Profit Players: Sheffield Wednesday signed Michail Antonio at exactly the right time

This article forms part of our Profit Players feature series, which is where Football Transfer Tavern takes a look at how well a player has fared since being signed or sold, using statistical figures and statements from pundits to prove how good of a deal the club managed to achieve.

In the middle of February 2012, Sheffield Wednesday acquired the services of wide man Michail Antonio on loan from Reading until the end of the season. At the time, the London-born ace had yet to really make his breakthrough in the game. It was well before he became the Premier League regular he is today and this was one of a number of loan spells he was sent on by the Royals.

It was a deal that immediately paid off from an Owls point of view, as in just 14 appearances for the club he scored five goals and provided two assists, helping them earn promotion from League One to the Championship.

His contribution was enough to convince Wednesday and their manager Dave Jones to bring him in on a permanent basis ahead of the 2012/13 campaign, with the club forking out £810,000 to get him. The ex-Wolves boss was delighted with the purchase, claiming that whilst Antonio was “nowhere near the finished article” he did have “a lot of talent,” (BBC Sport).

It is fair to say that he picked up where he had left off upon his return to Hillsborough and in his first full term with the club he managed to score seven times whilst also racking up 11 assists in 37 Championship appearances (Transfermarkt).

His form continued into the 13/14 season too, where he added a further four goals and six assists to his tally in 27 more league outings.

Unfortunately for the Owls, Antonio then became a little fed up at Hillsborough. Indeed, he claimed that he had become ” a bit too comfortable” in South Yorkshire and needed a new challenge.

As a result, he was sold to fellow second tier outfit Nottingham Forest, who paid £1.71 million to take him to the City Ground. That meant that Sheffield Wednesday made a profit of £900,000.

Looking back, it is fair to say that SWFC signed Antonio at exactly the right time. It was at Hillsborough where he really kick started his career and he helped the club win promotion back to the Championship and consolidate their position in the second tier.

Overall he played 84 games in the blue and white stripes, netting 17 goals and providing 19 assists, so he was certainly a success on the pitch which in turn meant that he was a success off it too, bringing in a healthy profit upon his departure.

Since leaving he has gone from strength to strength and he is now a regular in the top flight for West Ham United, where he recently made history by become the first Hammers player to score four goals in a Premier League away match.

Owls fans, how did you rate Antonio’s spell at Hillsborough? Let us know in the comments below…

Newcastle United: Allan Saint-Maximin loses out on player of the year to Martin Dubravka

Newcastle United ace Allan Saint-Maximin has lost out to Martin Dubravka as the Tyneside club’s player of the year for the 2019/20 season.

As per the official website of the Magpies, the 31-year old takes over from last campaign’s winner Salomon Rondon and becomes the sixth different keeper to win the award.

Indeed, having played in every minute of this Premier League term, keeping a relatively impressive 11 clean sheets in the process, perhaps the choice of Dubravka is justified.

However, one player who may count themselves unlucky to have missed out on the accolade is Saint-Maximin.

Indeed, the 23-year old has arguably been a revelation in his debut season at St. James’ Park, bein ever so influential especially in the top flight.

Saint-Maximin scored three goals and made a further four assists in England’s highest division in this campaign, while also creating eight big chances and averaging 4.7 successful dribbles and 1.3 key passes per game, according to Sofascore.

In addition to these stats, the choice of Dubravka could also be put into question based off of the fact that he made the most errors leading to goals out of any other player in the league (via premierleague.com).

Nevertheless, the Slovakian international has won the award ahead of Saint-Maximin and will surely be hoping to win it for the next term if possible.

Whether he keeps his place in the team though is another matter, especially with the summer transfer window opening and a proposed takeover looming large over the North East.

Geordies, does Dubravka deserve to be named player of the year? Comment below!

