2017–18 Liverpool F.C. season

The 2017–18 season was Liverpool Football Club's 126th season in existence and their 56th consecutive season in the top flight of English football. It was also the club's 26th consecutive season in the Premier League. Along with the Premier League, Liverpool also competed in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and UEFA Champions League. The season covered the period from 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2018. It began with an away 3–3 draw against Watford in the league and ended with a 3–1 loss to Real Madrid in the UEFA Champions League final.

Liverpool
2017–18 season
Liverpool players before Spartak Moscow away, 26 September 2017
ChairmanTom Werner
ManagerJürgen Klopp
StadiumAnfield
Premier League4th
FA CupFourth round
EFL CupThird round
UEFA Champions LeagueRunners-up
Top goalscorerLeague:
Mohamed Salah (32)

All:
Mohamed Salah (44)

Season review

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Pre-season

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Liverpool began their preseason in the same manner as last year, a visit to Tranmere Rovers on 12 July. Liverpool won 0–4 with goals from James Milner (from the penalty spot), Marko Grujić, Pedro Chirivella, and Ben Woodburn (from the penalty spot as well.)[1] The Reds next trip was to Wigan Athletic on 14 July where they drew 1–1 going 1–0 down early, but the equalizing goal coming in first half stoppage time from new signing Mohamed Salah.[2] On 19 July, Liverpool played their first match of the 2017 Premier League Asia Trophy friendly tournament in Hong Kong against Crystal Palace.[3] The Reds won 2–0 thanks to goals from another new signing, Dominic Solanke, and Divock Origi. The Reds advanced to the final, played on 22 July, the day after announcing new signing Andrew Robertson on a deal from Hull City, against Leicester City. Liverpool won the tournament defeating Leicester in the final 2–1, despite conceding first, due to goals from Salah and Philippe Coutinho.[4]

Liverpool returned to Europe to play their next pre-season match on 29 July against Hertha BSC, a match that celebrated the two clubs respective 125th anniversaries of existence. Liverpool got the better of the German side winning 0–3 in Berlin with goals scored by Solanke, Gini Wijnaldum, and Salah.[5] Liverpool's next two matches were as a part of another pre-season tournament as the club partook in the 2017 Audi Cup, defeating Bayern Munich at Bayern's home stadium 0–3 in their first match of the tournament on 1 August, the goals coming from Sadio Mané, yet another from Salah, and Daniel Sturridge.[6] In the final on the next day, Liverpool lost to Atlético Madrid, 1–1 (4–5 in penalties) with a Roberto Firmino spot kick pushing the game to penalties before ultimately losing.[7] In the days before their final pre-season match, Liverpool were dealt a blow as it was revealed that Adam Lallana was injured in the final and, according to manager Jürgen Klopp, would be out for "a couple of months."[8] In the final friendly on 5 August in Dublin against Athletic Bilbao, Liverpool finished strong winning the match 3–1 thanks to Firmino's spot kick, Woodburn's strike in the second half, and Solanke's headed finish.[9]

August

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Liverpool began their Premier League campaign on 12 August with a trip to Vicarage Road to take on Watford. Watford opened the scoring in the eighth minute with a Stefano Okaka header off a corner kick, however Mane levelled in the 29th minute, only for Abdoulaye Doucouré to give Watford a 2–1 in the 32nd where it stood at the half. In the second half, Liverpool took the lead after goals from Firmino from the spot and Salah in the 55th and 57th minutes, respectively. However, in the 93rd Miguel Britos once again levelled the game with a controversial equalizer off another corner kick to set the score at 3–3 where the game finished. Following the match, manager Klopp expressed disappointment in the equalizer counting making the claim that Britos was offside when scoring.[10] Liverpool had no time to despair over lost points as they set off to Germany to square off with Hoffenheim in the first leg of their Champions League qualifier on 15 August. The match was Liverpool's first Champions League match since December 2014. In the tenth minute, Simon Mignolet made a penalty save to keep the game level at 0–0 where it stood until Trent Alexander-Arnold's 35th minute free kick goal, the first in a Liverpool shirt for him. A James Milner attempted cross deflected off Håvard Nordtveit and that went down as an own goal to make it 0–2 in the 74th. Hoffenheim responded with a Mark Uth 87th-minute goal but, despite the nervy finish, Liverpool saw off the final minutes of the 1–2 victory in the away leg.[11] Liverpool returned home for the first time in the season where on 19 August they played Crystal Palace. The Reds were victorious defeating Palace 1–0 thanks to a Mane goal in the 73rd. This marked the first victory at home against Palace for Liverpool since 2013.[12] On 23 August, Liverpool played the home leg of their Champions League qualifier against Hoffenheim. Liverpool got off to a fantastic early start with a 3–0 scoreline after 21 minutes thanks to two goals from Emre Can and one from Salah. Uth pulled one back in the 28th to make it 3–1, however, Firmino tacked one more on in the 63rd making it 4–1. Sandro Wagner made it 4–2 in the 79th, but it was only a consolation goal as Liverpool won 4–2 (6–3 on aggregate) and advanced on to the Champions League group stage.[13] Liverpool's final game of the month, and before the international break, was at home against Arsenal on 27 August. In what was called a "dazzling attacking display", Liverpool won 4–0 thanks to goals before the half from Firmino and Mane in the 17th and 40th minutes, respectively, and goals after the half from Salah in the 57th minute and Sturridge in the 77th minute.[14] On 29 August Liverpool made a transfer move for the 2018–19 season as the club announced Naby Keïta from RB Leipzig would join the club effective 1 July 2018.[15]

September

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Liverpool's September began with a visit to the City of Manchester Stadium to take on Manchester City on 9 September. Manchester City opened the scoring through Sergio Agüero in the 25th minute, and a Mane high boot drew a hotly-debated red card putting the Reds down to ten men. From there City scored four more goals, two from Gabriel Jesus and two from Leroy Sané to mark a 5–0 victory. Liverpool manager Klopp felt that the challenge was not a red card worthy incident and noted the event was a "game-changing incident."[16] Liverpool next began UEFA Champions League group stage play at home against Sevilla on 13 September. The Reds went down in the 5th minute after a costly Dejan Lovren mistake allowed Wissam Ben Yedder to tap Sevilla ahead. Liverpool roared back in response with a Firmino goal in the 21st and a Salah goal in the 37th to put them back on top before the half. In the 41st minute, however, with the chance to put Liverpool ahead by two goals, Firmino missed a chance from the penalty spot. Joaquín Correa drew Sevilla level in the 72nd and the game finished at 2–2.[17] Liverpool faced a Premier League fixture next as they squared off with Burnley on 16 September. The match was notable for being Philippe Coutinho's return to the Liverpool starting eleven following a busy transfer window in which Barcelona had widely reported interest in the player to the point where the club released a statement explicitly stating Coutinho would remain a Liverpool player at the close of the summer window.[18] Scott Arfield put the visitors up 0–1 in the 27th, however Salah responded with an equalizer just three minutes later to put the scoreline at 1–1 where it stood till the final whistle.[19] The Reds faced another midweek test on 19 September where they faced off with Leicester City at King Power Stadium in the Carabao Cup. Leicester scored twice in the second half through Shinji Okazaki and Islam Slimani in the 65th and 78th minutes to knock the Reds out of the Cup tournament with a 2–0 defeat.[20] That weekend, on 23 September, Liverpool played a second game at King Power Stadium against Leicester, this time in the league. Salah kicked off scoring in the 15th while Coutinho scored his first goal of the season with a stunning free kick in the 23rd to put Liverpool up 0–2. Right before the halftime whistle, Okazaki got Leicester a goal back on a scrambled effort off a corner kick. Captain Jordan Henderson put the Reds up 1–3 in the 68th with a counter-attacking goal, however Jamie Vardy got the goal back just a minute later. In the 73rd, goalie Simon Mignolet gave up a penalty kick, which, taken by Vardy, was saved by the keeper to keep the scoreline at 2–3, the final score.[21] The final game of the month was another Champions League group stage bout, this time in Moscow against Spartak Moscow on 26 September. Spartak opened the scoring off a 23rd minute Fernando free kick, however Liverpool responded in the 31st through a Coutinho goal. The game finished level at one and Liverpool earned another point in group stage play.[22]

