Title-chasers Liverpool slipped to their second Premier League defeat of the season after substitute Ademola Lookman earned Leicester City a hard-fought 1-0 victory on Tuesday.
Liverpool dominated the first half against an injury-hit Leicester and looked set to take a deserved lead when they were awarded a 16th-minute penalty, only for Egyptian Mohamed Salah to see his spot-kick saved by home goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel.
The chances kept coming for the visitors, with Sadio Mane blazing over when he should have scored early in the second half. Liverpool’s profligacy proved costly as Lookman fired Leicester in front just before the hour mark, sparking scenes of euphoria at the King Power Stadium.
“Definitely, it was well deserved (for Leicester),” Liverpool coach Juergen Klopp told Amazon Prime. “It was a very strange game. We were just not good enough. We still had enough chances. What we did was just not right. We played a really bad game, so it was well deserved.”
Liverpool, who had a five-day break prior to their trip to the King Power after the Boxing Day fixture against Leeds United was postponed, looked much fresher than Leicester, playing their second game in three days, and soon took control of the match.
After bombarding a Leicester backline decimated by injuries early on, Jordan Henderson volleyed Liverpool’s first chance over, before Wilfred Ndidi fouled Salah in the penalty area to give the visitors a golden opportunity to break the deadlock.
The penalty from the Egyptian, however, was poor, too close to Schmeichel, with the rebound header from Salah coming out off the crossbar. It was the Liverpool striker’s third penalty miss for the club in all competitions.
Since the start of 2020, Schmeichel has saved more penalties in the Premier League than any other goalkeeper, with Tuesday’s stop his third. Salah then forced another fine save out of the Dane as Liverpool continued to throw everything at Leicester.
Mane’s miss had the Liverpool bench looking at each other in disbelief, only for Lookman, following up his goal against champions Manchester City on Boxing Day, to add to their woes with a powerful finish after a swift counter.
There were last-ditch blocks aplenty, bodies put on the line, but Leicester got the job done, with the players sinking to their knees upon the final whistle, having left Liverpool unable to score for the first time in 29 league games.
Klopp said his side cannot even think about being able to catch Manchester City if they put in more performances like their showing on Tuesday. “It was not our plan tonight (Tuesday) to give City the chance to run away,” Klopp told reporters. “If we play like tonight we do not think about catching up with City.”