Arne Slot may have some answers as well as new questions as a much-changed lineup sent Liverpool through to the fourth round for the fifth consecutive season.
Goals: Jota 25’ 49’, Salah 74’, Gakpo 90, 90+3′; Quansah OG 21′
Slot admitted in one of his recent press conferences that he was not used to the squad rotation required at a club like Liverpool.
At Feyenoord he had been able to stick with the same XI much of the time, but with Premier League, the League Cup, extra Champions League games, and FA Cup yet to come, Slot needed to use 22 or more players, rather than 11.
He rotated heavily against West Ham making nine changes, only Darwin Nunez kept his place outfield, with the Uruguayan preferred over playing Tyler Morton in midfield.
The rotation was a success. Despite the odd scare and some occasional indecision at the back, the team did enough to secure the win with relative ease in the end.
It’s testament to Slot’s system, and an early positive sign that it will stand up even when the personnel are changed.
Mo Salah came on and showed his class. Even just his passing is on the next level to most players, and he showed this in the build-up to his own goal, sliding Conor Bradley in behind the West Ham defence.
Caoimhin Kelleher was assured in goal to the point where you don’t see the difference between him and Alisson.
Meanwhile, Ryan Gravenberch and Ibrahima Konate were afforded the night off completely, with Virgil van Dijk, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Dominik Szoboszlai not required from the bench.
Looking at the starting lineup it was unclear who would act as the third, most advanced midfielder, as Szoboszlai has done in games under Slot so far.
Diogo Jota ended up the player closest to the Szoboszlai role, but drifted around the attacking midfield positions.
Szoboszlai regularly joins the forward line from an attacking midfield position, so having a forward, in Jota, dropping in, rather than a midfielder pushing up, made it feel different. But the positioning was quite similar despite the different perceptions of the two players.
Jota drifted around from a position mostly to the right of Darwin Nunez, but could be found anywhere between the two touchlines in front of Jones and Endo.
Elsewhere it was more of the same, too. Kostas Tsimikas hung back to form a back three during the initial build-up phase, while Curtis Jones and Wataru Endo formed the midfield double-pivot, advancing when the moment called for it.
Different names and a different feel, but ultimately a familiar shape.
As he has so many times in his Liverpool career, Jones showed his versatility, playing two different positions as the game went on and changes were made off the bench.
He started in the deep-lying midfield two alongside Endo, carrying out similar tasks to those normally assigned to Alexis Mac Allister.
Then when Mac Allister entered the fray himself, Jones moved forward into the most advanced midfield role, as previously performed by Jota.
The Scouser played a part in both goals, getting away the quick one-time pass which sent Cody Gakpo free for Jota’s first.
His involvement in the second was more noticeable. It was he who started the attack from deep, evading a West Ham defender before receiving the return ball on the edge of the area and finding the gap to play Jota in.