October

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Liverpool opened their October on the first of the month at St James' Park against Newcastle. Coutinho, through an out of the box effort, put Liverpool ahead in the 29th minute, however Newcastle leveled just seven minutes later through a Joselu goal that resulted after an attempted Joël Matip tackle deflected off Joselu and into the net. The scoreline remained at 1–1 for the rest of the game resulting in a draw.[23] Following the international break, the Reds returned to action on 14 October at Anfield to square off with Manchester United in a match that ended 0–0.[24] The Reds then returned to midweek action heading to Slovenia to take on Maribor on 17 October. In a record breaking performance, Liverpool thrashed Maribor 0–7 breaking the record for biggest away win not just in Liverpool history but by any English side in the European competition. Goals came from Firmino, Coutinho, Salah, another from Firmino, a second from Salah, the first of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain's Liverpool career, and a capper from Trent Alexander-Arnold.[25] On 22 October, Liverpool visited Wembley Stadium to take on Tottenham. The Reds fell behind 2–0 quickly following defensive mistakes in which Lovren drew heavy criticism for. Lovren was later subbed off for Chamberlain at the 30th minute. Salah drew Liverpool back one in the 24th, but Dele Alli chipped a goal in before the stroke of halftime. Harry Kane put in his second of the game in the 56th and the Reds were given a 4–1 defeat.[26] The final fixture of the month took place on 28 October back at Anfield against newly promoted Huddersfield Town, managed by Klopp's longtime friend David Wagner. Following a 0–0 first half, including a saved Salah penalty in the 43rd, the Reds put three past Huddersfield in the second half. The first came from Sturridge in the 50th, the second from Firmino just eight minutes later, and the final coming from Wijnaldum in the 75th to cap off a 3–0 victory.[27]

November

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November opened up for Liverpool on the first of the month at Anfield in their home fixture against Maribor in the Champions League group stage. Following a goalless first half, the Reds scored three in the second to get a 3–0 victory over their Slovenian counterparts. The goals came from Salah in the 49th, Emre Can in the 64th, and Sturridge in the 90th. The Reds were also given a penalty kick in the 54th, but Milner could not take advantage. This victory put the Reds one point clear at the top of their group.[28] Following that mid-week bout, the Reds then traveled to London to take on West Ham on 4 November. Salah and Matip put the Reds ahead 0–2 at the half as they scored within three minutes of each other, but West Ham countered in the 55th through Manuel Lanzini. Just a minute later, however, the Reds got their goal back through Oxlade-Chamberlain's first league goal as a Liverpool player. Salah added his second of the game in the 75th and Liverpool went on to a 1–4 victory in what was ultimately Slaven Bilić's final match in charge of the Hammers.[29] Following international break, the Reds were back in action on 18 November at home against Southampton, marking Virgil van Dijk's first visit to Anfield following links with Liverpool in which the club had to make a public statement renouncing interest in the Dutchman.[30] The Reds enjoyed two first-half goals in ten minutes from Salah and a third in the 68th minute from Coutinho en route to a 3–0 victory.[31] Up next was the second meeting in the group against Sevilla, this time in Spain on 21 November. The Reds roared at the start with goals from Firmino in the 2nd, Mane in the 22nd, and Firmino again in the 30th to go up 0–3 at the half. Unfortunately, the good times stopped there as Ben Yedder scored first in the 51st off an Éver Banega free kick, then again in the 60th off a penalty kick, both of which the fouls conceded were given up by Alberto Moreno, who received substantial criticism for these two missteps in spite of his otherwise solid "reboot" to his Liverpool career. Liverpool held on until the 93rd minute in which Guido Pizarro leveled the game at 3–3 and completed the Sevilla comeback. The Reds took a point, however, and remained at the top of the group through five games.[32] The Reds then had to look to recover in time for their weekend bout back at Anfield against defending champions Chelsea on 25 November. Salah scored against his former club putting Liverpool up 1–0 in the 65th, but off the bench Willian equalized at 1–1 in the 85th on a shot that appeared to be an attempt to cross the ball. The score stayed this way till the end and twice in a week Liverpool let in a late equalizer.[33] The final fixture of the month occurred at the Bet365 Stadium as Liverpool traveled to take on Stoke City in a mid-week Premier League bout on 29 November. Mane put the Reds out front in the 17th and gave them the halftime lead, then Salah, off the bench, scored two in six minutes to give Liverpool the 0–3 victory capping off a month of four games of where the Reds won by three goals.[34]

December

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Liverpool opened a busy December with a game at the Falmer Stadium against Brighton & Hove Albion on 2 December. Two goals within a minute of each other, first from Can (who was playing at centre back) then Firmino, gave Liverpool a 0–2 lead and they finished the game winning 1–5 thanks to additional goals from Firmino, Coutinho, and a Dunk own goal. Brighton's only goal came from Glenn Murray who scored from the penalty spot.[35] The next game was the final game of the Champions League group stage, a home bout against Spartak Moscow on 6 December. Liverpool needed a result to make it to the next round so tensions were running high at Anfield. However, the Reds dispatched Spartak 7–0, with goals coming from Firmino, Salah, a double from Mane and a hat trick for Coutinho and finished the group at the top.[36] The next fixture was the first league installment of the season of the Merseyside derby against crosstown rivals Everton on 10 December at Anfield. Liverpool maintained control throughout the first half and Salah's curling effort in the 42nd minute gave Liverpool the lead. Liverpool continued to dominate but a dubious penalty decision against Lovren saw Wayne Rooney converted a penalty in the 77th to tie the game at 1–1 where it finished. Klopp said following the game about the controversial penalty incident, "In my understanding, it's not a penalty."[37] The next game was yet another held at Anfield where Liverpool hosted West Brom on 13 December. The game was a 0–0 stalemate against West Brom at Anfield, with the most notable event being an 82nd minute Solanke goal was disallowed for a handball drawing conversation on whether or not the correct call was made.[38] On 17 December at the Vitality Stadium, Liverpool took on Bournemouth. The Reds bounced back in the next game winning 0–4 with goals from Coutinho, Lovren, and Salah before the half, and Firmino after.[39] The next game was against Arsenal at the Emirates on 22 December. In an exciting affair, Liverpool went 0–2 up through Coutinho in the 26th and Salah in the 52nd minute, but Arsenal took the lead with three goals in five minutes through goals from Alexis Sánchez, Granit Xhaka (on a long shot in which goalie Mignolet was heavily criticized for not doing better) and Mesut Özil. The Reds evened the score at 3–3 with a 71st-minute goal from Firmino giving the team their 8th league draw in 19 games, at the time the second most in the league.[40] Liverpool then returned to Anfield for their Boxing Day fixture against bottom-place Swansea City. Coutinho gave the Liverpool early in the first half and the game stood at 1–0 at half, but with a goal from Firmino in the 52nd, one from Alexander-Arnold in the 65th, another from Firmino in the 66th, and a capper from Oxlade-Chamberlain in the 82nd gave the Reds a 5–0 victory.[41] On 27 December, ahead of the New Year, Liverpool also welcomed the news of long-term target Virgil van Dijk, signed for a generally reported fee going up to £75 million.[42] With their new signing in attendance, Liverpool played their final match of the calendar year on 30 December against Leicester at Anfield. Vardy gave the Foxes a 0–1 lead in the 3rd where it stood until the 52nd with a Salah equalizer. Salah scored again in the 76th giving Liverpool a 2–1 victory and ensuring the Reds would end 2017 in the top four.[43]

