ARNE SLOT insisted the era of heavy metal football was over – yet for two madcap, marauding moments the speakers went back on.
For no more than a flash and a flicker…but still enough to send Liverpool five points clear after a Red arrows raid that had all the hallmarks of the previous Anfield gaffer.
Liverpool continued their fine form with a 2-0 win over Aston Villa
The Reds are now five points clear at the top of the table
Arne Slot brought back memories of heavy metal football to Anfield
A couple of rampant end-to-end counter thrusts served up every week under Jurgen Klopp, finished by a Darwin Nunez piledriver and a magical Mo Salah clip for a 2-0 win.
Ever since Slot stepped into Klopp’s shoes, the gameplan has been more methodical than mayhem. The days of 100mph, in-your-face football aren’t the Dutchman’s style.
How ironic, then, that it took a breakaway goal straight from the Klopp handbook for them to find a way to break the deadlock.
A length-of-the-field assault stemming from a Villa corner, and a finish which threatened to take the net from its moorings.
It was certainly enough to send Anfield wild. Although to be fair, that stunning Brighton win had got this place buzzing half an hour before they even kicked off on Merseyside.
Against a side whose form as they arrived in town couldn’t have offered a starker contrast to the Reds, either after four games without a win – the last three of them losses.
The perfect setting for an Anfield onslaught, you thought. For Liverpool to tear out of the traps and put their opponents on the canvas before they know it.
Only the 2024-25 version doesn’t tend to do that. It is a more measured, pick-your-moments one.
Mind you, when those moments arrive, the end product is just as devastating as any of those blow-your-socks off days under Klopp. As we saw after 20 minutes.
Liverpool were actually defending a corner when it broke to Virgil van Dijk a couple of yards outside his own box.
The Reds skipper didn’t need to pause, didn’t need to look up. He knew Mo Salah would be on his bike and clipped the most measured of balls for the Egyptian.
Darwin Nunez opened the scoring after 20 minutes
He put the finishing touches on a counter-attack reminiscent of the Jurgen Klopp day
Salah went stumbling courtesy of the backtracking Leon Bailey…but not before he had slid a pass forward to Darwin Nunez.
And although a rather hefty first touch initially seemed to have taken him too wide as he rounded keeper Emi Martinez, Nunez spun and smashed in the opener.
In a nano-second yells for Bailey to be sent off turned to screams of celebration at the breakthrough.
And credit to referee David Coote as well, for letting play continue when Bailey laid a hand on Salah’s back.
Although perhaps that is being a little kind to the official, as it was hard to say whether he was waving play on or to signal there had been no foul by the Villa man.
Thank Heavens, then, that Nunez buried the chance. No case to answer…and no chance of keeping out a thunderbolt that nearly took the net from its moorings.
Only a second Prem goal of the season for the Uruguayan forward – and ten minutes later he really should have been celebrating a third.
Again it stemmed from a Villa corner, and again they were sliced open by a lightning strike. Excusable once, but a second time? No wonder manager Emery looked ready to explode.
Mo Salah made sure of the result with a strike in the 84th minute
He celebrated with Reds fans after sending his side well clear of Man City
He surely would have done if the finish from Nunez had been as deadly as his first, too, when Salah once more sent him scooting clear.
But this time, for all it was a far kinder angle to the left of the penalty spot, he blazed over and Villa breathed again.
You still never really felt it would come back to haunt Liverpool. Yet minutes later it so very nearly did.
Again it was a Villa corner, but this time Lucas Digne’s delivery found Amadou Onana’s head, and Caoimhin Kelleher produced a fine reaction save to tip it over.
Trent Alexander-Arnold hobbled off with an injury
He is now a doubt for England’s upcoming Nations League matches
Shortly after, Digne whipped over another that would have gone in without a touch if the Liverpool goalie hadn’t been so vigilant, and the keeper repeated the action.
Similar to how Ryan Gravenberch flung himself to stop Ollie Watkins when it seemed like he was going to bury the follow-up.
The lead held firm, but they couldn’t unwind until four minutes from the end. Unbelievably, it needed another full-scale raid to make it happen.
Diego Carlos’ header against Salah on halfway was a huge stroke of luck, and the Kop striker crashed through.
It was a bad night at the office for Aston Villa
But there was nothing fortunate about his finish, waiting for Martinez to commit before dinking into the far corner.
Job done – once it was confirmed, with Pau Torres laughingly trying to claim a penalty at the other end – and five points clear.