Benitez is losing patience

Liverpool 1 Manchester City 0: A grumbling sense of dissatisfaction pursued the locals departing this arena

Liverpool 1 Manchester City 0: A grumbling sense of dissatisfaction pursued the locals departing this arena. Narrow victories such as this do little to appease supporters craving a more emphatic margin of success, with the lingering frustration having now spread to those wincing in the dug-out. "I'm disappointed and not happy with the final score," muttered Rafael Benitez. That is as close as the Spaniard comes to castigating his side.

The manager will have taken some satisfaction in the result. Never before have Liverpool squeezed as many as their current 54 points from the first 27 games of a Premiership season, providing further evidence of continued progress, even if Chelsea remain a blue speck on the horizon.

Yet the Kop is clamouring for a side to be spanked rather than having to endure this nail-biting fare. The European champions have not scored twice here since St Stephens' Day.

There were times yesterday when that inability to prise a second goal threatened to jeopardise Liverpool's pursuit of second place. The principal anxiety had been reserved for the sight of Steven Gerrard hobbling off after Richard Dunne checked his charge on goal late on - "I got a kick on the top of my foot but I should be okay," said the midfielder, much to the relief of watching Sven-Goran Eriksson, with the friendly against Uruguay in mind - though panic gripped the home side rather more just as Manchester City were adapting to life a player short.

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Joey Barton, a Liverpool supporter whose enthusiasm bordered on the reckless, had crunched his studs into Daniel Agger as the half-hour approached to earn a yellow card. But, with no lesson learned, he then buried his boot in Sami Hyypia's right shin seven minutes into the second half. Another flash of yellow prompted red.

The challenges may have been mistimed rather than malicious, but they were still severe; Eriksson could hardly have been impressed. "Joey's got to be a bit cuter and cleverer in the way he tackles," offered Stuart Pearce.

Barton already has nine yellow cards this season and was one away from an automatic suspension - although that tally remains unaffected following this red. Yet his departure appeared to inspire previously becalmed team-mates.

Some 11 times this season Liverpool have found themselves confronted by depleted opponents, though it has proved no guarantee they will prosper. In a four-minute period near the hour-mark, the visitors had their hosts quaking. Bradley Wright-Phillips was thwarted by Jose Reina's save, with the goalkeeper doing wonderfully well then to tip aside Trevor Sinclair's shot from outside the area.

The best opportunity fell to Georgios Samaras seconds later, Kiki Musampa's beautifully weighted pass embarrassing Agger only for the Greek, having wriggled clear of John Arne Riise, to loop his shot wide with Reina exposed. No visiting player has scored at Anfield in 14 matches, though Liverpool's profligacy keeps leaving the Kop on edge.

"There was a nervousness there and we've put ourselves under pressure," said Benitez. "When you are not scoring, you cannot afford to give the opposition one or two chances."

For 40 minutes this spluttering contest had not threatened a goal - and then City imploded. Hyypia's header towards the halfway line was innocuous enough, only for Gerrard to collect, spin and send Harry Kewell skipping free into the opposing half with the visitors caught horribly narrow. Danny Mills' gasping charge to stifle the Australian proved fruitless, with Kewell skimming his low shot across David James and into the corner. "I sensed they were nervous they hadn't made the breakthrough but, when you're chasing the game against Liverpool, you're going to be vulnerable," said Pearce.

Peter Crouch might have plundered a hat-trick. His header from Gerrard's corner in first-half stoppage-time was nodded from the line by Mills, while his flick-on to Kewell's centre dribbled marginally wide.

Unperturbed, Crouch dropped behind Sylvain Distin and squeezed out space from Dunne to turn and volley, only for James to touch on to the bar. His substitution 14 minutes from time was greeted with jeers, the final whistle welcomed with relief.

"Gerrard is not serious," added Benitez, referring to the captain's bruised foot.