January

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The Reds opened their 2018 on the first day of the year by traveling to Turf Moor to take on Burnley. Mane broke the deadlock in the 61st with a goal but Jóhann Berg Guðmundsson leveled the score in the 87th minute. The Reds, however, were able to get all three points off a Ragnar Klavan header in the 94th minute with a 1–2 final.[44] Following the triumph in the league, the Reds hosted Everton for the second time in under 30 days, this time in the third round of the 2017–18 FA Cup on 5 January. While Everton received the hotly contested penalty in the first meeting, Liverpool was the one to benefit from a controversial penalty call as Mason Holgate brought Lallana down inside the box and Milner converted the penalty in the 35th minute. The derby match also featured Holgate and Firmino getting into a verbal altercation shortly before the end of the first half following a push from Holgate to Firmino that sent the latter over the advertising boards. In the 67th minute, Gylfi Sigurðsson scored on a counterattack to equalize the game at one. In the 84th minute, however, van Dijk in his Liverpool debut scored off a corner kick making it 2–1 and marking a second game in a row with a late headed goal from a defender to win the game.[45] The day after, on 6 January, the club made the official announcement that (subject to a medical and personal terms) Coutinho would be leaving for Barcelona on a deal that Paul Joyce of The Times reported could reach up to £142 million. Coutinho was subsequently announced by Barcelona that day.[46][47][48] On 14 January, Liverpool took on the undefeated Manchester City at Anfield in hopes of deal City their first loss in the league as well as a measure of revenge for the 0–5 loss the Reds were dealt in the reverse fixture. Liverpool started off strong with an Oxlade-Chamberlain goal in the ninth minute, but City scored an equalizer through in the 40th through a Leroy Sane effort. From the 59th to the 68th, Liverpool extended the lead to 4–1 through goals from Firmino, Mane, and Salah in a thrilling ten minutes of action. City got one back in the 84th from Bernardo Silva and another from İlkay Gündoğan in the 91st put it at 4–3, but the Reds held on and doled City their first loss of the league season.[49] The next game for the Reds was a 22 January meeting in South Wales against Swansea and recently placed manager Carlos Carvalhal. Alfie Mawson scored the lone goal of the match in the 40th minute and the bottom place Swans took all three from the Reds with a 1–0 defeat given to the visitors.[50] In the fourth round proper of the FA Cup, on 27 January, Liverpool took on West Brom. Firmino's chip in the fifth gave the early lead, but a four-minute double to Jay Rodriguez put West Brom up 1–2 in the 11th. Video assistant referee replay played a crucial first half role as it denied Craig Dawson a goal to make the game 1–3, then awarded a penalty to Liverpool, which was subsequently missed by Firmino. West Brom added a third with an own goal from Matip late in first half added time. Salah put the Reds within one in the 78th, but the 2–3 scoreline stood and the Reds were stunned at home by the second from bottom Baggies in the cup.[51] The final fixture of the month was on 30 January where the Reds visited John Smith's Stadium and Huddersfield Town. Emre Can's long range effort in the 26th put the Reds up 0–1 early, and Firmino added a second right before the break. Salah's 78th minute spot kick made it 0–3 and Liverpool finished January with a comfortable victory.[52]

February

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February's first fixture occurred on the 4th when the Reds welcomed Tottenham to Anfield. Liverpool were off to a flying start following Salah's goal in the third minute giving Liverpool an early 1–0 lead. The score stayed this way until a screamer from Victor Wanyama in the 80th set off a frenetic close to the game. The 85th minute saw goalie Loris Karius come out and attempt to slide tackle the ball away from Harry Kane, however referee Jon Moss awarded a controversial penalty to Spurs for an infraction where some fans and pundits claimed Kane dived in hopes to win a call. Kane took, and subsequently missed, the kick in the 87th and in the 91st minute, Salah gave an outstanding solo effort to find a seeming winner for the Reds, but yet again a controversial penalty was given when van Dijk attempted to clear the ball from the box but missed and hit Erik Lamela. Kane took this penalty as well and converted in the 95th leaving the game level at 2–2. A frustrated Klopp stated following the game, "I don't understand either of the penalty situations. The first one was offside and the second, I know already what the ref and his assistant will say. There was a touch, a little touch. But Lamela has jumped into him and wanted the touch and to go down." Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino saw the incidents differently saying, "Both were a penalty and it is not controversial. Sometimes people complain about the referee, but when they are right it is good to tell everyone."[53] The Reds had a week off until their trip to St Mary's Stadium in Southampton on 11 February. In winter signing van Dijk's first match back in Southampton, the Reds won the match 0–2 with goals from Firmino in the sixth and Salah in the 42nd.Although Van Dijk did receive a hostile reception.[54] The next fixture for Liverpool was on Valentine's Day in Portugal where the Reds played in the round of 16 of the Champions League for the first time since 2009. Against Porto, the Reds opened scoring in the 25th through a Mane goal that was also mishandled by Porto keeper José Sá. Salah added another goal in the 29th to take the lead to 0–2, where it stood at the halftime whistle. In the second half, the goals continued as Mane added a second in the 53rd, Firmino scored his first of the game in the 69th, and Mane got his hat-trick goal in the 85th to give the Reds a 0–5 first leg victory.[55] Following a four-day mini camp in Marbella[56] the Reds returned home for their final fixture of the month on 24 February against West Ham. Can opened the scoring with a header off a corner in the 29th, and Salah in the 51st and Firmino in the 57th added on to the lead. Michail Antonio added one for the Hammers in the 59th to put the score at 3–1, but a Mane goal in the 77th to make it 4–1 put the game away and, for the day, the Reds moved into second place.[57]

March

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Liverpool's first match of the month was a home bout on 3 March against Newcastle, as the Reds welcomed back manager Rafa Benítez, who won the 2005 Champions League with the club. Salah opened the scoring in the 40th minute and Mane put in another in the 55th to give the Reds a comfortable 2–0 victory over the Magpies.[58] The Reds then played mid-week at home on 6 March against Porto in the return fixture of the Champions League round of 16. It was a quiet affair, Mane had a chance that hit the post and Danny Ings had a strong effort saved, but the game ended 0–0 and Liverpool moved on to the quarterfinals. Following these matches, on 10 March Liverpool traveled to Old Trafford in another iteration of the Northwest Derby against Manchester United. Marcus Rashford scored twice in ten minutes to give United a 2–0 lead within 25 minutes, were the score stood till the half. An Eric Bailly own goal put Liverpool back in business in the 66th, but it was not enough and a 2–1 scoreline was final. The loss put the Reds five points back of second place.[59] On 16 March, the Reds learned that their Champions League quarterfinal opponent would be the only other English team remaining, Manchester City. The fixtures were set for 4 April at Anfield and 10 April at the City of Manchester Stadium.[60] The following day, Liverpool returned to Anfield to square off with Watford and, in stylish fashion, dispatched the Hornets 5–0. Salah had his first English hat trick as he scored in the 4th, 43rd, and 77th, and then added one more for good measure in the 85th. Firmino added in one of his own in the 49th.[61] The final fixture of the month occurred on 31 March at Selhurst Park against Crystal Palace. Palace opened the scoring in the 13th with a Luka Milivojević spot kick and the 1–0 scoreline held into halftime. Just four minutes into the second half, however, Liverpool struck back with a Mane goal off a Milner cross. The 1–1 deadlock was broken as Salah slotted home another in the 84th and the Reds took a 1–2 victory out of London.[62]

