Final Thoughts: Anfield Turns on Slot After Another Lifeless Liverpool Display
By Steven Smith
After a loss at Manchester United last weekend, Liverpool returned to Anfield knowing that a response was required both in terms of performance and result. Instead, what unfolded was another deeply frustrating afternoon that perfectly encapsulated the growing disconnect between the supporters and the current management.
For fifteen to twenty minutes, Liverpool looked sharp, aggressive, and capable of controlling the game. After that, the levels dropped dramatically and the remainder of the contest became another grim exercise in survival football under Arne Slot.
The boos at full-time told the story.
Ryan Gravenberch of Liverpool scores a goal 1-0. Liverpool v Chelsea
Liverpool XI
⢠GK â Giorgi Mamardashvili
⢠RB â Curtis Jones
⢠CB â Ibrahima KonatĂŠ
⢠CB â Virgil van Dijk (c)
⢠LB â Milos Kerkez
⢠CM â Ryan Gravenberch
⢠CM â Dominik Szoboszlai
⢠RW â Jeremie Frimpong
⢠AM â Dominik Szoboszlai
⢠LW â Rio Ngumoha
⢠CF â Cody Gakpo
Alexander Isak â Rio Ngumoha (45â)
Joe Gomez â Ibrahima KonatĂŠ (77â)
Federico Chiesa â Cody Gakpo (77â)
Liverpool 1â0 Chelsea â Ryan Gravenberch (Rio Ngumoha) â 6â
Liverpool 1â1 Chelsea â Enzo Fernandez â 35â
⢠Possession â Liverpool 48% | Chelsea 52%
⢠xG â Liverpool 0.56 | Chelsea 0.50
⢠Total Shots â Liverpool 8 | Chelsea 5
⢠Shots on Target â Liverpool 3 | Chelsea 3
⢠Fouls â Liverpool 17 | Chelsea 17
⢠Corners â Liverpool 5 | Chelsea 2
The opening half was a strange reflection of Liverpoolâs entire season.
The Reds started brightly and looked dangerous early on, largely thanks to the fearless energy of Rio Ngumoha. The teenage winger was once again Liverpoolâs brightest player and it was his direct running and bravery that created the opening goal. After driving aggressively at Chelseaâs defence, the youngster delivered the perfect pass into Ryan Gravenberch, whose thunderous finish gave Anfield brief optimism.
For around twenty minutes, Liverpool looked competitive.
The movement was quicker, the pressing sharper, and Chelsea looked uncomfortable whenever Ngumoha isolated his marker. Unfortunately, as has happened too often this season, Liverpool completely lost control once the game settled.
The intensity vanished.
Chelsea began dominating possession and territory as Liverpool retreated deeper and deeper into a passive structure that invited pressure. The equaliser eventually arrived through Enzo Fernandez and it was no more than the visitors deserved after taking command of the midfield battle.
From that point onwards, Liverpool looked nervous, slow, and reactive.
Arne Slot
The second half brought another horrid watch for Liverpool supporters.
Chelsea looked the more organised and composed side throughout as Liverpool struggled to create anything meaningful. The passing lacked conviction, the structure remained disjointed, and the attacking play became increasingly predictable.
Rio Ngumoha remained the one genuine source of excitement before being substituted to audible frustration from the crowd. The boos that greeted the decision only intensified the growing hostility towards Arne Slot and his management of this team.
Chelsea will ultimately leave Anfield disappointed not to have won.
Liverpool simply clung on.
There were occasional moments of defensive resilience from Virgil van Dijk and Giorgi Mamardashvili, but the overall level remained far below what should be expected from the reigning Premier League champions.
The game drifted without purpose, without cohesion, and without any real sign of tactical clarity from the home side.
This was a performance of exhaustion, confusion, and growing inevitability.
The boos at full-time were not solely about this result. They were the culmination of an entire season filled with underwhelming performances, poor football, strange tactical decisions, and constant regression under Arne Slot.
Liverpool looked like a team waiting for the season to end.
With only two games remaining, it now feels increasingly likely that the final whistle on this campaign will also signal the end of Slotâs reign as Liverpool head coach.
Because despite Gravenberchâs superb strike and another outstanding display from Rio Ngumoha, the overall picture remains bleak.
Chelsea deserved more.
Liverpool survived again.
And Anfield has clearly had enough.
Liverpool 2 â 2 Chelsea

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