Rafael Benítez says Liverpool back on track after victory over Spurs

• Manager says win important ‘because we had to reduce gap’
• Redknapp rues missing of ‘glorious opportunity’

Rafael Benítez believes Liverpool have shown their rivals for a Champions League place that they will remain in the fight for fourth until the end of the season. Benítez’s side lifted the gloom around Anfield last night with a deserved 2-0 defeat of Tottenham Hotspur.

Liverpool are now a point behind Harry Redknapp’s fourth-placed side after two goals from Dirk Kuyt brought Benítez a precious victory in his attempts to keep his side in the Champions League. The Liverpool manager said the race for the final qualifying berth would include Tottenham, Manchester City and Aston Villa but, after another trying period as manager and despite fielding a team weakened by injury at Anfield, he was adamant his team would continue to challenge and improve as the campaign progresses.

“It was important for everyone here because we had to reduce the gap and stay in the race,” said Benítez. “I think we can improve in the second half of the season. Normally [in] the last five years we do better in the second half of the league. It is a question of having all the players available and, if not, seeing the players work as hard as they did tonight. Everyone knows Liverpool are a good team and it was just a question of time to start winning games and showing our quality. Other teams are also strong but now they know the race will be with four teams.”

The Liverpool manager was full of praise for the work rate and desire shown by his players against Tottenham, and reserved special praise for Kuyt. “Dirk works very hard, he could maybe have scored four goals tonight,” he added. “Always his commitment is 100% so we are really pleased for him too. It was important for us to score early. We were playing well but in the first half we were not in control, although we had the better chances. The second half was more clear. After the first goal they had to go forward and left spaces, which was good for us.”

Redknapp said that his team had missed “a glorious opportunity” to establish a seven-point lead over an injury-plaguedLiverpool, and criticised Howard Webb’s decision to disallow a Jermain Defoe goal at the start of the second half, for offside.

The Tottenham manager said: “I’ll probably sit up at home tonight reading the rule book for a couple of hours and see what the rules actually are. The referee nor the linesman seemed to know – they probably phoned a friend. Is he active, is it second phase; there are so many rules now. We have been on a good run so losing one game doesn’t mean we are out of it, but this was a great opportunity for us here. I’m disappointed.”

LiverpoolRafael BenítezTottenham HotspurHarry RedknappPremier LeagueAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

Premier League: Liverpool 2-0 Tottenham Hotspur

George Gillett may have a strange take on the definition of a blip, his considered analysis of a moribund season for Liverpool, but at least there is some respite for Rafael Benítez. His team could not afford to fail against Tottenham Hotspur if their prospects of a top-four finish were to retain more life than their Champions League, FA Cup and Carling Cup campaigns and a resolute display kept Harry Redknapp’s team in sight in that contest last night.

For all the rancour and recrimination Liverpool are now just a point behind Spurs after Dirk Kuyt’s early goal lifted the tension around Anfield and his late penalty after Sébastien Bassong had brought down David Ngog heralded a determined response from Benitez’s men. It is now Redknapp with cause for alarm in the race for Champions League qualification.

This was never likely to be a Liverpool XI to enrapture with its quality but the spirit shown since that abysmal FA Cup defeat by Reading a week ago suggests the threats to reputations and employment have galvanised Benítez’s team. A siege mentality has grown not only on widespread criticism but the loss to injury of Fernando Torres, Steven Gerrard, Yossi Benayoun, Glen Johnson and Daniel Agger – the combined source of 58% of Liverpool’s goals this season – and a change in tack from Benítez himself.

The Liverpool manager rarely strays into emotive, soundbite territory in press conferences, or at least not on the topic of his team’s prospects, so his admission that Tottenham represented “make or break” for the season demonstrated the seriousness of his side’s plight. A reaction from a demoralised squad was more pressing than the Spaniard’s usual diplomacy, and from every player on display, whether accustomed to the pressure like Jamie Carragher, or desperate to fill the injury void and answer their many detractors, such as Philipp Degen and Sotirios Kyrgiakos, he received one.

Carragher called the Liverpool team into a huddle before kick-off and led by zealous example throughout, manically so at times. Tottenham were made to look subdued by contrast and resembled another of those European scalps stunned by Anfield’s hostility until finally beginning to pass their way dangerously around the Liverpool midfield late in the first half.

