Three Things We Learned From Liverpool Vs Bayern Munich
20th February 2019
With Virgil van Dijk suspended and Joe Gomez and Dejan Lovren both injured, Klopp was forced to play Brazilian midfielder Fabinho out of position at centre-back alongside Joel Matip
- Liverpool were forced to settle for a 0-0 draw against Bayern Munich in the Champions League last-16 first leg on Tuesday
- Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp was back in conflict with Bayern after spending seven years jousting with the German giants when he in charge at Borussia Dortmund
- Lewandowski netted 16 Champions League goals for Dortmund under Klopp and had scored another 36 in the tournament since joining Bayern
- Tottenham drew first blood for England with a 3-0 rout of Borussia Dortmund at Wembley last week, while Manchester City travel to Schalke on Wednesday
LIVERPOOL, United Kingdom- Liverpool were forced to settle for a 0-0 draw against Bayern Munich in
the Champions League last-16 first leg on Tuesday.
Here are three
things we learned from a hard-fought Anfield stalemate:
Klopp frustrated by Bayern again
Liverpool manager
Jurgen Klopp was back in conflict with Bayern after spending seven years
jousting with the German giants when he in charge at Borussia Dortmund.
Klopp twice knocked
them off their perch to win the Bundesliga, but Bayern handed the German one of
the most painful defeats of his career when they beat Dortmund in the last
seconds of the 2013 Champions League final at Wembley.
It is a loss that
still gnaws at Klopp, who this week confirmed he almost became Bayern manager
in 2008 before joining Dortmund a year later.
Bayern instead
appointed Jurgen Klinsmann and Klopp would dearly love to exact a measure of
revenge for both that snub and the Champions League final agony.
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However, after
Liverpool were stifled by Bayern's defensive masterclass, Klopp will head home
to Germany for next month's second leg facing a tough task to get the upper
hand at last.
Fabinho fills in nicely
With Virgil van Dijk
suspended and Joe Gomez and Dejan Lovren both injured, Klopp was forced to play
Brazilian midfielder Fabinho out of position at centre-back alongside Joel
Matip.
Fabinho had filled
in as a makeshift defender against Wolves and Brighton earlier this season, but
neither of those teams had a forward of Robert Lewandowski's class.
Top-scorer in the
Champions League this season with eight goals, Bayern star Lewandowski was
looking to net for a fifth consecutive game in the competition.
But, with Fabinho in
fine form, Lewandowski barely had a sniff all night.
His one moment of
genuine menace ended with Fabinho producing a timely block to scramble the ball
to safety as the Poland striker prepared to pull the trigger.
It helped that Klopp
knew all about Lewandowski and how to subdue him after the pair worked together
so successfully at Dortmund.
Lewandowski netted
16 Champions League goals for Dortmund under Klopp and had scored another 36 in
the tournament since joining Bayern.
But Fabinho and
Matip ensured Lewandowski wasn't able to extend that impressive run as
Liverpool's unbeaten home record in European matches reached 20 matches.
Bayern restore German pride
With three English
clubs pitted against German opposition in the last 16, two of football's most
historic countries are engaged in a battle for national pride and European
progress.
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Alive
Tottenham drew first
blood for England with a 3-0 rout of Borussia Dortmund at Wembley last week,
while Manchester City travel to Schalke on Wednesday.
Liverpool were
favourites to make it at least two first-leg victories for the Premier League.
But, for all the
talk of Bayern being a fading force after they surrendered top spot in the
Bundesliga for much of this season, their fine recent European record stood
them in good stead on a typically raucous night at Anfield.
Having reached at
least the semi-finals of the Champions League in six of the last seven seasons,
Bayern were never likely to be rattled by Liverpool or their vociferous fans.
Setting out with a
cautious game plan, Bayern, the last German club to win the tournament in 2013,
didn't have a shot on target for over 80 minutes.
But crucially they
managed to subdue Liverpool's usually lethal forward line, keeping the
Bundesliga in with a chance of having at least one team in the quarter-finals.