Liverpool v Aston Villa: Premier League – live

Key events

Fast, furious entertainment at Anfield. Villa hit the post twice, but Liverpool dominated possession and threatened regularly before Mo Salah punished a terrible pass from Emi Martinez.

Emiliano Martinez of Aston Villa looks dejected after his mistake leads to Liverpool's first goal
Oh Emi! Photograph: Daniel Chesterton/Offside/Getty Images

See you in 10 minutes for the second half.

45+3 min Only Ian Rush (346) and Roger Hunt (285) have scored more goals for Liverpool than Mo Salah.

Mo Salah scores his 250th goal for Liverpool after a rank howler from Emi Martinez. He tried to pass the ball to Pau Torres on the left the Villa area, got his angles wrong and gave the ball straight to Salah. He guided an instant shot around Pau Torres and into the empty net with his right foot.

And now he’s back on the scoresheet!

Mo Salah celebrates
Mo Salah celebrates after being gifted a goal by the Villa ‘keeper. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

45 min Salah slips Digne superbly, only for Onana to get back and put out the burgeoning fire. Salah has shown glimpses of his best tonight, particularly with those quick touches to evade an incoming defender.

Yep, Ekitike was offside. Just before the disallowed goal, no more than ten seconds, Konsa lunged to make a brilliant block from Mac Allister’s shot.

Hang on, this looks offside. It was an excellent downward header from Szoboszlai’s cross but it will be ruled out.

At one end or another, a goal was coming!

39 min Watkins is bundled over 30-odd yards from goal after a sinuous run infield. Cash drives the free-kick well wide.

Cody Gakpo and Ryan Gravenberch conspire to take out Ollie Watkins.
Cody Gakpo and Ryan Gravenberch conspire to take out Ollie Watkins. Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA

38 min Robertson’s free-kick is fractionally too high for Konate at the far post; his header thus goes well wide.

36 min Gakpo’s snapshot is blocked by Cash after a quick Liverpool move.

35 min Plenty of Liverpool pressure now. The first goal is always important but tonight it feels positively Brobdingnagian, Clive.

33 min Szoboszlai curls a good free-kick that is pushed away to his left by the diving Martinez. I fancy he saw that late, which made it a better save.

32 min Gakpo moves smoothly infield and is tripped by Guessand just outside the area. That could have been a yellow card and Robertson politely asks the referee what’s what.

More importantly, Liverpool have a free-kick 20 yards from goal, a fair way to the left of centre…

29 min Onana is back on.

27 min Onana stays down after running into one of the advertising boards behind the Villa goal. He was given a helping shove by Szoboszlai as he shepherded the ball out of play.

Villa’s players aren’t happy; nor are the home fans; nor is Van Dijk, who wants the game to continue. But the good news is all parties have covered themselves in empathic glory!

26 min “Never mind the final score, this could be 4-3 (or 3-4) already,” says Matt Dony. “Exciting game, but terrified that Liverpool are wasting so many opportunities.”

You should be neutral mate; it’s great fun.

25 min Guessand breaks behind Van Dijk and moves into the area. Robertson makes a good, if risky, tackle from the wrong side and the danger passes.

For about 10 seconds, until Liverpool lose the ball in their own penalty area and Guessand’s shot from 18 yards is desperately blocked by Van Dijk.

Szoboszlai does superbly to read a return pass towards Pau Torres just outside the area, nick the ball and run through on goal. But his left-foot finish is tame and Martinez falls to his right to save.

Dominik Szoboszlai of Liverpool reacts after a missed chance.
Oh Dominik. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

22 min At the other end, Salah shoots over from the edge of the D. This match is great fun; the pace is ferocious.

21 min Rogers swerves majestically away from Gravenberch and curls a shot towards goal from 25 yards. Mamardashvili dives to his right to push it away – a comfortable save, certainly compared to the last one, but a thrilling run from Rogers.

Cash wallops a shot from a ludicrous angle that takes a nick off Van Dijk and flies towards the top corner. Mamardashvili leaps high to his left and fingertips the ball onto the outside of the post and behind for a corner. That’s a great stop, the kind Mamardashvili made every few minutes (or so it seemed) at Euro 2024.

18 min Good spell this for Liverpool, with the crowd finding their voice again. Salah slips Digne expertly, then cuts inside and crosses towards Gakpo at the far post. He heads back across goal and Ekitike can’t reach the the ball on the stretch. It came at an awkward height.

Seconds later, Szoboszlai’s clever looping header finds Robertson, whose sidefoot volley from the edge of the area deflects through to Martinez.

15 min Szoboszlai, 25 yards out, hits a sweet strike that goes a few yards past the left-hand post. It wasn’t too far wide but Martinez was comfortable and barely even looked at the ball.

13 min Salah plays a superb pass to the underlapping Bradley, whose cutback is crucially cut out at the near post by Torres. Excellent positioning.

12 min Watkins looks lively and is pulling to the left at every opportunity, with McGinn and Rogers supporting him on that side. One such run leads to a throw-in high up the pitch. Digne takes it short, gets it back and swings a cross that is headed away by Van Dijk.

9 min Szoboszlai’s cross from the right is headed away as far as Robertson. He tries to whip a cross back towards Salah but overhits it. It’s been a fun, fast start to the game.

Morgan Rogers, just inside the area to the left of centre, whips a shot that thumps the far post and rebounds to safety. A brilliant effort from Rogers, who had also started the move with a superb long pass out to Watkins.

4 min The away end cheer lustily when the ball rolls out of play after Gakpo fails to control a crossfield pass from Konate.

