Liverpool
Slot: Liverpool’s numbers suggest better days despite set-piece misfortune
Arne Slot says set-piece misfortune and strong chance creation explain Liverpool’s uneven first half.
Arne Slot urged patience as Liverpool try to steady a title defence that began poorly but has shown signs of recovery. With misfiring superstars and disappointing results there was even talk of a sacking for Slot just a few weeks ago, although a recent upturn in form saw Liverpool spend Christmas Day in fifth place, level on points with Chelsea above them.
Slot was frank about the standings but used statistics to explain why he remains optimistic. “We are in the position we deserve after the first half of the season,” he said. “I think we should be higher, let that be clear—I was expecting and hoping for us to be higher in the table—but even in the last six games the difference between us and the other team is constantly too small.
“Now we have been a few times a bit lucky with the result and we need to find a situation where we are so much better than the other team that luck or bad luck does not influence it any more.
“I think the games we have lost were unlucky. Referees and set pieces have had an incredible impact on the start of our season, but we should not have that as an excuse. That should not lead to us dropping points. We need to make sure like last season when a lot of decisions went against us as well but it didn’t hurt us.”
Slot highlighted how the underlying numbers contrast with the league position. “Players are getting fitter and fitter, not only the ones we brought in but also the ones who missed out in pre-season,” he continued. “They are getting used to each other. I think the best is still to come for this team.
“If you look at what has happened in the first half [of the season] then I am not so surprised where we are. If you look at our set-piece balance, there is not one team in the world that is minus eight in set pieces and is still joint-fourth in the league. If you find that team please tell me.
“From open play we are the number-one team in the league for chance creation but I don’t think anyone sees it because I think in general we are criticised a lot. That is true if you simply look at the results, but if you were to exclude the set pieces then the world would look completely different and we would probably be five or six points higher.”
Arsenal
Late Martinelli Push Leaves Conor Bradley’s Knee in Doubt After Stretcher Incident
Conor Bradley may have a serious knee injury after Martinelli’s shove sparked a late brawl. Scans due
Conor Bradley was forced from the pitch on a stretcher after a late knee twist, a sequence that has left Liverpool manager Arne Slot “fearing the worst.” The incident began when Arsenal’s No. 11 dropped the ball onto the prone defender and then attempted to shove him off the field to restart play. That shove ignited a mass brawl which further delayed the match.
Players from Liverpool reacted angrily at what was described as Martinelli’s disregard for a clearly injured opponent. Bradley was later seen leaving the stadium on crutches with his left knee in a brace; there was no suggestion he had been feigning the problem.
Slot was cautious on specifics but clear on the concern. “We have to wait on the scans if it’s that bad,” Slot acknowledged. “But it doesn’t look great if Conor has the injury which we fear he might have.”
The Liverpool manager tempered criticism of the Arsenal forward. “I don’t know Gabriel Martinelli, but he comes across as a nice guy,” he said. “I’m 100% sure that if he knew what the injury might be, that he would never do that,” Slot insisted. “I think the problem for him—and it’s a problem in general in football—is that there is so much time-wasting and players pretending that they are injured in the final parts of the game and during the game, that you can sometimes be annoyed if you want to try to score a goal that you think the player is time-wasting.
“You cannot ask Martinelli to think so clear in the 94th minute.”
Martinelli posted on social media to say he had contacted Bradley. “Conor and I have messaged and I have already apologised to him,” Martinelli wrote on Instagram. “I really didn’t understand he was seriously injured in the heat of the moment. I want to say I’m deeply sorry for reacting.
“Sending Conor all my best again for a quick recovery.”
Arsenal’s manager added a character reference for his player. “Knowing Gabi, if anybody knows Gabi, it’s an incredibly lovely guy and probably he didn’t realise what happened,” the Basque boss declared. “I hope that Conor is well. I will have a word with him now to understand that, but probably he didn’t recognise what happened.”