April

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Liverpool opened up the month of April of the fourth as they took on Manchester City at Anfield in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-finals. The Reds got off to a flying start with goals from Salah in the 12th, Oxlade-Chamberlain off a brilliant effort from outside the box in the 21st, and finally Mane in the 31st. The Reds finished with a comfortable 3–0 victory and for the second time this season defeated City at home.[63] In between the first and second legs, Liverpool traveled across the river to take on Merseyside rivals Everton at Goodison Park on 7 April. The affair ended 0–0, with the best effort coming from Yannick Bolasie, who tried a curling effort only for it to be saved well by Karius. The Reds could not find a goal, and their opportunity to go second in the table was missed.[64] Up next was the second leg of the quarter-finals at the City of Manchester Stadium against Manchester City on 10 April. City needed at least three goals, and they found one almost immediately from Gabriel Jesus in just the second minute. The Reds seemed slightly wobbled, and chances from Bernardo Silva and a goal ruled offside from Leroy Sane highlighted that. Following the half, however, with City manager Pep Guardiola sent to the stands during the break, Liverpool found their away goal in the 56th from Salah, and another in the 77th from Firmino. The Reds would win 1–2 and advance 5–1 on aggregate to the semi-finals.[65] Liverpool returned home to Anfield to take on Bournemouth on 14 April, and they celebrated their advancement with a strong 3–0 showing. The goals came from Mane in the 7th, Salah in the 69th, and Firmino with a 90th minute addition to the scoreline.[66] Next came a match with bottom-place West Brom on 21 April. The Baggies, coming off a victory at Manchester United to clinch the title in favor of Manchester City, had already forced Liverpool to drop points at Anfield and defeated them in the FA Cup. Liverpool found another early goal through Danny Ings, his first since the final match of Brendan Rodgers' tenure as Liverpool manager. Salah added another in the 72nd, and the Reds seemed on their way to all three points. However, a 79th-minute goal from Jake Livermore and an 88th-minute leveler from Salomón Rondón to make it 2–2 meant the points would be shared.[67] Liverpool could not dwell on this result as the final European night at Anfield was on deck on 24 April in the Champions League semi-finals against A.S. Roma. The first key action of the game was not a goal, but rather an injury as Oxlade-Chamberlain went down with what was eventually ruled as a knee ligament injury. The Reds could not find a breakthrough until a sparkling 36th-minute effort from Salah against his former team put the Reds ahead. Salah added another in the first minute of added time of the first half and the Reds carried a 2–0 lead into the second half. The Reds would not stop as Mane added a third in the 56th and Firmino had an eight-minute double to make the lead 5–0. Roma, however, got two key away goals back through Edin Džeko in the 81st and Diego Perotti from the penalty spot after a James Milner handball in the 85th. Regardless, the Reds walked away with a 5–2 and the driver's seat of the second leg.[68] The next day, the club would announce that Oxlade-Chamberlain was set to miss the remainder of the season as well as the 2018 World Cup for England.[69] The final fixture of the month was at Anfield against 19th place Stoke City on 28 April. Liverpool had the best of the chances: a Salah miss on a one-on-one with the keeper in the fifth, an Ings effort ruled out for offside in the 40th, and a controversial potential handball on Erik Pieters in the 87th, but neither team could find the net and the final score was 0–0.[70]

Liverpool's May began with the second leg of the Champions League semi-finals against Roma on 2 May. Liverpool quickly got an away goal from Mane in the ninth minute, striking first in the match. Just six minutes later, however, in the 15th minute, Roma would see one back after an attempted Lovren clearance struck Milner directly in the face and back into the Liverpool net. The Reds then saw a second goal in the 25th minute off a Wijnaldum header on a corner kick, marking his first away goal for Liverpool. The match entered the half 1–2 and with Liverpool in strong position to advance, however Roma continue to attack. Dzeko scored in the 52nd to level the match score, then Radja Nainggolan hit an exceptional long shot in the 86th. Finally, Klavan was penalized for Liverpool and Nainggolan achieved a brace off a spot kick in the 94th, but with Roma needed one more for extra time it was too little, too late. The final whistle sounded and Liverpool, while losing 4–2, advanced on an aggregate score of 6–7 and would see Real Madrid in the Champions League Final.[71] That weekend, Liverpool would take on Chelsea on 6 May at Stamford Bridge, with a win sealing top four and Champions League for the next season. Alas, in the 32nd minute, it was Chelsea striker Olivier Giroud who found the lone goal of the game and Chelsea won 1–0, giving them an opportunity to be level with Liverpool on points on the last match-day.[72] This, however, was not the case for Chelsea as they stumbled to Huddersfield 1–1 on 9 May,[73] meaning Liverpool would need, barring a massive goal differential swing, just a draw regardless of Chelsea's final day result to clinch fourth place. Liverpool's final Premier League match of the season took place at Anfield against Brighton & Hove Albion on 13 May. The Reds wasted little time in finding the breakthrough as Salah scored in the 26th minute and sealed the record for most goals in a 38-game Premier League season, with 32. Just five minutes before halftime, Lovren doubled the Reds lead with a massive header. Liverpool continued forward as Solanke and Andy Robertson scored their first Liverpool goals in the 53rd and 85th minutes as Liverpool cruised to a 4–0 victory and, as a result, fourth place in the Premier League.

Kyiv's Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex hosted the Champions League final on 26 May against the two-time defending champions in Madrid. Liverpool suffered an early blow as Salah sustained what Klopp later specified as a serious injury to "either the collarbone or the shoulder"[74] after just 30 minutes of play. Regardless, the score was 0–0 at the half but in the 51st minute, Karim Benzema pounced on a Karius roll-out of the ball and ultimately get a foot to direct the ball net-bound and give Madrid the 1–0 lead. Liverpool equalized in the 55th through Mane off a corner kick, but nine minutes after that Gareth Bale came off the bench and deliver a stunning bicycle kick to break the deadlock again. Bale found his second of the game and Madrid's third in the 83rd off a long shot that Karius mishandled into his own net. Madrid went on to win the Champions League 3–1 and Karius found harsh criticism for mistakes described as part of a "horror show" of a night for the Liverpool keeper. A few days after the game, Karius was diagnosed with a concussion which likely occurred in a clash between him and Sergio Ramos a few minutes before Madrid's first goal. Despite the season-ending heartbreak, this was Liverpool's best Champions League performance since 2007 and widely considered another step in the right direction for Liverpool as a whole.[75]

First team

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As it stands on 26 May 2018[76]
Squad no. Name Nationality Position(s) Date of birth Signed from Apps Goals Assists
Goalkeepers
1 Loris Karius   GK (1993-06-22) 22 June 1993 (age 31)   Mainz 05 49 0 0
22 Simon Mignolet   GK (1988-03-06)6 March 1988 (aged 29)   Sunderland 202 0 0
52 Danny Ward   GK (1993-06-22) 22 June 1993 (age 31)   Wrexham 3 0 0
Defenders
2 Nathaniel Clyne   RB (1991-04-05) 5 April 1991 (age 33)   Southampton 98 2 4
4 Virgil van Dijk   CB (1991-07-08) 8 July 1991 (age 33)   Southampton 22 1 0
6 Dejan Lovren   CB (1989-07-05)5 July 1989 (aged 28)   Southampton 152 6 3
12 Joe Gomez   RB/CB (1997-05-23) 23 May 1997 (age 27)   Charlton Athletic 41 0 3
17 Ragnar Klavan   CB (1985-10-30) 30 October 1985 (age 39)   FC Augsburg 53 2 0
18 Alberto Moreno   LB/LW (1992-07-05) 5 July 1992 (age 32)   Sevilla 136 3 11
26 Andrew Robertson   LB (1994-03-11) 11 March 1994 (age 30)   Hull City 30 1 5
32 Joël Matip   CB (1991-08-08) 8 August 1991 (age 33)   Schalke 04 67 2 0
38 Jon Flanagan   RB (1993-01-01)1 January 1993 (aged 23)   LFC Academy 51 1 2
66 Trent Alexander-Arnold   RB (1998-10-07) 7 October 1998 (age 26)   LFC Academy 45 3 3
Midfielders
5 Georginio Wijnaldum   CM/AM (1990-11-11) 11 November 1990 (age 34)   Newcastle United 92 8 15
7 James Milner (vice-captain)   DM/CM/LB/RB (1986-01-04) 4 January 1986 (age 38)   Manchester City 132 15 29
10 Philippe Coutinho   AM/LW (1992-06-12)12 June 1992 (aged 26)   Inter Milan 201 54 43
14 Jordan Henderson (captain)   CM/DM (1990-06-17) 17 June 1990 (age 34)   Sunderland 280 24 38
16 Marko Grujić   CM (1996-04-13)13 April 1996 (aged 21)   Red Star 14 0 1
20 Adam Lallana   CM/AM/RW/LW (1988-05-10) 10 May 1988 (age 36)   Southampton 140 21 19
21 Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain   CM/AM (1993-08-15) 15 August 1993 (age 31)   Arsenal 42 5 8
23 Emre Can   DM/CM (1994-01-12) 12 January 1994 (age 30)   Bayer Leverkusen 167 14 10
Forwards
9 Roberto Firmino   FW/LW (1991-10-02) 2 October 1991 (age 33)   Hoffenheim 144 50 34
11 Mohamed Salah   RW (1992-06-15) 15 June 1992 (age 32)   Roma 52 44 14
19 Sadio Mané   RW/LW (1992-04-10) 10 April 1992 (age 32)   Southampton 73 33 16
27 Divock Origi   FW (1995-04-18)18 April 1995 (aged 22)   Lille 77 21 6
28 Danny Ings   FW/RW/LW (1992-07-23) 23 July 1992 (age 32)   Burnley 25 4 1
29 Dominic Solanke   FW (1997-09-14) 14 September 1997 (age 27)   Chelsea 27 1 1
58 Ben Woodburn   FW/RW/LW (1999-10-15) 15 October 1999 (age 25)   LFC Academy 11 1 0

