Liverpool urged to keep focus as fixture pile-up looms

Mohamed Salah, center, is considered doubts for the trip to Palace, with injuries he collected earlier this month. (Reuters/File)
Updated 23 November 2019
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Liverpool urged to keep focus as fixture pile-up looms

  • Liverpool visit Aston Villa on Dec. 17 in the cup quarter-final before they play in the Middle East on the 18th

LIVERPOOL: Liverpool start a daunting run of 13 games in 41 days at Crystal Palace on Saturday that will define their season and, quite possibly, how the Jurgen Klopp era will be remembered at Anfield.

The spectacular, and controversial, 3-1 victory over defending champions Manchester City before the international break has left Liverpool nine points clear of Pep Guardiola’s side.

They hold an eight-point edge over second-placed Leicester and are heavy favorites to end a painful 30-year wait for a league title.

The visit to Selhurst Park also starts a sequence of five league games against opponents who appear, on paper at least, not to offer too stern a test for a team that have dropped just two league points all season — in a 1-1 draw at Manchester United.

But it is Liverpool’s schedule away from the league that has caused the greatest degree of interest and speculation in recent weeks.

Their involvement in the FIFA Club World Cup in Qatar, plus their success in the League Cup, means Klopp will be forced to play two games within 24 hours of each other, over 4,000 miles apart.

Liverpool visit Aston Villa on Dec. 17 in the cup quarter-final before they play in the Middle East on the 18th, with Klopp fielding two different squads to cope with the congestion.

The Liverpool boss concedes that the exact nature and logistics of putting out two teams on different continents within a matter of hours had yet to be addressed.

But a number of pundits, led by former Anfield favorite Jamie Carragher, have argued that Klopp should effectively ignore the four cup competitions in which his team are involved this season — the two domestic cups, Champions League and Club World Cup.

The obsession among the red half of Merseyside with winning the title increased with the near-miss under Brendan Rodgers in 2014.

And it reached near-fever pitch in May, when they lost the title to City by 1 point. Not even the considerable consolation of winning the Champions League in June could dull the desire from Liverpool supporters to see their team lift a trophy they last won under Kenny Dalglish in 1990. “I know a lot of Liverpool supporters wouldn’t say this, and certainly the club couldn’t, but nothing can get in the way of Liverpool winning the league. Nothing,” said Carragher.

“The Aston Villa game in the Carabao (League) Cup? If Liverpool get through they will have two semifinals to play then and that cannot get in the way of Liverpool winning the league.”

Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson are considered doubts for the trip to Palace, with injuries they collected earlier this month.

But Joe Gomez and Jordan Henderson, who both pulled out of England’s game in Kosovo last weekend, are expected to be fit to return.


Medvedev battles into Melbourne third round after early scare

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Medvedev battles into Melbourne third round after early scare

  • Feisty Russian keeps his cool in the sunshine to beat Quentin Halys of France 6-7 (9/11), 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 in just over three hours
MELBOURNE: Three-time runner-up Daniil Medvedev survived an early scare on Wednesday before battling into the Australian Open third round.
The feisty Russian kept his cool in the sunshine to beat Quentin Halys of France 6-7 (9/11), 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 in just over three hours.
The former world number one and 11th seed faces Fabian Marozsan of Hungary next at Melbourne Park.
“It was a very tough match, happy I managed to fight,” said Medvedev, who polished off the match in style with his 14th ace.
“Happy to play some good tennis to win. I still cannot get used exactly to the court and still am missing a little power in my shots.
“But definitely playing better, feeling good.”
The first set against 83rd-ranked Halys was an almighty battle stretching over 68 minutes.
Halys eventually pulled through on the 20th point of a marathon tiebreak, then immediately put pressure on Medvedev’s serve at the start of the second.
The Frenchman duly broke and Medvedev, who has vowed to be more “positive” on court, gave the first fleeting signs of losing his cool.
The 29-year-old, the beaten finalist in 2021, 2022 and 2024, reset and straight away broke back with a terrific two-handed backhand down the line.
The 2021 US Open champion rattled off three games in a row to lead 3-2 and was firmly in the ascendancy as he took the second and third sets to turn the screw on the flagging 29-year-old Halys, before racing away in the fourth.
Medvedev, whose record was poor at the Grand Slams last year, warmed up for another crack at the Melbourne Park title by winning the Brisbane International.
“I need to rebuild my confidence step by step,” Medvedev admitted, referring to his poor recent record in majors.
“Just trying to enjoy it and play some good tennis.”