On paper, a 5–2 win over West Ham United looks emphatic. Ruthless. Convincing.
But anyone who actually watched the game knows it wasn’t quite as dominant as the scoreline suggests.
Yes, Liverpool scored five.
Yes, there were moments of attacking quality.
But control? That’s another conversation entirely.
Three Deflections, Fine Margins
Three of Liverpool’s goals came via significant deflections.
That’s not to say they don’t count — they absolutely do. You create your own luck by shooting and putting defenders under pressure.
But deflected goals mask underlying performance.
If those strikes don’t take a touch?
Are we talking about a controlled dismantling… or a tight, chaotic game?
There’s a difference.
Set Pieces — West Ham Were Poor
Liverpool also capitalised on some incredibly poor defending from set pieces.
West Ham’s organisation was shaky.
Second balls weren’t cleared properly.
Marking looked confused.
Credit to Liverpool for attacking those moments aggressively — but again, that’s exploiting weakness rather than suffocating an opponent.
There’s a difference between dominance and opportunism.
The Real Concern: Midfield Control
The biggest issue wasn’t the defence.
It wasn’t the attack.
It was midfield.
Too often, West Ham played through Liverpool with surprising ease.
Simple vertical passes bypassed the first press.
Midfield runners weren’t tracked consistently.
Transitions felt loose rather than managed.
For a side that wants to compete deep into Europe and domestically, control in midfield is non-negotiable.
At times, it felt like Liverpool were stretched — relying on individual moments rather than structural dominance.
Chaos Instead of Control
There’s nothing wrong with chaos when you’re clinical.
But elite sides control tempo.
They dictate pace.
They suffocate games at 2–0.
They manage space between the lines.
Liverpool didn’t do that consistently.
It felt open.
Too open.
Against stronger opposition, that openness becomes dangerous.
The Positive Perspective
Five goals still matter.
Confidence matters.
Momentum matters.
Home wins matter.
But if you’re looking beyond the headline result and thinking about Champions League ambitions, this performance leaves questions.
It was effective.
It wasn’t controlled.
Final Thought
A 5–2 win will always look impressive in the table.
But if Liverpool want to move from entertaining to dominant, midfield control has to improve — quickly.
Because better teams won’t miss the chances West Ham did.
And they won’t defend set pieces that poorly either.
If you’d like, I can also help you frame this as a slightly more provocative headline to drive debate — something that challenges the narrative while staying balanced.
Jamie (The Kopite View)