New contracts

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Date Pos No. Player Ref.
7 July 2017 DF 66   Trent Alexander-Arnold [77]
10 August 2017 MF 40   Ryan Kent [78]
25 October 2017 FW 58   Ben Woodburn [79]
31 January 2018 FW 59   Harry Wilson [80]
29 April 2018 FW 9   Roberto Firmino [81]
7 June 2018 MF 53   Ovie Ejaria [82]

Transfers and loans

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Transfers in

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Entry date Position No. Player From club Fee Ref.
1 July 2017 FW 11   Mohamed Salah   Roma £43,900,000 [83]
10 July 2017 FW 29   Dominic Solanke   Chelsea Tribunal [84]
21 July 2017 DF 26   Andrew Robertson   Hull City £10,000,000 [85]
31 August 2017 MF 21   Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain   Arsenal £40,000,000 [86]
1 January 2018 DF 4   Virgil van Dijk   Southampton £75,000,000 [87]
Total £168,900,000

Transfers out

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Exit date Position No. Player To club Fee Ref.
1 July 2017 GK 13   Alex Manninger Retired [88]
3 July 2017 DF 47   Andre Wisdom   Derby County £2,000,000[A] [89]
18 July 2017 MF 21   Lucas Leiva   Lazio £5,000,000 [90]
21 July 2017 MF 35   Kevin Stewart   Hull City £4,000,000[B] [91]
31 August 2017 DF 3   Mamadou Sakho   Crystal Palace £24,000,000[C] [92]
8 January 2018 MF 10   Philippe Coutinho   Barcelona £105,000,000[D] [93]
11 January 2018 MF 25   Cameron Brannagan   Oxford United £250,000 [94]
Total £140,250,000
  1. ^ Fee may eventually rise to £4,500,000.
  2. ^ Fee may eventually rise to £8,000,000.
  3. ^ Fee may eventually rise to £26,000,000.
  4. ^ Fee may eventually rise to £142,000,000.

Loans out

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Start date End date Position No. Player To club Fee Ref.
26 July 2017 End of season MF 68   Pedro Chirivella   Willem II None [95]
28 July 2017 End of season DF 56   Connor Randall   Heart of Midlothian None [96]
16 August 2017 End of season MF 54   Sheyi Ojo   Fulham None [97]
31 August 2017 Half of season MF 49   Jordan Williams   Rochdale None [98]
31 August 2017 End of season FW 27   Divock Origi   VfL Wolfsburg £6,000,000 [99]
31 August 2017 8 January 2018 MF 40   Ryan Kent   SC Freiburg £1,000,000 [100][101]
12 January 2018 End of season MF 40   Ryan Kent   Bristol City None [102]
17 January 2018 End of season MF 16   Marko Grujić   Cardiff City None [103]
29 January 2018 End of season FW 15   Daniel Sturridge   West Bromwich Albion £1,500,000 [104]
31 January 2018 End of season MF 53   Ovie Ejaria   Sunderland None [105]
31 January 2018 End of season FW 59   Harry Wilson   Hull City None [106]
31 January 2018 End of season FW 50   Lazar Marković   Anderlecht None [107]
31 January 2018 End of season DF 38   Jon Flanagan   Bolton Wanderers None [108]

Transfer summary

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Friendlies

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Pre-season

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As of 15 June 2017, Liverpool have announced four pre-season friendlies against Hertha BSC,[109] Athletic Bilbao[110] Tranmere Rovers and Wigan Athletic.[111]

12 July 2017 Friendly Tranmere Rovers   0–4   Liverpool Birkenhead, England
19:45 BST Report Milner   32' (pen.)
Grujić   42'
Chirivella   50'
Woodburn   78' (pen.)
Stadium: Prenton Park
Attendance: 13,444
Referee: Mike Dean
14 July 2017 Friendly Wigan Athletic   1–1   Liverpool Wigan, England
19:30 BST Gilbey   21' Report Salah   45+1' Stadium: DW Stadium
Attendance: 12,715
Referee: Oliver Langford
29 July 2017 Friendly Hertha BSC   0–3   Liverpool Berlin, Germany
17:00 BST Pekarík   77' Report Solanke   16'
Wijnaldum   38'
Moreno   45'
Salah   63'
Stadium: Olympiastadion
Attendance: 54,279
5 August 2017 Friendly Liverpool   3–1   Athletic Bilbao Dublin, Ireland
17:15 BST Firmino   21' (pen.)
Woodburn   59'
Solanke   80'
Report Williams   30' Stadium: Aviva Stadium
Attendance: 51,333

Premier League Asia Trophy

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Liverpool faced Crystal Palace in their opening game at the 2017 Premier League Asia Trophy.[112]

19 July 2017 Semi-finals Liverpool   2–0   Crystal Palace Hong Kong
13:30 BST Solanke   61'
Grujić   68'
Origi   79'
Report Dann   42' Stadium: Hong Kong Stadium
Attendance: 39,273
Referee: Bobby Madley (England)
22 July 2017 Final Liverpool   2–1   Leicester City Hong Kong
13:30 BST Salah   20'
Coutinho   44'
Report Slimani   12'
Mahrez   43'
Ndidi   73'
Stadium: Hong Kong Stadium
Attendance: 39,498
Referee: Bobby Madley (England)

Audi Cup

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Details for the 2017 Audi Cup were announced on 15 June 2017.[113]

1 August 2017 (2017-08-01) Semi-finals Bayern Munich   0–3   Liverpool Munich, Germany
19:30 BST Sanches   50'
Vidal   89'
Report Mané   7'
Salah   34'
Sturridge   83'
Lallana   89'
Stadium: Allianz Arena
Attendance: 57,500
Referee: Robert Hartmann (Germany)
2 August 2017 Final Liverpool   1–1
(4–5 p)
  Atlético Madrid Munich, Germany
19:30 BST Milner   25'
Gomez   45'
Klavan   64'
Firmino   83' (pen.)
Report Bare   27'
González   57'
Stadium: Allianz Arena
Attendance: 66,000
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
Penalties

Competitions

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Overall

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Competition Started round Final
position / round
First match Last match
Premier League 4th 12 August 2017 13 May 2018
FA Cup Third round Fourth round 5 January 2018 27 January 2018
EFL Cup Third round Third round 19 September 2017 19 September 2017
UEFA Champions League Play-off round Runners-up 15 August 2017 26 May 2018

Updated to match played 26 May 2018
Source: Competitions

Overview

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Competition Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Premier League 38 21 12 5 84 38 +46 055.26
FA Cup 2 1 0 1 4 4 +0 050.00
EFL Cup 1 0 0 1 0 2 −2 000.00
UEFA Champions League 15 9 4 2 47 19 +28 060.00
Total 56 31 16 9 135 63 +72 055.36

Updated to match played 26 May 2018
Source: Competitions

Premier League

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League table

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
2 Manchester United 38 25 6 7 68 28 +40 81 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
3 Tottenham Hotspur 38 23 8 7 74 36 +38 77
4 Liverpool 38 21 12 5 84 38 +46 75
5 Chelsea 38 21 7 10 62 38 +24 70 Qualification for the Europa League group stage[a]
6 Arsenal 38 19 6 13 74 51 +23 63
Source: Premier League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored. 4) Play-offs (only if needed to decide champion, teams for relegation or teams for UEFA competitions).[114]
Notes:
  1. ^ Since the winners of the 2017–18 FA Cup (Chelsea) and the winners of the 2017–18 EFL Cup (Manchester City) both qualified for European competition based on their league positions, the berths awarded to the 5th-placed team (Europa League group stage) and the League Cup winners (Europa League second qualifying round) were passed down the league.