Glasgow Rangers: Porto’s signing of Mehdi Taremi could hurt Morelos deal

Following links to Glasgow Rangers’ Alfredo Morelos, FC Porto have signed Iranian striker Mehdi Taremi from fellow Portuguese club Rio Ave.

The Dragoes, who will compete in the Champions League this season, have reportedly splashed out €4.5m (£4m) on the 28-year-old, who scored 21 goals in all competitions last term for his previous club. Having also scored 15 goals in 38 matches for his country, Porto appear to have got themselves a bargain considering Taremi is currently valued at £9m by Transfermarkt.

This deal, though, could have a negative effect on any deal for Morelos. Porto are currently loaded in attack – in terms of pure strikers, they have Vincent Aboubakar, Fabio Silva, Ze Luis, Tiquinho Soares and Moussa Marega along with Taremi. Whilst Marega has been linked with a move away from the Portuguese side, that would still leave Porto with five other forwards – surely there is no need for Morelos.

Not only that, the transfer fee could be an issue. The Colombia international may be valued at £13.5m by Transfermarkt, but the Gers are reportedly looking for £20m for his services – that would be the highest fee Porto have ever paid for a player.

As such, it looks as though the Ibrox outfit will need to find another buyer for Morelos, and it is a situation Steven Gerrard needs resolving as soon as possible. The last thing he wants is the 24-year-old to become a full-blown distraction at the club.

Let us know what you think below!

Henry Winter hails Jose Mourinho and Spurs after derby win

They may not have kept a clean sheet, but Tottenham’s north London derby victory over Arsenal had all the hallmarks of a Jose Mourinho masterclass.After falling behind to an Alexandre Lacazette thunderbolt, Spurs quickly found themselves back in the game thanks to a clinical piece of finishing from Heung-min Son.

Is it Mido or Pedro Mendes? This Spurs quiz will separate the loyal from the fake…

World Class score: 95% | Expert score: 80% | Veteran score: 65% | Intermediate score: 45% | Amateur score: 30% | Try Again: 5%

And then, when it looked like the game was drifting towards a draw, Toby Alderweireld rose highest to plant his header past Emiliano Martinez and hand Spurs all three points.

Following the end of the game, The Times journalist Henry Winter took to Twitter to share his thoughts on the match, and he reserved special praise for Mourinho in particular, insisting that it’s “always dangerous to write him off”.

Having now gone above their fierce rivals in the Premier League table, Spurs have the perfect opportunity to now launch a late Europa League push.

And with all the momentum that comes with a derby day victory, you wouldn’t put it past them from overhauling some of the sides above them.

West Ham to reject Lucas Perez loan bid

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West Ham will reject a loan bid from FC Schalke for striker Lucas Perez before the transfer deadline, Football FanCast can confirm.

The Irons have thus far adopted a stance that they will not loan out any first-team players in this transfer window.

A BBC report claimed on Wednesday that the German club had lodged a loan offer for Perez, who has struggled for minutes thus far this season in east London.

However, the Irons would prefer to receive a transfer fee for Perez and value him at around £4million.

Perez has played 10 times in the Premier League, per Transfermarkt, but has yet to complete 90 minutes under Manuel Pellegrini in the top flight.

Former Wigan & Fulham man, Jimmy Bullard recently showed that he’s still got it! Check out the video below…

Nevertheless, Football FanCast understands the club intends to retain Perez as cover for Marko Arnautovic, who recently signed a new contract at the London Stadium, and Javier Hernandez.

Andy Carroll is injury-prone and as we exclusively revealed earlier this month, would likely be allowed to leave if a deadline day bid is tabled. However that appears unlikely, given his patchy fitness record and poor form when he has played.

Football FanCast also understand that Reece Oxford has been told that he can leave on loan, having failed to play a single minute for the first-team thus far this season.

It remains to be seen if an offer will be forthcoming that suits his needs, however.

