Liverpool showed his mother’s pool for the conflict with Herseyside Derby in her pity. The Reds won 2-0 at Anfield, with Mo Salah scoring a second-half goal. However, the match was full of questionable refereeing decisions.
Ashley Young was given his marching orders against the Cheese for two bookable fouls in the first half.
But with the game still goalless, Everton felt Liverpool should be reduced to 10 men. Ibrahima Konate was booked when the Blues forward brought down Beto. Konate remained uninterested until Pawson was soon snapped up by Jurgen Klopp.
Soke announcerLiverpool fouled Salah on the penalty spot in the 75th minute when Luis Diaz’s ball hit Michael Keane’s hand. This despite Pewson’s appeal being ruled out before VAR got involved. Salah sealed Liverpool’s victory in extra time.
In his post-match press conference, Dyche said: “Myself and the players in the case were very pleased with the decision. In the first half, we didn’t put pressure on the defensive game like last time.
Of course we weren’t as clean or fluid as before, but they are a good team and we defended very well.”The show is ongoing. The first is touch, the second is yellow, but that’s it.
In the second half we changed our shape and it worked really well because we wanted to blow the game up and they hit the Kop and stuff.
Then, of course, penalty kicks are different and it’s difficult to try to change your mental format to play more aggressively in attack. I don’t like his model rules, but I understand. If you touch it, you will be punished.
I had to do it on purpose, but I’m not yelling, that’s the rule. I don’t know about you, but I’m bored of everything that makes me run to the TV. Because we all know what will happen.“I don’t know what the success rate is, but there’s a 99 percent chance I’ll do what the referee tells me. They talk about speeding up the game. Please continue.
There is a person in the office who has been viewed 47 times. “If it’s a penalty, it’s a penalty, but it’s not for today’s game, it’s for the greater good,” he said.When asked why he thought Conate had not been sacked, Dyche said: “I don’t know about that.
I asked the referee about it and he said he didn’t think it was a punishable offense and he felt it right away. I don’t know what it was like back then. I like to think there are a lot of honest people in football. People today would be surprised if he issued a second yellow card.
“Their manager brought in his players as quickly as possible and I can imagine what he was thinking: we’ve got one off. But he couldn’t bear to get rid of her. He knows and we do,” he said.
