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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Barry Glendenning

Liverpool 2-0 Burnley: Premier League – as it happened

Sadio Mané celebrates his second goal with Diogo Jota as Anfield erupts.
Sadio Mané celebrates his second goal with Diogo Jota as Anfield erupts. Photograph: Russell Cheyne/Reuters

Match report: Liverpool 2-0 Burnley

Andy Hunter was at Anfield for the Guardian to see Liverpool take the points courtesy of a goal in each half from Diogo Jota and Sadio Mane.

Jurgen Klopp speaks ...

And he’s not a happy bunny. “Burnley is never a game where you can just outplay them, you have to be ready for a proper fight,” he tells BT Sport. “We were today in a really difficult game. You saw these challenges with Barnes and Wood on Virgil and Joel and it’s like ... [shoulder shrug] ... I’m not 100% sure if we’re going in the right direction with these kind of decisions. It feels like we go ten or 15 years back to ‘Oh, that’s the kind of football we wanted to see’, or whatever.

“It’s just too dangerous. You cannot really judge the situations. How you get up in the air, that’s fine. But when you get down and they stand still in the defender, it’s just hard. The rules are like they are but you cannot defend these situations. How do you want to avoid these situations?”

I’m not sure what he’s on about, to be honest ... but he has a right bee in his bonnet. I think he’s upset with Burnley players nudging his players in the air in the Liverpool box and preventing them from jumping to reach high balls in the Burnley box. He wants more protection for his players.

Jordan Henderson speaks ...

“The performance was good at times but there are places where we can improve, of course,” says Liverpool’s captain in an interview with BT Sport. “Overall we’re delighted. Fans are back, it was great to have them back, they gave us a lift and we got the result in the end, so that’s the most important thing.

“It keeps you going at times, the emotion of it. Burnley are a good side. They make it difficult and we knew that before the game. They certainly did that, with the set pieces and the long balls in behind, but I thought overall we dealt with it quite well and we could have scored more goals if we’re being honest.”

A quick recap: Liverpool were made to work very hard for their win but Liverpool’s classd told in the end. Burnley probably had the upper hand when Liverpool took their first half lead, with Dwight McNeil and Chris Wood causing them all sorts of bother.

Liverpool took a stranglehold on the game in the second half, with Sadio Mane hammering home to round off a fine move involving Virgil van Dijk, Harvey Elliott and Trent Alexander-Arnold. Burnley spurned a couple of chances to pull a goal back, none better than Ashley Barnes with one of the final kicks of the game.

Full time: Liverpool 2-0 Burnley

Peep! Peep! Peeeeeeeeeep! It’s all over at Anfield, where goals from Diogo Jota and Sadio Mane have secured the points for Liverpool. Their second half performance was more convincing than that of the opening 45 minutes and they had to work hard for their win. Making his Premier League debut for Liverpool, young Harvey Elliott was excellent, while Trent Alexander-Arnold was also outstanding for the hosts. A deserved win for Liverpool but Burnley can take heart from a decent performance.

90+4 min: Alisson gets down to save with a strong left hand at the feet of Ashley Barnes after the Burnley striker had been played in behind. He should have scored.

90+ 4 min: Liverpool’s players ping the ball around amongst themselves as they attempt to play down the clock.

90+ 2 min: Burnley corner. Ben Mee heads the inswinger over the bar when he should have at least hit the target.

90+ 2 min: Liverpool have been trying to get Joe Gomez on to the field for several minutes woithout much success. Here he comes now, replacing Tsimikas with just two minutes of added time remaining.

90 min: Nursing a sore shoulder and about to be taken off, Tsimikas is played into trouble by Joel Matip, loses the ball and then fights hard to win it back. He earns himself a round of applause in the process.

88 min: Alisson saves well from Jay Rodriguez, clawing away his shot bound for the top corner from outside the Liverpool area. Offside.

87 min: Salah is released down the right by Elliott and drills a low ball towards Mane in the Burnley penalty area. Inexplicably, the Senegalese feels to make contact. That’s unlikely to do much to end the occasional frostiness between the duo.

85 min: Alisson punches clear under pressure from Jay Rodriguez, after Jack Cork sent a ball from deep into the Liverpool penalty area.

84 min: Salah tees up Trent Alexander-Arnold on the edge of the Burnley penalty area. He tries to bend a shot past Nick Pope but fails to apply sufficient curl on his effort.

81 min: It’s six of one and a half-dozen of the other as Tsimikas is penalised for grappling after getting the better of McNeil in a chase towards the Burnley goal. Liverpool’s Greek left-back had got the better of his man there and was through on goal – a let-off for Burnley.