Results summary

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Overall Home Away
Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts W D L GF GA GD W D L GF GA GD
38 21 12 5 84 38  +46 75 12 7 0 45 10  +35 9 5 5 39 28  +11

Last updated: 13 May 2018.
Source: Premier League

Results by matchday

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Matchday1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundAHHAHAAHAHAHHAAHHAAHHAHAAHAHHAHAAHAHAH
ResultDWWLDWDDLWWWDWWDDWDWWWWLWDWWWLWWDWDDLW
Position96288578965565445444443433333433333344
Updated to match(es) played on 13 May 2018. Source: 11v11
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Matches

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On 14 June 2017, the fixtures for the forthcoming season were announced.[115]

12 August 2017 1 Watford 3–3 Liverpool Watford
12:30 BST Okaka   8'
Doucouré   32'
Britos   90+4'
Report Mané   29',   37'
Firmino   55' (pen.)
Salah   57'
Alexander-Arnold   62'
Mignolet   88'
Stadium: Vicarage Road
Attendance: 20,407
Referee: Anthony Taylor
19 August 2017 2 Liverpool 1–0 Crystal Palace Liverpool
15:00 BST Henderson   69'
Mané   73'
Report Puncheon   15'
Van Aanholt   63'
Benteke   90+2'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,138
Referee: Kevin Friend
27 August 2017 3 Liverpool 4–0 Arsenal Liverpool
16:00 BST Firmino   17'
Lovren   20'
Gomez   23'
Mané   40'
Salah   57'
Sturridge   77'
Report Welbeck   22'
Xhaka   40'
Özil   49'
Holding   73'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,206
Referee: Craig Pawson
9 September 2017 4 Manchester City 5–0 Liverpool Manchester
12:30 BST Otamendi   6'
Agüero   24'
Fernandinho   28'
Gabriel Jesus   45+6', 53'
Sané   77', 90+1'
Report Alexander-Arnold   19'
Mané   37'
Can   80'
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 54,172
Referee: Jonathan Moss
16 September 2017 5 Liverpool 1–1 Burnley Liverpool
15:00 BST Salah   30'
Can   90+3'
Report Arfield   27'
Pope   55'
Cork   90+3'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,231
Referee: Roger East
23 September 2017 6 Leicester City 2–3 Liverpool Leicester
17:30 BST Albrighton   17'
Ndidi   22'
Okazaki   45+3'
Vardy   69',   73',   90+2'
Report Salah   15'
Coutinho   23'
Matip   45+2'
Lovren   56'
Henderson   68'
Mignolet   72'
Stadium: King Power Stadium
Attendance: 32,004
Referee: Anthony Taylor
1 October 2017 7 Newcastle United 1–1 Liverpool Newcastle upon Tyne
16:30 BST Joselu   36'
Pérez   55'
Report Coutinho   29'
Gomez   58'
Stadium: St James' Park
Attendance: 52,303
Referee: Craig Pawson
14 October 2017 8 Liverpool 0–0 Manchester United Liverpool
12:30 BST Report Smalling   74'
Young   87'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,912
Referee: Martin Atkinson
22 October 2017 9 Tottenham Hotspur 4–1 Liverpool Wembley, London
16:00 BST Kane   4', 56'
Son   12'
Alli   45+3'
Report Salah   24'
Can   45+2'
Stadium: Wembley Stadium
Attendance: 80,827
Referee: Andre Marriner
28 October 2017 10 Liverpool 3–0 Huddersfield Town Liverpool
15:00 BST Salah   42'
Sturridge   50'
Firmino   58'
Wijnaldum   75'
Report Smith   41' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,268
Referee: Kevin Friend
4 November 2017 11 West Ham United 1–4 Liverpool Stratford, London
17:30 GMT Noble   37'
Reid   47'
Lanzini   55',   90'
Report Salah   21', 75'
Matip   24'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   56'
Stadium: London Stadium
Attendance: 56,961
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
18 November 2017 12 Liverpool 3–0 Southampton Liverpool
15:00 GMT Salah   31', 41'
Lovren   43'
Coutinho   68'
Report Romeu   61' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,256
Referee: Mike Jones
25 November 2017 13 Liverpool 1–1 Chelsea Liverpool
17:30 GMT Salah   65' Report Willian   85' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,225
Referee: Michael Oliver
29 November 2017 14 Stoke City 0–3 Liverpool Stoke-on-Trent
20:00 GMT Martins Indi   65' Report Mané   17',   74'
Mignolet   39'
Can   56'
Wijnaldum   63'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   66'
Salah   77', 83'
Stadium: bet365 Stadium
Attendance: 29,423
Referee: Martin Atkinson
2 December 2017 15 Brighton & Hove Albion 1–5 Liverpool Falmer
15:00 GMT Murray   51' (pen.)
Bruno   61'
Report Can   30'
Firmino   31', 48'
Coutinho   87'
Dunk   89' (o.g.)
Stadium: Falmer Stadium
Attendance: 30,631
Referee: Graham Scott
10 December 2017 16 Liverpool 1–1 Everton Liverpool
14:15 Salah   42'
Lovren   76'
Report Sigurðsson   36'
Gueye   42'
Rooney   77' (pen.)
Schneiderlin   85'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,082
Referee: Craig Pawson
13 December 2017 17 Liverpool 0–0 West Bromwich Albion Liverpool
20:00 Can   68' Report Field   90+2' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,243
Referee: Paul Tierney
17 December 2017 18 Bournemouth 0–4 Liverpool Bournemouth
16:30 Aké   10' Report Coutinho   20'
Lovren   26'
Salah   44'
Firmino   66'
Lallana   73'
Stadium: Dean Court
Attendance: 10,780
Referee: Andre Marriner
22 December 2017 19 Arsenal 3–3 Liverpool Holloway, London
19:45 Sánchez   53'
Xhaka   56'
Özil   58'
Iwobi   58'
Report Coutinho   26'
Salah   52'
Firmino   71'
Stadium: Emirates Stadium
Attendance: 59,409
Referee: Martin Atkinson
26 December 2017 20 Liverpool 5–0 Swansea City Liverpool
17:30 Coutinho   6'
Firmino   52', 66'
Alexander-Arnold   65'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   82'
Report Olsson   56' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,850
Referee: Kevin Friend
30 December 2017 21 Liverpool 2–1 Leicester City Liverpool
15:00 Milner   8'
Salah   52', 76'
Can   53'
Robertson   90+1'
Report Vardy   3'
Maguire   53'
Ndidi   62'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,226
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
1 January 2018 22 Burnley 1–2 Liverpool Burnley
15:00 Guðmundsson   87' Report Mané   61'
Klavan   90+4'
Stadium: Turf Moor
Attendance: 21,756
Referee: Roger East
14 January 2018 23 Liverpool 4–3 Manchester City Liverpool
16:00 Oxlade-Chamberlain   9'
Firmino   59',   60'
Mané   61'
Salah   68'
Milner   90+3'
Report Sané   40'
Otamendi   65'
Sterling   69'
Fernandinho   72'
B. Silva   84'
Gündoğan   90+1'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,285
Referee: Andre Marriner
22 January 2018 24 Swansea City 1–0 Liverpool Swansea
20:00 Mawson   40' Report Robertson   44'
Matip   45'
Stadium: Liberty Stadium
Attendance: 20,886
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
30 January 2018 25 Huddersfield Town 0–3 Liverpool Huddersfield
20:00 Report Can   26'
Firmino   45+1'
Salah   78' (pen.)
Stadium: John Smith's Stadium
Attendance: 24,121
Referee: Kevin Friend
4 February 2018 26 Liverpool 2–2 Tottenham Hotspur Liverpool
16:15 Salah   3', 90+1'
Alexander-Arnold   42'
Milner   58'
Can   90+6'
Report Alli   69'
Wanyama   80'
Kane   87',   90+5' (pen.)
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,213
Referee: Jonathan Moss
11 February 2018 27 Southampton 0–2 Liverpool Southampton
16:30 Romeu   62' Report Firmino   6'
Matip   37'
Salah   42'
Can   47'
Stadium: St Mary's Stadium
Attendance: 31,915
Referee: Martin Atkinson
24 February 2018 28 Liverpool 4–1 West Ham United Liverpool
15:00 Can   29'
Salah   51'
Firmino   57'
Mané   77'
Report Collins   43'
Kouyaté   47'
Antonio   59'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,256
Referee: Stuart Attwell
3 March 2018 29 Liverpool 2–0 Newcastle United Liverpool
17:30 Salah   40'
Mané   55'
Report Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,287
Referee: Graham Scott
10 March 2018 30 Manchester United 2–1 Liverpool Manchester
12:30 Rashford   14', 24',   27'
Valencia   89'
Report Oxlade-Chamberlain   35'
Bailly   66' (o.g.)
Stadium: Old Trafford
Attendance: 74,855
Referee: Craig Pawson
17 March 2018 31 Liverpool 5–0 Watford Liverpool
17:30 Salah   4', 43', 77', 85'
Firmino   49'
Gomez   52'
Report Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,287
Referee: Anthony Taylor
31 March 2018 (2018-03-31) 32 Crystal Palace 1–2 Liverpool Selhurst, London
12:30 BST Milivojević   13' (pen.)
Benteke   38'
McArthur   45'
Report Karius   12'
Mané   24',   49'
Salah   84'
Stadium: Selhurst Park
Attendance: 25,807
Referee: Neil Swarbrick
7 April 2018 33 Everton 0–0 Liverpool Liverpool
12:30 Report Stadium: Goodison Park
Attendance: 39,220
Referee: Michael Oliver
14 April 2018 34 Liverpool 3–0 Bournemouth Liverpool
17:30 Mané   7'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   54'
Salah   69'
Firmino   90'
Report Aké   15' Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,959
Referee: Chris Kavanagh
21 April 2018 35 West Bromwich Albion 2–2 Liverpool West Bromwich
12:30 BST Livermore   79'
Rondón   88'
Report Ings   4'
Moreno   69'
Salah   72'
Stadium: The Hawthorns
Attendance: 24,520
Referee: Stuart Attwell
28 April 2018 36 Liverpool 0–0 Stoke City Liverpool
12:30 BST Van Dijk   88' Report Crouch   36'
Diouf   42'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,255
Referee: Andre Marriner
6 May 2018 37 Chelsea 1–0 Liverpool Fulham, London
16:30 Giroud   32'
Alonso   79'
Moses   81'
Courtois   90+4'
Report Salah   39'
Clyne   40'
Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Attendance: 41,314
Referee: Anthony Taylor
13 May 2018 38 Liverpool 4–0 Brighton & Hove Albion Liverpool
15:00 Salah   26'
Lovren   40'
Solanke   53'
Robertson   85'
Report Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 50,752
Referee: Kevin Friend

