Torres double lifts Liverpool and leaves Dalglish smiling

LONDON (Reuters) – Kenny Dalglish left Molineux beaming in delight yesterday after Liverpool beat Wolverhampton Wanderers 3-0 for their first victory since he returned as manager a fortnight ago.

Two goals from Fernando Torres and one from Raul Meireles gave Liverpool their first win since they beat Bolton Wanderers on New Year’s Day and brought a huge smile to the craggy face of the Scotsman who replaced Roy Hodgson as manager on January 8.

“It was nothing short of what we deserved. We will always be competitive. We might not be smashing people across the nose with their elbows, but we’ll always be competitive,” Dalglish told Sky Sports after Liverpool’s second away win of the season in the Premier League.  “The way we worked was great credit to them, we are one unit, there are no divisions in this football club and if we stick together we’ve got a chance.”
Dalglish hailed Spain striker Torres’s “fantastic” performance, adding: “Apart from his two goals, he worked his socks off and he was threatening most of the time, that performance will do for us.”

Fernando Torres

The win lifted a far more composed Liverpool from 13th to 10th and left Wolves, despite all their battling qualities, just one point and one place above bottom club West Ham United who are away at Everton in a later kickoff.

Torres opened the scoring after 36 minutes when Christian Poulsen beat the offside trap with a pass down the right to Meireles. The Portuguese midfielder took the ball into the Wolves area before squaring for Torres who tapped in.

Meireles, who scored his first Liverpool goal against Everton last week, doubled the lead with a spectacular 20-metre dipping volley that flew over helpless keeper Wayne Hennessey after 50 minutes.

Torres cracked home the third from close-range in stoppage to round off a long-passing move that carried the ball from one end of the pitch to the other.

That move evoked memories of the Liverpool of old, when they dominated and won matches almost as a right, sweeping aside the opposition and challenging for titles.