Bournemouth vs Liverpool match report: Raheem Sterling picks off Cherries to ease the pressure on Brendan Rodgers

Bournemouth 1 Liverpool 3

Sam Wallace
Wednesday 17 December 2014 22:53 GMT
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Raheem Sterling celebrates his second for Liverpool
Raheem Sterling celebrates his second for Liverpool (GETTY IMAGES)

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In the last five months Brendan Rodgers’ team have demonstrated a whole series of troubling weaknesses that their manager has struggled to fix, but at least last night he did not have to add to the list of problems a lack of nerve against Championship opposition.

It was a win at last for Rodgers, the first in four games and 16 days, and some respite from the grip of anxiety that has taken hold at Anfield in recent weeks. For Raheem Sterling, without a goal in 17 games, there was two in this cup tie, and one for Lazar Markovic, although there still a brief passage when Liverpool began to wobble. This team seems destined to wobble for some time yet but this time it did not prove catastrophic.

There was no repeat of the Selhurst Park capitulation of last season, and Liverpool are into the semi-finals of the Capital One Cup, where they will face Chelsea in the new year. There is an enmity between those two clubs that burns stronger with every season not least in recent months because of the circumstances of Liverpool’s defeat to Jose Mourinho’s side in the league at Anfield last April.

But that is for another day. Tonight, Bournemouth had their chances in the first half to keep the game within reach but they simply gave their Premier League opposition too much time and space in the first half to settle their nerves and win the game.

Liverpool’s first goal was a 52-pass move, beautifully constructed and the kind of football that Rodgers was hoping to play before the dream went sour this season. Yet when Dan Gosling, the former Everton trainee, scored to make it 3-1 before the hour there was a period when another goal might have seen Liverpool’s will dissolve again. This time, they managed to steady the ship.

Rodgers picked a side for the occasion with just three changes from the team that lost at Old Trafford on Sunday. There was no resting the captain Steven Gerrard, or Dejan Lovren and Martin Skrtel, the defensive axis which has been the source of so many problems this season.

There was also no backing down from the three-man defensive configuration either, with Kolo Toure taking the place of the injured Glen Johnson and within the first four minutes it felt possible that Liverpool might pay a high price for their manager’s stubbornness. Callum Wilson, Bournemouth’s top goalscorer picked his way past Lovren and Skrtel and, with just Brad Jones to beat, passed the ball wide of the goal.

Lazar Markovic scores Liverpool's second, and his first for the club
Lazar Markovic scores Liverpool's second, and his first for the club (GETTY IMAGES)

It was a dreadful miss and by the time Bournemouth got sight of Jones’ goal again, they were two goals behind. What followed the Wilson chance was a period of Liverpool domination that felt so one-sided that it was hard to recall a time when Bournemouth put a challenge on the away side’s back three. Toure, Skrtel and Lovren were able to pass the ball under no pressure at all, and the Championship side barely had a touch of it.

It looked very much like Eddie Howe’s team had been told to stand off Liverpool and try to absorb the attacks that they did make closer to the Bournemouth goal. The consequence was that Gerrard, Adam Lallana and Philippe Coutinho also passed the ball with freedom and a Liverpool team with ebbing confidence was allowed to work its way into the game.

Who knows how different it might have been had Bournemouth put pressure on a team that had won just two of their ten previous games. As it turned out, Liverpool were allowed to find their tempo with Coutinho and Lallana playing behind Sterling. On the wings, Markovic and Henderson offered the width. Their first goal was testament to the time and space they were afforded by Howe’s team.

It ended with Henderson heading Markovic’s cross from the left across goal for Sterling to nod past Artur Boruc. The move comprised of 52 passes and lasted two minutes and 26 seconds. There is no doubting that this Liverpool side, at their best, can pass the ball well. Nevertheless, this time Bournemouth gave them an invitation to do so.

Former Everton man Dan Gosling pulls one back
Former Everton man Dan Gosling pulls one back (GETTY IMAGES)

Before then Boruc had done well to push a Lallana shot over the bar. The goalkeeper had also stopped Gerrard’s strong strike from Markovic’s cutback but it only felt like a matter of time before Liverpool scored. They did so again on 27 minutes when Markovic struck a low shot past Boruc after Coutinho’s shot was saved. In the build-up, the Bournemouth captain Tommy Elphick appeared to stop in response to what he seemed to think was the referee’s whistle.

Then, a moment of hope for Howe’s team. The right-back Martin Francis got away down the right side for the first time since the very start of the game and cut the ball back out of the reach of Toure to Yann Kermogant in the area. Unmarked and with time to pick his spot he struck his shot wildly over the bar.

For Kermogant, like so many of Howe’s Championship–leading team, it was to be one of those nights when they were reminded of what might lay ahead should they make the step up to the top division. Kermogant was off before the hour and by then Liverpool had scored a third.

This time it came through the centre, from Toure to Lallana and onto Sterling whose unreliability in front of goal against Manchester United on Sunday had crystallised into something more certain this time. He slotted the ball beyond the reach of Boruc and if it had looked hard for Bournemouth before then, at three goals it was starting to seem impossible.

Yet they pulled one back before the hour, a goal from Gosling, who scored the winner for Everton against Liverpool in the FA Cup fourth round in February 2009. His shot found its way under the body of Jones, newly-installed as the club’s No 1 and doing little once again to convince that he is deserving of the position.

The goal alone showed how easily Liverpool’s rhythm could be disrupted and for the next few minutes there was a shakiness about them. Mamadou Sakho, on as a second half substitute for Lovren, ploughed unwisely into a challenge in the area with Wilson. One of the Bournemouth substitutes, Ryan Fraser, headed a chance wide. Gosling hit the post on 69 minutes.

It proved too much for Bournemouth to close the gap and Sterling had two good chances for the hat-trick. By the end, Rodgers’ name was being sung by the away support and, given the week they have had, he will settle for that.

Liverpool (3-2-4-1): Jones; Toure, Skrtel, Lovren; Gerrard, Lucas; Henderson, Coutinho, Lallana, Markovic; Sterling.

Subs: Sakho/Lovren ht, Can/Coutinho 71, Borini/Gerrard 89

Bournemouth (4-4-1-1): Boruc; Francis, Elphick, Cargill, Smith; Ritchie, Gosling, O’Kane, Stanislas; Kermorgant; Wilson.

Subs: Arter/Kermogant 53, Fraser/Stanislas 53, Pitman/O’Kane 81

Attendance: 11,347

Referee: M Clattenburg

Man of the match: Gerrard

Rating: 6

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