Sunday People

SHH! YOU KNOW WHO!

Alexander-arnold adds to eery silence at the Etihad, where complacenc­y has seemingly set in

- BIG MATCH VERDICT

THERE was a nice irony about Trent Alexander-arnold putting a finger to his lips and shushing the Etihad crowd after his point-earning strike.

The natives did not need shushing – there had barely been a peep out of them all afternoon.

He was silencing the silent.

Save for the moment that Alisson gifted Erling Haaland his 50th Premier League goal, rarely can a so-called crunch fixture have been so crushingly quiet.

Much to Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola’s annoyance.

At an early stage of the second half – and at several points during its entirety – Guardiola turned to look at the crowd... sorry, turned to look FOR the crowd. The punters were there, but only in person.

Don’t think, for one minute, Manchester City loyalists are any less passionate than any other fans – they are not.

But this was an afternoon of City complacenc­y, an afternoon of City failing to rise to the occasion, an afternoon of City operating on autopilot. Never mind what he said afterwards, that is why Guardiola (right) was furious during the match, that anger spilling over into a contretemp­s with Darwin Nunez.

Pep will know this was an opportunit­y missed, a chance to put down a marker squandered, a psychologi­cal opening they failed to walk through.

Sloppy

In a casual, sloppy way, his Treble winners team blew it.

But when you have won 23 home games on the bounce, the buffers of complacenc­y are bound to be struck soon.

And that was certainly the case here – in the stands, on the field.

Apart from those in the visiting pen, there was, at half-time, probably no one who thought the champions would not go on and see out another victory.

After all, at least Haaland’s hunger looks unlikely to ever be sated.

Alisson was at double-fault for the City breakthrou­gh, following his horrible sliced clearance by failing to keep out a scuff that he could have thrown his cap on.

But Haaland was alive to the possibilit­ies, is always alive to the possibilit­ies, and if he can get a better handle on Jeremy Doku’s game at some stage, it could be a very profitable link-up.

Getting a handle on Doku’s intentions, though, will take some doing.

He is like a Belgian Peter Beagrie, with a lot more pace.

Doku was somehow given the manof-the-match award by the local sponsors but you could file this as a

frustratin­g instalment of his formative City career. It was actually typical of how this pretty mundane match panned out that Doku and Haaland almost combined for a City second moments before

Alexander-arnold’s leveller.

In fact, Alexander-arnold had spent a large part of this contest having his blood twisted by Doku but, fortunatel­y for Jurgen Klopp, his vice-captain also has ice in his veins.

There is probably no calmer, cooler, outfield operator in the Premier League, his sweet take and finish meaning there have now been six draws between Klopp and Guardiola, with the former winning 12 times and the latter 11. Alexander-arnold is still getting to grips with his hybrid role but the prospect of him convincing England boss Gareth Southgate to field a more adventurou­s midfield system remains an exciting one.

Eccentric

After his nice hit, Alexander-arnold still had more defending to do as Doku continued his eccentric, if exciting, time on the left flank.

But in a performanc­e that was considerab­ly out of kilter with their norm, City’s end product was noticeable by its absence.

That is why Guardiola became more animated – with his players, with his bench, with his crowd, with the officials, eventually with Nunez.

Liverpool had been nowhere near their threatenin­g, aggressive best and

Guardiola’s men had failed to flex familiar title muscles.

No wonder Pep shouted.

But on a day when the biggest club game in current Premier League football went off with a whimper, at least someone made a noise.

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 ?? ?? Trent on the rise Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-arnold made his point after Erling Haaland’s opener (left) at an unusually quiet Etihad
Trent on the rise Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-arnold made his point after Erling Haaland’s opener (left) at an unusually quiet Etihad

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