Virgil van Dijk has said he was not being arrogant in dismissing Manchester United’s overly defensive display at Anfield in Sunday’s goalless draw.
The Liverpool captain provoked a response from former United midfielder Roy Keane when he said only one team played to win. Keane said the comments were arrogant and disrespectful, adding: “He needs a reminder himself; he’s playing for a club that have won the title once in 30-odd years.”
Van Dijk insisted there was honesty but no arrogance in his words on a frustrating afternoon where Liverpool had 34 shots but failed to score for the first time since April.
“I like Roy Keane, if he said that then it’s fine,” said Van Dijk. “He is Man United throughout and I understand he could react like that but I felt what I said and there is absolutely no arrogance in that. Everyone who watched the game probably felt the same. We move on. We had the opportunity and we couldn’t score and that’s the frustrating part.”
‘We are better with Marcus Rashford’ - Ruben Amorim urges striker to stay at Manchester United
Marcus Rashford ‘ready for new challenge’ as Manchester United exit moves closer
Liverpool’s Arne Slot says Premier League referees are testing his patience
Champions Shelbourne to host Derry City in Premier Division 2025 season opener
Jürgen Klopp’s side ended a club record-equalling run of 34 successive matches in which they scored a goal, and the 34 shots they attempted was their most on record (since 2003-04) without scoring.
Striker Darwin Núñez has not found the net in 10 matches; Mohamed Salah, who scored 10 in 12 league games before November’s international break, has just one in the last five; Luis Díaz has scored once in the league since mid-August while Cody Gakpo’s two league goals were both in September.
Van Dijk admits the players may have been trying just too hard against their arch-rivals who they had beaten 7-0 at Anfield in March.
“Maybe [we were] trying to force it a little bit at times and we could have made a better decision but it was hard to break the low block down,” he added.
“You push, you push, you push and try to do everything in your power but it was one of those days we couldn’t find the right decision to score a goal. At times – I won’t say every time – we forced it too much to find a solution which wasn’t there but that’s football.”
There is no time for Liverpool to dwell on the disappointing result which cost them top spot as West Ham are the midweek visitors for the quarter-finals of the Carabao Cup, a competition Liverpool won in 2022.
“We move on and have to learn from a lot of moments – and we will – and focus on Wednesday,” said Van Dijk. “Let’s go for it. It’s the first trophy that could be in reach and it will be a very tough game as West Ham are also in a good moment with good players.”
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Find The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Our In The News podcast is now published daily – Find the latest episode here