Elliott close to becoming a Liverpool regular – Critchley

The teenager earned praise from the stand-in first-team boss after impressing in his side’s Carabao Cup loss to Aston Villa

Harvey Elliott was praised for being a “constant threat” during Liverpool‘s 5-0 loss to Aston Villa in the Carabao Cup quarter-finals on Tuesday.

Elliott, 16, continued to impress as Liverpool’s youngest ever team were well beaten at Villa Park.

The teenage winger has made three senior appearances for the Premier League giants and Neil Critchley, the U23 coach who took charge due to Jurgen Klopp and Liverpool’s senior stars being in Qatar for the Club World Cup, said Elliott was nearing a breakthrough for the European champions.

“He’s not too far away because he trains with our first team on a regular basis,” Critchley told a news conference.

“He’s had first-team exposure already, the manager and staff think a lot of him. I thought he was a constant threat all night, a really good outlet for us. But he was reliant on a lot of the players getting the ball to him and I thought the service to him was top class as well.

“I wouldn’t want to single anyone out because I thought as a collective, the whole group of players, the subs included, couldn’t have done any more. I thought we played like a Liverpool team and that was really, really important to us.

“We spoke about what we could control before the game, what was important to us. Good, bad or indifferent, we never quit. I don’t think you can accuse any of the Liverpool players of putting their heads down or being downhearted, they stuck at it right to the end.”

While Liverpool’s inexperienced youngsters made a bright start, they found themselves 4-0 down at half-time after Jonathan Kodjia’s brace, a Conor Hourihane strike and Morgan Boyes’ unfortunate own goal.

Critchley revealed Klopp had sent a half-time message to the squad to continue pushing despite their deficit, with Wesley adding a fifth goal in additional time for Villa.

“We had some information at half-time from the manager – basically to keep playing the way we were playing, keep being brave, keep doing what we were doing,” Critchley said.

“So he was out there watching with the staff and the players and I hope, and I’m sure he will be, he is proud of the way we played.”

Klopp and his team face Monterrey in the Club World Cup semi-finals on Wednesday.

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