'Embarrassing': Never-before-seen gaffe gifts Liverpool win
Liverpool have clinched a Champions League “miracle” after a shambolic passage of play from Barcelona allowed their opponents to win an unlikely semi-final tie.
The Reds were down 3-0 from the first leg in Spain but conjured an almost unthinkable turnaround in the second leg to win 4-0 at Anfield and seal their spot in the final.
Missing stars Mohammed Salah and Roberto Firmino, the mountain Liverpool faced before kick-off looked of Everest proportions to climb.
However, goals to stand-in striker Divock Origi and a double for midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum set up a grandstand finish.
Liverpool won a corner with little more than ten minutes of regular time remaining and the aggregate scores locked at 3-3 when Barcelona completely switched off.
Trent Alexander-Arnold noticed the Barca players with their backs to the ball so the Reds defender took a quick corner that caught his opponents completely off guard.
The sneaky tactic saw Origi steal in to score his second and the decisive fourth goal that ultimately sent Liverpool through to the final.
Fans were quick to crucify Barcelona for their woeful defensive lapse that ultimately cost them the semi-final tie.
Lol Barcelona that corner kick lmfao
— Rollo Tomasi (@BilbaoBaggins13) May 7, 2019
Oh Barcelona. Oh Barcelona. Let that corner kick go down in history as the day you were out smarted
— Lester Kanali (@LE5T) May 7, 2019
Pretty embarrassing from Barcelona. How do you lose on a corner like that at this level. They played scared. Fabinho MOTM.
— Emmett McConnell (@_emcconnell_) May 7, 2019
Just saw the winning corner. I've never seen anyone do that before lol. Tricked me 😂. Twice now Barcelona lost a 3-0 in the UCL, back to back too. 👌
— Nick 🕴️ (@NickyL51) May 7, 2019
'Staggering'
Liverpool 4-0 Barcelona (Agg: 4-3)Barcelona looked dead on their feet for the fourth goal. No-one was standing five or six yards from Origi, standing on the six-yard line from a corner, it was incredible. #livbarca
— george diamataris (@90min_plus3) May 7, 2019
Barcelona deserved to be knocked out for that last corner goal alone, just thought they would show up and win, delighted for liverpool #LIVBAR
— flipmac (@Flipmac1) May 7, 2019
Can't work out if it was just a wonderful spot by A-A (based on Barcelona still shuffling for corner) or just awful defending. Both probably
— Chris Lepkowski (@chrislepkowski) May 7, 2019
Massive fan of that corner by Alexander-Arnold! Shambolic defending though by Barcelona
— Daniel Hatfield (@dannyhat1988) May 7, 2019
Liverpool pulling off a miracle to reach Champions League final
— Theresa McG 🍀 (Tee)🏴 Hail Cesar 🍀 (@theresacfc) May 7, 2019
MIRACLES DO HAPPEN TO LIVERPOOL IN EUROPE
— Lamiah (@Lamiah98) May 7, 2019
It is just the fourth time in Champions League history that a team has overturned a 3-0 deficit to seal a spot in the final of the competition.
“Unbelievable. I don’t think many people gave us a chance. We knew it would be difficult but still possible,” Reds captain Jordan Henderson said.
“The belief we have in the changing room is amazing. We knew we could do something special at Anfield. Look at the fans and the lads – this is a special night. This is up there with the best.
“We wanted to start fast. We got an early goal which helped. It wasn’t just the goal, it was getting after them and putting them under pressure. We knew if we showed personality and heart then we’d have a chance.”
Origi scored twice, either side of goals by halftime substitute Wijnaldum early in the second half, to send Liverpool into its second straight final and set up a meeting with either Ajax or Tottenham on June 1.
Reds clinch special piece of history
It was only the third time in the history of the European Cup that a team came from three goals down after the first leg of a semifinal and progressed to the final, after Panathinaikos in 1970-71 and Barcelona in 1985-86. No team had done it in the Champions League era.
The comeback was all the more unlikely given that Liverpool was without two of its first-choice forward line, Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino.
Instead, it was Origi — the scorer of the crucial fourth goal in the 79th minute — who made the seemingly impossible, possible. And it needed some remarkable ingenuity from Trent Alexander-Arnold, who pretended to walk away from taking a corner before quickly spinning round and sending in a low cross as Barcelona’s players dawdled. Origi swept in the finish.
Given the opposition, a team featuring arguably the greatest ever soccer player in Messi, this will likely rank as Liverpool’s greatest European performance, rivaling the comeback from three goals down against AC Milan in the 2005 Champions League final.
There was also the 3-1 win over Saint-Etienne in the 1977 European Cup and the 4-3 win from 2-0 down against Borussia Dortmund in the 2016 Europa League quarterfinals.
Barcelona suffer another unthinkable collapse
For Barcelona, it was the second year in a row that it let a three-goal lead slip, having beaten Roma 4-1 at home in the quarterfinals in 2018 before losing the return leg 3-0 to go out.
Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp had delivered a stirring speech on the eve of the game, telling his players to “fail in a beautiful way” if they were to get eliminated.
They took that to heart.
Salah, Liverpool’s top scorer who missed the game as he followed protocols after a concussion, entered the stadium before kickoff wearing a T-shit bearing the message: “Never Give Up.”
Then teammate Andrew Robertson set the tone on the field, pushing Messi’s head with two hands while the Barcelona forward was on the ground after an early challenge. Fabinho followed that up with a crunching tackle on Luis Suarez, who was jeered relentlessly by Liverpool fans at the ground he graced for 3½ years.
A goal was needed to really give a shaken Barca team the jitters and it arrived after seven minutes, with Origi tapping into an empty net after goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen could only parry out a shot by Jordan Henderson.
Barcelona already looked rattled, with Suarez living up to his role as the player opposition fans love to hate. In one incident, the striker flicked his boot back into the right knee of Robertson as they ran along together. Robertson needed treatment and was substituted at halftime.
The player who came on for Robertson — Wijnaldum — made an almost instant impact, making it 2-0 by sweeping home a low cross from Alexander-Arnold.
Two minutes later, he made another run into the area and met a cross from Xherdan Shaqiri with a firm header into the corner past a flat-footed Ter Stegen.
It was bedlam inside Anfield, the scene of so many of these famous fightbacks.
Philippe Coutinho, a former Liverpool player like Suarez, was substituted for Nelson Semedo after an ineffective game — his tracking back left a lot to be desired — and Barca’s game quickly improved, the team exerting more control. Liverpool’s players might also have wondered how to approach the game with the score tied on aggregate.
With agencies