80 min: Liverpool double-substitution: Thiago Alcantara and Roberto Firmino on for Naby Kieta and Diogo Jota.

79 min: Burnley substitution: Erik Pieters on for Johann Gudmundsson.

77 min: Josh Brownhill is penalised for leading with his arm in a challenge on Harvey Elliott. Down on the touchline, Jurgen Klopp is having a furious argument with Sean Dyche and his assistant coaches, Steve Stone and Ian Woan. “Stone, Woan and Moan,” as my sometimes colleague Mark Webster has labelled them.

75 min: Mo Salah gets thre better of Charlie Taylor down the inside right and elects to try to curl the ball into the top corner rather than pick out Sadio Mane. The ball drifts well wide and Mane makes no secret of his irritation. Burnley substitution: Jay Rodriguez has replaced Chris Wood.

70 min: Ben Mee sticks out his left foot to dispossess Harvey Elliott and is harshly penalised. “Effing joke!” he spits in the direction of Mike Dean, although I may be paraphrasing.

From the ensuing, undeserved free-kick, Ashley Barnes is forced to hack clear from a yard or two away from his own goal as Virgil van Dijk threatens to extend Liverpool’s lead with a downward header. Having been bang in this match giving Liverpool plenty to think about at 1-0 down, Burnley are on the ropes.

69 min: That was a splendid goal. Virgil van Dijk played a sublime pin-point pass to Harvey Elliott on the right touchline from deep. He cut inside and combined with Trent Alexander-Arnold, whose deft touch set up Sadio Mane to hammer a low drive past Pope from about 12 yards out.

Sadio Mane celebrates his goal.
Sadio Mane celebrates his goal. Photograph: Javier García/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

GOAL! Liverpool 2-0 Burnley (Mane 69)

Sadio Mane finishes a slick passing move to double Liverpool’s lead.

Sadio Mane finishes a fine move to score the second.
Sadio Mane finishes a fine move to score the second. Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA

Updated

67 min: Tarkowski meets a Gudmundsson cross from the right in the Liverpool penalty area. It’s an inch or three too high for him and he is unable to steer his header goalwards. Wide.

65 min: Sadio Mane rises unchallenged to meet another Trent Alexander-Cross. He doesn’t get much power behind his effort and the ball drops into the gloves of Nick Pope.

64 min: Harvey Elliott is having an impressive league debut in the red of Liverpool. He wins another corner for Liverpool after having a cross blocked. Nothing comes of it.

61 min: Liverpool corner after Nick Pope manages to keep out a Sadio Mane effort that looked destined for the back of the net. I’m not sure how much the Burnley goalkeeper knew about that shot on the turn through a thicket of bodies but he stopped it. Nothing comes from the ensuing corner.

60 min: Dwight McNeil blocks a goal-bound shot from Mo Salah, who had chested down a cross from Harvey Elliott, before twisting and turning to create a yard of space to fire a shot off.

58 min: Virgil van Dijk volleys a Trent Alexander-Arnold inswinger goalwards. His shot looks destined to end up in the bottom corner but takes a deflection off Ben Mee to go wide. Mike Dean awards a goal-kick, believing the ball to have gone out off Sadio Mane.

Virgil van Dijk appeals to referee Mike Dean for a corner.
Virgil van Dijk appeals to referee Mike Dean for a corner. Photograph: Russell Cheyne/Reuters

Updated

56 min: His metaphorical hat. The Burnley goalkeeper is not actually wearing any headwear.

55 min: Under pressure from Lowton, Sadio Mane is unable to get any power on his shot on the turn as he connects with a neat Diogo Jota pass into the Burnley penalty area. Pope is able to throw his hat on the ball.

53 min: Ashley Barnes wins an unlikely corner with a challenge on Trent Alexander-Arnold. Brownhill’s inswinger is headed clear by Big Virgil. The Dutchman is on hand to hack clear when the ball returns from the edge of the penalty area off the head of a Burnley player.

51 min: Tarkowski seems to have hurt his jaw but looks OK to continue after a drink of water.

50 min: Tarkowski bangs heads with Mane as he clears with a towering header. There’s a break in play as he needs treatment.

48 min: Tsimikas wins a free-kick just outside his own penalty area after a collision with Gudmundsson as the pair challenged for a high ball. Gudmundsson was a little late.

Burnley "equaliser" ruled out!

46 min: Matt Lowton takes the ball past Jordan Henderson on the right side of the Liverpool penalty area and drills the ball into the centre. Ashley Barnes connects to fire the ball past Alisson, but was well offside.

Second half: Liverpool 1-0 Burnley

46 min: Burnley get the second half started with no changes in personnel on either side.

