Jurgen Klopp was furious with Joel Matip in the first half (Image: GETTY) Liverpool came back from a goal down to win for the third time this season with a 3-1 victory over Wolves in what turned out to be a game of two halves for Jurgen Klopp ‘s side. The Reds were in serious trouble in the first half after Hwang Hee-chan gave the hosts a deserved lead and Wolves should have been out of sight before the break. But Liverpool managed to hang on before goals from Cody Gakpo, Andy Robertson and Harvey Elliott saw Liverpool move to the top of the table. Express Sport picks out four things learnt from Liverpool’s comeback win over Wolves. Klopp’s anger at Matip speaks volumes It was uncomfortable opening 45 minutes for Klopp on the touchlines as he looked on in dismay at some of his team’s defending – or lack thereof. Matip had the biggest job of all as the most senior defender with Jarell Quansah alongside him and Joe Gomez out wide on the right. But the Cameroonian failed to calm things down at the back with a number of errors as Wolves capitalised. Klopp pulled Matip to one side at one stage to have some choice words with the defender. Matip would have been given clear instructions from Klopp to use his experience to help Quansah settle early on, but failing to do that may cost the 32-year-old a chance to keep his place in the starting line-up. Mohamed Salah was at his creative best in the second half (Image: Getty) With Joe Gomez and and Jarell Quansah starting in a makeshift back four it was always going to be make or break on whether it was going to work. It was quickly apparent inside just five minutes that Gomez was no replacement for Alexander-Arnold while Quansah was in for a difficult match alongside Joel Matip. Signing a right-back capable of filling in for Alexander-Arnold will surely be high on Liverpool’s agenda in the New Year, while a more reliable centre-back may also be needed, particularly with Matip and Gomez struggling to impress. Quansah may still be one for the future and he’s shown already this season what he’s capable of, but the match against Wolves was proof that Liverpool lack depth at the back for right now. Salah’s excellence Without Alexander-Arnold bombing forward down the right flank and picking out passes from deep, Salah was noticably isolated in attack until he came alive in the second half. The Egyptian can pop up with a piece of magic at a moment’s notice, but he’s at his best when he’s involved in the build-up play regularly.
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp’s angry outburst speaks volumes in Wolves draw
Sourceexpress.co.uk
RELATED ARTICLES