Man City vs Liverpool result: Five things we learned as Reds earn a point to leave City in bottom half

Man City 1-1 Liverpool: Salah’s early penalty was cancelled out by Jesus, while De Bruyne missed a spot-kick for City

Karl Matchett
Sunday 08 November 2020 14:16 EST
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Liverpool celebrate taking the early lead
Liverpool celebrate taking the early lead (Getty Images)

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Manchester City came from behind to draw 1-1 with Liverpool in the Premier League on Sunday evening.

Liverpool started fast and Sadio Mane won a penalty in the opening 10 minutes, which was duly buried by Mohamed Salah. Gabriel Jesus notched the equaliser on the half-hour mark, though, with a fine touch on the turn and finish.

Kevin de Bruyne was given a golden chance to put City ahead after a penalty was awarded at the other end just before half-time, but he sent his effort wide to leave the scores locked at the break.

Both sides were far more cautious in the second half as the pitch got more heavy in the constant rain, leaving the points shared at the end of 90 minutes.

Here are five things we learned from the game at the Etihad Stadium.

Battle back from injury

There was a direct match-up on the pitch with two players who have been out injured recently: City lacking a centre-forward, Liverpool without a second senior centre-back.

Gabriel Jesus and Joel Matip returned to start here, often coming up against each other and having mixed results in turn.

The ex-Cameroon international cleared one off the line from Raheem Sterling, with Jesus waiting for a pull-back, while the Brazil striker powered a second-half header off-target after escaping the two in the middle.

Jesus’ equaliser, though, was a moment of real class; he attached himself to Trent Alexander-Arnold instead of a centre-back, span the defender with his first touch and poked home the goal.

All four in attack

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp had been given a dilemma ahead of the game over choosing which forwards would feature.

In the end, it was all of them - Diogo Jota right side, Sadio Mane left, Roberto Firmino and Salah up front.

There were chances for all four, Firmino notably opting out of lobbing Ederson within the first few seconds, and the tactical shift involved in starting each of them showed Klopp is happy and able to alter the team as needed.

In future games it’ll likely give the Reds an extra goal threat off the bench rather than starting with the quartet all in place, but they certainly gave City problems to fix in the first half.

Transition play

The speed of both teams committing players forward immediately after winning possession, and their ability to exchange passes and open up scoring chances, showed precisely why they have been the best two in the land for the past three years.

City took a while to get to grips with matters in midfield, but after a switch in Rodri’s positioning they were able to find him with the first ball out of defence more often and overwhelm the Reds in the centre.

For their part, Liverpool roared forward with four or more after winning the ball in midfield, winning their penalty and fashioning chances aplenty by speed and intelligence of movement.

These are comfortably the best teams in England in transition and while the second half didn’t live up to the power and pace of the first, it was still an overall exhibition as to why the rest of the league so frequently succumbs to defeat in the face of these rivals.

England right-backs in focus again

There are so many of them that it seems game-to-game we get Premier League fixtures with at least one potential England right-back playing, but here were two of the foremost options.

Kyle Walker seems more perceived as a third centre-back option for Gareth Southgate, but one of his last England outings saw him give away a penalty - and the same occurred here with a fairly needless and obvious foul.

Even so, he might feel his opportunities are boosted somewhat - as Trent Alexander-Arnold went off injured.

It wasn’t the Liverpool man’s best outing of the season, but with Virgil van Dijk already missing from the back line, their creative outlet being sidelined with an apparent calf injury will only make matters more difficult - and Southgate will presumably now turn to Reece James first across the next two weeks.

Table-topping turnover

Liverpool went into the weekend’s games top of the table, only for Southampton to usurp them Friday night.

Then Tottenham took over as leaders for all of two hours - with Leicester then making good on their own start to the season by becoming leaders ahead of this titanic tussle at the Etihad.

The Reds couldn’t quite get themselves back to the top with a win of their own, but sitting a point off first, with leaders Leicester to play at home next and their hardest game of the season already out the way - Jurgen Klopp will likely see all that as a fair trade for the 1-1 draw.

City have a lot of ground to make up, but they do at least have the game in hand to look forward to, if another game to fit somewhere in the schedule can be viewed as a positive.

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