Half-time: Liverpool 1-0 Burnley

Peep! Liverpool may lead through Diogo Jota’s first-half header but one suspects Sean Dyche might be the happier of the two managers. His side have more than held their own after an entertaining first half and posed plenty of problems for Liverpool in the process. Chris Wood has been a constant menace, while Tarkowski will consider himself unlucky not to have made Alisson look foolish just a couple of minutes ago. His effort might well have been chalked off if it had gone in but I saw no harm in his challenge on Alisson.

45+2 min: Alisson launches the ball long and Liverpool win a throw-in deep in Burnley territory. Sane takes it and Mike Dean blows for the interval.

45 min: Burnley free-kick, just inside their own half. Tarkowski beats Alisson to the dropping ball from deep at the edge of the Liverpool penalty area. He outmuscles the goalkeeper, who failed in his effort to punch clear, and directs a header goalwards. Anfield holds its breath then sighs with relief as the ball bounces wide of the right upright.

43 min: Running towards his own goal, Ben Mee hooks a long Jordan Henderson ball from deep out for a throw-in with Mo Salah snapping at his heels. Good defending.

41 min: Liverpool advance with Jota on the ball. He feeds it to Mane, who plays it into the path of Elliott. The teenager is unable to steer his first-time shot on target. The ball breaks to Salah on the edge of the area, but his shot is blocked by Ben Mee.

38 min: Liverpool attack on the break and Elliott plays the ball to Henderson, who stands it up at the far post. Pope punches clear under pressure from Diogo Jota, taking out his team-mate James Tarkowski in the process.

35 min: Trent Alexander-Arnold gallops on to a ball down the inside right and pulls itl back towards Mo Salah from the byline. His shot is blocked by Jack Cork.

33 min: They’re a goal down and came within the width of a bus ticket of being two down, but Burnley have played well in this opening half-hour. They’ve been uncharacteristally pro-active and look quite threatening in the final third.

31 min: Sadio Mane shins the ball over the bar after getting between two defenders to connect on the volley with a ball over the top from Trent Alexander-Arnold.

29 min: Regardless of the illegality of the finish, that was a fine move from Liverpool. It finished with Elliott playing a lovely weighted ball in behind to Salah and the Egytian curled a shot around Pope and inside the far post from a tight angle. He’d mistimed his run, however and the strike was correctly ruled out.

Goal ruled out after VAR consultation

28 min: It’s as you were after Salah’s excellent strike is ruled out for offside: Liverpool 1-0 Burnley.

Mohamed Salah’s strike was ruled out.
Mohamed Salah’s strike was ruled out. Photograph: Russell Cheyne/Reuters

Updated

GOAL! Liverpool 2-0 Burnley (Salah 26)

That’s a fine finish from Mo Salah who sidefoots home from a tight angle after being played in by Harvey Elliott. But was he offside?

24 min: In the latest act of a frenetic few minutes, Mo Salah brings a smart save out of Nick Pope with a shot from distance. Good work by Elliott on the break to send the Egyptian on his way.

22 min: Burnley free-kick wide on the right. Tarkowski makes an untracked run to the far post as the ball is floated his way from a quickly taken free-kick. The central defender connects with the ball but is unable to steer it on target.

20 min: Good, aggressive play by Jack Cork near the edge of the Liverpool penalty area leads to Josh Brownhill shooting from distance. Alisson saves at his near post.

19 min: In for Andy Robertson, Kostas Tsimikas curls a cross into the Liverpool penalty area. Darting between Ben Mee and James Tarkowski, Diogo Jota sends a firm header past Nick Pope.

Diogo Jota has scored in each Premier League game so far this season.
Diogo Jota has scored in each Premier League game so far this season. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

GOAL! Liverpool 1-0 Burnley (Jota 18)

Ha-ha! Diogo Jota heads Liverpool ahead ... just as I was typing a sentence about how unimpressive they have been.

Diogo Jota gets between the Burnley defenders to open the scoring.
Diogo Jota gets between the Burnley defenders to open the scoring. Photograph: Andrew Powell/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

Updated

17 min: Dwight McNeill drives a cross from the left wing towards the near post. Chris Wood gets his head to the ball and Alisson parries. Far from having it all their own way, Liverpool haven’t been ... oh, hold on!

16 min: Matt Lowton sends a cross into the Liverpool penalty area, looking for Chris Wood. Joel Matip heads clear.

15 min: Liverpool win a throw-in deep in Burnley territory. Tsimikas chucks the ball to Naby Keita, who miscontrols it straight back out for a Burnley throw-in.

