• Andy Robertson sent off in 17th minute
  • Andreas Pereira gives visitors lead before Cody Gakpo equaliser
  • Rodrigo Muniz appears to win it but Diogo Jota grabs share of spoils

Liverpool 2-2 Fulham: Player ratings as ten-man Reds snatch late draw

  • Liverpool battle to 2-2 draw with Fulham on Saturday afternoon
  • Andy Robertson shown red early on after Andreas Pereira's opener
  • Gakpo and Jota both on target for Arne Slot's side

 

By talal Osman 

Liverpool twice had to come from behind on Saturday as they clawed their way to a 2-2 draw with Fulham at Anfield.

Fulham found themselves ahead just 11 minutes in when Andreas Pereira rose in acrobatic fashion to convert Antonee Robinson's cross, and it went from bad to worse for Liverpool when Andy Robertson was sent off for tripping Harry Wilson six minutes later when the former Reds youngster was through on goal.

The Reds reset at the break and tied things up two minutes after the restart when Mohamed Salah's pin-perfect cross was turned home by Cody Gakpo's diving header.

With the clock winding down, it was substitute Rodrigo Muniz who turned home another Robinson cross with a delightful flick that nestled in the back of the net after a deflection off Joe Gomez.

However, there would be one final twist as Diogo Jota wrong-footed Bernd Leno and stroked the ball into bottom corner with just four minutes left of regular time, seeing Liverpool escape with a point.

 

Liverpool were held to a 2-2 draw by Fulham in a pulsating Anfield encounter defined by an early Andy Robertson red card.

The Reds trailed after just 11 minutes as Andreas Pereira produced an incredible volleyed finish, and their misery was compounded when Robertson was sent off for a last-man challenge shortly after.

Cody Gakpo's equaliser early in the second half stoked hopes among the home support of an unlikely win, but those appeared to have been extinguished by Rodrigo Muniz's late strike.

However, Diogo Jota marked his return from injury with a well-taken goal, leaving Fulham hanging on for a point in the end.

How the game unfolded

Liverpool were almost gifted a dream start as a loose backpass put Curtis Jones in on goal, but the midfielder was denied by a well-timed Issa Diop challenge

And it was Fulham who then, in fact, got themselves ahead, Pereira producing an incredible, acrobatic finish to squeeze the ball into the top corner after Antonee Robinson had crossed from the left.

Things went from bad to worse for the hosts soon after with Robertson seeing red for a last-man challenge on Wilson and missing out on a reprieve after VAR confirmed the Welshman to be onside.

Only a desperate Joe Gomez block then prevented Wilson from making it 2-0 as Fulham continued to threaten, though Liverpool eventually began to settle as the half wore on. It was they who finished strongest, with Cody Gakpo forcing a save with a header from a free-kick before Luis Diaz nodded over a huge chance from a Dominik Szoboszlai cross.

And the momentum continued into a second half that began with Gakpo heading home a delicious Mohamed Salah cross to send Anfield into raptures.

The Dutchman almost had another moments later, forcing Bernd Leno into a save low down to his right as Fulham struggled to calm the game and the crowd.

The visitors did, though, eventually regain control, meaning Liverpool's best chances came almost exclusively on the counter. However, they twice almost profited through Salah, though he drove wide and over with each respective chance.

Unfortunately for the Reds, it felt inevitable that Fulham's numerical advantage would eventually tell, and so it proved as Muniz turned Robinson's cross home to spark scenes of joy in the away end.

Yet there was still another twist in the tale remaining, and it was provided by the returning Jota, whose clever feint after being played through opened up the goal for a customarily composed finish to make it 2-2.

And that is how it finished as Fulham saw off a late siege on their goal, despite their man advantage.

In any other circumstances, a draw at home to Fulham would feel like a serious blow to a Liverpool side hoping to go on and lift the Premier League title.

But it would be foolish not to consider the circumstances, the most significant of which was the early red card received by Robertson.

Playing with ten men is hard, and coming from behind twice in such situations even harder, and so Arne Slot will surely find it easy to pick the positives out of this one.

That is even more true after Liverpool's main title rivals, Arsenal, dropped points in a home clash with Everton that kicked off at the same time.