toptop
Ten-man
Chelsea produced a display of remarkable resistance to hold on for a 1-1 draw
with Liverpool, in an epic, enthralling contest between two Premier League title
hopefuls at Anfield, following Reece James' hotly-debated sending off in
first-half injury time.
The Champions League holders had won at this venue in March and were impressing
again on Liverpool's patch, leading through Kai Havertz's brilliant header, as
an enthralling contest approached half-time. But drama and controversy moments
before the break transformed the match.
Joel Matip hit the bar as Chelsea struggled to clear a corner and when Sadio
Mane rifled in a follow-up shot the ball cannoned into James' arm off his knee
on the goal-line, before the defender appeared to try to flick the ball away
with his hand.
Referee Anthony Taylor consulted the pitchside monitor on VAR's advice and
infuriated the Chelsea players by not only awarding a spot-kick - which Mohamed
Salah hammered home - but also showing James a red card for denying a clear
goalscoring opportunity.
While former Chelsea striker Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink argued James couldn't go to
make the block with his knee without moving his arm in the direction of the ball
as well, Sky Sports pundits Jamie Redknapp and Gary Neville agreed the Chelsea
man had to go. "I know it hits his leg first but it's just the movement of the
arm," said Neville. "If you're denying a goalscoring opportunity a red card has
to follow, whether you like it or not," added Redknapp.
The incident left Chelsea level with Liverpool but facing a second-half
onslaught in front of the Kop, yet while Salah, Diogo Jota, Virgil van Dijk,
Jordan Henderson and Trent Alexander-Arnold were among the players to try to
find the winner, the home side struggled to build enough consistent pressure to
break through.
Chelsea boss Thomas Tuchel celebrated that resistance - and hard-fought draw
against his compatriot Jurgen Klopp - at the final whistle, which brought to the
end a brilliant contest which could form an important chapter in a fascinating
Premier League title race.
Player ratings
Liverpool: Alisson (6), Alexander-Arnold (7), Matip (7), Van
Dijk (7), Robertson (6), Elliott (6), Henderson (6), Fabinho (6), Salah (7),
Firmino (6), Mane (6),
Subs: Jota (6), Thiago (6), Tsimikas (N/A)
Chelsea: Mendy (7), Azpilicueta (7), Rudiger (7), Christensen
(8), James (4), Jorginho (6), Kante (6), Alonso (6), Mount (7), Havertz (8),
Lukaku (6)
Subs: Thiago Silva (7), Kovacic (6), Chalobah (N/A)
Man of the match: Andreas Christensen (Chelsea)
How Chelsea held out in memorable clash with
Liverpool...
The first half ended in controversy but it began in frantic fashion, with
chances at both ends during an electric opening period between these two
championship contenders in the evening sunshine at a packed-out Anfield.
Eighteen-year-old Harvey Elliott, trusted in midfield for the big occasion,
almost made it a perfect start for the hosts, shooting just wide from the edge
of the box after four minutes, before Chelsea's Mason Mount and Havertz caused
problems and Reds' skipper Henderson badly miscued a volley from
Alexander-Arnold's excellent pass into the box.
It was a moment of brilliant invention which opened the scoring on 21 minutes,
Havertz stooping to meet a near-post corner from James and loop the ball over
Alisson. "A sensational header," said Sky Sports pundit Neville.
After riding out the early storm, Tuchel's side were producing the ideal away
performance at Anfield and should have extended their lead. They twice
counter-attacked, with Mount's lofted pass for Lukaku just overhit and then
Havertz missing a chance to play in the Belgian moments later, before the
striker's shot was blocked and Mount flashed an effort across the face of goal.
As Elliott wasted a chance on his weaker foot from inside the Chelsea box and
Roberto Firmino was forced off with injury, the visitors were on the brink of
completing what Neville described as "the perfect half". But that changed
dramatically in stoppage time.
Andy Robertson's corner was flicked on by Mane and eventually headed onto the
bar by Matip but when Mane's follow-up shot struck James on the thigh and then
the arm, VAR advised referee ref Taylor to go to his pitchside monitor where he
judged the action to be handball and a denial of a goalscoring opportunity.
The punishment of a penalty - expertly converted by Salah - and red card for
James, infuriated the visitors, with Antonio Rudiger booked before the spot-kick
and Edouard Mendy shown a yellow card after it, following a scuffle with
Henderson.
