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Liverpool XI Confirmed: Woodman Starts as Attack Takes Centre Stage

Liverpool FC have confirmed their starting lineup to face Crystal Palace FC — and it’s a team that leans heavily on attacking quality while raising a few tactical questions.

🔴 Confirmed Liverpool XI

Freddie Woodman

Curtis Jones

Ibrahima Konaté

Virgil van Dijk

Andrew Robertson

Alexis Mac Allister

Dominik Szoboszlai

Florian Wirtz

Mohamed Salah

Alexander Isak

Cody Gakpo

🪑 Substitutes

Ádám Pécsi

Joe Gomez

Milos Kerkez

Federico Chiesa

Jeremie Frimpong

Ryan Gravenberch

Trey Nyoni

Rio Ngumoha

Will Wright

Woodman starts as goalkeeper situation continues

With uncertainty still surrounding Alisson Becker, Woodman gets the nod — a big moment for the goalkeeper in a high-pressure game.

How he handles distribution and composure under pressure could be crucial.

Familiar defence, makeshift right-back

Curtis Jones again fills in at right-back, highlighting the ongoing lack of depth in that position.

Alongside him, Konaté and Van Dijk provide stability, while Robertson returns on the left — offering balance and experience.

Midfield creativity — but is there enough control?

Mac Allister and Szoboszlai sit behind Wirtz in what is clearly an attack-minded midfield.

The upside:

Creativity

Progressive passing

Ability to break lines

The concern:

Lack of a true defensive midfielder

Potential vulnerability in transitions

Against a disciplined Palace side, that balance will be tested.

Firepower up front

This is where Liverpool look most dangerous.

Salah brings proven quality

Isak offers a central goal threat

Gakpo adds movement and versatility

With Wirtz linking everything together, Liverpool have enough attacking talent to break down any defence — if they can find rhythm.

Strong options off the bench

The bench offers real flexibility:

Chiesa and Ngumoha for attacking impact

Frimpong for width and pace

Gravenberch for midfield energy

There are options to change the game if needed.

Final thought

This is a lineup built to win the game — not control it safely.

There’s creativity, there’s firepower, but also risk.

Against Palace, it may not need to be perfect.

It just needs to be enough.

Jamie (The Kopite View)

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