Daniel Sturridge's late equaliser rescued a point for Liverpool after a
classic Merseyside derby with Everton at Goodison Park.
In the finest meeting between these two sides in years,
Everton and Liverpool traded blows almost from the first whistle before
sharing a point at its conclusion.
Philippe Coutinho gave the visitors an early lead but
Kevin Mirallas - who should have been sent off for a shocking first
half-tackle on Luis Suarez - quickly equalised.
Suarez restored Liverpool's advantage before half-time
but Everton, playing with the attacking intent manager Roberto Martinez
is determined to introduce, responded in style.
Romelu Lukaku, who had twice been thwarted by Liverpool
keeper Simon Mignolet, sidefooted home the equaliser before a towering
header from Mirallas' corner put the hosts ahead with eight minutes
left.
Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers had introduced
Sturridge for Lucas with 15 minutes left and the move paid dividends in
the 89th minute as he rose to head Steven Gerrard's free-kick beyond
home keeper Tim Howard.
The list of chances was almost endless as, even in
stoppage time, Howard saved from Suarez, and Mignolet blocked Everton
substitute Gerard Deulofeu as both teams went for the winner.
They earned a standing ovation at the final whistle and rightly so after a thrilling 90 minutes.
Liverpool could only put Sturridge on the bench after
he struggled with a thigh injury on England duty - but Suarez was
available after flying back from Uruguay aboard owner John W Henry's
private jet following their World Cup qualification on Thursday.
And it was inevitable that Suarez would be involved in most of the major talking points of an eventful first half.
The Reds were ahead inside five minutes in a manner
that would have left Toffees manager Martinez aghast, as his side left
Coutinho unmarked at the far post to score from Gerrard's corner,
despite the efforts of James McCarthy on the line.
Martinez's counterpart Rodgers will not have felt any
better as Everton equalised three minutes later, Mirallas pouncing to
score after Martin Skrtel could not clear a Leighton Baines free-kick.
A free-flowing game looked certain to produce further
goals. And so it proved as Suarez restored Liverpool's advantage in the
19th minute. He was fouled by Gareth Barry 25 yards out before
inflicting further punishment by curling a low free-kick past the left
hand of Howard.
Suarez was a central figure once more when he was
felled by a shocking high challenge from Mirallas - referee Phil Dowd
taking his time to make a decision as Liverpool's striker received
lengthy treatment, before producing only a yellow card.
Mirallas, who was injured by a challenge from Suarez in
last season's Merseyside derby, was fortunate to stay on the pitch
after what looked a clear red card.
The hosts were dealt a blow just after half-time when
Baines limped off, but Martinez felt bold enough to introduce gifted
youngster Deulofeu, on loan from Barcelona, instead.
And he should have scored within moments when he was sent clear by Mirallas, but Mignolet was off his line quickly to block.
Lukaku had been a growing threat after a quiet start
and twice Mignolet thwarted the giant striker as he looked poised to
bring Martinez's men level.
It was Liverpool, however, who had the best opportunity - and contrived to waste it.
Suarez somehow ran a slalom through a number of home
defenders and the ball fell to Joe Allen, but the midfielder, alone and
eight yards out with only Howard to beat, sidefooted wide.
Everton were throwing everything forward and were
rewarded when Mirallas crossed for Lukaku to finally beat Mignolet, who
got a hand to his shot from eight yards but could not keep it out.
And the striker then soared above Reds defender Jon
Flanagan in a mismatch in Liverpool's penalty box to head in a corner
from the influential Mirallas.
Liverpool were not to be denied a point though and
Sturridge earned it for them. He had the ball in the net again in injury
time but was well offside, while the visitors' substitute Victor Moses
also headed wide.
But Everton fully deserved something from this game and
final whistle blew just after McCarthy had seen a shot blocked in the
area.
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