With the opening goal against Aston Villa, Mohamed Salah set another new club record. The Liverpool striker scored his 15th away destination in a single Premier League campaign and defeated Luis Suare’s 14 in the 2013/14 season.
Salah’s shot was the first in the game and broke the Deadlock shortly before half an hour. When Andres Garcia gave the ball to Diogo Jota, the Portugal striker selflessly sat up that Salah put in an unusual goal.
Before half-time, Youri Tielemans brought the host level and Ollie Watkins then the Midlands team at the front. When Liverpool wins against Aston Villa, it will be moved 10 points before the Gunners this weekend on West Ham United. The Reds then travel to Manchester City on Sunday.
Read more: Arsene Wenger makes Liverpool and Arsenal Title Adjusion – “It’s easy”.
Read more: The Barcelona star Lamine Yamal makes Liverpool approved before the Champions League education
Salah, who ends up for this campaign for the 30-goal brand, is outside the contract at the end of the season when things are. But Arne Slot spoke last month that he wanted to keep him and his hopes that an extension can be sorted out.
“Everyone wants him, including us,” said Slot in January. “We want him to expand of course – that is clear. I am not surprised that Saudi wants him.
“But I would not be surprised if other countries want him. He is old enough and wise enough and did so many clever things in his career that he is the right decision for himself and hopefully for us as.”
At the beginning of the week, Jamie Carragher and Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold had his say in Salah’s future. All three need new offers before the summer or they will leave as free agents.
“I understand what you have done for the club, but at the moment you are still so good that I don’t think you can offer you for a year. It should be two” to you from Sky bet.
“I would be disappointed if Liverpool would not sign her, but I would also look at her as you didn’t sign? The team is made for you, wherever you will go? Give money or give them long contracts in Europe.