‘Left foot, right foot, it doesn’t matter’ – Why prolific Wrexham striker Paul Mullin is ‘second to none’ in the eyes of team-mate Steven Fletcher

Paul Mullin is “second to none” when it comes to goalscoring, with Wrexham team-mate Steven Fletcher claiming the prolific striker has no weaknesses.

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Forward helped to secure promotion last seasonUp and running in the current campaignOne of the best finishers in the businessWHAT HAPPENED?

The Dragons frontman has become a talismanic presence at StoK Racecourse – with club co-owner Ryan Reynolds among his biggest fans – and has now found the target on 81 occasions through 101 appearances for the Welsh outfit.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Mullin fired Wrexham to promotion back into the Football League last season and is up and running in 2023-24 after recovering from a punctured lung. Summer signing Fletcher is among those to have been left mightily impressed by the 28-year-old’s skill set, with the veteran Scotland international telling of his fellow forward: "I have played with a lot of good strikers and Paul's finishing is second to none. Left foot, right foot, it doesn't matter where it lands for him, he will hit the target and I am delighted for him to get off the mark this season."

WHAT THEY SAID

Fletcher has also been among the goals for Wrexham since joining them as a free agent, with his account opened when netting a dramatic stoppage-time equaliser in a 3-3 draw with Crewe. The 36-year-old said of his experiences with the Dragons: "What a feeling. Brilliant. You want to get off the mark as a striker and score as many goals as you can. To get one in the 95th minute was great. I got eye contact with Jacob [Mendy] straight away, he knew I would make that run and it was a great, pinpoint cross. I didn't have to do much."

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Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Wrexham are still looking for consistency this season, with Phil Parkinson yet to settle on a winning formula that works every week, and they will be back in action on Tuesday when taking in a trip to fellow promotion hopefuls Mansfield.

The next Lionel Messi? Argentine wonderkid Claudio Echeverri explains why he is ‘nowhere near’ Inter Miami superstar & picks out more suitable comparison

Argentine wonderkid Claudio Echeverri continues to make quite the name for himself, but he claims to be “nowhere near” the level of Lionel Messi.

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South America always produces top talentExciting forward has emerged at River PlateReluctant to be compared with all-time great

WHAT HAPPENED?

For a long time, football in Argentina found itself forever searching for the ‘next Diego Maradona’. Eight-time Ballon d’Or winner Messi, who savoured World Cup glory with his country in 2022, has now picked up that baton and every emerging superstar in South America is likened to the current Inter Miami talisman.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT THEY SAID

Echeverri falls into that category at just 17 years of age, but the hottest of prospects – who has made his senior debut for River Plate in 2023 – is wary of being compared to an all-time great. He has told when asked which Argentinian player he is most similar to: “I always said that my idol was Messi, but I’m nowhere near Messi! I also really liked Pablo Aimar, who’s part of the national-team staff, and he’s spoken to me many times. He’s a great person, and he gives me useful pointers about what I need to correct in my game. I’d probably say ‘Pablito’, then – he was a talented player and loved to take on defenders like me.”

DID YOU KNOW?

Echeverri is already attracting admiring glances from afar, as European heavyweights begin to notice his obvious potential, and he has all of the qualities that a South American forward would be expected to boast. The talented teenager added on his biggest strengths: “I’m not really sure what my biggest strength is. I think it could be my speed, because I'm very fast; I try to get on the ball quickly and I immediately get forward.”

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

While eager to avoid picking up the ‘next Messi’ tag, Echeverri is hoping to follow in the footsteps of his iconic fellow countryman. He said of his ambition for the immediate and long-term future: “I always said that my dream was to make my debut for River’s first team, and I’ve done that now. Now, it’s probably playing for the senior national team. That’s my dream.”

Exclusive: USWNT's Sofia Huerta on World Cup dream, quietening the doubts & finding something to be best at

GOAL sat down with the American fullback to discuss how she redefined her goals to make her World Cup dream a reality

Let Sofia Huerta hype herself up for just one moment – she deserves to, after all. By any measure, Huerta shouldn't be here; she shouldn't be with this team for this tournament for this moment; it feels unfathomable.

