Shelvey came good in the end, forcing James Collins into own goal which enabled Liverpool to leapfrog West Ham into 10th, but for a long time he was a "false 9" only in the sense that he seemed an imposter in the centre-forward position. In the first half he played on the shoulder of West Ham's centre-halves like a conventional striker, but never looked comfortable. He closed defenders down, but he rarely held the ball up, nor did he drag his markers around. And when it came to threatening a goal, the one chance he did have, from a Stuart Downing cross in the final minute of the half, he stubbed wide. Meanwhile Shelvey's strengths, such as breaking forward from midfield, were lost to the team.