Carroll shows his class as Liverpool coast to win

Liverpool 3 Manchester City 0: ALEX FERGUSON and Manchester United can rarely have found a Liverpool home victory as satisfying…

Liverpool 3 Manchester City 0:ALEX FERGUSON and Manchester United can rarely have found a Liverpool home victory as satisfying as this. Manchester City were taken apart at Anfield, and that does not begin to cover the extent of their problems on a night when their designs on the FA Cup and investment for the Champions League were made to appear decidedly fragile by Kenny Dalglish's team.

Roberto Mancini could not have envisaged a worse warm-up for Saturday’s FA Cup semi-final with their local rivals at Wembley. Carlos Tevez limped off early with a suspected hamstring injury and, as has so often been the case this season, all of City’s inspiration and guile went with him.

They have at least been able to rely on stout defending but even that asset was devastated as Andy Carroll scored the first two goals of his Liverpool career and formed a partnership with Luis Suarez that eclipsed the visitors’ equally expensive attack. Dirk Kuyt got in the act as Liverpool made the contest safe inside 35 minutes.

City have now gone six Premier League away games without a win in 2011 and whether they will venture among the European elite next season is now open to question with Tottenham three points behind with a game in hand.

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The two clubs’ preparations could not have contrasted more greatly, with Liverpool bereft of defenders following defeat at Roy Hodgson’s West Brom and City having rested players for their rout of Sunderland. Yet the difference in their responses was even more profound. Liverpool were outstanding, City woeful.

Whereas the home side compensated for absentees with spirit, ingenuity and individual excellence, the visitors were laboured, lethargic and devoid of imagination. City were anything but a team with designs on the Champions League and FA Cup.

A collective effort earned its standing ovation from the Anfield majority at half-time, in salute of the finest 45-minute display of Dalglish’s second reign, but no one epitomised Liverpool’s superior level of performance and desire better than the debutant John Flanagan. The 18-year-old had not made even a substitute’s appearance before being drafted into a depleted defence at right-back yet he settled superbly. Liverpool’s understandable reticence to give Flanagan the ball proved unnecessarily protective.

A cross-field pass to Fabio Aurelio would have soothed any nerves in the teenager and defensively he was faultless, crunching hard but fair into Gareth Barry and muscling aside Mario Balotelli. Balotelli’s presence on the pitch was indicative of City’s evening. In the 13th minute their captain Tevez was dispossessed by Carroll and appeared to injury a thigh in the process. He was immediately withdrawn but not before his opponent had swept Liverpool into the lead with an unstoppable drive beyond Joe Hart.

Carroll’s tackle on Tevez allowed Raul Meireles to strike from distance, though only into Vincent Kompany. The rebound was returned with interest by the England striker as his low, left-foot drive beat Hart purely for pace and power, not precision, and Anfield erupted to acclaim Carroll’s first goal since his €40 million transfer from Newcastle.

Hart had already tipped a Luis Suarez shot on to the post before Liverpool took the lead with the Uruguayan, displaying a sublime touch and an unerring knack of finding space all over the pitch, sent through by Carroll’s quick thinking. The England goalkeeper was beaten again 11 minutes before the interval when Meireles, Suarez and Aurelio had shots blocked inside the area. The latter’s effort was deflected across the area by Kompany, and Kuyt picked his spot into the far corner.

City were reeling and seconds later Carroll glanced his second past Hart when he towered above Aleksandar Kolarov to meet Meireles’ cross with a glancing header.

In contrast to the pedestrian Edin Dzeko and Balotelli, Carroll and Suarez looked a double-act of rich potential. They embarrassed their City counter-parts in terms of industry and threat.

City’s €28 million Italian substitute suffered the ignominy of being withdrawn with seven minutes remaining.

LIVERPOOL: Reina, Flanagan, Carragher, Skrtel, Aurelio, Kuyt, Lucas, Spearing, Meireles, Suarez, Carroll (Ngog 90). Subs Not Used: Gulacsi, Cole, Maxi, Wilson, Shelvey, Robinson. Booked: Aurelio.

MAN CITY: Hart, Boyata, Kompany, Lescott, Kolarov, Barry, Toure Yaya, Milner (Silva 59), Tevez (Balotelli 16), Adam Johnson, Dzeko, Balotelli (De Jong 83). Subs Not Used: Taylor, Zabaleta, Wright-Phillips, McGivern.

Referee: Mark Halsey (Lancashire).