14 min: Another cross from Alexander-Arnold, this one from open play, sails deep towards the far post. Nick Pope claims under pressure from Virgil van Dijk.

13 min: Alexander-Arnold’s delivery to the near post is headed clear.

13 min: Harvey Elliott canters down the right wing and wins a corner for his team.

11 min: Trent Alexander-Arnold gives the ball away cheaply deep inside his own half, but Ashley Barnes is unable to pick out Chris Wood with his pass into the penalty area.

9 min: Johann Gudmundsson needs treatment after a coming-together with Kostas Tsimikas juast outside the Liverpool penalty area. Burnley claim their man was elbowed but replays suggest it was no more than a collision between two players chasing the ball.

9 min: Down on the touchline, Sean Dyche is having a very animated conversation with Andy Madley, the fourth official. I’m not sure what that’s all about.

Sean Dyche’s unhappy about something.
Sean Dyche’s unhappy about something. Photograph: Javier García/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

6 min: Alexander-Arnold has an attempted cross blocked by Charlie Taylor but the ball ricochets off the Liverpool defender for a goal-kick. Nick Pope decides to take a drink, prompting whistles from the Kop who disapprove of his attempts at time-wasting ... after six minutes. Unusually, Liverpool are playing into the Kop in this first half.

4 min: Dwight McNeil has a shot from just inside the Liverpool box cleared off the line by Trent Alexander-Arnold after being teed up by Brownhill. There was an offside in the build-up and his effort wouldn’t have counted if it had gone in.

3 min: Harvey Elliott gets an early “reducer” from Josh Brownhill and Liverpool win a free-kick in line with the right side of the Burnley penalty area. Trent Alexander-Arnold curls the ball towards the far post, where Diogo Jota gets his head to the ball but sends it high and wide. He hadn’t much control over that header.

2 min: Burnley’s players line up in white shirts, shorts and socks today and get an early ball into the box aiming for Chris Wood. His first touch sends the ball straight into the arms of Alisson.

Liverpool v Burnley is go ...

1 min: Jordan Henderson lays a wreath in the centre-circle for the late Andrew Devine as the Kop show a “97” mosaic in his honour. Following a minute’s applause for Andrew and others connected with the club who lost their lives during lockdown, Henderson places the wreath in front of the Kop and the players take a knee. With the last of the formalities over, Liverpool kick off with Harvey Elliott getting the ball rolling on his Premier League debut for the club.

Not long now: With AC/DC’s Thunderstruck blaring out over the PA, Burnley’s players walk out to a chorus of boos from a packed Anfield. Liverpool, led by Jordan Henderson, are next out. They receive a decidedly less hostile reception as Angus Young and chums are replaced by Gerry and The Pacemakers singing You’ll Never Walk Alone, with the crowd providing welcome backing vocals.

An email: “Oxlade Chamberlain played last week,” writes Clive. “No mention of him being injured - does that mean he’s leaving?”

Jurgen Klopp has just told BT Sport the Ox is absent for unspecified “personal reasons”.

Burnley at Anfield
Ben Mee (left) and Matt Lowton lead their Burnley teammates out for their warm-up. Photograph: Andrew Powell/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

Liverpool v Burnley
Liverpool’s players warm up ahead of kick-off. Photograph: Catherine Ivill/Getty Images

Harvey Elliott starts for Liverpool

The 18-year-old is a surprise inclusion in the home line-up and makes his first Premier League start. Elliott became the youngest ever top-flight player in England when he made his Fulham debut in 2018, soon after his 16th birthday. JOrdan Henderson is another notable inclusion. The skipper makes his first appearance for his club since 20 February.

While the rare sight of a starting line-up wearing shirt numbers from one to 11 is bound to be a weekend talking point, if any team was likely to do so it was Burnley. Ashley Westwood and Jay Rodriguez drop out of the side that lost against Brighton last weekend, to be replaced by Josh Brownhill and Ashley Barnes.

Liverpool v Burnley line-ups

Liverpool: Alisson, Alexander-Arnold, Matip, van Dijk, Tsimikas, Elliott, Henderson, Keita, Salah, Jota, Mane.

Subs: Konate, Thiago, Firmino, Gomez, Adrian, Jones, Minamino, Robertson, Kelleher.

Burnley: Pope, Lowton, Tarkowski, Mee, Taylor, Gudmundsson, Brownhill, Cork, McNeil, Wood, Barnes.

Subs: Hennessey, Rodriguez, Collins, Pieters, Norris, Bardsley, Thomas, Richardson, Dodgson.

