The Reds’ display at the KC Stadium would have felt all too familiar
for Liverpool fans who have become all too familiarised with their side being
ludicrously inconsistent and would be in no way surprised to see them lose to a
distinctly inferior side. It certainly felt like the Liverpool of old who
managed to dominate possession and large stretches of the match against Hull City
but simply failed to convert what few chances they created and then proceeded
to leak goals and in turn three points. If it weren’t for Steven Gerrard’s
magnificent free kick, the score line would have been even more embarrassing
for Liverpool, who had previously never lost to Hull City in any competitive
fixture.
Liverpool were of course without the prolific Daniel
Sturridge, something they will have to get used to, as it was confirmed the
striker will miss up to 8 weeks with ankle ligament damage. The next month or
so is crucial for Liverpool as they face the likes of Chelsea and Manchester
City, if they play like they did against Hull, they could find themselves on
the end of a shellacking similar to what City inflicted upon Tottenham just a
week ago. If Liverpool are to achieve Champions League football for next
season, consistency is key. They simply cannot afford to lose games at inferior
opponents.
From the outset, Liverpool had looked a shadow of the team
that they have been for the opening 12 fixtures. Possession was sloppy, chances
were few and far between and the likes of Victor Moses and Glen Johnson were
made to look simply inept by Hull City players. A performance like this should
serve as a wakeup call to Brendan Rodgers and his side. Liverpool were mediocre
at best, and multiple players simply failed to contribute to the cause in any way.
If Liverpool are to return to the summit of English and world football, they
must build a squad with depth. It seems as though without Daniel Sturridge and
Jose Enrique it could collapse all too easily.
Hull City's David Meyler uses his arms to measure his excitement at his first Premier League goal. |
The formation employed by Rodgers at Hull was certainly not
the problem, it was rather the players who failed to fulfil their roles. Victor
Moses was simply useless, he provided not one chance going forward and
practically gifted Hull their opener with sloppy dribbling out of the back,
albeit the goal came from a deflection, but nonetheless the ball should have
been cleared by Moses rather than fluffing around in his own half. Moses should
not be playing against Norwich in midweek, the only adequate, yet harsh, word
to describe his performance is ‘useless.’
The midfield was not exactly the problem, with Steven
Gerrard, Jordan Henderson and Lucas patrolling the centre admirably and
controlling possession for large stretches of the game. However, as a team,
Liverpool were unbelievably sloppy in possession, something you cannot afford
to be in the Premier League, if you lose the ball, teams will punish you, it is
that simple. Words never rang more true yesterday as Liverpool conceded three
goals after failing to secure possession and not clearing their lines.
The
defence was an absolute shambles, Glen Johnson seemed as though he was going on
a Sunday Morning walk every time he gained possession, simply wandering in
field and being disposed a huge number of times. Jon Flanagan was better in
possession but his passing was wayward and he played in to the feet of Moses
repeatedly despite the fact that the Nigerian was being closely marked, the
equivalent of simply handing over possession, for Premier League quality
fullbacks, that is like taking candy from a baby. Kolo Toure did not look
assured, he took too long on the ball and whilst his centre back partner Martin
Skrtel may have been an imposing presence neither did enough to stop any of the
soft goals Liverpool conceded.
In conclusion, yesterday’s match showed Liverpool the danger
of underestimating an opponent, they cannot afford to lose their consistency
now, and they Rodgers must figure out how to get his side winning without
Daniel Sturridge or it could be a long 8 weeks for Reds fans. Further, defence
is a big problem for the Reds and January must see the purchase of a first team
quality left back, one or possibly two wingers, and a creative midfielder if
they are to gain some consistency in the New Year.
That’s the Rosey Wrap on Liverpool vs. Hull City,
Thanks for reading,
By Jake Rosengarten
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