FA Cup

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  Win   Draw   Loss

In the FA Cup, Liverpool entered in the third round and were drawn at home to Everton.[116]

5 January 2018 Third round Liverpool 2–1 Everton Liverpool
19:55 GMT Milner   35' (pen.)
Van Dijk   84'
Solanke   88'
Report Rooney   7'
McCarthy   60'
Sigurðsson   67'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,513
Referee: Bobby Madley
27 January 2018 Fourth round Liverpool 2–3 West Bromwich Albion Liverpool
19:45 GMT Firmino   5',   27'
Can   61'
Salah   78'
Report Rodriguez   7', 11'
Barry   26'
Matip   45+2' (o.g.)
Dawson   83'
Hegazi   85'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,342
Referee: Craig Pawson

EFL Cup

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Liverpool joined the EFL Cup in the third round and were drawn away to Leicester City.[117]

  Win   Draw   Loss

19 September 2017 Third round Leicester City 2–0 Liverpool Leicester
19:45 BST Okazaki   65'
Slimani   78'
Iborra   90'
Report Grujić   57'
Klavan   75'
Stadium: King Power Stadium
Attendance: 31,609
Referee: Stuart Attwell

UEFA Champions League

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On 4 August 2017, Liverpool were drawn against Bundesliga side 1899 Hoffenheim in a two-legged tie for a place in the main competition.[118]

  Win   Draw   Loss

Play-off round

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15 August 2017 First leg 1899 Hoffenheim   1–2   Liverpool Sinsheim, Germany
19:45 BST Kramarić   12'
Hübner   76'
Uth   87'
Report Alexander-Arnold   35',   55'
Can   51'
Nordtveit   74' (o.g.)
Stadium: Rhein-Neckar-Arena
Attendance: 25,568
Referee: Björn Kuipers (Netherlands)
23 August 2017 Second leg Liverpool   4–2
(6–3 agg.)
  1899 Hoffenheim Liverpool, England
19:45 BST Can   10', 21'
Salah   18'
Henderson   45+1'
Firmino   63'
Report Uth   28'
Geiger   30'
Kadeřábek   37'
Vogt   51'
Wagner   79'
Hübner   90'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 51,808
Referee: Daniele Orsato (Italy)

Group stage

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After beating 1899 Hoffenheim in the qualifiers, Liverpool entered the group stage and were drawn in Group E against Spartak Moscow, Sevilla and Maribor.[119]


Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification LIV SEV SPM MRB
1   Liverpool 6 3 3 0 23 6 +17 12 Advance to knockout phase 2–2 7–0 3–0
2   Sevilla 6 2 3 1 12 12 0 9 3–3 2–1 3–0
3   Spartak Moscow 6 1 3 2 9 13 −4 6 Transfer to Europa League 1–1 5–1 1–1
4   Maribor 6 0 3 3 3 16 −13 3 0–7 1–1 1–1
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
13 September 2017 (2017-09-13) 1 Liverpool   2–2   Sevilla Liverpool, England
19:45 BST Firmino   21',   42'
Salah   37'
Moreno   39'
Gomez   64'   90+3'
Report Ben Yedder   5'
Mercado   35'
Pareja   42'
Banega   45+3'
Correa   72'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 52,332
Referee: Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)
26 September 2017 (2017-09-26) 2 Spartak Moscow   1–1   Liverpool Moscow, Russia
19:45 BST Fernando   23'
Bocchetti   46'
Report Can   7'
Coutinho   31'
Firmino   75'
Stadium: Otkrytiye Arena
Attendance: 43,376
Referee: Clément Turpin (France)
17 October 2017 (2017-10-17) 3 Maribor   0–7   Liverpool Maribor, Slovenia
19:45 BST Milec   40'
Vrhovec   80'
Hotić   89'
Report Firmino   4', 54'
Coutinho   13'
Salah   19', 40'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   86'
Alexander-Arnold   90'
Stadium: Ljudski vrt
Attendance: 12,506
Referee: Viktor Kassai (Hungary)
1 November 2017 (2017-11-01) 4 Liverpool   3–0   Maribor Liverpool, England
19:45 GMT Salah   49'
Milner   53'
Can   64'
Sturridge   90'
Report Bohar   22'
Rajčević   52'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 47,957
Referee: Ivan Kružliak (Slovakia)
21 November 2017 (2017-11-21) 5 Sevilla   3–3   Liverpool Seville, Spain
19:45 GMT Banega   45'
Mercado   54'
Ben Yedder   51', 60' (pen.)
Pizarro   90+3'
Report Firmino   2', 30'
Mané   22'
Moreno   38'
Henderson   68'
Can   82'
Stadium: Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán
Attendance: 39,495
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
6 December 2017 (2017-12-06) 6 Liverpool   7–0   Spartak Moscow Liverpool, England
19:45 GMT Coutinho   4' (pen.), 15', 50'
Can   6'
Firmino   18'
Mané   47', 76'
Salah   86'
Report Dzhikiya   4'
Fernando   62'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 48,779
Referee: Szymon Marciniak (Poland)

Knockout phase

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Round of 16
edit

The draw for the round of 16 was held on 11 December 2017, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[120]

14 February 2018 First leg Porto   0–5   Liverpool Porto, Portugal
19:45 GMT Report Mané   25', 53', 85'
Salah   29'
Firmino   69'
Stadium: Estádio do Dragão
Attendance: 47,718
Referee: Daniele Orsato (Italy)
6 March 2018 Second leg Liverpool   0–0
(5–0 agg.)
  Porto Liverpool, England
19:45 GMT Henderson   59' Report André   34'
Dalot   90+2'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 51,121
Referee: Felix Zwayer (Germany)
Quarter-finals
edit

