Liverpool 1-0 Everton: Diogo Jota’s clever finish sees the Reds go 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League as they win nervously  Merseyside Derby

The good news for Liverpool is that this may be as hard as it gets. The only team wishing to deny them as badly as Everton between now and the end of the season will be Arsenal and by the time they visit Anfield on May 10, this title race may be all but over.

This was difficult for Liverpool. It really was desperately difficult. Emotional, tense and occasionally petty, everything that a derby usually is but at the same time everything a team chasing only its second league title in 35 years doesn’t need a game to be.

Deep into injury time – at around about the time Everton and James Tarkowski got them at Goodison Park in mid-February – the nerves that had threatened to derail Liverpool in the first half were back. They were giving the ball away needlessly and inviting pressure.

At the death Everton won a corner. Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford advanced and Anfield inhaled. It came to nothing and Anfield exhaled. And a minute later it was over. A major obstacle overcome, a big step taken.

So now Arne Slot and his players are a little closer to heaven, a little nearer to their journey’s end. 

The lead over Arsenal is 12 points again and now Liverpool need four wins and not five. On Sunday Liverpool are at Fulham 24 hours after Arsenal play at Everton. This is how it tends to work at this stage of the season. The psychology of it all can feel overwhelming.

Liverpool went 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League after beating Everton 1-0

Diogo Jota's second half strike settled what was a nervy Merseyside derby on Wednesday

Diogo Jota’s second half strike settled what was a nervy Merseyside derby on Wednesday

Jota's smart run and finish inside the area was only his second Premier League goal of 2025

Jota’s smart run and finish inside the area was only his second Premier League goal of 2025

Moyes insists Liverpool winner against Everton was offside

And that is why this win was so important. Had they not won this game, Liverpool’s lead would still have been vast. But the mood would have been different. More noise, more questions, more pressure.

As it is, they will feel they have passed a real test and the truth is that they Liverpool deserved this victory. Everton did their damndest to deny them. 

Tarkowski, their captain, should have been sent off early on but wasn’t and then, with Virgil van Dijk asleep on the half hour, visiting striker Beto struck a post.

The game was anyone’s at that point. It was scrappy and directionless. So at times were Liverpool. But the crucial part is that they settled down. They played their football. They got better. And then they scored a really quite super goal to win the game.

Having been starved of space in the first half, an increase in intensity from Liverpool from that point led to some of the broken play on which they thrive. 

When Diogo Jota picked up the ball 30 yards from goal in the 57th minute, he played it forward to Luis Diaz on the edge of the penalty area. In old money the Colombian was offside but he didn’t attempt to play the ball until Tarkowski had intercepted it. 

Then he was aware enough to step in, back heel it to Jota and watch as his team-mate eased past two defenders – one of them Tarkowski – to pull a low right foot shot past Pickford down the centre of the goal.

Despite his injury issues, Jota remains very important to Liverpool and here he was nerveless. Afterwards Everton manager David Moyes was upset by the offside call – even though it was correct – but strangely less so by the Tarkowski tackle.

A major talking point came in the first half when James Tarkowski somehow avoided a red card

 

A major talking point came in the first half when James Tarkowski somehow avoided a red card

Tarkowski had been booked for his challenge on Alexis Mac Allister and VAR didn't upgrade it

 

Tarkowski had been booked for his challenge on Alexis Mac Allister and VAR didn’t upgrade it

Slot fumes at ‘clear’ red card not given to Everton’s Tarkowski

Beto had caused Liverpool's defence problems and had a first half goal disallowed for offside

 

Beto had caused Liverpool’s defence problems and had a first half goal disallowed for offside

Only a few minutes had passed when the former Burnley defender beat Alexis MacAllister to a loose ball but followed through so recklessly that he took his opponent high and ugly with his studs. 

The referee reached for a yellow card and the VAR officials had a look and cleared it. That felt strange.

For a while Liverpool really struggled. They had looked anxious in the tunnel beforehand and the feeling lingered. 

Mo Salah headed at Pickford while Jarred Branthwaite blocked a Jota shot. That apart, Everton – sitting deep with a line of five in front of a line of four – looked reasonably comfortable.

The visitors carried a first half threat on the counter, too. Van Dijk was, frankly, all over the place whenever Everton tried to hit Beto from deep. 

Once the Portuguese forward embarrassed him to put the ball in the net only to be ruled offside. Then he did it again but struck the post when clean through.

That, after half an hour, was a huge moment. A goal for Everton at that point would have presented Liverpool with an enormous mental challenge. 

As it was, it was pretty much Everton’s final attempt on goal of the whole game.

 

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