A woman who initially opted to play for Mexico couldn't have imagined herself playing for the U.S. women's national team. And a player that once had so many reasons to doubt herself could never have predicted that she'd have so many reasons to believe.

That's what got Huerta to this moment: belief. It's what got her from the wilderness to the World Cup. Seven years ago, she found herself playing for Adelaide United with no real idea of what would come next. On Friday night, she could very well start for the USWNT in Auckland in the first game of their 2023 World Cup.

The path to this point has been anything but a straight line. Huerta isn't like many of her team-mates, many of whom were tipped for success at an early age. For so long she was an outsider. Yet, here she is among the stars with a chance to represent her country at a World Cup.

"I've been in the league [NWSL] for 10 years," she says. "That is an accomplishment, for sure. I just signed a deal with Lotto. That's a big deal! I'm the first player from Idaho to become a female professional soccer player, the first to play for and against Mexico and the U.S. There are so many things! I know I just sounded a little cocky there, but I just think, in general, the mentality is now to focus on what you do have instead of what you don't.

"I think, right now, there are just so many things to be thankful for."

Ahead of the World Cup, the USWNT fullback sat down with GOAL to talk about the things she's thankful for, her winding path to a World Cup and how her one world-class skill got her to where she always dreamt of being.

GettyA long journey and nothing to lose

To understand Huerta, you have to understand her journey.

"Everyone's journey is very different and unique and amazing in its own way," she says. "My journey, specifically, has not been a straight line."

A Mexican-American born and raised in Idaho, Huerta's path to USWNT stardom has been anything but normal. In fact, her path to the USWNT ran straight through one of the team's big rivals, Mexico.

Having represented the U.S. and Mexico as a youth international, Huerta opted to join the latter back in 2012. She played five matches for them at international level, scoring twice, before deciding that her heart really was with the USWNT.

The problem was that, for a while, the USWNT didn't necessarily love Huerta back. Having earned seven caps with the U.S. after her initial switch, she tumbled down the pecking order after she failed to impress. It was at that time that her mental health began to deteriorate as she developed anxiety that made her lose belief in herself as a player and person.

That is what Huerta has battled back from. For three years, she found herself out of the USWNT picture and, for three years, she wondered: what's the point? In those moments, she wasn't just battling defenders, but herself.

"I'm a great teammate, a great friend, like there are so many things, and just because I'm not on the national team doesn't mean I'm not successful," she said while reflecting on those darker times. "Changing that narrative a few years back has definitely served me in the best way possible because it has made this time period before the World Cup easier. I've heard players say that if they don't make the roster, will they feel fulfilled in their career? I understand that, but, no matter what, I'm still gonna feel good about my career."

Huerta, admittedly, is still fighting back against that anxiety with the help of a mental health coach. But it's hard to say she isn't giving it hell, having built herself into one of the 23 best players in the USWNT player pool.

"It's never been guaranteed for me, and even right now, going into the World Cup, it's not guaranteed. My journey, specifically, definitely has allowed me to appreciate the position I'm in. I'm very thankful that I'm in the conversation, that I've been getting to camps the last couple years and I'm in a position where I can go to work. [Going to] a World Cup, I'll be one of the few who have gone to that first World Cup in their 30s. That kind of describes my journey a little bit.

"I was playing for the Mexican national team and I was with the U.S. and then I didn't do what I needed to do and then there was a few years in between and then I finally got called in again in a different position. I'm playing a completely different position than I have over the majority of my professional career.

"It's never been like linear for me. It's always been really winding and with a lot of uncertainty and I think really, just going into this summer, I had just more peace than I think anyone would expect considering my journey. But I think at this point, I have nothing to lose."

AdvertisementGetty ImagesDealing with doubts

During those darker moments, Huerta had to ask herself some tough questions.

