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'A bigger problem' - Liverpool torn apart by national media after FA Cup embarrassment

James McConnell of Liverpool reacts during the Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Plymouth Argyle and Liverpool at Home Park
-Credit:2025 Liverpool FC


Liverpool suffered a shock FA Cup exit to Championship strugglers Plymouth Argyle on Sunday Ryan Hardie’s penalty was the difference at Home Park. The Reds struggled throughout against a side ranked 43 places below them in the English football ladder.

Arne Slot’s side only had four shots on target and did not start to threaten goalkeeper Conor Hazard until the dying embers. While Slot named a much-changed side, having left a significant number of his senior stars at home, it was no excuse as a below-par Liverpool found themselves victim to a classic FA Cup giant-killing.

With the national media in place at Home Park to witness a big cup upset, here’s what they made of the Reds’ dismal defeat…

READ MORE: 'Every ball long' - Arne Slot makes Man United and Plymouth comparison after Liverpool loss

READ MORE: Federico Chiesa adds to Liverpool worry as brutal change doesn't tell full story

Oliver Holt of the Daily Mail believed Slot made the ‘first mistake’ of his Liverpool reign against Plymouth.

He wrote: “If anyone could have predicted where Liverpool’s pursuit of the Quadruple might end this season, many might have bet on the Bernabeu, the Nou Camp, Munich’s Allianz Arena or perhaps Wembley Stadium. Instead, it ended here, at Home Park, in front of the Green Army.

“It ended against an Argyle side that has only won once in the last three months and sits rock bottom of the Championship. It ended against a team that seemed to lurch from one misfortune to another when Rooney was in charge here.

“Liverpool’s challenge for those four trophies foundered on the rocks that were the heroic Argyle central defenders Maksym Talovierov, from Ukraine, and Nikola Katic, from Bosnia, who were so obdurate and determined they could have repelled that armada all by themselves. They were Plymouth’s men of war.

“Liverpool’s manager Arne Slot has made a flawless start to his time as a manager in English football since he succeeded Jurgen Klopp as Liverpool boss and this was the first time that English football bit him and bit him hard.

“His team selection was his first mistake since he arrived from Holland. It is easy to sympathise with that selection because his side are chasing honours on so many fronts. Something has to give. He has to rest players some time. But the scale of his changes left him and his team badly exposed.

“When the final whistle blew after nine minutes of added time, it signalled the shock of the round and what will almost certainly be the shock of the season. The bottom of the Championship beating the top of the Premier League isn’t supposed to happen in modern football.”

The Guardian’s Jonathan Liew christened the loss ‘one of the greatest shocks in the modern history of the FA Cup’.

He wrote: “And on this whistle, unleash chaos. Nobody really knows how Plymouth Argyle managed to survive those nine minutes of injury time at the end, those interminable minutes when hearts were pounding and nerves were shredding and it felt like not just Conor Hazard’s goal, not just Home Park, but Plymouth itself, was under siege.

“Just as nobody had really seen this coming: the team rooted to the foot of the Championship, hosting perhaps the best team in the world right now, and sending them spectacularly to the canvas. Ryan Hardie’s penalty early in the second half was the difference between the sides, and even then nobody really believed. But as those nine minutes ticked away, one of the greatest shocks in the modern history of the FA Cup felt agonisingly close and agonisingly elusive all at once…

“For Slot and his players there will be pressing questions to answer in the coming days, questions about selection and application, a ­weakened lineup that should still have got the job done. Instead Liverpool played like exactly what they were: a side that had barely played together before. For a team basically built on chemistry, understanding instincts honed and shared, this is a bigger problem than it would be somewhere else.

“Luis Díaz and Diogo Jota struggled for rhythm against a rugged Plymouth back five. Federico Chiesa looked lost on the right wing. An early injury to Joe Gomez was suboptimal. Darwin Núñez offered little off the bench. And with the senior players rested, there was little firepower to add once the first wave had failed so comprehensively.”

Jason Burt of the Daily Telegraph considered it the worst Liverpool had played all season, with any potential Premier League title making the loss all the more sweeter for Plymouth.

He wrote: “Quadruple no more. Not this season. Yes, Arne Slot made 10 changes, retaining only goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher. Yes, he left big guns such as Mohamed Salah, Cody Gakpo and Virgil van Dijk at home. Yes, he lost stand-in captain Joe Gomez early on to yet another injury and, yes, the Liverpool head coach is prioritising other competitions.