Broadcasters reacted strongly. Sky Sports commentator Gary Neville called the action unacceptable. “I am actually fuming with Martinelli, I don’t know how the Liverpool players didn’t go over and absolutely whack him to be honest with you and take a red card. Absolutely disgraceful, that,” he seethed. Roy Keane recalled a similar personal experience. “I didn’t like it,” the former Manchester United captain said of the Martinelli incident. “It happened to me when I was badly injured and a player stood over me, and it’s not good.
Arsenal
Arsenal and Liverpool Share 0-0 as Leaders Hold Six-Point Advantage
Arsenal held to 0-0 by Liverpool; leaders, remain six points clear after a cagey, chance-poor match.
Arsenal were held to a 0-0 draw by Liverpool at the Emirates Stadium, missing the chance to extend their lead to eight points. After the result and with the Premier League pausing for the FA Cup weekend, Arsenal remain six points clear in the 2025/26 title race. Liverpool consolidated a top-four place and extended an unbeaten run to 10 games across all competitions.
The match was divided into two contrasting halves. Arsenal dominated possession early and forced saves from Alisson, who made four in total. A miscommunication between William Saliba and David Raya nearly produced a Liverpool goal when a back-pass almost bypassed the goalkeeper; Conor Bradley’s attempted lob then struck the crossbar. Arsenal finished the first half on top but created few clear chances.
Liverpool improved after the interval and briefly threatened when Florian Wirtz went down under pressure from Leandro Trossard. The VAR decision was ‘no penalty’. Liverpool’s second-half control prompted Mikel Arteta to introduce attacking changes just after the hour, with Viktor Gyökeres substituted in the 64th minute after registering eight touches overall.
Injury disrupted Arsenal: Piero Hincapié was forced off before the hour and Conor Bradley was stretchered off late after a stoppage-time incident involving Gabriel Martinelli, who threw the ball on top of Bradley and attempted to shove him. The incident sparked a strong reaction from Liverpool players and staff.
Key performers from the ratings included Alisson (8.3) keeping a clean sheet, Milos Kerkez (7.5) for his work on the left, and Virgil van Dijk (7.3) who handled Arsenal’s central threats. For Arsenal, Jurriën Timber (7.2), Martín Zubimendi (7.2) and Declan Rice (7.2) were noted for their midfield contributions, while Viktor Gyökeres (6.1) was judged to have minimal impact.
Statistics reflected a cautious affair: Arsenal edged expected goals 0.30 to 0.14 and registered the only shots on target. Neither side produced a match-defining moment in difficult conditions, and the draw leaves both teams to regroup for the FA Cup weekend.
Arsenal
Ekitiké ruled out again as Liverpool travel to Arsenal
Ekitiké was absent with DOMS; he traveled to London but did not feature as Wirtz played ‘false nine’ Thu
Hugo Ekitiké was missing from Liverpool’s matchday squad for the second game running as the Reds travelled to face Premier League leaders at the Emirates Stadium on Thursday night. The striker has been Liverpool’s most productive signing from the 2025 summer window, having cost £79 million (106.1 million) to prise away from Eintracht Frankfurt and already scoring 11 times in a Liverpool shirt across all competitions.
That total includes five goals in his last five Premier League appearances, a run that has been particularly important in a season made more difficult by Alexander Isak’s struggles and his subsequent broken leg. Despite his form, Ekitiké was withdrawn from selection because of delayed onset muscle soreness, otherwise known as DOMS, believed to be affecting his hamstring.
Ekitiké did travel to London, with reports saying he did not receive scan results until he was on the plane, and he ultimately did not feature. When Arne Slot answered media questions on Wednesday morning, he explained that Ekitiké had not trained with the rest of the Liverpool squad all week up to that point, the day before the game.
Before kick-off the expectation was that Cody Gakpo would continue to deputise in the No. 9 role, but Liverpool’s starting shape saw Gakpo on the left while Florian Wirtz, who had played in the No. 10 position against Fulham, pushed up as a ‘false nine’ instead.
Slot indicated the issue is not a major injury. He suggested that, had Liverpool not been playing every few days, Ekitiké’s return to full training and match action might have come sooner. With preparations tightly packed around fixtures, opportunities to rejoin sessions are limited and that has kept the striker out for now.
