‘It blew me away’: Klopp stunned by Salah’s flawless finish

Liverpool go two points clear of Manchester City following comfortable win over Chelsea

Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah  celebrates with manager   Jurgen Klopp    as he’s substituted after scoring a goal against Chelsea to give his side a 2-1 victory. Photograph: Getty Images
Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah celebrates with manager Jurgen Klopp as he’s substituted after scoring a goal against Chelsea to give his side a 2-1 victory. Photograph: Getty Images

Jürgen Klopp said he was blown away by the brilliance of Mohamed Salah's strike against Chelsea as he urged Liverpool to produce a flawless finish to the Premier League title race.

Salah struck an astounding goal 142 seconds after Sadio Mané opened the scoring at Anfield as Liverpool retook a two-point lead over Manchester City with victory against Maurizio Sarri's side. Klopp was thrilled by what he described as a complete team performance and the build-up to Mané's 13th goal in 16 games, but it was the Egypt international's emphatic finish past Kepa Arrizabalaga that left him momentarily speechless.

"It blew me away," the Liverpool manager said. "I didn't think anything in that moment but I know I was really happy because I was in line with the ball and maybe I saw first that it would go in! It was a really outstanding finish and I don't want to minimise that but I loved the first goal, too. I was immediately reminded of the 4-3 against Borussia Dortmund. Hendo instead of Milly and Sadio instead of Dejan, but good team play, good cross, good header. The performance was really good but you need the goals, and we got them."

Standards

Salah now has 19 league goals for the season, 22 in total, but had been on a barren run by his standards of one goal in 10 games before sealing victory against his former club. Klopp said of the drought: "The answer in football is always work rate, and the work rate of all three up front today was outstanding. Chelsea is a top team. We treat these games like Champions League games, nothing else, and you cannot defend a team like this without offensive wingers. Everybody uses it. Each top team takes that risk. How the boys worked today was unbelievable. And they got the reward. You can get an easy goal from a yard or a shot from 25 yards, a thunderbolt. Outstanding."

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Liverpool are now only four wins from their first league title since 1990 should City slip up in any of their remaining five matches. Klopp insists the focus is on finishing the season with 97 points and not on what Pep Guardiola’s team produce.

“The biggest challenge for us is always facing the world outside. We play our game. If City lose today, and we find out five minutes before the game, somebody tells us “City lost!” then that is not a help. You lose your focus then. We only try to collect as many points as possible. What is it now, 85? Four games to play: 97. Let’s try. And if that’s enough, then perfect. If not, we cannot change it. And we didn’t lose it here or there or whatever.

Champions

“Very smart people will come out and say: ‘Yeah, if you would have won against Leicester you would be champions.’ It’s all bulls**t. People and idiots bring something like this up. By the way, on this point, we can finally close the slipping book. Robbo slipped and nothing happened, so it’s not a Liverpool thing. Done.”

Sarri lamented Chelsea’s slow start to the second half that cost them what he admitted was the gameplan of keeping the match goalless until the closing stages. The Chelsea manager, who has lost five of his past seven away league matches, said: “We were a little bit low defensively at the beginning of the second half but we also defended a bit low at the beginning of the first half.

“It is not easy to play against Liverpool in that moment. If we were able to pass the first 10 minutes with the same result, in the last 20-25 minutes we would find a lot of spaces because they needed to win. The target was to arrive in the last 20-25 minutes at 0-0.”

– Guardian