Michael Owen is back but Liverpool have still a long, long way to travel
before they arrest their alarming Premiership slide.
The England striker scored his first Premiership goal since November 2 this
afternoon and yet the Anfield faithful still went home bemused, and not a little
angry, at the form of their side.
Leaving Anfield without three points is becoming as inevitable and as
distressing as tax in their pay packets.
Today they greeted the final whistle,
after Dion Dublin had equalised from the penalty spot, with a chorus of boos -
and who could blame them?
Only supporters in possession of a bus pass could have been familiar with the
sort of crisis Liverpool are enduring.
They have now taken just five points from a possible 33 in the Premiership,
plunging from a position where they led the league by six points in November to
one which found them 11 points behind leaders Arsenal, having played a game
more, at the end of this afternoon.
It amounts to their worst run since the 1950s and the pressure inevitably is
increasing on Houllier, despite his defiance last week that he would never quit
his beloved Liverpool.
His team, however, continue to produce relegation form and that against a side
which have scored just four goals and not won away from home all season.
You can almost touch the uncertainty at a club which was once so dominant.
Players continually go for the same ball, the passing is poor, the understanding
minimal, the confidence non-existent.
It could have been worse, because Villa had enough chances to win this game.
But until Houllier introduces some much-needed width, accepts that such as El
Hadji Diouf and Salif Diao are just not up to the job and provides Owen with
much better service than this afternoon then Liverpool are destined to slide
even further.
True, when Owen's precious goal came - after 37 minutes and 48 seconds - it
owed much to the industry of Diouf, the £10million striker who has endured much
criticism since he was signed by Houllier on the back of a sparkling World Cup.
Diouf, for one of the few times, wriggled and writhed his way into the Villa
penalty area before unleashing a right-foot shot which appeared to strike the
arm of Villa defender Olof Mellberg.
Some of the Liverpool players appealed, the assistant referee even began to
signal for a spot-kick but Owen is a natural predator and he had only one
thought - rippling the Villa net.
That's exactly what he did, lashing the ball home from 12 yards and referee
Paul Durkin promptly awarded the goal.
It was deserved reward for Liverpool's work-rate in a first-half in which
Villa, for the most part, gave as good as they got. Indeed, Dion Dublin might
easily have given Villa a two-goal lead before the game was 10 minutes old if
his aim had been as precise as crosses provided by Gareth Barry and Lee
Hendrie.
It took Liverpool a long time to raise any worthwhile rhythm and Diao
continues to search for his best position. Too often he was the man who
squandered possession, his distribution frustrating the Anfield faithful.
Just as well then that Liverpool had Danny Murphy at the centre of the action
to pick up the pieces - the England man their lone inspiration.
Villa might have been expected to fold after the interval considering they had
not won away from home all season. Instead Villa manager Graham Taylor made a
change at half-time, bringing on Stefan Moore for Darius Vassell, and Villa
responded superbly.
Only a brilliant flying save by Kirkland kept out an Ian Taylor header but
there was an inevitability about the equaliser.
Not for the first time Liverpool failed to clear their lines swiftly enough
and captain Sami Hyypia was ruled to have brought down Gareth Barry.
Dublin stepped forward to take the kick, sliding the ball sweetly under
Kirkland's body as he dived low to his left and no-one could say that Villa did
not deserve their stroke of fortune.
There was a lack of cohesion about Liverpool's play and on the hour Houllier
made a double substitution, bringing on Emile Heskey for Mellor and Vladimir
Smicer for Diouf.
True, Enckelman produced one superb save from a surging Gerrard run and shot,
but the measure of Houllier's increasing desperation was evident in his
substitution of Diao for Bruno Cheyrou.
It didn't work, though not much did for Liverpool on another frustrating
afternoon of jeers.
For Villa and Taylor it was a welcome point. For his side
the away crowd had only cheers.
Teams
Liverpool: Kirkland, Carragher, Henchoz, Hyypia, Riise,
Gerrard, Diao (Cheyrou 72), Murphy, Diouf (Smicer 60), Owen,
Mellor (Heskey 60).
Subs Not Used: Dudek, Traore.
Booked: Henchoz.
Goals: Owen 38.
Aston Villa: Enckelman, Johnsen, Mellberg, Barry, Samuel,
Hendrie (De la Cruz 52), Taylor, Hitzlsperger, Wright, Dublin,
Vassell (Moore 45).
Subs Not Used: Postma, Crouch, Edwards.
Booked: Taylor, Wright.
Goals: Dublin 49 pen.
Att: 43,210
Ref: P Durkin (Dorset).