"I think it's human nature," she says. "I definitely always felt like I was enough and had the quality to be on the national team, but that wasn't really aligning with what the reality was. I wasn't getting called in. I wasn't really in the conversation. So then it was like, 'Okay, well, is my perception of myself different than what everyone else's perception of me is?' Of course, doubt creeps in and I think, 'Hey, did I miss out on that opportunity, or we're not gonna get this opportunity again?' That would have come in every once in a while.

"I think just with all the mental work I've done, that doesn't really serve me. In fact, it just like causes me to have more anxiety and really, ultimately, if I can't really perform at my highest level anyway, I'm never going to get called back."

For years, the national team was that definition. It is the pinnacle of the game, after all – the highest level a player can play at. Every player dreams of those moments of hearing the national anthem play. It was hearing that anthem, while on the Mexican side of it all, that convinced Huerta to switch over and follow her heart with the USWNT.

The USWNT always was the goal, but Huerta realized she couldn't make it her everything. Instead, she had to fall in love with the process again and rediscover why she got into this line of work in the first place.

"When you start getting in your head, you're not having fun anymore," she says. "Really, what are you doing? We all play! Yeah, the money has gotten better, of course, but we all started playing when there was absolutely no money! We played it because we loved it and it was fun and we enjoyed it. It was about getting back to that. So I just thought about how I want to be the best player I can be. I know that when I'm my best, I can be on the national team, so it was just getting back to that.

"I finally got back to that and, of course, I was noticed by Vlatko and got called up again."

GettyFaking it, Making it

Despite all she's done over the last few years, Huerta very much found herself right in that bubble heading toward the World Cup.

She felt good about what she'd done, and she had every reason to. Since returning to the USWNT in 2021, she's amassed 22 caps with 16 of them coming in 2022. Featuring that heavily in the year before a World Cup is, generally, a good sign, but World Cup rosters are always nervy, aren't they?

"Obviously, it's all about your perception," she says. "I think the initial few days when I left camp [in April], we had basically like two-and-a-half months until [Vlatko Andonovski] made the roster. There was a lot of anxiety. It was kind of like 'Okay, did I do everything that I need to do to solidify my spot?' It's almost like these questions that no-one knows the answer to and it was kind of pain-seeking a little bit. As I worked through that, I was like, 'Well, that's not really serving me'. I know what I've done the last couple of years with the national team, and in fact, what I've done in the NWSL.

"Of course, doubt can creep in and anxiety can creep in but at the end of the day, as we've heard many times, 'just fake it 'til you make it', and so I kind of took that mentality."

In the end, she was one of five fullbacks named to the U.S. squad and one of 14 first-timers heading to the World Cup. She's one of only five players in the squad that hasn't even played at a youth World Cup. She's the first player from Idaho to ever make the team and only the second, after Sydney Leroux, to make a USWNT squad after switching their international allegiance.

"I know I'm a good player, but, ultimately, the decision is kind of based on one person or a few coaches' decisions," she says. "If there was another coach, maybe I wouldn't be a guarantee. You never know! All I can do is what I can do, what's in my control, control the controllable. Vlatko is the one that has the hard job here, in my opinion!"

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LottoA supreme crosser of the ball

The big reason Huerta is back with the USWNT? A positional switch that has allowed her to flex her world-class attribute week in, week out.

For the earlier parts of her career, Huerta was a winger but, in recent years, she's shifted back to right-back. And since that switch, she's become a crossing machine. Huerta is regarded as one of the world's best crossers of the ball. She's a player that can create a goal out of nothing with one swing of her foot.

"When I was in college, my coach Jerry Smith told me that one of the keys to being on the national team is being the best at something," she says. "That gets you in and keeps you in the national team: being the best at something. You kind of look at everyone and say, 'Oh, this person does that'. I've always had a pretty good cross. It's obviously going better because I've worked on that craft, but I remember him telling me that I have a world-class cross, keep working on it, and that will be my ticket. And it's pretty funny now because I think he's right!

