Liverpool were
condemned to their worst start to a season for half a century as Lukas
Podolski and Santi Cazorla gave Arsenal victory at Anfield.
On what would
have been Bill Shankly's 99th birthday, the Reds equalled the record of
his newly-promoted side in 1962-63 by collecting just one point from
their opening three games.
Coming on the
back of Friday's deadline-day transfer debacle, when they failed to
secure a replacement for Andy Carroll who had joined West Ham 24 hours
earlier, the situation has provided huge cause for concern on
Merseyside, with both owner John Henry and manager Brendan Rodgers in
the firing line.
Deadly duo: Lukas Podolski (right) and Santi Cazorla inspired Arsenal to victory over Liverpool at Anfield
Match facts
Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Skrtel, Agger, Jose Enrique, Gerrard, Allen, Sahin (Shelvey 67), Borini (Downing 55), Suarez, Sterling.
Subs not used: Jones, Henderson, Coates, Carragher, Kelly.
Booked: Skrtel, Shelvey.
Arsenal:
Mannone, Jenkinson, Mertesacker, Vermaelen (Koscielny 90+1), Gibbs,
Diaby, Arteta, Oxlade Chamberlain (Ramsey 73), Cazorla, Podolski (Andre
Santos 82), Giroud.
Subs not used: Martinez, Walcott, Coquelin, Gervinho.
Goals: Podolski 31, Cazorla 68.
Booked: Arteta, Mertesacker.
Referee: Howard Webb (S Yorkshire)
Attendance:
Arsene Wenger will reflect that he could easily have been in the same position had Arsenal lost.
However, with
Cazorla capping an excellent display by profiting from a Jose Reina
blunder after summer recruit Podolski had opened their account for the
season before half-time, the Gunners chief can start looking forward
with confidence.
A summer of optimism has given way to a sobering reality at Anfield.
Henry did spend
big in his backing of Kenny Dalglish but as only Luis Suarez of those
expensive purchases started against Arsenal, the wisdom of Dalglish's
work has to be questioned.
So much now rests on Suarez and for the first half at least, he almost seemed to be trying too hard.
Fabio Borini and Raheem Sterling had Liverpool's best chances before the break.
The latter
continues to catch the eye and his excellent turn onto Steven Gerrard's
knockdown created the half-chance he belted against the outside of a
post.
Breaking the deadlock: Podolski (left) opens the scoring by firing past Reds goalkeeper Pepe Reina (right)
Relief: Germany forward Podolski celebrates his first goal for Arsenal - and the Gunners' first of the season
Borini was rather more rash with his openings, two of which he sent sailing over the bar.
Worst of all, Daniel Agger failed to head home a Gerrard corner when he had been left completely unmarked.
The impression Liverpool were in control was a misleading one.
With Cazorla
continuing to impress and Abou Diaby thriving in the space Nuri Sahin
failed to fill, Arsenal looked capable of opening their opponents up on
the counter.
Provider turns scorer: Cazorla (centre left) celebrates with Podolski after scoring Arsenal's second goal
That worrying
statistic of potentially becoming the first side to start the season
with three successive scoreless games hung heavy for a while.
But after
Cazorla's shot had been saved by Reina, the Spain midfielder was
instrumental in Arsenal breaking their duck for the campaign.
A wayward Gerrard
pass allowed Thomas Vermaelen to set up a break from the edge of his
own box. Podolski fed Cazorla, then kept motoring. By the time Cazorla
was in a position to play the killer pass, Podolski had arrived in
support and the German drilled expertly past Reina from 10 yards.
The visitors should have doubled their advantage almost immediately.
Diaby's surging
run out of his own half was reminiscent of Patrick Vieira in his pomp.
He released Olivier Giroud inside the Liverpool box, but the finish was
poor and Reina watched it fly wide.
Liverpool emerged with more purpose after the break, and once Stewart Downing was introduced they had more penetration too.
The winger had a
shot deflected wide by Vermaelen not long after Per Mertesacker, who had
been booked very early on, had sent Suarez to the deck with a clumsy
challenge that could easily have brought Liverpool a penalty.
Lonely place: Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers (right) watches his side's defeat
Dejected: (left-right) Liverpool's Steven Gerrard, Jonjo Shelvey, Martin Skrtel and Daniel Agger
Just look at his face: Liverpool striker Luis Suarez can't hide his frustration on a bad afternoon for his side
As it turned out, Arsenal were merely softening their opponents up for another body blow.
Just on in place
of the ineffective Sahin, Jonjo Shelvey failed to track Cazorla's arcing
run around the corner of the Liverpool area.
Missed chance: Suarez blasts over the Arsenal crossbar under pressure from Thomas Vermalen (bottom right)
After an
excellent one-two with Podolski, Cazorla also left Downing standing
before firing a shot goalwards from an acute angle which Reina was
unable to keep out.
The goal merely
heightened growing worries about Reina, whose form has dipped below the
high standards he set a couple of years ago.
Debut to forget: Nuri Sahin (right) joined Liverpool over Arsenal last week but may be regretting his choice now
At the other end, Vito Mannone twice denied Shelvey and Suarez lifted his shot over after turning onto Gerrard's pass.
'You're getting sacked in the morning,' taunted the visiting supporters to Rodgers before the final whistle.
He isn't. But
with the squad at his disposal, the Northern Irishman will do well to
preside over any substantial improvement on last term's eighth-placed
finish.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2197063/Liverpool-0-Arsenal-2-match-report-Lukas-Podolski-Santi-Cazorla-target.html#ixzz25KBmI400
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