There are many talking points from Liverpool’s 2-1 defeat of Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield on Sunday.
[ MORE: Match recap | 3 things ]
This was a match rife with mistakes and squandered chances, and there was not a man who was perfect.
Andy Robertson was very, very good, but a part of the Spurs equalizer. Danny Rose was a Spurs star, but flubbed a late bid to send in a beautiful cross.
Stars
Andy Robertson -- The Liverpool left back not only served up an assist while habitually cooking Kieran Trippier, he blocked a seemingly surefire Christian Eriksen equalizer.
Roberto Firmino -- This was about so much more than the opening goal -- though what a header! -- as the Brazilian striker served as a calm playmaker and a bully on the ball.
Georginio Wijnaldum -- The least celebrated of a safe midfield, Wijnaldum was the best of the bunch and went 90 minutes in the win
Danny Rose -- Has been in fine form for club and country, and was a big part of several promising moves coming from Spurs’ left side. Almost was removed from this list for a horrid 87th minute blunder on a scoring chance, but was just too important over the first 87.
Christian Eriksen -- Inventive and undeterred, his spinning assist was a just reward for his day’s work.
Lucas Moura -- Struggled for much of the first half, but scored the equalizer and took a very smart tactical yellow with Salah on the break in the 79th minute.
Duds
Hugo Lloris -- The match-deciding goal is entirely on him, even if it ends up going over the line via an otherwise steady Toby Alderweireld.
Kieran Trippier -- As noted in the Robertson blurb, Trippier was very poor on the flank. His quick pass on the equalizer helped, but
Alisson Becker -- A fine parry in the second half, but mostly looked out-of-sorts in a big spot.
Moussa Sissoko -- Here for one reason: Sprung for a 2v1 with Heung-min Son, he dribbled toward the defender until a pass was impossible before blazing an effort nowhere near the goal. Son could’ve helped by running away from goal, but my goodness.
Harry Kane -- This was going to be “Harry Kane and Mohamed Salah,” but it felt like kicking a dead horse to put Salah here for struggling when he, along with Lloris, produced Alderweireld’s own goal. Kane was largely absent for a star striker, and working hard doesn’t get you the plaudits when you’re a Golden Boot chaser. So maybe Mohamed Salah should be here, too, having scored just once in nine matches.