though he's been told to coast games, and not to close down the opposition or do anything that involves stretching for the ball. I'd like to see him rested until Arsenal, or even put under the surgeon's knife, which I strongly suspect really needs to happen in both his and Torres' case. I want to see Kuyt, Benayoun and Riera as the three 'forwards' next weekend. Oh and that Italian fella in midfield if he's still alive.

The league is over as a contest. I thought Chelsea would drub Arsenal today and so they did. Men against boys. They are galloping into the dust. We won't finish within 20 points of them. Manchester United will do well to keep the deficit in single figures. I very much doubt they will. Might as well hand the Footballer of the Year to Essien right now.

So, dreadful worst team ever sack Benitez Liverpool are now a mere 2 points behind amazing astonishing better than Brasil 1970 Harlem Globetrotter Arsenal. This is precisely why no Liverpool fan is worried about losing our top 4 spot just yet. Rubbish all season but still there or thereabouts and we cannot conceivably play as badly as this all season. I bet the Arsenal are glad that Flawton and the rest of the media have guaranteed them a top 4 spot or they might start getting nervy.
Once More With Feeling
[info]kopdude wrote:
Monday, 30 November 2009 at 12:18 pm (UTC)
I just posted this on your other LFC article but just to ram the point home:

?Titles are not won in November...we are not the same at the back....the almost invincible back four of last year is suddenly looking vulnerable and fragile....X has been uncharacteristically patchy and Y has looked unsure with crosses....we just don't look like the same cohesive unit...the second negative of sorts is the introduction of B - 2 goals from 10 league starts hardly inspires confidence...with Chelsea accumulating a big goal difference early on, the pressure is immense on us to take our chances....the third negative so far has been the results against the top 4. We've given up leads against (other 3) and just come home with a point...?

The above is from a Utd fan's blog from November last season, when Utd were several points adrift and about to lose to Arsenal. There was no mention of Fergie being sacked anywhere.

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