The draw for the quarter-finals was held on 16 March 2018, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[121]

4 April 2018 First leg[122] Liverpool   3–0   Manchester City Liverpool, England
19:45 BST Salah   12'
Oxlade-Chamberlain   21'
Mané   31'
Henderson   86'
Report Otamendi   45+3'
Gabriel Jesus   76'
De Bruyne   80'
Sterling   90+3'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 53,581
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
10 April 2018 Second leg[123] Manchester City   1–2
(1–5 agg.)
  Liverpool Manchester, England
19:45 BST Gabriel Jesus   2'
Ederson   14'
B. Silva   30'
Report Mané   14'
Alexander-Arnold   29'
Firmino   35',   77'
Salah   56'
Van Dijk   65'
Stadium: City of Manchester Stadium
Attendance: 53,461
Referee: Antonio Mateu Lahoz (Spain)
Note: Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola was ejected at half-time.[124]
Semi-finals
edit

The draw for the semi-finals was held on 13 April 2018, 12:00 CET, at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.[125]

24 April 2018 First leg Liverpool   5–2   Roma Liverpool, England
19:45 BST Salah   36', 45+1'
Alexander-Arnold   39'
Mané   56'
Firmino   61', 69'
Lovren   74'
Milner   85'
Report Juan Jesus   26'
Džeko   81'
Perotti   85' (pen.)
Fazio   88'
Stadium: Anfield
Attendance: 51,236
Referee: Felix Brych (Germany)
2 May 2018 Second leg Roma   4–2
(6–7 agg.)
  Liverpool Rome, Italy
19:45 BST Milner   15' (o.g.)
Džeko   52'
Florenzi   76'
Manolas   84'
Nainggolan   86', 90+4' (pen.)
Report Mané   9'
Wijnaldum   25'
Lovren   44'
Robertson   84'
Solanke   90'
Stadium: Stadio Olimpico
Attendance: 61,889
Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)
Final
edit
26 May 2018 Final Real Madrid   3–1   Liverpool Kyiv, Ukraine
20:45 Benzema   51'
Bale   64', 83'
Report Mané   55',   82' Stadium: NSC Olimpiyskiy Stadium
Attendance: 61,561
Referee: Milorad Mažić (Serbia)

Squad statistics

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Appearances

edit
Players with no appearances not included in the list.
As of match played 26 May 2018
No. Pos. Nat. Name Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup UCL Total
Apps Starts Apps Starts Apps Starts Apps Starts Apps Starts
1 GK   Loris Karius 19 19 1 1 0 0 13 13 33 33
2 DF   Nathaniel Clyne 3 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 2
4 DF   Virgil van Dijk 14 14 2 2 0 0 6 6 22 22
5 MF   Georginio Wijnaldum 33 27 2 1 1 1 14 11 50 40
6 DF   Dejan Lovren 29 24 0 0 0 0 14 14 43 38
7 MF   James Milner 32 16 2 1 0 0 13 9 47 26
9 FW   Roberto Firmino 37 32 2 2 0 0 15 15 54 47
11 FW   Mohamed Salah 36 34 1 1 0 0 15 13 52 48
12 DF   Joe Gomez 23 21 1 1 1 1 6 4 31 27
14 MF   Jordan Henderson 27 25 1 0 1 1 12 11 41 37
17 DF   Ragnar Klavan 19 16 0 0 1 1 8 3 28 20
18 DF   Alberto Moreno 16 14 1 1 0 0 10 9 27 24
19 FW   Sadio Mané 29 28 2 2 0 0 13 13 44 43
20 MF   Adam Lallana 12 1 1 1 0 0 2 1 15 3
21 MF   Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain 32 14 2 2 1 1 7 4 42 21
22 GK   Simon Mignolet 19 19 1 1 0 0 2 2 22 22
23 MF   Emre Can 26 24 2 2 0 0 10 8 38 34
26 DF   Andrew Robertson 22 22 1 1 1 1 6 6 30 30
28 FW   Danny Ings 8 3 1 0 1 0 4 0 14 3
29 FW   Dominic Solanke 21 5 1 0 1 1 4 0 27 6
32 DF   Joël Matip 25 22 2 2 0 0 8 7 35 31
52 GK   Danny Ward 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1
58 FW   Ben Woodburn 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0
66 DF   Trent Alexander-Arnold 19 18 2 1 0 0 12 11 33 30
Players who went out on loan or left permanently but made appearances for Liverpool prior to departing
10 MF   Philippe Coutinho 14 13 0 0 1 1 5 4 20 18
15 FW   Daniel Sturridge 9 5 0 0 0 0 5 0 14 5
16 MF   Marko Grujić 3 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 6 1
27 FW   Divock Origi 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
38 DF   Jon Flanagan 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1

Goalscorers

edit
As of match played 26 May 2018

Includes all competitive matches.

Rank Pos. No. Player Premier League FA Cup Champions League Total
1 FW 11   Mohamed Salah 32 1 11 44
2 FW 9   Roberto Firmino 15 1 11 27
3 FW 19   Sadio Mané 10 0 10 20
4 MF 10   Philippe Coutinho[A] 7 0 5 12
5 MF 23   Emre Can 3 0 3 6
6 MF 21   Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain 3 0 2 5
7 FW 15   Daniel Sturridge[A] 2 0 1 3
DF 66   Trent Alexander-Arnold 1 0 2 3
9 MF 5   Georginio Wijnaldum 1 0 1 2
DF 6   Dejan Lovren 2 0 0 2
11 DF 4   Virgil van Dijk 0 1 0 1
MF 7   James Milner 0 1 0 1
MF 14   Jordan Henderson 1 0 0 1
DF 17   Ragnar Klavan 1 0 0 1
DF 26   Andrew Robertson 1 0 0 1
FW 28   Danny Ings 1 0 0 1
FW 29   Dominic Solanke 1 0 0 1
DF 32   Joël Matip 1 0 0 1
Own goals 2 0 1 3
Total 84 4 47 135
  1. ^ a b Players who left Liverpool, either on loan or permanently, during the season

Clean sheets

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Includes all competitive matches.

Correct as of matches played on 13 May 2018
No. Player Premier League FA Cup Champions League Total
1   Loris Karius 11 0 6 17
22   Simon Mignolet 7 0 0 7

Disciplinary record

edit
As of matches played 13 May 2018
No. Pos. Name Premier League FA Cup EFL Cup UCL Total
                   
1 GK Loris Karius 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
2 DF Nathaniel Clyne 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
4 DF Virgil van Dijk 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0
5 MF Georginio Wijnaldum 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
6 DF Dejan Lovren 4 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 6 0
7 MF James Milner 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
9 FW Roberto Firmino 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0
11 FW Mohamed Salah 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
12 DF Joe Gomez 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 5 1
14 MF Jordan Henderson 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 6 0
16 MF Marko Grujić 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0
17 DF Ragnar Klavan 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0
18 DF Alberto Moreno 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0
19 FW Sadio Mané 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 1
20 MF Adam Lallana 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
21 MF Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
22 GK Simon Mignolet 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
23 MF Emre Can 8 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 13 0
26 DF Andrew Robertson 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0
29 FW Dominic Solanke 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0
32 DF Joël Matip 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
66 DF Trent Alexander-Arnold 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 6 0
Total 44 1 1 0 2 0 24 1 71 2

Club awards

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End-of-season awards

edit

The 2018 Liverpool F.C. Players’ Awards event was held at Anfield on 10 May 2018.[126]

Liverpool Standard Chartered Player of the Month award

edit

Awarded monthly to the player that was chosen by fans voting on liverpoolfc.com

Month Player Votes
August   Mohamed Salah 52%[127]
September   Mohamed Salah 41%[128]
October   Dejan Lovren[a] 33%[130]
November   Mohamed Salah [131]
December   Mohamed Salah [132]
January   Roberto Firmino [133]
February   Mohamed Salah [134]
March   Mohamed Salah [135]
April   Mohamed Salah [136]
  1. ^ Lovren won the award following an online campaign by supporters, as he had received threats to his family because of his poor performance against Tottenham.[129]

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