"I believe I'm a quality player for sure, but I think one of the main reasons I'm on this team is because I have such a good cross."

Huerta is right: that's why she's here. And it's what makes her such an interesting option for the USWNT.

So often, teams sit in deep against the U.S. and, over the last few years, the team has struggled a bit to break teams down. That's where Huerta could come in. There's no real defense for a perfectly-hit cross, after all.

"That's my favorite part about playing since the position change," she says. "Previously being an attacking player, obviously I have a very attacking mindset. I play defense and that's the priority, of course, but I'm on the national team because I'm an attacking outside back. I'm not necessarily this phenomenal one-on-one defender. I can get forward and I get crosses in the box for my team-mates to score.

"I really try to focus on what I'm really, really good at. That's always the main key of mine in the game: let me have at least two to four key passes that can create big chances. It's also about getting better at what I get better at, and I'm a defender now so I need to get better in certain areas and I focus on that on the daily as well. It is a balance, but I definitely try to focus on, and what I find important, is just being good at what I'm really good at."

It remains to be seen how much Huerta will play this summer. She'll be battling star fullback Emily Fox and veteran Kelley O'Hara for a spot on that right-hand side. But, if there comes a time where the U.S. needs someone to create some danger, Andonovski will know where to look.

Man Utd player ratings vs Wolves: Raphael Varane and Andre Onana get rusty Red Devils out of jail

The French defender headed in the only goal of the game while the debutant goalkeeper made a series of saves to shut out an impressive Wolves side

This was far from the performance Manchester United would have expected after a summer of lavish spending but they somehow got away with it and beat an excellent Wolves side 1-0 to start the season with three points.

Mason Mount had a really disappointing competitive debut but his fellow new arrival Andre Onana made four big saves to keep out Gary O'Neil's rampant visitors, who also hit the woodwork and defied expectations just a week after parting ways with coach Julen Lopetegui.

United went ahead against the run of play when Raphael Varane headed home Aaron Wan-Bissaka's cross in the 76th minute. Wolves will be wondering how they did not take more from the game, especially after having a strong penalty shout in added time when Onana collided with two players. GOAL rates Manchester United's players from Old Trafford…

Getty ImagesGoalkeeper & Defence

Andre Onana (7/10):

The Cameroonian played with courage on his competitive debut and, unlike in the friendly against Lens, his tendency to roam did not get him into trouble. Made smart saves from Matheus Cunha, Pedro Neto and Fabio Silva (twice) although was fortunate to not be penalised for clashing with two Wolves players in added time.

Aaron Wan-Bissaka (8/10):

Attentive to the danger down his side and set up the only goal with a smart cross to Varane. Stayed focused until the end.

Raphael Varane (8/10):

Gave United leadership when they were struggling to hold Wolves off and, most crucially, found the breakthrough goal.

Lisandro Martinez (5/10):

Looked rusty on what was his first competitive game in more than four months. Got an early booking for a sliding tackle on Neto and that conditioned his performance until half-time, when Ten Hag took him off for Victor Lindelof.

Luke Shaw (6/10):

Some of Wolves best chances came down his left side and he was not very effective going forward. Made an excellent block late in the game.

AdvertisementGettyMidfield

Bruno Fernandes (6/10):

Was far from his dominant self but helped United find the breakthrough with a lovely through ball to Wan-Bissaka.

Casemiro (6/10):

Not as solid as usual defensively but was lively in attack.

Mason Mount (5/10):

An uninspiring full debut. Struggled to create much and his passing was imprecise.

GettyAttack

Antony (7/10):

United's liveliest attacker and a big improvement on many matches from last season.

Marcus Rashford (6/10):

Struggled to get much space as a centre-forward and had more joy when he returned to his favorite position on the left of the attack in the second half. Still created little to shout about.

