31/01/2026
Liverpool 4–1 Newcastle: Reds Deliver Authority, Control and Ruthlessness
Liverpool produced one of their most convincing performances of the season with a 4–1 victory over Newcastle United at Anfield, combining intensity, composure, and attacking quality to turn an early setback into a commanding win.
After recent inconsistencies, this felt like a performance built on purpose, aggressive without being reckless, patient without being passive.
Five Talking Points
1. Early Setback, Mature Response
Despite Liverpool’s bright start and territorial dominance, Newcastle struck first through Anthony Gordon, momentarily silencing Anfield. In previous games, such moments have unsettled the Reds — but this time, the response was calm and controlled. Liverpool didn’t force the issue; they trusted the structure and kept probing.
2. Ekitike Turns the Game on Its Head
The turning point came courtesy of Hugo Ekitike, whose movement and finishing changed the game completely. His first goal rewarded sustained pressure, while his second taken with real confidence flipped the momentum entirely before half-time. It was a striker’s performance built on timing, awareness, and composure. We remember a certain Fernando Torres.
3. Wirtz Pulls the Strings
Florian Wirtz once again showed why he is central to Liverpool’s attacking identity. Operating between the lines, he linked midfield to attack effortlessly, dictated tempo in advanced areas, and capped his performance with a well-taken goal. His intelligence in possession ensured Liverpool always had control of the game’s rhythm. What a player we have on our hand
4. Control Replaces Chaos
One of the most encouraging aspects was Liverpool’s game management. After going ahead, the Reds slowed the tempo when required, recycled possession intelligently, and limited Newcastle’s ability to counter. This was a clear step forward from recent matches where late-game control had been an issue.
5. Konaté Seals It Late
In stoppage time, Ibrahima Konaté added the final touch by turning home from close range after sustained pressure in the box, putting the result beyond doubt. Beyond the goal, his overall contribution reflected defensive authority, physical dominance, and leadership, a reassuring sight as Liverpool look for stability at the back.
Standout Contributions
Hugo Ekitike: Two goals, constant movement, decisive edge
Florian Wirtz: Goal, creativity, tempo control
Ibrahima Konaté: Defensive solidity and a late goal
Midfield unit: Controlled transitions and second balls
🔴 The LFC Planet Debate:
Who was your Man of the Match — Ekitike’s clinical finishing, Wirtz’s creative control, or Konaté’s authority at both ends of the pitch?
👇 Make your case in the comments.
28/01/2026
Liverpool 6–0 Qarabağ — Reds Storm Into Champions League Last 16
Liverpool produced an emphatic performance as they cruised to a 6–0 victory over Qarabağ at Anfield to secure their place in the UEFA Champions League last 16 with authority. The Reds were relentless from start to finish, showing attacking fluidity, clinical finishing, and control throughout the contest.
The goals came from Alexis Mac Allister (2), Florian Wirtz, Mohamed Salah, Hugo Ekitike, and Federico Chiesa, a scoring spread that underlined Liverpool’s attacking depth and variety.
Liverpool took an early lead and never looked back, with Mac Allister opening the scoring before Wirtz and Salah added further goals to put the Reds firmly in control. Ekitike added his name to the scoresheet, and Chiesa rounded off the rout to cap a night the hosts will remember for its clinical precision.
This result eased the pressure after recent ups and downs and provided a much-needed confidence boost, with Liverpool demonstrating that when their attacking players click, they can overwhelm any opposition.
The LFC Planet verdict:
A ruthless night in Europe — efficient, dominant, and full of attacking quality. Liverpool showed exactly what they are capable of when their key players deliver in unison.
24/01/2026
🔴 Bournemouth 3–2 Liverpool – Five Talking Points From a Heartbreaking Defeat 🔴
Liverpool’s Premier League campaign suffered another blow as AFC Bournemouth produced a dramatic 3–2 victory at the Vitality Stadium, with Amine Adli’s stoppage-time winner breaking Red hearts in the fifth minute of added time. The Reds looked set for at least a point after battling back from a two-goal deficit, but late defensive lapses proved costly once again.
1. Early Setbacks Put Liverpool on the Back Foot
Bournemouth drew first blood when Evanilson fired home in the 26th minute and was quickly followed by Álex Jiménez three minutes later to double the hosts’ advantage. A combination of hesitant marking and a temporary numerical advantage after a Liverpool injury disrupted early rhythm, leaving the Reds chasing the game from very early on.
2. Van Dijk Pulls One Back Before Half-Time
Just before the break, Liverpool sparked hope when skipper Virgil van Dijk headed home from a set-piece, cutting the deficit to 2–1 and giving the Reds a platform to build on in the second half. The goal shifted momentum and gave Liverpool belief going into the interval.
3. Szoboszlai’s Free-Kick Levels the Game
Ten minutes from time, Liverpool drew level through a superb set-piece routine. Dominik Szoboszlai unleashed a powerful free-kick into the top corner, and suddenly it felt like the comeback was complete. The Reds looked sharp and in control after a sluggish start, with urgency and precision in their attacking play.
4. Late-Game Nerves Return as Adli Strikes
Just when it seemed Liverpool might salvage a point, Amine Adli forced the ball over the line deep in stoppage time after a long Bournemouth throw caused chaos in the box. It was a cruel end for the visitors, who had fought back admirably but couldn’t close the game out.
