AC MILAN 1-3 LIVERPOOL: ARNE SLOT'S REDS EARN IMPRESSIVE COMEBACK WIN IN THEIR CHAMPIONS LEAGUE OPENER AS BOTH CENTRE BACKS NET HEADERS BEFORE DOMINIK SZOBOSZLAI SEALS VICTORY

  • Liverpool come from behind to see off AC Milan away from home at the San Siro
  • Arne Slot's Reds put in an assured display in their Champions League opener 
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As the clock ticked towards 11pm local time in Milan, Arne Slot could finally sit back, relax and enjoy his 46th birthday. After a few days stressing over whether his team could right the wrongs of a dismal defeat on Saturday, the Liverpool head coach was finally gifted a present.

It came in the form of three points to start the Champions League campaign, in one of world sport’s most grand arenas at the coliseum-like San Siro. As far as a welcome to European football with Liverpool goes, this was a baptism of fire for Slot.

For the first 20 minutes, it felt like his team were going to melt in the cauldron of noise and succumb to pressure. But goals from both centre halves, Ibrahima Konate and captain Virgil van Dijk, gave Slot the perfect end to his birthday as they came from behind to topple AC Milan.

Dominik Szoboszlai added a third on 67 minutes to put the game to bed after some wasteful finishing before it and then Slot finally cut a more relaxed figure. Given the calm nature of the Dutchman, he had spent the first hour or so here pacing his technical area with anxiety.

Evidently, he felt he had a point to prove. With this Liverpool’s first Champions League game for 18 months, they were back at Europe’s top table – and Slot needed to show he belonged here too. Did he do that? Absolutely. 

This was not a perfect performance by any means – Liverpool looked vulnerable at times – but it was a display of tactical maturity, resilience and efficiency at both ends. After a shoddy first 20 minutes, the Reds barely put a foot wrong, Milan unable to regain their hold on the game.

Mohamed Salah hit the woodwork twice and the home team needed keeper Mike Maignan to be at his best to deny more goals, with Liverpool dominating the chances. Ultimately, though, this game was won by two set-pieces.

Given all the romanticising of set-piece coaches in 2024 – Arsenal’s Nicolas Jover is almost a mythical character whose name is often on newspaper back pages – it is rather ironic that Liverpool do not have a dead-ball specialist.

After Saturday’s defeat to Nottingham Forest swiftly ended the Arne Slot honeymoon period, the new head coach knew another loss would put him under scrutiny. He had been brought back down to earth to halt a perfect start to life in England – and needed a quick reaction.

The San Siro is hardly the best location if you need to get over a deep disappointment, mind. Although several sections of the ground were empty due to fans’ protests of ticket prices, the atmosphere is still deafening. It felt like Liverpool’s stars could melt in the cauldron of noise.

A penny for the thoughts of Slot, then, as his team fell behind with less than three minutes on the clock to a slick Milan breakaway goal. Just the start he and they needed. To frustrate him further, this goal was entirely preventable.

Kostas Tsimikas, playing ahead of Andy Robertson in one of two changes – noteworthy given Slot’s reluctance to rotate his pack – misjudged an attempted header and, suddenly, Christian Pulisic had the freedom of the San Siro. The American charged in and fired hard and low.

Pulisic never showed off his true talents at Chelsea but he is adored in Milan, the name which drew the loudest cheer from the Curva Sud when the teams were read out pre-match. Paulo Fonseca’s team were clearly in the mood and continued to play through Liverpool’s press. 

MATCH FACTS

AC MILAN: (4-2-3-1) Maignan (Torriani 57'); Calabria (Royal 69'), Pavlovic, Tomori (Gabbia 84'), Hernandez; Fofana, Loftus-Cheek (Abraham 69'); Pulisic, Reijnders, Leao; Morata (Okafor 84')

Subs not used: Nava, Zeroli, Chukwueze, Bartesaghi, Terracciano, Musah

Goals: Pulisic (3')

Bookings: Calabria, Fofana, Fonesca

Coach: Paulo Fonseca

 

LIVERPOOL: (4-2-3-1) Alisson; Alexander-Arnold (Gomez 79'), Konate, van Dijk, Tsimikas; Mac Allister (Endo 90+2'), Gravenberch; Szoboszlai, Salah (Chiesa 90+2'), Gakpo (Diaz 68'); Jota (Nunez 68')

Subs not used: Jaros, Kelleher, Jones, Robertson, Quansah, Morton, Bradley

Goals: Konate (23'), van Dijk (41'), Szoboszlai (67')

Bookings: Mac Allister, Konate

Coach: Arne Slot

 

Referee: Espen Eskas (Norway)

Venue: San Siro

Slot patrolled the touchline scratching his bald head – shining amid the heat of a warm September in Italy – and must have been wondering just what happened to the version of Liverpool which utterly dismantled Manchester United at Old Trafford a fortnight ago.

It felt like they were being strangled by Milan for those first 20 minutes but, then, out of nowhere, Liverpool turned up. In their first attack of note, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Szoboszlai exchanged slick, quick passes and Salah rattled the crossbar.

That seemed to be the spark that jolted the rest sporting Liverpool’s black away shirts into action, even those fans up in the Gods who found their voice. On 24 minutes, they were level, as Konate headed home an Alexander-Arnold free-kick.

Milan goalkeeper Maignon, who was limited to a watching brief in the early minutes, was suddenly being forced into save after save. Salah could have had a hat-trick as he struck the upright a second time and then forced the French keeper down for a full-stretch save.

Diogo Jota, who was handed his professional debut by Milan boss Fonseca at Portuguese club Pacos Ferreira, was guilty of being greedy as he shot wide of the mark when Cody Gakpo was unmarked for a square pass and probable tap-in.

But Liverpool finally found the goal to put them ahead four minutes before half-time as Van Dijk peeled off his marker to rise high and head in a Tsimikas corner. Two set-pieces, two goals. Stand-in dead-ball coach Aaron Briggs was mobbed by Slot and his coaching clan.

Liverpool continued to dominate proceedings, with Jota and Tsimikas coming close before Szoboszlai finally won the game on 67 minutes. The Hungary captain played a slick give-and-go with Cody Gakpo before an easy tap-in past sub goalkeeper Lorenzo Torriani.

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2024-09-17T21:23:01Z dg43tfdfdgfd