The 100 seconds that saved Liverpool's Champions League hopes
The 100 seconds that saved Liverpool's Champions League hopes
For nearly an hour it was a tense and nervy affair and then in the space of 100 seconds Liverpool exhaled a huge sigh of relief.
The
Champions League holder had needed a draw against Red Bull Salzburg to
guarantee its place in the last 16, but until second-half goals from
Naby Keita and Mo Salah eventually secured a 2-0 win on Tuesday, there
was a palpable sense that Liverpool was living just a bit too close to
the edge for its liking.
Nerves
frayed as Salah missed chance after chance. They frayed even more as
Salzburg frequently pierced a Liverpool defense that has struggled to
keep clean sheets this season.
Seven
years after Chelsea had failed to reach the last 16 after winning the
Champions League the previous season -- could Salzburg really pull off
the one of the great European shocks and condemn Liverpool to a similar
fate?
This season, the Austrian team has
proved one of the surprise packages of the Champions League under its
American manager Jesse Marsch.
When
the two teams met at Anfield in Group E, Marsch's half-time team talk
urging his players to show more fight against Liverpool went viral as
the American switched between English and German, peppering his language
with a fusillade of expletives in a performance that was like a one-man
theater show.
Given
what was at stake for Salzburg -- a place in the knockout stages of
Europe's most prestigious competition as well as millions of extra
dollars for doing so -- the Austrian team got off to a blistering start
as Erling Braut Håland, Hwang Hee-chan and Takumi Minamino unsettled
Jurgen Klopp's team.
In those
opening exchanges, Virgil van Dijk was left bawling at his fellow
defenders as Salzburg threatened to take the lead on several occasions.
If there was tension in the Liverpool back line, an element of calm authority was provided by its goalkeeper Alisson Becker.
In
last season's group stage final match, Alisson had to make an
astonishing last-gasp save to ensure Liverpool edged past Napoli to
reach the last 16 and on Tuesday the Brazilian goalkeeper made a number
of key interventions to keep the score goalless.
Ahead of this Group E encounter, much of
the pre-media commentary had surrounded Håland, whose goalscoring has
been key to Salzburg's impressive Champions League campaign -- its first
since 1994.
Unfortunately for the
home team, the 19-year-old Norwegian struggled to replicate the feats
that had brought him eight goals in five games.
Just
before Liverpool took the lead, Håland did manage a glimpse at goal,
but his normally unerring touch deserted him as he fired the ball into
the side netting.
Havoc
Soon
afterward Liverpool took the lead with a goal that bore the hallmarks
of so many of their goals this season -- Trent Alexander Arnold
switching the play to find fellow full-back Andrew Robertson and then
the speedy Sadio Mane proceeding to create havoc.
After
Robertson exchanged passes with Mane, the Senegalese international
rampaged into the penalty area, persuading Salzburg keeper Cican
Stankovic to rashly leave his goal. And when Mane crossed for Keita all
the Guinea international had to do was head home into the empty net.
Both
Mane and Keita had once played for Salzburg and their combination for
that opening goal sucked the air out of the Red Bull Arena -- apart from
the end where the Liverpool supporters were congregated.
Seconds later Salah well and truly burst Salzburg's balloon.
Jordan
Henderson's pass sent Salah clear and as Stankovic ran out of his
penalty area, the Egyptian international pushed the ball past the
Salzburg keeper, but in doing so the angle to the opposition's goal
narrowed alarmingly. Somehow, Salah recalibrated his sights and guided
his shot into the net.
After the
game Robertson called the goal "ridiculous" while Liverpool midfielder
James Milner quipped in a tweet: "#MolovesPythagorastheorem."
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