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Liverpool v Tottenham (2018-19)
Liverpool v Tottenham
Report
EventPremier League 2018-19
DateSunday 31 March 2019
VenueAnfield, Liverpool
Player of the MatchAndrew Robertson
RefereeMartin Atkinson
Attendance53,322
Weather12 °C (54 °F)
Liverpool - Fulham
Spurs - S'hampton
Liverpool - S'hampton
Spurs - Brighton

Liverpool v Tottenham was a match which took place at the Anfield on Sunday 31 March 2019.

Toby Alderweireld's late own goal gave Liverpool a priceless victory and put them back on top of the Premier League.

Visitors Tottenham looked on course to earn a point - and even wasted chances to go in front - after Lucas Moura deservedly equalised Roberto Firmino's first-half header for the home side.

Liverpool were on the brink of losing ground to Manchester City - 2-0 winners at Fulham on Saturday - until the title race took another dramatic twist in the closing moments in front of the Kop.

Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris failed to hold Mohamed Salah's routine far-post header and the ball ricocheted into the net off Alderweireld.

It was sheer elation for Liverpool, who are now two points clear of City having played a game more, but misery for Spurs, who are in a real fight for a top-four place and were left to regret Moussa Sissoko's glaring miss when through on goal minutes earlier.

Liverpool are simply refusing to be denied in their Premier League title battle with Manchester City - no matter how late they have to leave it to get the three points.

They were fortunate victors here but once again they dug deep, rode their luck, and were the beneficiaries of another dramatic conclusion at Anfield. And not for the first time this season, a visiting goalkeeper was culpable.

Everton's Jordan Pickford and Crystal Palace's Julian Speroni have both had nightmare moments in front of the Kop that have resulted in tight home wins; now Lloris can add his name to the list of those who might be privately cursed by Pep Guardiola's reigning champions.

There was little degree of difficulty about the save the France World Cup winner needed to make from Salah's header, which was on target but hardly laced with menace, in the final minute of normal time.

He fumbled the routine save and it was the unfortunate Alderweireld who got the final touch. Liverpool had the win, just as it looked as if they would have to settle for a point and hand the title advantage to City.

And yet credit to Klopp's side. Just as they did by winning 2-1 with a late penalty at Fulham in their last league game, they refused to lose the belief that they could win. They did so in a game where their opponents were the stronger side for much of the second half.

As Klopp went through his mandatory fist-pumping in front of the home support, you could sense just how significant this late show might prove to be.

Tottenham's players slumped to the ground in anguish at the final whistle; they clearly felt they had been denied their just reward.

Mauricio Pochettino's side may actually have been unhappy with a point but suffered for their own flaws in front of goal, especially when Sissoko missed that huge chance with the score level and Spurs on top.

There was not a shred of conviction as he bore down on Liverpool keeper Alisson. Instead there was almost a desperation to get rid of the ball to the adjacent Son Heung-min, but the responsibility was his and he choked by hoisting a hopeless finish well over the top.

Dele Alli was then inches off target and as long as this potent Liverpool side were in contention there was always the threat of that last-ditch hammer blow.

Spurs, after a tame first half, were outstanding in the second, but they are now without a Premier League win since 10 February and are embroiled in the fight for a top four place - with a Champions League quarter-final against Manchester City to come.

There is so much quality in this side but they wasted a huge chance here and ended up with an unwanted statistic to their name; it is the first time they have lost four consecutive Premier League away matches since a sequence under Harry Redknapp between December 2008 and January 2009.

And there is now only a single point separating Spurs in third and Chelsea in sixth.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, speaking to Sky Sports: "I was relatively calm [after the winning goal] because it was a surprise. I saw the header and nothing else. I had no clue how the ball went in.

"In the first half, we had fantastic chances and scored a wonderful goal. In the second half, we looked heavy and couldn't really play. They changed only a little bit. We didn't adapt well. After Spurs' goal, we started playing again more.

"We compete with the best team in the world [Manchester City] and play against one of best in the world in Tottenham - it is a tough task.

"City last year were champions and are still pretty good. We have to fight like crazy. The crowd was outstanding. They were really here to push us and at the end it helped. It is only positive. I said there are 500 ways to win a football game and today was slightly ugly. Who cares?

"We compete with the best team in world for one position and that is really hard."

Tottenham boss Mauricio Pochettino, speaking to BBC Match of the Day: "We are all disappointed but at the same time we have to be happy with our second-half performance.

"We were a little bit unlucky to concede the second goal when we should have been ahead because we dominated Liverpool, who are a very good team.

"No one wants to lose but it's a different defeat than the ones we suffered against Southampton or Burnley. We cannot say it's positive but now we start from zero and we can achieve what we want.

"I was telling the players in the changing room we have seven games and we are in top four and need to compete. It's a mini league and, playing the way we played today, I think we can achieve the top four."

