sport
Liverpool survives astonishing Salzburg fightback in seven-goal thrille
[su_label type=”info”]SMA News – Agencies[/su_label][su_spacer size=”10″][su_dropcap]P[/su_dropcap]erhaps watching football at Anfield should come with a health warning.
Just five months since Liverpool produced one of the most astonishing comebacks in the history of European football to dump Barcelona out of the Champions League, its players were once again involved in another contest that defied any modicum of logic.
Playing Austria’s Red Bull Salzburg — a game Liverpool had been expected to win comfortably — this was an utterly thrilling contest in which chaos reigned supreme and the rest of the watching world embraced it.
Nowhere has seen more Champions League goals since the start of the 2017-18 season than Anfield. This thrilling encounter made it 47 — seven more than any other venue, though Liverpool supporters may have accepted a quieter evening if pressed.
While the neutrals will bask in the entertainment, for Liverpool, there will only be relief, especially after Jurgen Klopp’s side had lost its opening Group E game at Napoli.
Leading 3-0 after 36 minutes, this was a game for Liverpool that should have been over for the European champion at halftime.
Instead, like a tired parent fumbling around in the dark after coming home late and tripping over the noisiest toy in the house, Liverpool could not find a way to switch Salzburg off. In the end, the Austrians woke the whole house up.
How did it come to this? At three goals down, not even the most ardent of Salzburg supporters would have imagined what would madness would ensue.
No team had scored three goals at Anfield in a European game since October 2014 and no team had beaten Liverpool in its own back yard since Real Madrid triumphed 3-0 five years ago.
Add into the equation Liverpool’s status as defending European champion and its seven victories from seven Premier League games, and few would have forgiven the traveling supporters for fearing the worst.
Sadio Mane, playing against his former club, had given Liverpool a ninth-minute lead with Andrew Robertson and Mohamed Salah adding further goals to leave Liverpool in pole position with just nine minutes of the first half remaining.
Even when Hwang Hee-Chan turned Virgil van Dijk inside out and coolly finished to reduce the deficit to two goals just before the interval, it appeared more of a consolation goal than anything for Liverpool to fear.
How wrong that assertion proved to be.
The Austrian champion, which hit six in its opening group game a fortnight ago, exploded out of the blocks in the second half to leave Liverpool’s Anfield fortress rocking.
Within 11 minutes of the restart, the deficit was down to one as Takumi Minamino unleashed a stunning volley into the far corner as the impossible began to look more than possible.
Four minutes later, Salzburg moved level courtesy of substitute Erling Braut Håland, who tapped home at the far post before wheeling away to celebrate in front of the delirious away supporters.
It was all too much for Jesse Marsch, the Salzburg coach, who ran down the touchline with a mixture of joy and disbelief. If you cannot enjoy moments like this as a coach, moments that so many sports fans dream of, then what is the point?
Sensing an opportunity, it was Marsch’s decision to send Håland on just four minutes before the forward fired home the equalizer.
Anfield, so often a witness to the unfathomable on a European night, was stunned. Few teams have the temerity to play in such a way against Liverpool, even fewer have emerged unscathed.
For a moment, Salzburg sensed history. And yet, as so often with a champion, even when it is on the ropes, it finds a way to win.
Just nine minutes after the Austrian side had drawn level, Liverpool struck the fatal blow.
Once again it was Salah, his 12th Champions League goal in 13 appearances at Anfield, who did the damage with a fine volley after meeting Roberto Firmino’s knockdown. Anfield exhaled.
“It’s better to learn the lessons during the game than talk about it after it,” Liverpool coach Klopp told BT Sport after the game.
“We started incredibly well in the game. We were outstanding in the first 25-30 minutes.
“But it was really difficult to get a foot in the game again (after they drew level). I’m not angry or anything like that. I always take a while to realize what I feel after the game.
“I saw us playing really well and then we took the wrong decisions. Then it is how we want to approach the game from that point on.”
Just five months since Liverpool produced one of the most astonishing comebacks in the history of European football to dump Barcelona out of the Champions League, its players were once again involved in another contest that defied any modicum of logic.
Playing Austria’s Red Bull Salzburg — a game Liverpool had been expected to win comfortably — this was an utterly thrilling contest in which chaos reigned supreme and the rest of the watching world embraced it.
Nowhere has seen more Champions League goals since the start of the 2017-18 season than Anfield. This thrilling encounter made it 47 — seven more than any other venue, though Liverpool supporters may have accepted a quieter evening if pressed.
While the neutrals will bask in the entertainment, for Liverpool, there will only be relief, especially after Jurgen Klopp’s side had lost its opening Group E game at Napoli.
Leading 3-0 after 36 minutes, this was a game for Liverpool that should have been over for the European champion at halftime.
Instead, like a tired parent fumbling around in the dark after coming home late and tripping over the noisiest toy in the house, Liverpool could not find a way to switch Salzburg off. In the end, the Austrians woke the whole house up.
How did it come to this? At three goals down, not even the most ardent of Salzburg supporters would have imagined what would madness would ensue.
No team had scored three goals at Anfield in a European game since October 2014 and no team had beaten Liverpool in its own back yard since Real Madrid triumphed 3-0 five years ago.
Add into the equation Liverpool’s status as defending European champion and its seven victories from seven Premier League games, and few would have forgiven the traveling supporters for fearing the worst.
Sadio Mane, playing against his former club, had given Liverpool a ninth-minute lead with Andrew Robertson and Mohamed Salah adding further goals to leave Liverpool in pole position with just nine minutes of the first half remaining.
Even when Hwang Hee-Chan turned Virgil van Dijk inside out and coolly finished to reduce the deficit to two goals just before the interval, it appeared more of a consolation goal than anything for Liverpool to fear.
How wrong that assertion proved to be.
The Austrian champion, which hit six in its opening group game a fortnight ago, exploded out of the blocks in the second half to leave Liverpool’s Anfield fortress rocking.
Within 11 minutes of the restart, the deficit was down to one as Takumi Minamino unleashed a stunning volley into the far corner as the impossible began to look more than possible.
Four minutes later, Salzburg moved level courtesy of substitute Erling Braut Håland, who tapped home at the far post before wheeling away to celebrate in front of the delirious away supporters.
It was all too much for Jesse Marsch, the Salzburg coach, who ran down the touchline with a mixture of joy and disbelief. If you cannot enjoy moments like this as a coach, moments that so many sports fans dream of, then what is the point?
Sensing an opportunity, it was Marsch’s decision to send Håland on just four minutes before the forward fired home the equalizer.
Anfield, so often a witness to the unfathomable on a European night, was stunned. Few teams have the temerity to play in such a way against Liverpool, even fewer have emerged unscathed.
For a moment, Salzburg sensed history. And yet, as so often with a champion, even when it is on the ropes, it finds a way to win.
Just nine minutes after the Austrian side had drawn level, Liverpool struck the fatal blow.
Once again it was Salah, his 12th Champions League goal in 13 appearances at Anfield, who did the damage with a fine volley after meeting Roberto Firmino’s knockdown. Anfield exhaled.
“It’s better to learn the lessons during the game than talk about it after it,” Liverpool coach Klopp told BT Sport after the game.
“We started incredibly well in the game. We were outstanding in the first 25-30 minutes.
“But it was really difficult to get a foot in the game again (after they drew level). I’m not angry or anything like that. I always take a while to realize what I feel after the game.
“I saw us playing really well and then we took the wrong decisions. Then it is how we want to approach the game from that point on.”