NO spotting Reds

Liverpool reach Champions League knockout stages with win

Klopp’s side needed the three points to top the group because Napoli beat Genk 4-0.

In Summary

•Mohamed Salah scored a right-footed goal from outside the box for the first time since moving to Europe from Egypt

•The defending champions, who needed at least a point to progress, were on the ropes at times in the first half against a side who had scored 87 goals in 24 games. 

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah scores their second goal
Liverpool's Mohamed Salah scores their second goal
Image: REUTERS

 

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said he loved that his side were “so smart” as they beat Red Bull Salzburg 2-0 to reach the Champions League last 16 as Group E winners.

The defending champions, who needed at least a point to progress, were on the ropes at times in the first half against a side who had scored 87 goals in 24 games. But from the moment Naby Keita headed in Sadio Mane’s cross, there was only going to be one winner.

Mohamed Salah clinched victory 100 seconds later with an excellent right-footed finish from a ludicrously tight angle.

“I couldn’t have more respect for what Salzburg is doing,” said Klopp. “I know how people see it - you think being the best team in Austria is ‘OK’.

“Then you see how good they are, how good they were in the first game (the Reds won 4-3 at Anfield), how good they were against Napoli and Genk and then you could come here as the current Champions League winner and misunderstand that situation.

“And I love it, I really love it that my team is so smart that they listen and they put in a shift in like that. Salzburg was unbelievably strong, especially in the first half, but we as well were ready for that fight.”

Klopp’s side needed the three points to top the group because Napoli beat Genk 4-0. The Reds will discover their Champions League last-16 opponents in Monday’s draw in Nyon, Switzerland (11:00 GMT). Real and Atletico Madrid are both possible opponents.

Salzburg drop into the Europa League last 32. Their 19-year-old striker Erling Braut Haaland had chances to score but failed to become the first player to score in his first six Champions League appearances.

“It was a bit like a heavyweight boxing contest,” said Salzburg boss Jesse Marsch. “We fought really hard, but they fought back. In the end they got two more punches in. That’s how close the margin is between victory and defeat in the Champions League.”

Liverpool had hoped to have sealed their last-16 place before the final group game - but they came to Austria needing a point against a side who pushed them all the way in a 4-3 thriller at Anfield.

Salzburg started at an electric pace, with Virgil van Dijk having to stop Haaland from having a one-on-one with Alisson after 15 seconds.

There were nine shots on target before the break - the most in the first half of a Champions League match without there being a goal since Schalke v Manchester United in April 2004.

Alisson needed to make six saves in the first half, although Liverpool arguably had the best chance when Salah shot wide from close range when completely unmarked. The Egyptian also fired over the bar from eight yards after the restart.

Two shaky moments from Salzburg keeper Cican Stankovic eventually settled the game. He rushed off his line to try to take the ball off Mane, who was able to cross for Keita to head into an empty net - both former Salzburg players.

And less than two minutes later he again left his goal unguarded, with Salah going round him before somehow finding the net with his right foot from a tight angle outside the box - a chance much harder than many of the eight shots he failed to score with.

They never looked back after that and kept a second clean sheet in a row, having conceded in each of the 13 matches before that.

“Jesse and his team worked great with their team and gave them a fantastic attitude; they used what they could use, but we also played very well in the spaces,” said Klopp.