The Football Association has decided there is no case to answer after Jordan Henderson was involved in an altercation with Gabriel Magalhaes during Liverpool's visit to Arsenal earlier this month.
The pair had a heated exchange of words after the Gunners were awarded a late penalty in the Premier League clash, which Bukayo Saka converted to consign the Reds to a 3-2 Premier League defeat.
Gabriel was believed to have taken offence at something Henderson had allegedly said, with Arsenal midfielder Granit Xhaka also clashing with the Reds skipper before an unseemly spat involving several players on both sides.
READ MORE: Liverpool had three players on shortlist before £65m transfer that changed everything
READ MORE: Full Liverpool squad available for Ajax as duo return but seven players absent
In the immediate aftermath, a complaint was made to referee Michael Oliver who then consulted with Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp and Arsenal counterpart Mikel Arteta on the touchline before resuming play.
The FA were compelled to investigate the allegation after Oliver included the incident in his match report, with a further six players subsequently asked to join the two main parties in providing a statement. Television footage was viewed with the authorities calling in linguistic experts to assess the footage.
And with none of the witnesses having heard the alleged comment, the FA have determined they will not be issuing any charges.
An FA statement said on Wednesday: "Following an investigation into an allegation received by The FA in the Premier League fixture between Arsenal FC and Liverpool FC on Sunday 9 October 2022, The FA can confirm that it will not be taking any disciplinary action.
"The FA received a complaint about an incident involving two players in this fixture. As a result of the complaint, The FA conducted a full and thorough investigation.
"The investigation included taking witness statements from the complainant and accused, along with an additional six players who were within proximity of the alleged incident, reviewing multiple angles of video footage, and seeking independent linguistics experts evidence. None of the witnesses heard the alleged comment, and the player accused strenuously denied the allegation throughout.
"Whilst The FA is entirely satisfied that the allegation was made in good faith, it is equally satisfied that there is no case to answer.
"The FA continues to take all allegations received extremely seriously and would encourage anyone who believes that they have been the subject of or witness to abuse to report this through the appropriate channels. The FA receives a number of complaints in any one season and thoroughly investigates each one that it receives. Following consideration of all of the evidence received, not all cases will result in a charge being issued."
READ NEXT:
- Man United could help Liverpool sign Bellingham despite reported £131m transfer fee
- Liverpool must cope without leading striker as two youngsters set for opportunity
- Darwin Nunez and two others return but Thiago remains missing from Liverpool training
- 'I don't think so' - Ajax boss dismissed Liverpool claim and makes 'crazy' prediction
- FSG CEO Sam Kennedy makes Liverpool future vow