Liverpool have become an ‘easy touch’, says former captain and coach Graeme Souness
Champions suffered their fourth straight home defeat in falling to Everton in the Premier League
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Your support makes all the difference.Former Liverpool captain and coach Graeme Souness has called the current Reds side an “easy touch” and a shadow of their former selves after the champions suffered a 2-0 derby loss to Everton on Saturday.
In another poor performance that marked their fourth home loss in a row, Jurgen Klopp’s team looked nothing like the outfit that stormed to the Premier League title last season, ending the club’s 30 year wait for a domestic championship.
The loss follows defeats at Anfield by Burnley, Brighton and Manchester City and was Everton’s first win at Anfield since 1999.
READ MORE: Premier League table and fixtures – all games by date and kick-off time
“They’re a shadow of a team. When you think what Liverpool have been for three years – a team that no one wants to play against, a team that were always on the front foot, super aggressive, must have been horrible to play against them,” said Souness, now a pundit with Sky Sports.
“And now everyone wants to play against them. They’re an easy touch and that hurts me.”
Souness questioned the approach taken by Liverpool’s players to the clash with their Merseyside neighbours who had not beaten them in 20 league encounters.
“As a Liverpool supporter, I am deeply disappointed with my team. It didn’t look like they had any energy or any fight or any real aggression about them. The best team got the points,” he added.
“I think there’s no Liverpool player that can come off that pitch tonight and think ‘I’ve had a good game tonight.’”
Liverpool are in sixth place, 16 points behind leaders Manchester City and now face a battle to even make the top four and qualify for next year’s Champions League.
Midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum said it was vital that Liverpool took on the challenge with the right mindset.
“You don’t want to feel sorry for yourself and don’t want to go into the victim role,” said the midfielder. “You just want to deal with the situation and try to bring it to a better end, or a good end, even if you know that you have a lot of injuries.
“I think that’s how we should look at the situation, not be the victims but just try to turn it around. We have a lot of games to turn it around and if we’re going to look at the situation as victims it’s going to be worse,” he said.
Reuters
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