Alejandro Garnacho (6/10):

Lively but frustrating. Got forward a lot but routinely made the wrong decision. Removed in the 68th minute.

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GettySubs & Manager

Victor Lindelof (6/10):

Played the entire second half and could do little to prevent Wolves' dominance.

Jadon Sancho (6/10):

Gave United a bit more fluidity when he came on.

Christian Eriksen (6/10):

His experience helped United get a win they did not deserve.

Scott McTominay (N/A):

Only introduced for the last 13 minutes.

Facundo Pellistri (N/A):

Only introduced for the final two minutes.

Erik ten Hag (6/10):

No complaints with his team selection and his substitutes helped improve the team and ultimately get the result.

Salah's hot but broken Liverpool still ice-cold: Winners, losers and ratings as Alisson blunders in FA Cup draw against Wolves

The Reds were unable to ease their recent woes as they were held to a 2-2 draw at Anfield in the FA Cup third round

Another record for Mohamed Salah, but another performance to set alarm bells ringing among Liverpool supporters as Cody Gakpo's debut did not spark an immediate revival.

The Reds' Egyptian King was on target at Anfield on Saturday night, his goal taking him above Sir Kenny Dalglish in the club's all-time list, but for Jurgen Klopp there was little else to smile about. His side were miles below par yet again as Wolves, threatened by relegation in the Premier League, left Merseyside with 2-2 draw – and now a replay – in the FA Cup third round.

Julen Lopetegui's side had, as so many teams seem to do against Liverpool these days, taken a first-half lead, with Goncalo Guedes capitalising on an awful error from Reds goalkeeper Alisson Becker.

But Darwin Nunez's expertly-controlled volley on the stroke of half-time levelled matters, and when Salah put the home side ahead shortly after the break, Klopp's side looked set to put the misery of Monday's defeat at Brentford behind them with a win.

They couldn't hold on, though. Wolves substitute Hwang Hee-chan smuggled in an equaliser midway through the second half, and the visitors thought they'd snatched a win when Toti Gomes bundled home late on, only for an offside flag against Matheus Nunes to save Liverpool's bacon.

Klopp and his team now face an unwanted replay at Molineux later in the month, while questions over their form, in particular a lack of energy and legs in midfield, will only grow after yet another underwhelming showing.

Here, GOAL runs through the winners and losers from Anfield…

Getty ImagesThe Winners

Mohamed Salah:

From one King to another. Salah has laid waste to record after record since his arrival on Merseyside in 2017, but here he nudged his way past a true Anfield legend. His goal, taken with supreme composure in front of the Kop, takes him to 173 in a Liverpool shirt, one more than Sir Kenny Dalglish, the man widely considered to be the Reds' greatest ever player. Salah sits seventh on the all-time scoring list now, 10 behind Robbie Fowler and 13 behind Steven Gerrard. He should catch both by the end of the season, even considering his team's struggles.

Julen Lopetegui:

If the Premier League table makes for grim reading for Wolves fans, their side's performance here should allay some fears. This is not a team that should be battling relegation. The Midlanders have appointed themselves a mighty fine manager in Lopetegui, who should have plenty of fun getting a tune out of a gifted group of footballers at Molineux. All the best performers wore old gold here. Ruben Neves was imperious in midfield, Rayan Ait-Nouri was a constant menace down the left, while Guedes, Adama Traore and Raul Jimenez kept Liverpool's backline honest throughout. And when Lopetegui turned to his bench, he found game-changers. Hwang had only been on the field three minutes when he combined with another sub, Matheus Cunha, to force the equaliser at 2-2, while a third replacement, Matheus Nunes, showed why Liverpool are so keen to add him to their ranks next season. Wolves didn't get the win they probably feel they merited, but they should improve fast under Lopetegui. If they don't, they'll have let themselves down.