“The games are coming thick and fast and intensely. This tie was sandwiched between overturning the Carabao Cup semi-final deficit to Tottenham Hotspur last Thursday and facing Everton away in the last ever Merseyside derby at Goodison Park in the Premier League on Wednesday. Slot will argue something had to give and later revealed that, while Curtis Jones was on the bench, the midfielder had not recovered and could not come on. But try telling that to the Green Army…

“Usually, in such upsets, there are some glaring misses or outstanding saves and huge slices of luck, but while Plymouth defended wonderfully there were none until two outstanding saves by goalkeeper Conor Hazard deep into injury time. Liverpool created little of note until the 89th minute – when James McConnell shot wide from the edge of the penalty area with Hazard stranded…

“This was the worst Liverpool have played in their 30 matches under Slot, who cut an increasingly agitated figure on the touchline; goaded by those Plymouth fans who lapped up his agitation. It was only their fourth defeat of the season in all competitions and, after the Premier League loss at home to Nottingham Forest last September, the only one that mattered.

“They will probably go on to win the league, they are one of the favourites in the Champions League and are in the Carabao Cup final but, for Plymouth, it makes this giant-killing, after the last-round giant-killing of another Premier League club, Brentford away, all the more memorable as they claimed a place in the last 16.

“Liverpool were so poor that it was simply shocking at times, until their desperation kicked in and they went long, with centre-half Jarrel Quansah pushed up as an auxiliary centre-forward even though they already had Núñez, Jota and so on up there.”

The Times’ Hamzah Khalique-Loonat pointed out Liverpool’s ‘form, experience, and eight FA Cup titles counted for nothing’ as Plymouth ‘wrote history’.

He wrote: “The good ship Liverpool has run aground. Arne Slot’s dreadnought was last seen just off the coast of Plymouth, the same spot where HMS Argyle was sighted, sailing off merrily into the fifth round of the FA Cup.

“It has been some time since a giant-killing of this stature, with the Premier League and Champions League leaders being unceremoniously dumped from the Cup, by a team affixed to the bottom of the Championship.

“This was only their third win since November 5 last year. And it was deserved. Plymouth fought and battled hard. They masterfully manoeuvred tricky tactical waters, then battened down the hatches for nine minutes of stoppage time, in which Liverpool whipped up a furious storm but could not breach that watertight defence.

“This was Plymouth’s first win over Liverpool since 1956, but it may just have been the greatest act of resilience in these parts since Francis Drake set sail in 1588. Liverpool’s form, experience, and eight FA Cup titles counted for nothing here. What mattered instead was Plymouth’s doggedness, their resilience, their utter commitment to the task at hand…

“Even with nine added minutes, Liverpool could not find a way through. In the last of those Hazard produced the most stunning save of all: a fingertip touch to deny Núñez from inside the six-yard box. A touch which secured victory and wrote history.”

And finally, the Liverpool ECHO’s very own LFC correspondent, Paul Gorst, believes there was one small mercy for Slot after his side’s FA Cup embarrassment.

He wrote: “If the bad news for Arne Slot is that his team are now out of the FA Cup, the good news is that the Liverpool boss at least had the best part of 300 miles back to Merseyside to get it out of his system.

“For the supporters who had made that same cross-country trek for this fourth-round tie, such an arduous pilgrimage surely only added to the frustration at bowing out to a second-tier team.

“But by the time the club themselves touched down on home soil on Sunday evening, one suspects Slot and his staff will already have turned their attention to Wednesday evening's festivities at Goodison Park. Some defeats simply linger longer than others.

“There will be no FA Cup for Slot to celebrate in his maiden season at Anfield then, and while that fact will be mourned by the Dutchman, it will only be briefly as the focus quickly shifts to the small matter of Everton and the chance to go nine points clear in the Premier League's title race. Do that and this debacle will be a mere footnote; the off-day can become an afterthought…

“The reality is there are bigger fish to fry for Slot and an unwanted exit here is cosmetic damage only to the season's overriding ambitions. One small mercy is that crashing out now ends fanciful notions of an unprecedented quadruple and the external pressure that comes with such unrealistic debates.

“To Everton then, where Liverpool have to now make sure the team selection here and those fleeting moments of embarrassment on the journey home were all for the greater good.”