Andrew Devine: Liverpool will stage a pre-match tribute to fan Andrew Devine, who died in July. A coroner ruled that the 55-year-old, who died 32 years after suffering severe and irreversible brain damage at Hillsborough in 1989, was unlawfully killed, and that therefore he is legally the 97th victim of the disaster. A mosaic in his honour will also be visible on the Kop.

Sean Dyche speaks: Unlike their hosts, Burnley are unlikely to play in a particularly positive way today and Sean Dyche said yesterday that their win in January will have no bearing whatsoever on their approach to the match.

“I don’t think our win there last time will make us more optimistic, we caught them at a very good time and we played very well,” he said. “Last season they had some injuries, lost Van Dijk who is a Rolls Royce player, and we maybe caught them at a slower period and earned the right to win a game.

“That is the equation you need. We will have to have the same equation, but there is no guarantee of doing that again. It is about how many attacking options you can find and how many different ways you can attack, or attack enough, to put doubt in the opposition. It is not an easy task but that is certainly part of our intention on Saturday.

“Often in these types of games the best form of defence is attack, but we have to get the mixture right to give ourselves a chance. We’ve just got to concentrate on what we do, focus on what we do, work very, very hard - as you always have to at these clubs - and once again, try to turn around the kind of thinking from most in football that you’re going to get beat.

“We’ve done that before, but it comes with hard work, it comes with organisation, it comes with discipline, and it comes with talent as well. It is very tough going to these places and winning games. You have to work hard. When you have the ball you have to optimise and maximise the chances.”

Sean Dyche
Sean Dyche is hoping his side can bounce back from their opening weekend defeat at the hands of Brighton. Photograph: Alex Livesey/PA

Jurgen Klopp speaks: Asked yesterday if he sees today’s match as something of a revenge mission following last season’s defeat in the corresponding fixture, Jurgen Klopp admitted the thought hadn’t even crossed his mind ... until he’d been asked the question.

“Not in a moment, sitting here to be honest,” he said. “I didn’t even think about it. Now you have told me, that’s something I didn’t like. It was a strange one. Yes we lost it, Burnley won it, that’s how football is, so well deserved. But it obviously has nothing to do with the game now.”

Asked how he expected his side to play in front of a full house for ther first time in over 500 days, he stated the blindingly obvious. “Football is only possible to enjoy when you play in a positive way, when you just go for it,” he said. “There are no guarantees out there, not at all, especially not against Burnley because they can make your life really uncomfortable.

“They defend well and have really good footballers in the team. Sean is doing a brilliant job there. He sets them up so they are not only annoying, good set pieces, all this kind of stuff. They have a clear way of playing, so that’s what we prepare for - not any kind of revenge or whatever.”

Jurgen Klopp
Jurgen Klopp addresses his troops at training on Thursday. Photograph: Andrew Powell/Liverpool FC/Getty Images

Today’s match officials

  • Referee: Mike Dean.
  • Assistants: Darren Cann and Mark Scholes.
  • Fourth official: Andy Madley.
  • VAR: Stuart Attwell.
  • Assistant VAR: Dan Cook.
Mike Dean
Wirral-based, Tranmere Rovers-supporting referee Mike Dean won’t have far to travel to officiate at Anfield today. Photograph: Ian Tuttle/REX/Shutterstock

Early team news

Liverpool midfielders Jordan Henderson and Thiago Alcantara participated in a behind-closed-doors games against Aston Villa during the week, have both been given a clean bill of health and are likely to feature in today’s matchday squad. Curtis Jones is also available having sat out last weekend’s win over Norwich after suffering a concussion. Andy Robertson remains sidelined with an ankle injury, with Kostas Tsimikas likely to deputise for the Scottish left-back again. Fabinho will not be in Liverpool’s squad today as he comes to terms with the sad recent news of his father’s passing.

For Burnley, Dale Stephens has undergone surgery on ankle injury and will be out until mid-September, while Kevin Long is also out after having a scalpel taken to his calf. Full-back Phil Bardsley could start for Burnley today having completed his return to full fitness following a hernia operation.

Phil Bardsley
Phil Bardsley could start at right-back for Burnley today after recovering from surgery on a hernia. Photograph: Alex Dodd - CameraSport/CameraSport/Getty Images

Premier League: Burnley v Liverpool

The weekend’s Premier League action kicks off at Anfield, where visitors Burnley raised eyebrows by ending Liverpool’s 68-match home unbeaten run in January. Few are expecting Burnley to triumph today, with the players of Liverpool likely to be spurred on by the prospect of lining up in front of a packed Anfield for the first time in 17 months, during which time they captured and went on to relinquish their first league title in 30 years behind closed doors. Kick-off on Merseyside is at 12.30pm (BST) but stay tuned in the meantime for team news and build-up.

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