Brendan Rodgers' thriving side delivered yet another
dominant victory at Anfield to move to the top of the Premier League
with only six games remaining
It's on, make no mistake. Anfield's dream of a first league title since 1990 is looking ever more like glorious reality. To Liverpool, this is everything.
Brendan Rodgers' side enter April top of the Premier
League. Defeat for Chelsea and a draw for Manchester City had led to
whispers across Merseyside before today's game that this could just be
Liverpool's year. They're shouting it now.
This 4-0 dismantling of a Tottenham side so lacking in
belief, ideas or any semblance of fighting spirit has become par for the
course. An opening goal in a matter of minutes followed by total
domination - we've seen this one before.
Rodgers dismissed talk of his side being under pressure
ahead of the visit of Spurs and his players followed suit on the pitch.
Nerves were kept for the Kop, before kick-off at least, as the likes of
Coutinho, Henderson and Sterling, youngsters with the hopes of a city on
their shoulders, delivered fearlessly.
If Manuel Pellegrini and Jose Mourinho were looking for
signs that this is all too much for the side from Merseyside, they will
have been left disappointed and more than a little concerned. From
Coutinho's perfectly floated 30-yard ball in the opening minute to
Daniel Sturridge's attempted backheel to make it 5-0, this entire
Liverpool side played without inhibition. Never has a title challenge
looked like so much fun.
Liverpool were absolutely ruthless in taking apart
Tottenham. The opener, a slapstick deflection offYounes Kaboul following
the first of what felt like hundreds of attacks down the right channel,
set the tone for an afternoon off the visiting team having absolutely
no answer to what was being thrown at them. Just how on Earth do you
stop this side?
Tim Sherwood, brow furrowed sat next to the press box,
quite clearly didn't have the answer and his players might as well have
joined him in the stands and let Liverpool get on with it. They were
merely passengers like the rest of us.
For both Manchester City and Chelsea, whose visits to
Merseyside will almost certainly decide the direction of this title,
Liverpool represent a unique rival. Rodgers possesses a squad of players
who don't know what it is to win a Premier League title and that fact,
for so long seen as a weakness looks to have been turned into a
strength. Nobody saw this coming. Now the rest are chasing, and
stumbling along the way.
Liverpool have answered every question asked of them this
season, but there remains one more. 'The Reds are coming up the hill'
read the banner at the front of the Kop but now there they are there,
kings of the castle, looking down on the rest. There was little to
suggest that the enormity of that or this magnificent season is playing
on the minds of Rodgers or his side against Tottenham. This was simply
another one ticked off the list.
This was significant, they all are now, but you would
never have known it from Rodgers come full time. West Ham away next
Sunday, he insists, is all that matters, for now, but even a Kop that
has spent years, far too many, waiting for this feeling again, is
beginning to truly believe. You can't blame them after performances like
this.
On the edge of history, still Liverpool go forward. It's on, make no mistake.
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