Liverpool pressed from the off with Carragher, captain in the absence of Gerrard, flying into both Wilson Palacios and Niko Kranjcar to concede a blatant free-kick that he protested against with a creditable impression of innocence. His next challenge was also illegal, although the visitors could not benefit as it was inflicted on Javier Mascherano, while a rampaging pursuit of a lost cause brought Anfield to its feet at the end of the first period when it resulted in a Liverpool corner. From Albert Riera’s delivery, Kuyt had a goalbound header hacked clear by Gareth Bale and Martin Skrtel sent the subsequent rebound wastefully high over Heurelho Gomes’ crossbar.

A goal at that point would have given Liverpool the rare luxury of a comfortable two-goal lead, after Kuyt had taken only six minutes to atone for the miss that cost his side a precious victory at Stoke City on Saturday. The breakthrough came via route one with a polished touch. José Reina saved a low cross from Bale at the third attempt with Kranjcar closing in and, from his launched clearance, Kuyt chested the ball expertly into the path of Alberto Aquilani, who rolled possession back to the Dutchman. Kuyt seized his rare opportunity to lead the Liverpool line with a measured finish from 18 yards into Gomes’ right-hand corner.

Tottenham took more than 30 minutes to shake off their lethargy and match Liverpool’s endeavour, although their approach was unlikely to brook many complaints from the home side. A central defence of Kyrgiakos and Martin Skrtel offered an open invitation to the pace and movement of a Jermain Defoe or Luka Modric but, as they showed at the Britannia Stadium, that pairing was more than comfortable with an aerial assault. For the majority of the first half Redknapp’s team barely troubled the Liverpool defence, with too many hopeful long punts presenting Peter Crouch with a forlorn task against his former club.

It was the 45th minute before Spurs displayed the invention required to unsettle Liverpool, Jermaine Jenas and Wilson Palacios combining to release Modric who was unable to beat Reina with a low shot to the goalkeeper’s left. That opening shaped the visitors’ tactics after the interval and the improvement was marked, with Jenas testing Reina from 20 yards, although Liverpool engineered the better chances.

Riera, making his first start since the goal-less draw at Blackburn on 5 December, headed against Gomes’ bar from a Carragher cross and Degen should have doubled the advantage only to lose his nerve completely with just the Brazilian to beat. Kuyt was again at the heart of the Liverpool threat, seizing on a defensive error to burst clear and release Degen into acres of space on the right. As soon as Anfield realised it was the Swiss full-back with the game at his mercy the noise dropped. They clearly knew what was to come, as Degen declined to shoot and sought out a return to Kuyt instead, only to play the ball behind his aghast team-mate.

Premier LeagueLiverpoolTottenham HotspurAndy Hunterguardian.co.uk

Asmir Begovic urges Portsmouth not to feel sorry for themselves

• Stand-in keeper tells team-mates to seize their destiny
• Bosnian may be a transfer target for Tottenham

Despite propping up the Premier League table going into tonight’s visit of Arsenal, Asmir Begovic has urged his Portsmouth team-mates not to feel sorry for themselves. David James’s understudy is convinced Avram Grant’s side are better than their league position suggests and believes they are capable of beating anybody at Fratton Park.

“We know we are a decent side and shouldn’t be in the position we are but we have to stop feeling sorry for ourselves and take games to people,” said the goalkeeper. “We have to take control of our own destiny and move up that table.”

The 22-year-old Bosnia-Herzegovina international is enjoying his first sustained run in the first team since joining the club in 2006 and has started all but one game under Grant as James struggles to recover from a calf strain.

He has kept three clean sheets in the six games he has started since returning from a six-week loan spell at Ipswich Town and reports suggest Harry Redknapp, the man who brought him to England from his adopted Canada as a teenager, will move to bring the 6ft 5in goalkeeper to Tottenham Hotspur next month as cover for Heurelho Gomes.

However, after defeat at home to Manchester United and the 2-0 victory over Liverpool, Begovic is focused on the visit of yet another member of the Big Four to Fratton Park: “We know Arsenal is going to be difficult, no matter how well or badly they are playing.

“They have great players but we’re at home. We’ve beaten Liverpool and have given Man United a good game there so if we can repeat that we can get some points,” he said.

“I’d be happy if it was like the Liverpool game – not having a save to make. I’d take that any day of the week. We know they are dangerous and we have to be switched on at all times.”

PortsmouthAvram GrantHarry RedknappTottenham HotspurTransfer windowPremier LeagueMikey Staffordguardian.co.uk