Liverpool Could Offer Biggest Threat to Manchester City’s Supremacy

 Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp celebrates with Joe Gomez and Virgil van Dijk at Selhurst Park. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA
Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp celebrates with Joe Gomez and Virgil van Dijk at Selhurst Park. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA
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Liverpool Could Offer Biggest Threat to Manchester City’s Supremacy

 Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp celebrates with Joe Gomez and Virgil van Dijk at Selhurst Park. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA
Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp celebrates with Joe Gomez and Virgil van Dijk at Selhurst Park. Photograph: Nick Potts/PA

More than anything, José Mourinho sounded resigned when he discussed Manchester United’s defeat by Brighton. There was gloom rather than defiance and it was strange to hear United’s manager explain that his refusal to talk about the negative aspects of his team’s performance was because of criticism about his previous brutal honesty. This was not Sir Alex Ferguson creating a siege mentality: it was Mourinho protecting himself rather than his players.

The negative vibes from the summer have rolled into the season and it is not premature to suggest that United could be heading for what Antonio Conte would call a Mourinho season. It is three years since the “palpable discord” that brought about an unhappy end to the Portuguese’s second spell at Chelsea and the memory of how Mourinho lost his connection with his players at Stamford Bridge feels relevant at the moment, even if United’s individual quality makes it impossible to write them off after two games.

Gallingly for Ed Woodward, United’s executive vice-chairman, it is not just Manchester City who are threatening to zoom away. It is also Liverpool, where excitement is building about their chances of winning a first league title since 1990. They have started with two wins, crushing West Ham with an attacking extravaganza on the opening weekend and showing their gritty side against Crystal Palace on Monday, and look more mature following their run to the Champions League final with a summer of focused spending.

It is, of course, far too early for definitive predictions and Liverpool will have a better idea of whether they can end 29 years of hurt after visiting Chelsea and Tottenham in September and hosting City on 7 October. Yet the pre-season hype looks justified for the time being and Woodward cannot have envisaged this scenario when he appointed Mourinho in 2016.

The biggest threat to City’s supremacy emanates from Merseyside rather than the man from the red half of Manchester. There was a time when Mourinho was seen as Guardiola’s nemesis but that description applies to Klopp these days. The German holds an 8-5 winning record over Guardiola and Liverpool looked prepared for the difficult months ahead at Selhurst Park, withstanding Palace’s physicality and organisation to secure one of the more resilient wins of the Klopp era.

Although it would be unwise to read too much into one game, it is worth considering how Klopp has targeted his team’s defensive weaknesses. He initially struggled to stiffen Liverpool’s rearguard resolve after replacing Brendan Rodgers in October 2015 and his critics lined up to accuse him of naive tactics, as though his previous success with Borussia Dortmund meant nothing. Neither Simon Mignolet nor Loris Karius convinced in goal and when Liverpool lost 4-1 to Tottenham last season, Harry Kane tormented Dejan Lovren so much that Klopp withdrew the Croatian centre-back after 31 minutes.

But the arrival of Virgil van Dijk from Southampton in January has altered the dynamic of Liverpool’s defence. The Dutchman is a leader in the mould of Jamie Carragher or Sami Hyypiä and nobody is quibbling about his £75m fee now.

Alisson, Brazil’s No 1, could also prove to be worth the money after his £66.9m move from Roma and Naby Keïta has brought extra class to the midfield. Klopp has competition for places, with another summer arrival, Fabinho, not even in the squad against Palace.

Naturally the other contenders will shout for attention. Yet United seem to be a shambles and none of the others look as powerful or hungry as Liverpool. Arsenal’s first aim under Unai Emery must be a top-four finish and the same applies to Maurizio Sarri at Chelsea, who have been exciting in attack and vulnerable at the back. As Arsenal demonstrated at Stamford Bridge last weekend, the problem for Sarri is that his defenders are not suited to playing in a back four, especially with N’Golo Kanté given extra freedom in midfield.

Elsewhere in the capital, uncertainty reigns at Tottenham. Mauricio Pochettino’s side have started with edgy wins over Fulham and Newcastle, and apprehension has gripped the club after the failure to make any signings and the delays to their new stadium. They do not look equipped for more than Champions League qualification, although they have a chance to prove their critics wrong when they visit Old Trafford on Monday.

City, however, are unlikely to hang around. Guardiola is desperate to retain the title and that means Liverpool will have to maintain a demented pace to keep up with a team who dismissed Arsenal without Kevin De Bruyne, Leroy Sané and David Silva.