5. Another Example of Late Concessions Costing Points
This result continues a worrying trend for Liverpool this season — conceding in the late stages of games and dropping valuable points or results in the process. Despite showing character to get back into this match, the Reds’ inability to shut down the final moments has become a recurring issue that remains unresolved.
🔴 The LFC Planet asks:
Is this a fitness issue, a tactical failing, or a mental lapse when games enter the final stages? What must Liverpool fix first to stop conceding late and losing points?
👇 Drop your thoughts below
23/01/2026
🔴 BREAKING: Liverpool in Talks to Sell Andy Robertson to Tottenham 🔴
Major transfer news emerging today as Tottenham Hotspur have entered negotiations with Andy Robertson and Liverpool FC over a potential January move. Robertson’s contract at Liverpool expires in five months, and Spurs are reportedly pushing to bring the 31-year-old left-back to North London before the window closes.
The move comes amid: Limited starts this season for Robertson, with Milos Kerkez preferred at left-back
Tottenham left-back Ben Davies sidelined with a long-term injury
Spurs desperate to add experience and leadership at the back.
Robertson has been a stalwart at Anfield since 2017, making over 360 appearances and lifting Premier League and Champions League trophies. But with his deal running down and playing time harder to come by, both player and club appear open to a January switch — as long as it’s right for all parties.
If the deal goes through, Liverpool could look to recall Kostas Tsimikas early from his loan at Roma to help cover the left-back position — a move that suggests the club are planning ahead rather than panicking.
📍 The Big Question for Reds Fans:
Should Liverpool allow a club legend to leave mid-season to resolve his future…
OR is selling Robertson now too risky given defensive depth concerns?
👇 Vote & speak your mind:
🔴 Sell him now
🔵 Keep him until summer
🟡 Try to extend his contract
22/01/2026
Liverpool Top England’s Money List for the First Time 🔴
Liverpool have officially become the highest-earning English club for the first time, according to the Deloitte Football Money League 2026.
The Reds rank 5th globally, ahead of domestic rivals, underlining Liverpool’s growing financial power on and off the pitch.
Top-earning English clubs (2026):
Liverpool FC – £702m
Manchester City – £697m
Arsenal – £690m
Manchester United – £666m
Tottenham Hotspur – £565m
Globally, only Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, and Paris Saint-Germain generated more revenue.
This reflects:
Strong commercial growth
Matchday revenue consistency
Global fan engagement
Smart financial management
But it also raises a familiar question 👇
Does being England’s top earner now demand matching ambition on the pitch?
The LFC Planet asks:
Should Liverpool’s financial strength translate into bigger transfer risk-taking, or is sustainability still the right path?
👇 Drop your thoughts below
📸 Image credit: BBC Sport / Deloitte Football Money League
22/01/2026
Jeremie Frimpong — What a Night 🔴
After last night’s game, reminded everyone exactly what he brings to this side.
⚡ Relentless energy
🔥 Constant threat down the flank
🎯 Direct, fearless, and aggressive
Whether it was his movement, intensity, or end product, Frimpong played with confidence and purpose, the kind of performance that turns heads and raises questions.
If this is a sign of what’s to come, Liverpool have a serious weapon on their hands.
What did you make of Frimpong’s display? 👀🔴
18/01/2026
Marc Guéhi’s Eye-Watering Man City Wages — Is This Why Liverpool Pulled Out? 🔴
Reports suggest Marc Guéhi was offered huge wages by Manchester City — figures that Liverpool were unwilling to match - Around 300k per week.
For a club that prioritises structured wages and long-term sustainability, this could explain why Liverpool FC chose to walk away, even with defenders out for the season.
📌 The dilemma:
Guéhi = proven Premier League captain
But wages = potentially disruptive
Liverpool’s model = control, not panic
Is refusing to break the wage structure smart business — or has it cost Liverpool a chance to stabilise the defence right now?
👇 Have your say, Reds:
Would you break the wage structure for a player like Guéhi, or was walking away the right call?
17/01/2026
🔴 Liverpool 1–1 Burnley: Familiar Problems, Familiar Outcome 🔴
Liverpool were held to a 1–1 draw by Burnley at Anfield — another frustrating night against a promoted side, despite Florian Wirtz finding the net.
Wirtz’s goal showed exactly why Liverpool moved for him: sharp movement, composure in tight spaces, and the ability to make something happen when the game feels stuck. But once again, it wasn’t enough.
🧠 The Key Talking Points
⚽ Bright start, poor control
Liverpool started well, dominated possession, but failed to turn pressure into control. The tempo dropped too quickly after taking the lead.
🧱 Set-piece fragility strikes again
Burnley’s equaliser came from a situation Liverpool simply haven’t fixed all season. Poor organisation, slow reactions, and a lack of authority at the back.
🔁 Lack of cutting edge
Plenty of the ball, not enough pe*******on. Too many safe passes around the box, not enough runners attacking it.
🧠 Game management still an issue
Against promoted teams, Liverpool continue to struggle to kill games off. One goal never feels enough — and opponents know it.
📉 Bigger Picture
This is now another dropped opportunity at home against a side Liverpool should be beating. In a tight season, these results add up quickly.
There are positives — Wirtz, spells of dominance, control in midfield — but without defensive solidity and ruthless finishing, Liverpool keep making life difficult for themselves.
🔴 LFCNaija asks:
Is this a tactical issue, a mentality problem, or simply a lack of defensive reliability?
👇 Drop your post-match thoughts below