Three Things We Learned From Liverpool Vs Barcelona
8th May 2019
Only Deportivo La Coruna in 2004, Barca in 2017 and Roma in 2018 had overturned a three-goal first leg deficit to win Champions League knockout ties

- Liverpool reached the Champions League final with a remarkable 4-0 thrashing of Barcelona in Tuesday's semi-final second leg
- Given the size of the task seemingly facing Liverpool, it was no surprise to hear Jurgen Klopp had warned his wife not to expect a celebration when he returned home from Anfield
- Now Dutch midfielder Wijnaldum has joined Liverpool's European hall of fame with two quick-fire goals after coming on as a half-time replacement for the injured Andrew Robertson
LIVERPOOL, United
Kingdom- Liverpool reached the Champions League final with a remarkable 4-0
thrashing of Barcelona in Tuesday's semi-final second leg.
Here AFP Sport looks at three things we learned from one of
Anfield's greatest European nights:
Incredible Liverpool make history
Given the size of the task seemingly facing Liverpool, it
was no surprise to hear Jurgen Klopp had warned his wife not to expect a
celebration when he returned home from Anfield.
"I don't tell my missus 'wait for me at home, we will
have a party after the game because we'll win it'. We have to work for
it," Klopp had said when asked about the 3-0 first leg deficit.
Yet, against all odds, Klopp's side will face Ajax or
Tottenham in the final after one of the greatest nights in their glorious
history.
Liverpool, five-time European champions, are only the third
team in the history of the European Cup/Champions League to come from three
goals down after the first leg of a semi-final and progress to the final,
following in the footsteps of Panathinaikos in 1970-71 and Barcelona in
1985-86.
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Only Deportivo La Coruna in 2004, Barcelona in 2017 and Roma
in 2018 had overturned a three-goal first leg deficit to win Champions League
knockout ties.
Yet, with Barca so fragile at the back, the writing was on
the wall from the moment Divock Origi slotted home from close-range in the
seventh minute.
The previous three teams to score in first seven minutes of
Champions League games against Barca went on to score three or more goals and
Liverpool's relentless pressure ensured they had emulated that achievement by
the 56th minute.
It was an even more jaw-dropping achievement given Liverpool
were playing without injured trio Mohamed Salah, Roberto Firmino and Naby
Keita.
The astonishing revival will now forever be mentioned in the
same awed tones as Liverpool's never-to-be-forgotten 'Miracle of Istanbul' when
Steven Gerrard and company recovered from 3-0 down at half-time to beat AC
Milan on penalties in the 2005 Champions League final.
Super-sub Wijnaldum
For 42 years, David Fairclough held a special place in
Liverpool's history as the club's unparallelled super-sub, but Georginio
Wijnaldum's incredible contribution may have surpassed even his illustrious
predecessor.
When Fairclough came off the bench to score Liverpool's
winner with just minutes left in the 1977 European Cup quarter-final against
Saint-Etienne, he ensured he would be cherished forever at Anfield for the goal
that sparked the team's run to win the tournament for the first time.
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Now Dutch midfielder Wijnaldum has joined Liverpool's
European hall of fame with two quick-fire goals after coming on as a half-time
replacement for the injured Andrew Robertson.
Turning in Trent Alexander-Arnold's cross in the 54th
minute, Wijnaldum put Liverpool two up before rising highest to head in Xherdan
Shaqiri's cross two minutes later.
Among all the great moments in Liverpool's glittering history,
Wijnaldum's was among the most unexpected, but his dynamic display was about
far more than his crucial goals as he drove Barca to distraction with his
pressing.
Incredibly, Wijnaldum went into the match with only three
club goals this season, while all the 28-year-old's Champions League goals in
his Liverpool career have come in the semi-finals after he also netted against
Roma last season.
Feeble Barca stunned by Liverpool fireworks
In a familiar story for Barcelona, the Spanish champions
crumbled under pressure in the most feeble fashion.
Significantly for Liverpool, Barca had collapsed against
Roma just last season when the Italians recovered from a 4-1 quarter-final
first leg loss at the Camp Nou to go through on away goals after a 3-0 win.
In the last five seasons alone, Barca had lost knockout
games on the road to Roma, Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus, Atletico Madrid and
Bayern Munich.
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Once again the Catalan giants, who last won the Champions
League in 2015, wilted when the stakes were highest.
Showing a lack of appetite for the physical challenge posed
by Liverpool, Ernesto Valverde's side let themselves be bulled into submission
far too easily.
Their defending was horrific from the moment Jordi Alba's
misplaced header set up Liverpool's opener and their finishing wasn't much
better as chances for a priceless away goal were squandered.
Perhaps it didn't help that cheeky Liverpool fans set off
fireworks at four in the morning outside the Barcelona team hotel in a bid to
give Lionel Messi and his team-mates a sleepless night.
But that alone was no excuse for the timid way Barca allowed
themselves to be ripped apart by Liverpool in one of the most wretched results
in the club's history.
"We're talking about Busquets, Suarez, Pique and the
best player I've ever seen, Messi, and they could not handle the
pressure," former England captain Alan Shearer said.