Match[]

Details[]

Sunday 31 March 2019
16:30
Liverpool Liverpool FC 2–1 Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Hotspur Anfield, Liverpool
Attendance: 53,322
Referee: Martin Atkinson
Roberto Firmino Goal 16'
Alderweireld Goal 90' (og)
Report Lucas Moura Goal 70'
Liverpool
Tottenham
13 Alisson
66 Trent Alexander-Arnold
32 Joël Matip
04 Virgil van Dijk
26 Andrew Robertson
05 Georginio Wijnaldum
14 Jordan Henderson Substituted off in the 77th minute 77'
07 James Milner Substituted off in the 77th minute 77'
11 Mohamed Salah Substituted off in the 90+3th minute 90+3'
09 Roberto Firmino
10 Sadio Mané
Substitutes:
03 Fabinho Substituted on in the 77th minute 77'
06 Dejan Lovren Substituted on in the 90+4th minute 90+4'
08 Naby Keïta
20 Adam Lallana
22 Simon Mignolet
23 Xherdan Shaqiri
27 Divock Origi Substituted on in the 77th minute 77'
Manager:
Flag of Germany Jürgen Klopp
01 Hugo Lloris
06 Dávinson Sánchez Substituted off in the 69th minute 69'
04 Toby Alderweireld
05 Jan Vertonghen
02 Kieran Trippier
23 Christian Eriksen Substituted off in the 90+1th minute 90+1'
17 Moussa Sissoko
20 Dele Alli
03 Danny Rose
10 Harry Kane
27 Lucas Moura Substituted off in the 82nd minute 82' Booked
Substitutes:
07 Son Heung-min Substituted on in the 69th minute 69'
12 Victor Wanyama
18 Fernando Llorente Substituted on in the 90+1th minute 90+1'
21 Juan Foyth
22 Paulo Gazzaniga
33 Ben Davies Substituted on in the 82nd minute 82'
52 Oliver Skipp
Manager:
Flag of Argentina Mauricio Pochettino

See also[]

External links[]

Premier League 2018–19

Arsenal FC Arsenal · AFC Bournemouth Bournemouth · Brighton & Hove Albion Brighton & Hove Albion · Burnley FC Burnley · Cardiff City FC Cardiff City · Chelsea FC Chelsea · Crystal Palace FC Crystal Palace · Everton FC Everton · Fulham FC Fulham · Huddersfield Town FC Huddersfield Town · Leicester City FC Leicester City · Liverpool FC Liverpool · Manchester City FC Manchester City · Manchester United FC Manchester United · Newcastle United FC Newcastle United · Southampton FC Southampton · Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Hotspur · Watford FC Watford · West Ham United FC West Ham United · Wolverhampton Wanderers Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League match days 2018-19

Match day 01 | Match day 02 | Match day 03 | Match day 04 | Match day 05 | Match day 06 | Match day 07 | Match day 08 | Match day 09 | Match day 10 | Match day 11 | Match day 12 | Match day 13 | Match day 14 | Match day 15 | Match day 16 | Match day 17 | Match day 18 | Match day 19 | Match day 20 | Match day 21 | Match day 22 | Match day 23 | Match day 24 | Match day 25 | Match day 26 | Match day 27 | Match day 28 | Match day 29 | Match day 30 | Match day 31 | Match day 32 | Match day 33 | Match day 34 | Match day 35 | Match day 36 | Match day 37 | Match day 38 

Liverpool F.C. matches - 2018-19
2018-19 Premier League
West Ham United (h) · Crystal Palace (a) · Brighton & Hove Albion (h) · Tottenham Hotspur (a) · Chelsea (a) · Arsenal (a) · Everton (h) · Manchester United (h) · Arsenal (h) · Everton (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (h) · Chelsea (h) · Newcastle United (a) · Wolverhampton Wanderers (h)
2018-19 FA Cup
Wolverhampton Wanderers (a)
2018-19 EFL Cup
Chelsea (h)
2018-19 Champions League
Paris Saint-Germain (h) · Napoli (a) · Red Star Belgrade (h) · Red Star Belgrade (a) · Paris Saint-Germain (a) · Napoli (h) · Bayern Munich (h) · Bayern Munich (a) · Porto (h) · Porto (a)Barcelona (h) · Barcelona (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (n)
Tottenham Hotspur F.C. matches - 2018-19
2018-19 Premier League
Newcastle United (a) · Fulham (h) · Manchester Utd (a) · Watford (a) · Liverpool (h) · Brighton (a) · Huddersfield Town (a) · Cardiff City (h) · West Ham United (a) · Manchester City (h) · Arsenal (a) · Arsenal (h) · Liverpool (a) · Manchester City (a) · Bournemouth (a) · Everton (h)
2018-19 FA Cup
2018-19 EFL Cup
Watford (h) · West Ham United (a) · Arsenal (a) · Chelsea (h) · Chelsea (a)
2018-19 Champions League
Internazionale (a) · Barcelona (h) · PSV Eindhoven (a) · PSV Eindhoven (h) · Internazionale (h) · Barcelona (a) · Borussia Dortmund (h) · Borussia Dortmund (a) · Manchester City (h) · Manchester City (a) · Ajax (h) · Ajax (a) · Liverpool (n)
Liverpool FC2 v Tottenham Hotspur
Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur
Premier League

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