Tuchel made a double change at the break, with Thiago Silva and Mateo Kovacic
coming on for Havertz and N'Golo Kante, but they were inevitably pinned back for
long periods of the second half, with Jota heading wide and Van Dijk shooting at
Mendy soon after the restart.
Henderson went close with a spectacular long-range effort, while Fabinho and
Robertson tried their luck, too, but increasingly Chelsea grew in confidence and
were even able to create some attacking moments of their own.
Liverpool struggled to carve out any real chances against the determined
visitors, with Alexander-Arnold eventually ending a 14-minute wait for a shot
with a dig on 80 minutes, and were fortunate sub Kovacic didn't capitalise when
he went through on goal moments later.
The hosts did mount a late charge, with Salah and Alexander-Arnold forcing saves
from Mendy, but still they could find no way through their resolute visitors.
In the end, Liverpool were forced to settle for a point, which maintains both
sides' unbeaten starts to the season and their positions joint-top of the early
Premier League table.
Was ref Anthony Taylor right to award a
penalty and send off Reece James?
Sky Sports' Gary Neville:
"I thought it was handball. It's his knee onto his arm. I think that right arm
swings as if it is trying to save it in some way.
"I know it hits his leg first but it's just the movement of the arm."
Sky Sports' Jamie Redknapp:
"James has a bit of motion there with his arm to try to clear the ball. And if
you're denying a goal-scoring opportunity a red card has to follow, whether you
like it or not."
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink:
"I think it's a natural position. He goes first with his knee, with his thigh,
that hits the ball first. That's why his arm is moving as well. Yes, the ball
hits his arm. The referee has a decision to make. Would I want a penalty there
as well? Yes.
"You can't hold your arm behind your back when your knee goes up."
Opta stats
Only Brentford (15) are on a longer unbeaten run in league matches within
England's top four tiers than Liverpool, who extended their run without a defeat
to 13 matches with their draw with Chelsea (W10 D3).
Mohamed Salah's equaliser for Liverpool was the 14th penalty in a row the
Egyptian has scored in the Premier League - only Matt Le Tissier (23 in a row
between 1994 and 2000) has had a longer consecutive run of scoring from the spot
without missing in Premier League history.
Liverpool's Trent Alexander-Arnold created five chances in this evening's match
with Chelsea, the most a player has managed against the Blues in the Premier
League since Thomas Tuchel took charge. Indeed, the Englishman has now created
more opportunities for his teammates than any other top-flight player so far
this season (15).
César Azpilicueta played in his 300th Premier League game for Chelsea, becoming
only the fourth player to do so for the club after John Terry (492), Frank
Lampard (429) and Petr Cech (333).
Not only did Reece James (21y 263d) become the first Chelsea player to be sent
off at Anfield in the Premier League since Frank Lampard in 2009, he's the
youngest Blues player to see red in the top-flight since John Obi Mikel (20y
154d) v Man Utd back in 2007.
In Premier League history, only Arsenal's opponents (120) have received more red
cards than Liverpool's (106), with the eight that Chelsea have received against
Liverpool the most the Blues have had versus any fellow opponent in the
competition.
Edouard Mendy was called upon to make six saves at Anfield, his most in a single
appearance since joining Chelsea in any competition.
What's next?
After the upcoming international break, Liverpool go to Leeds, live on Sky
Sports, on Sunday, September 12 at 4.30pm, while Chelsea host Aston Villa at
5.30pm on Saturday, September 11, also live on Sky Sports.
Teams
Liverpool Alisson, Alexander-Arnold, Matip, Van Dijk, Rebertson
Tsimikas 86), Henderson (c) (Thiago 74), Fabinho, Elliott, Mane, Firmino (Jota
43), Salah
Subs Not Used Kelleher, Gomez, Konate, Keita, Minamino,
Oklade-Chamberlain
Booked
Goals Salah 45+5 (pen)
Chelsea Mendy, Azpilicueta (c), Christensen, Rudiger, James,
Jorginho (Chalobah 87), Kante (Kovacic 46), Alonso, Havertz (Silva 46), Lukaku,
Mount
Subs Not Used Kepa, Chilwell, Loftus-Cheek, Hudson-Odoi,
Ziyech, Werner
Booked Rudiger, Mendy
Sent Off James 45+3
Goals Havertz 22
Attendance 54,000
Referee Anthony Taylor
VAR Chris Kavanagh