Ben Doak:

Five minutes plus stoppage time. That was all it took for Liverpool's 17-year-old Scot to do what so many of his vaunted team-mates couldn't, and show a little bit of purpose and bravery. Doak is a real talent, good enough to play first-team football at Celtic last season, and on this evidence he's worth a place in Klopp's squad. The manner in which he ran at players, and how he put himself about more importantly, did not go unnoticed among the home fans. While so many in red look crippled by fear, the teenager brought a freshness and an energy that was most welcome. Even if he can only do a short burst off the bench at this stage, he could come in very handy in the coming weeks.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesThe Losers

Alisson Becker:

If ever you wanted a pair of goals to sum up Liverpool's season, here they were. The first was a comedy of errors, Thiago Alcantara too casual in the middle of the field, but able to just about salvage the situation with a slide tackle. The ball ended up with Alisson, who tried to spray it to the right flank but instead passed it straight to Guedes, who accepted the gift. The second wasn't much better, an Ibrahima Konate clearance sent back by Nathan Collins for Hwang, who had the freedom of Anfield as he waltzed into the box, fed Cunha and then, somehow, forced the return pass beneath Alisson's dive, via a deflection off Konate. Alisson, who has been one of the Reds' few consistent performers this season, beat the turf in frustration, but his face told the true story. 'What the hell is happening?' it said. Good question.

Liverpool's press:

Another week, another midfield nightmare for Liverpool. Having taken flak for his selection at Brentford, Klopp went with his 'best' three for this game, with captain Jordan Henderson back after concussion, alongside Fabinho and Thiago. None of them played well, all of them looking lethargic and a step or two off the pace. Liverpool's second-ball game was dreadful, with Wolves constantly able to get their heads up and play through the Reds' shape. Cody Gakpo, making his debut on the left of the Reds' attack, was unable to bring about a return to the counter-pressing style which has won so many admirers – and trophies – down the years, with the team looking disjointed and dishevelled. Only when Naby Keita came on did the Reds even threaten to win the ball back high up the field, and even the Guinea international made too many mistakes in possession. Whatever Klopp and his staff are working on at Kirkby, simply isn't working. This is a broken team at the moment, one that any opponent would fancy its chances against.

Jordan Henderson:

We know Liverpool's captain too well by now to write him off, but Henderson knows he and his teammates have to improve quickly or their season will be in the dust. 'We win cups' read the banner on the Kop prior to kick-off, but the Reds are only in this one still because of a marginal offside call, and they could have had few complaints had Wolves snatched the win. Henderson was one of four changes from the side which started, and struggled so badly, at Brentford, but when the fourth official's board went up midway through the second half, it was no surprise to see the No.14 on it. The skipper was poor, unable to get close enough to Neves and Co. in midfield, and lacking any real quality with his delivery and passing. One skied cross in the first half summed up his, and Liverpool's, evening. Dismal.

Getty ImagesLiverpool Ratings: Defence

Alisson Becker (4/10):

Nightmare for Wolves' opener and saw the ball squirm under his body for the equaliser. Off his line quickly to snuff out Traore and saved well from Ait-Nouri.

Trent Alexander-Arnold (7/10):

Produced a pass of supreme quality for the equaliser and played with heart.

Joel Matip (6/10):

Lucky to get away with dallying in his own box early on. Defended OK generally.

Ibrahima Konate (6/10):

Unfortunate with the deflection for the equaliser, but didn't inspire confidence though his pace was more than useful against Traore.

Andy Robertson (6/10):

Struggled against Traore in the first half. Kept plugging away without reward. Wolves were dangerous down his side.

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Getty ImagesMidfield

Fabinho (5/10):

Looked a mile off it in the first half. Improved a bit after the break but is still some way short of what's expected. Looks so heavy legged and static.

Jordan Henderson (5/10):

Outran throughout by Wolves' midfield and, despite a decent 5-10 minute spell at the start of the second half. unable to impact the game on the ball.

Thiago Alcantara (7/10):

Poor first half, taking too many touches and putting his side under pressure.