Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge, right, slips past Corry Evans of Blackburn Rovers during their FA Cup Quarter-Final replay at Ewood Park on April 8, 2015. Andrew Yates / Reuters
Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge, right, slips past Corry Evans of Blackburn Rovers during their FA Cup Quarter-Final replay at Ewood Park on April 8, 2015. Andrew Yates / Reuters
Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge, right, slips past Corry Evans of Blackburn Rovers during their FA Cup Quarter-Final replay at Ewood Park on April 8, 2015. Andrew Yates / Reuters
Liverpool's Daniel Sturridge, right, slips past Corry Evans of Blackburn Rovers during their FA Cup Quarter-Final replay at Ewood Park on April 8, 2015. Andrew Yates / Reuters

Daniel Sturridge and Liverpool refuse to give up on top-four ambitions


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Striker Daniel Sturridge said Liverpool can challenge for the title again next season despite not being able to build on last year’s runners-up spot.

Liverpool’s top-four hopes took a nosedive with defeats to Manchester United and Arsenal, and despite having an FA Cup semi-final to look forward to next weekend they seem likely to miss out on their main aim of retaining Uefa Champions League football.

Injury to Sturridge, coupled with the loss of Luis Suarez in the summer, contributed to a poor start to the campaign, which is costing them dearly.

However, the England international has not given up on a top-four slot just yet, and even if they do fall short he has confidence they can up the ante when they start afresh in August.

“We have, of course, not played as well as we have done in the last season, but things change,” he said.

“Of course we aim to play well until the end of the season, and next season we will hopefully be able to win the Premier League, not just get into the top four. We just need to start the season better than we did this season.

“Top four is still feasible. We have seven games left and anything is possible.

“The FA Cup is huge for us, but we have to still understand we have a chance in the Premier League and getting into the top four.

“We won’t put our eggs in one basket. There are still seven games to go in the Premier League and we are looking forward to playing in each of those.”

Newcastle United are the visitors on Monday, ideal opponents to get their league form back on track as their Anfield record is woeful.

They have lost 16 times and drawn just three of their last 19 visits, with their last victory at the ground coming in April 1994

Liverpool will again be without captain Steven Gerrard and centre-back Martin Skrtel, who both serve the final match of their respective three-game bans.

A one-game suspension to defender Emre Can in last week's FA Cup quarter-final replay at Blackburn Rovers prompted manager Brendan Rodgers to abandon his successful 3-4-2-1 formation and restore a flat-back four, which rewarded him with a clean sheet after conceding six in two games against United and Arsenal.

Rodgers’ flexibility on tactics got Liverpool out of their sticky patch earlier this season, and Sturridge said that and the way he coaches the players to embrace new styles and systems is a huge positive for the club.

“It is important to have someone like that in the camp who is a man-manager and talks to the players,” he said. “It is important you can have a manger you can talk to and we just look forward to playing for this club.”

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