Riyad Mahrez, a £60m signing from Leicester, was on the bench for the 6-1 win over Huddersfield and it is daunting for the rest to consider City’s depth. Liverpool are not quite as strong. They know they can beat City in a one-off game, but it remains to be seen whether Adam Lallana, Xherdan Shaqiri and Daniel Sturridge are capable of stepping up if Roberto Firmino, Sadio Mané or Mohamed Salah are unavailable.

All the same, the thrill of the chase should fire these players. City are so good that there will be no shame in Liverpool finishing second and, while Mourinho gripes and moans and indulges in self-pity, Klopp is making all the right moves and gearing his team for the race of their lives.

The Guardian Sport



AC Milan Remains Winless under Fonseca; Lukaku Scores on Debut in Napoli Win

 AC Milan's Rafael Leao goal 2-2 during the Serie A Enilive soccer match between SS Lazio and AC Milan at the Rome's Olympic stadium, Italy, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (Fabrizio Corradetti/LaPresse via AP)
AC Milan's Rafael Leao goal 2-2 during the Serie A Enilive soccer match between SS Lazio and AC Milan at the Rome's Olympic stadium, Italy, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (Fabrizio Corradetti/LaPresse via AP)
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AC Milan Remains Winless under Fonseca; Lukaku Scores on Debut in Napoli Win

 AC Milan's Rafael Leao goal 2-2 during the Serie A Enilive soccer match between SS Lazio and AC Milan at the Rome's Olympic stadium, Italy, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (Fabrizio Corradetti/LaPresse via AP)
AC Milan's Rafael Leao goal 2-2 during the Serie A Enilive soccer match between SS Lazio and AC Milan at the Rome's Olympic stadium, Italy, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (Fabrizio Corradetti/LaPresse via AP)

New AC Milan coach Paulo Fonseca was hoping for a reaction when he dropped three key players for a visit to Lazio in Serie A.

The move led to a solid start by the Rossoneri. The final result was a third straight game without a win on Saturday.

Taty Castellanos and Boulaye Dia scored second-half goals for Lazio to overturn an early opener from Strahinja Pavlovic, and the benched Rafael Leao came on to equalize for Milan in a 2-2 draw.

Meanwhile, Romelu Lukaku scored on debut and Antonio Conte’s Napoli earned its second straight win by coming back to beat 10-man Parma 2-1.

Benching issues

Leao, Theo Hernandez and Davide Calabria were each benched at the start by Fonseca.

Leao and Hernandez were sent on after Lazio’s two goals, with former Roma striker Tammy Abraham also entering for his Milan debut, and Abraham provided the assist for Leao’s equalizer.

But Leao and Hernandez then remained on the far side of the field during a cooling break — isolated from the rest of Milan’s squad.

Fonseca said Leao and Hernandez didn’t need to join the team for drinks because they had just come on minutes earlier.

“Let’s not create a problem, because there is no problem. The reaction from the players was good,” Fonseca said. “When there’s a problem I take responsibility but right now there’s no problem.”

Milan has two points from two draws and a loss. Lazio has four points.

Improvised goalkeeper

Serie B champion Parma had to move defender Enrico Del Prato into goal after starter Zion Suzuki was sent off with two yellow cards and all five substitutions had been used.

It didn’t go well for Del Prato, who could only get a weak hand on a powerful shot from Lukaku then reacted late to a header from Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa during 15 minutes of stoppage time.

Ange-Yoan Bonny converted a penalty for Parma early on.

Lukau was signed from Chelsea on Thursday, reuniting him with Conte after the pair won Serie A at Inter Milan. He’s wearing No. 11 and not his customary No. 9, which still belongs to Victor Osimhen, who remains in limbo and dropped from the squad after failing to find a new club during the transfer window.

Napoli has six points after opening with a dispiriting 3-0 loss at Hellas Verona.

Eriksson tribute

Before kickoff of the Lazio-Milan match, there was a tribute to former Lazio coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, who died on Monday from pancreatic cancer.

A three-minute video of Eriksson’s years at Lazio was shown on the jumbo screens inside the Stadio Olimpico and a banner in the center circle read, “Sven Goran Eriksson forever.”

Eriksson coached Lazio to the Serie A title in 2000 and also won a Cup Winner’s Cup with the Roman club.

Lazio wore black armbands for the game.

A minute’s silence is being held before every Serie A game this weekend to remember Eriksson.

Winless Bologna

Champions League debutante Bologna remained winless following a 1-1 draw with Empoli, with Giovanni Fabbian and Emmanuel Gyasi trading early goals.

Bologna, fifth last season, hosts Shakhtar Donetsk in its Champions League opener on Sept. 18.

Lecce beat Cagliari 1-0 for its first victory, with a goal from Nikola Krstovic despite playing the entire second half with 10 men.