Champions League 2008 - 2009 - Euro Red Diary 33
by Joel Rookwood
PSV Eindhoven v Liverpool UEFA Champions League
Consolidating a position at the summit of a league is becoming
Liverpool Football Club's established pattern of behaviour.
With Saturday's victory at Blackburn Rovers ensuring the men
from Merseyside remain clear at the top of the Premier
League, the next task involved securing first place in group
D of the Champions League.
This required subjecting PSV Eindhoven, a side who languish in fifth
place in the Dutch Eredivision, to their fifth defeat in six European
games.
On paper this did not seem particularly likely, when having already
qualified for the so-called Super Sixteen round of Europe's elite
football competition, Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez unveiled
his squad for the final European tie of 2008. The Brazilian Cavalieri
replaced the dependable Pepe Reina in goal, with the unfancied Dossena,
Leiva and Ngog also taking their place in the starting eleven. But
it was the second half substitute appearances of inexperienced trio
Stephen Darby, Martin Kelly and Jay Spearing coupled with the inevitable
Liverpool victory that illustrated the gulf in class between the
two squads. Liverpool could afford the luxury of offering young
hopefuls valuable exposure to continental competition at the ‘highest
level', without compromising a result or the position of Liverpool
Football Club. In truth however, this was as much an insult to PSV
manager Huub Stevens and his squad, as it was to the credit of his
opposite number Rafael Benitez.
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Despite conceding the opening goal via a corner that never was,
Liverpool recovered to level the game before half time. Lazovic's
opener was cancelled out by former Ajax winger Ryan Babel on his
return to Holland. The Dutchman has experienced a dip in form in
recent weeks, culminating in an ill-advised request for a loan move
back to his former club. But having been told in no uncertain terms
to forget about a temporary move away from Merseyside, Babel showed
glimpses of guile in Eindhoven, heading Liverpool level in timely
fashion during first half stoppage time.
The second half illustrated more clearly the chasm in class that
currently exists between the evening's contestants. Albert
Riera's beautifully crafted strike gave Liverpool the lead
midway through the second half, with French youngster David Ngog
scoring his first goal for Liverpool twelve minutes from time. The
third goal confirmed a result that the population of the Philips
Stadium knew would prove an inevitability.
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The midfield was orchestrated by Lucas Leiva and Javier Mascherano,
who captained Brazil and Argentina respectively during the Olympic
football tournament in Beijing. Whilst the commanding performance
of the latter was expected, the influential role played by the former
was considered more surprising by the 2000 Liverpool fans in attendance.
The much-maligned Brazilian has not performed to the standards expected
of a Liverpool player in recent months, but shone in Eindhoven,
clearly relishing the limelight and a break from the incessant pressure
that Premier League football brings by definition.
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Disappointingly however, Robbie Keane could not add to the four
goals his eighteen club appearances have produced thus far during
this his debut season for Liverpool, making him a frustrated and
frustrating player to watch at the moment. Apologists for the 28-year
old Irishman advance claims that he is yet to be given the opportunity
to excel in a Liverpool shirt, with Benitez regularly substituting
the former Tottenham
striker in the latter stages of matches. Yet by the time we were
exiting the stadium on a bitterly cold evening in East Holland,
it had become overwhelmingly obvious that Liverpool's quest to remain
at the Premier League summit heading into the concluding stages
of the season, and to be a similarly commanding position in the
latter phases of the European Cup rely on Liverpool's strikers producing
clinical form. As Liverpool look forward to next week's Champions
League draw in Nyon, everyone connected with the club knows the
importance of the ten league games that lie between now and the
next European fixture in February. If the club have held on to top
spot by the time Inter Milan, Sporting Lisbon, Villarreal, Real
Madrid or Lyon entertain Liverpool, Liverpudlians might be about
to experience something very special indeed.
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