Salah fires blank as Stoke hold Liverpool at Anfield

BBC
BBC
Sarah fires blank as Stoke hold Liverpool at Anfield

Liverpool’s hopes of securing a top-four English Premier League spot were frustrated by a battling Stoke City side who restricted the free-scoring Reds to a goalless draw at Anfield on Saturday.

Stoke’s hard-won point may however not be enough to secure the visitors’ survival after Southampton, West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace all won.

With Swansea City due to play Chelsea later on Saturday, the fight for positions at both ends of the table will go to the final day.

Liverpool, which still has to face Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, lead the Blues by nine points with two games in hand although superior goal difference may prove decisive for Jurgen Klopp’s side.

Domestic finishing position would, of course, prove academic if Liverpool win the UEFA Champions League.

They certainly looked like a side with their semi-final second leg in Rome on their mind.

They failed to make the most of 72 per cent possession against the visitors who have never won a league game at Anfield.

Even 43-goal Mohamed Salah had an off-day, marking the first time since Boxing Day that the Egyptian had failed to score after starting at home.

Liverpool, who made five changes from their semi-final first leg in midweek, felt they deserved a late penalty kick.

This was after Erik Pieters handled in an incident similar to the one that led to James Milner conceding a spot-kick against AS Roma.

“We had to make changes. That is always a bit of a rhythm breaker, in the final third. Everything is instinct between the regulars and we missed a bit of that,” said Klopp.

Elsewhere, Southampton gave itself a shot at safety by beating south coast rivals Bournemouth 2-1 with two goals from Dusan Tadic.

Goalkeeper Alex McCarthy proved the real hero with a late save from Ryan Fraser, whose fierce shot looked destined for the net.

Bottom side West Brom continue to defy relegation after Matt Phillips’ first-half shot gave them a 1-0 win at Newcastle United.

It was their eighth point from four games under caretaker manager Darren Moore.

Heartening as the win was, a Swansea victory later on Saturday would still end Albion’s eight-year top-flight stay.

Palace all but guaranteed their safety after thumping Leicester City 5-0, a result that will do little to halt the speculation over Claude Puel’s future as Foxes’ manager.

Wilfried Zaha scored Palace’s first and laid their second for James McArthur while substitute Christian Benteke rounded off the rout with a penalty kick.

Roy Hodgson’s side are now six points clear of the drop zone although they have played one match more than four teams below them.

Among them are Brighton & Hove Albion, who drew 0-0 with Burnley, and Huddersfield Town who lost 2-0 at home to Everton.

Although Huddersfield are three points clear of 18th-placed Southampton, their run-in is difficult.

They have trips to Manchester City and Chelsea and a home game against Arsenal, which will be Arsene Wenger’s final match in charge of the Gunners.

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