2 min Gravenberch’s shot from distance is blocked on the edge of the area. Liverpool, as you’d expect, have come flying out of the traps.

1 min Aston Villa, in white, kick off from left to right as we watch. Great atmosphere at Anfield.

Lucas Digne beats Mo Salah to a header.
Lucas Digne beats Mo Salah to a header. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

“I’m on the train with a bunch of Pompey lads who wont get home ‘til about midnight after a 4-0 shellacking at St Andrew’s,” writes Gary Naylor. “That they’re in good spirits and planning another away day to Hull, speaks to the irrational nature of the football fan, the game a largely safe space for an otherwise dangerous indulgence.

“That irrationality wants Liverpool to be in crisis, loves the prospect of the inquests in the morning, the phone-ins that will demand his Slot’s head on a stick and Salah and Van Dijk to be sold in January. It’s childish and all but indefensible - but millions of us feel like this!”

Dear Liverpool fans, Gary’s contact details are available for a small fee.

All set? This could be a cracker. I’m predicting Liverpool 4-3 Aston Villa.

A reminder of the teams

Liverpool (4-2-3-1) Mamardashvili; Bradley, Konate, Van Dijk, Robertson; Gravenberch, Mac Allister; Salah, Szoboszlai, Gakpo; Ekitike.
Subs: Woodman, Pecsi, Gomez, Endo, Kerkez, Wirtz, Chiesa, Nyoni, Ngumoha.

Aston Villa (4-2-3-1) Martinez; Cash, Konsa, Pau, Digne; Onana, Kamara; Guessand, Rogers, McGinn; Watkins.
Subs: Bizot, Maatsen, Lindelof, Mings, Bogarde, Barkley, Sancho, Malen, Broggio.

Referee Stuart Attwell.

“Yeah, Liverpool were top of the league a few weeks ago, but in all honesty, they weren’t playing a huge amount better then than they are now,” writes Matt Dony. “That mad run of late winners wasn’t sustainable. Sometimes a team has good luck, sometimes they have bad luck, and you just have to hope it all evens out.

“This group of players is too good to be this mediocre for a long period, things will certainly click into place at some point. But I fear it may not be enough. I worry that (already) the title may be gone. The psychological impact of this spell will likely linger, for both Liverpool AND Arsenal.

“Still, a few pride-restoring wins in the short term would be a big help. And, hey, if not tonight, there’s always Real Madrid and Man City to come in the next few days. What could possibly go wrong…”

The Premier League table going into tonight’s game

Liverpool (10th) and Villa (11th) will jump to third if they win. It’s like snakes and bloody ladders.

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Arsenal 10 15 25
2 AFC Bournemouth 9 5 18
3 Tottenham Hotspur 10 9 17
4 Chelsea 10 7 17
5 Sunderland 9 4 17
6 Man Utd 10 1 17
7 Man City 9 10 16
8 Crystal Palace 10 5 16
9 Brighton 10 2 15
10 Liverpool 9 2 15
11 Aston Villa 9 1 15
12 Brentford 10 -2 13
13 Newcastle 9 1 12
14 Fulham 10 -2 11
15 Everton 9 -3 11
16 Leeds 10 -8 11
17 Burnley 10 -7 10
18 Nottm Forest 10 -12 6
19 West Ham 9 -13 4
20 Wolverhampton 10 -15 2

Arne Slot makes three changes from last Saturday’s defeat at Brentford. Andy Robertson replaces the struggling Milos Kerkez at left-back; Ryan Gravenberch and Alexis Mac Allister come in for Curtis Jones and Florian Wirtz.

Just one changed to the Villa side that beat Manchester City: Evann Guessand comes in for the injured Emi Buendia.

Liverpool (4-2-3-1) Mamardashvili; Bradley, Konate, Van Dijk, Robertson; Gravenberch, Mac Allister; Salah, Szoboszlai, Gakpo; Ekitike.
Subs: Woodman, Pecsi, Gomez, Endo, Kerkez, Wirtz, Chiesa, Nyoni, Ngumoha.

Aston Villa (4-2-3-1) Martinez; Cash, Konsa, Pau, Digne; Onana, Kamara; Guessand, Rogers, McGinn; Watkins.
Subs: Bizot, Maatsen, Lindelof, Mings, Bogarde, Barkley, Sancho, Malen, Broggio.

Referee Stuart Attwell.

Arne Slot has said the Liverpool hierarchy share his views on the reasons for the team’s slump and he will not abandon an attacking style in search of a way out. The head coach admitted that six defeats in seven games was unacceptable before Aston Villa’s visit on Saturday and denied making excuses for Liverpool’s worst domestic run in 72 years.

Slot accepted the pressure was on before his makeshift team exited the Carabao Cup against Crystal Palace on Wednesday. That pressure to arrest the slide, however, is not, he insisted, coming from Liverpool’s owner, Fenway Sports Group, FSG’s chief executive of football, Michael Edwards, or the sporting director, Richard Hughes, after a summer transfer outlay of almost £450m.

Read more…

In a dim, distant past – five and a bit weeks ago – Liverpool were top of the Premier League, 12 points clear of 18th-placed Aston Villa. Now the two clubs are level on points, snuggled together in mid-table.

Villa’s recovery is a reminder that things change very quickly in football; that bad patches are almost unavoidable and you just have to ride them out. Easier said than done, especially when you:

a) are the reigning champions
b) are one of the biggest clubs in the world
c) spent eye-watering wonga in the summer and
d) exist in a culture that has gone completely mad

The good news for Arne Slot is that there’s a simple solution: if Liverpool win tonight, the bloodlustful masses will look elsewhere. At least until the next game.

Kick off 8pm.