There's mitigation, but ...
This week's TAW column.
I missed the first eight minutes, which is to say I missed the bit where Liverpool were competitive at 0-0. The narrative of the game was written before I sat down.
Bob Paisley’s only disappointment with Liverpool legend Ray Kennedy was that he was a slow starter. ‘I want you to start when all the others do,’ he would tell him.
There was good reason for Ray’s early lethargy. I can’t begin to explain the reason for Liverpool’s.
So many games are determined on confidence and momentum. Look at the Palace game. 2-0 up and the issues temporarily forgotten. Go a goal down, however, and we might as well go home. No fight, no show, no pride in where we are and what we’re doing. No plan either. As Johno said on The Ratings, you need a plan. Ours seemed to be just to turn up and hope.
You can go a goal down. That happens. Someone has to score and if it’s not you, you put a plan together to sort it out. The first thing to do is to not give a second goal away. Once again, Liverpool weren’t listening. 2-0 and everyone just wants to get off the pitch and get to work on the ‘We go again’ press release for next week. Beaten again by their own meekness.
Neil used the word ‘mitigation’ a few times in his post-match review and it’s important to accept that there are other factors for Liverpool’s awful season. None of what you’d suppose are our preferred front three of Ekitike, Isak and Salah are available so where are the goals coming from?
What’s the manager supposed to do? Cody can be a number nine of sorts but not one you’d start at Old Trafford in May. Equally, we don’t have a fit right-back apart from the one who’s now a right-sided forward, but isn’t, so instead we’re playing arguably our best protective central midfielder there. I still wouldn’t recognise our goalkeeper if I shared a cab with him.
But that mitigation only carries you so far. Alexis Mac Allister and Florian Wirtz both finished the game. They get 95 minutes.
It’s easy to shine a torch at Mac Allister and I enjoyed his occasional drives forward when he had space, but his legs have clearly gone. His clearance for the third goal was Sunday League level at best, but he’s playing centre-mid for Liverpool at Old Trafford. I think that might be the last time he does that. Nevertheless, he gets 95 minutes.
Elsewhere?
A few weeks ago, I was given a free ticket to see the Happy Mondays. I’ve never been a huge fan but like the odd song so it wasn’t a chore. On they came and kicked off with Kinky Afro. Then came Bez, their dancer, whose sole role is to gyrate around Shaun Ryder and shake the odd maraca. That’s his job. To come on, tell everyone to have a good time, have a dance and get off again. He doesn’t even have to learn the songs. Not for the first time I wondered if he’s needed at rehearsals.
It was great to see him as he’s entertaining, despite not really contributing anything to the songs.
See Florian Wirtz.
A flick here or there, the odd bit of skill, true, but ultimately, he’s just shaking maracas in the Liverpool midfield at Old Trafford against Manchester United. He too gets the full 95 minutes.
Mitigation is significant. The bench has few options; so much so that we’re asking a 17-year old kid to get us out of trouble at Old Trafford. Arne Slot has been dealt an awful hand, but my God, he does himself no favours.
One final analogy. Promise. In ‘The Godfather’ Tom Hagen, the Don’s advisor, is sacked when Michael takes over from his dad as head of the family. Tom’s stunned and asks why.
“You’re not a wartime consiglieri, Tom,” his brother replies. “Things might get rough with the move we’re trying.”
One thing has become clear this season. Arne Slot is a league winning manager and an exceptional manager, but what he’s not is a wartime consiglieri. That’s fine up to a point, but in the Premier League and with the game as it is, it’s almost always wartime.
The whispers around the club say he’ll be here next season, but I have my doubts. There are people who openly despise him and people who want him to stay, but there’s an increasing number of people who just want something to build on and doubt if he can do it from here.
I want him to stay as I hate it when the club has to start again, but I wonder how he can go to Old Trafford with no Plan A and watch Liverpool capitulate in Manchester for the third time this season.
This is a team desperate for the season to end. They can’t think like that as there’s still Champions League qualification to sort, but if Sunday’s anything to go by, they’ll do just that.
There has to be a change though. That much is clear. You can’t go a goal down and hope the opposition gives you gifts.
It’s always wartime in the Premier League and if you have no skill in crisis management then there’s only one way this is going to end. I wish it were otherwise.
Karl


Winning at OT is never guaranteed. Better Liverpool teams than this have failed to do it.
When Isak was playing, I thought it would be a struggle.
When Isak was confirmed injured, I thought it was highly unlikely.
When you remove £200 to £250 million of attacking talent (I have no idea what Mo is worth these days) from a squad that is already struggling with form, fitness and structure, and then send them to a hated rival who are experiencing a bounce and who have played one game per week all season, expecting a win seems ludicrous.
It can happen, but it's not likely.
It's even less likely when they score from a wild deflection off Macca's arse and have a ball pushed into the net with a hand given the all clear (someone remind me what VAR is for, if not to work out situations just like this one).
That wasn't the officials' only influential moment on the game. Letting Heaven absolutely poleaxe Frimpong early in the game and give nothing for it was also annoying.
Step forward Stuart Atwell. He has a track record with us. WIth him on VAR, some of us knew in advance of the game that it would be a rough afternoon.
So yes, there is mitigation. Without the 'but'.
There has been mitigation from the summer last year. And each week/month that mitigation has grown, for those balanced and logical enough to account for it.
This game was just another marker of our awful season. Things haven't gone on our way. But we've been here before, and we have a long history of responding to these downturns in spectacular fashion. When Klopp won the league, he followed it with a crap, injury plagued season, and then the next year came as close as anyone to winning a quad.
Fans didnt call for him to be sacked in that off-season. He had credit in the bank and we understood the mitigating factors.
I'm happy to give the Slot the same patience.
Mitigation is why we fail as a club these days. Slot should've been out the fucking door in November after THAT week. Everything we needed to know was right then. But the TAW cheerleading has contributed to Slot staying on and stinking the joint out and wasting a season.