Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers is adamant that referee Anthony Taylor
was correct to award his side a second penalty during the 2-1 win at West Ham.
The Reds moved back to the top of the Premier League table thanks to
Sunday’s victory at Upton Park, as Steven Gerrard struck twice from the
penalty spot, either side of a Guy Demel equaliser.
Taylor caused controversy after allowing Demel’s goal to stand, despite
Andy Carroll appearing to hit goalkeeper Simon Mignolet in the face in
the build-up to the goal.
Liverpool’s second penalty also looked to be the wrong call, with
Hammers goalkeeper Adrian getting a touch to the ball before bringing
down Jon Flanagan.
However, Rodgers said: “The first penalty was clear and I
thought the second one was a penalty as well. Jon gets a touch on the
ball and touches it past the goalkeeper. The keeper gets a touch on the
ball, but also takes him.''
Liverpool’s player were angered by Taylor’s decision to allow West
Ham’s equaliser to stand, especially as the assistant referee had raised
his flag for a foul.
Rodgers revealed after the game that he spoke to the official at half-time about the incident.
“I just had a quiet word and he thought the keeper had dropped it,” he said.
Rodgers added: "I don't want to get fined. It was a difficult game to
officiate. The nature of West Ham's style is physical, they asked a lot
of questions."
The victory was Liverpool’s ninth Premier League win a row, and Rodgers felt his team deserved to come out on top.
“We were clearly the better team,” he said. “West Ham had one shot on
target which was the goal. It was a brilliant win today and keeps our
run going. We’ve won nine games in a row, which at this level is
incredible."
Gerrard’s pair of penalty conversions took him to 11 for the season, and 10 in the Premier League.
“He studies the goalkeepers,” said Rodgers of his captain. “He can put the ball anywhere.”
Liverpool face Manchester City next week in a match that has the look of a potential title decider.
“It was interesting to hear [City captain] Vincent Kompany say we were
the best team they had played,” Rodgers said. “We have to respect them
because they have world-class players but it's about ourselves and the
confidence we have to play.
"For the youngsters, there's no pressure. Just go and play and the
pressure I will take. The most important thing is to focus on the ball
and the team and not yourself. The concentration for me is on the next
training session.”
Meanwhile, Hammers boss Sam Allardyce admitted Carroll did foul
Mignolet in the build-up to his side's equaliser and feels the goal
should not have stood.
“When you look at it, it looks like Andy has fouled him,” he said, and
also questioned the intervention of assistant Steve Child, who had his
flag up 35 yards from an incident that took place amid a packed penalty
box.
Allardyce also felt the second Liverpool penalty decision was the wrong
call, adding: “Flanagan is going down before Adrian plays the ball. He
thinks Adrian hasn't played the ball and he has. In that position where
he is, he has got to be 100 percent certain.
"I feel let down, the lads feel really let down. We took Liverpool
right to the wire. The management of the game by the officials was not
quite up to the levels you’d expect."
Allardyce added on Liverpool's upcoming game against City next week:
“They have got a good chance. The key factors are the Manchester City
game and the Chelsea game. The key question is can they hold their
nerve.”
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