Liverpool’s FA Cup exit further proof of their slide, Bayern Munich mini-crisis, Real Madrid drop points, more

Liverpool's FA Cup exit further proof of their slide, Bayern Munich mini-crisis, Real Madrid drop points, more

It was an FA Cup weekend in England, league title races heated up around Europe, and we have a ton of talking points to dissect at the end of it all. Liverpool’s slide continued as the defending champions were knocked out by Brighton, while PSG, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich all looked sluggish in league play for different reasons.

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There was drama in Italy as Napoli continued to extend their lead atop Serie A while Milan and Juventus suffered humbling defeats to Sassuolo and Monza respectively. Borussia Dortmund got a morale-boosting victory to stay in the Bundesliga’s top four, Casemiro (of all people) popped up with goals for Man United and Pedri again stepped up for Barcelona.

It’s Monday, and Gab Marcotti reacts to the biggest moments in the world of football.


What a difference a year makes for Liverpool

This time last year, Liverpool were second in the Premier League and had just strengthened the side with the addition of Luis Diaz. They were one-third of the way into a nine-game winning streak — 12 if you count the League Cup final victory on penalties against Chelsea, and 18 if you discount the Champions League defeat against Inter, since they still went through on aggregate. They would win both domestic cups and not lose a match that mattered until the last game of the season, against Real Madrid in the Champions League final.

Twelve months on, they’re out of both domestic cups — on Sunday, they fell 2-1 to Brighton — they’re ninth in the table (and 10 points away from fourth place), they face a tough rematch against Real Madrid in the Champions League round of 16, they lost a posse of the recruitment gurus who masterminded their rise (namely Michael Edwards and Julian Ward), and they’re up for sale.

No wonder Jurgen Klopp looked wearier than usual on Sunday.

Liverpool weren’t terrible against Brighton, and they might even have scored a couple of goals in the first half. But they fell away badly after the break and, perhaps most concerning, appeared to lose discipline: witness the fouls from Fabinho and Andy Robertson that could easily have been red cards. (In fact, the Fabinho one left you wonder what sort of “threshold” exists in the mind of Neil Swarbrick, the VAR who didn’t tell referee David Coote to have another look.) When guys like Fabinho and Robertson — veterans who have been there, done that and bought the commemorative T-shirt — act like that, you know something is seriously wrong.