Lallana’s two goals help Liverpool sink Swansea

Convincing victory sees Brendan Rodgers’s side move to eight place

Liverpool 4

Swansea 1

Liverpool ended 2014 as they opened it. Their defence can still cause palpitations from the most harmless of situations but, more importantly as far as Brendan Rodgers’s ideal is concerned, the relentless attacking threat that many thought had vanished forever made its return against Swansea City.

Garry Monk's side contributed to their own demise at Anfield but struggled to cope with the movement and imagination of Adam Lallana, Raheem Sterling and Philippe Coutinho, the trio afforded deserved standing ovations after impressive displays.

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Sterling and Jonjo Shelvey could both face retrospective action from the English Football Association for raising their hands – against Federico Fernandez and Emre Can respectively – but there was no disputing the merit of Liverpool's biggest victory of a trying season.

Results have not encouraged much forward-thinking at Anfield this term but recent performances have lifted the air of despondency.

Swansea’s inability to break out of their own half until falling behind to Moreno’s 33rd minute opener reflected Liverpool’s control here.

Rodgers responded to the festive demands by changing personnel but not the formation that had brought improvement, the poor first-half performance against Burnley on St Stephen’s Day notwithstanding.

Steven Gerrard, Lazar Markovic and Kolo Toure were all rested on the bench with the Ivorian's place in central defence taken by Emre Can.

The Germany under-21 midfielder enjoyed a comfortable opening in his irregular role until being smacked in the face by Jonjo Shelvey’s flailing arm shortly before the interval.

The referee, Andre Marriner, was perfectly-placed to spot the incident, which followed a marauding run into the area by the former Liverpool midfielder, yet Shelvey escaped unpunished.

Two full-backs, Javier Manquillo and Moreno, were deployed in midfield by Rodgers and helped stifle support for Wilfried Bony from Nathan Dyer and Wayne Routledge. With Raheem Sterling, Coutinho and Lallana again prospering from the 3-4-2-1 system, the attacking threat came solely from Liverpool prior to Swansea's belated response once behind.

Powerful header

Rodgers had his arm up in celebration at Liverpool's first opening, a powerful header by Martin Skrtel from a Jordan Henderson corner, only for Lukasz Fabianski's smart-handling to intervene.

Sterling instigated a flowing move with a fine crossfield ball out to Moreno then arrived in the box to volley the left-back’s delivery against the Swansea goalkeeper. Lallana sliced a glorious chance over from the rebound.

The visitors were too deep, despite Garry Monk’s encouragement to step out, and punished by another incisive Liverpool move that commenced with Mamadou Sakho’s pass out of defence to Moreno.

The Spanish defender raced forward and picked out Lallana, who in turn released Henderson to the byline. Moreno continued his run into the penalty area and converted at close range when the cross arrived, despite Fabianski’s best efforts on the line.

Swansea made a determined start to the second half, pressing Liverpool’s defenders and refusing to allow their opponents to dictate the play, but undermined their chances of recovery with a comical error. Not that anyone connected with the visitors, and Fabianski in particular, was left laughing after.

Routine clearance

The former Arsenal goalkeeper was presented with what should have been a routine clearance by Ashley Williams’s back-pass.

Instead, and seemingly oblivious to the in-rushing Lallana, he attempted to sweep the ball out wide and succeeded only in hitting the Liverpool player who reeled away in delight as the ball dropped into the unguarded net.

Liverpool’s hopes of a second successive clean sheet were extinguished less than a minute later when Can and Sakho failed to clear crosses into the area and Gylfi Sigurdsson buried a simple finish from the French defender’s poor header.

Lallana’s second goal of the night, Liverpool’s third, was an outstanding reminder of what last season’s title challenge was based upon. Henderson played a simple pass to Coutinho who sent the summer signing sprinting through the centre with an exquisite flick.

The former Southampton captain drifted away from Fernandez and Angel Rangel to the left before burying a fine finish into the far corner.

Liverpool’s fourth completed a miserable return to Merseyside for Shelvey, who somehow glanced Henderson’s corner to the near post beyond his own goalkeeper and into the far side of the Swansea net. Monk looked on aghast at Swansea’s latest act of self-destruction but this was a night when Liverpool recaptured their flair. Guardian Service

LIVERPOOL: Mignolet, Can, Skrtel, Sakho, Manquillo, Lucas, Henderson, Moreno, Lallana (Markovic 77), Sterling (Balotelli 83), Coutinho (Borini 90). Subs not used: Toure, Gerrard, Lambert, Ward. Booked: Skrtel.

SWANSEA CITY: Fabianski, Richards (Rangel 46), Fernandez, Williams, Taylor, Britton (Ki 67), Shelvey, Dyer, Sigurdsson, Routledge, Bony (Gomis 62). Subs not used: Emnes, Carroll, Tremmel, Bartley.

Attendance: 44,714

Referee: Andre Marriner (W Midlands).