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Barca Battered
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07-03-2007, 07:51
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Victory in Rome
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Re: Barca Battered
Thanks JP - it was a close run tie in the end. Liverpool could and possibly should have paid for the lack of clinical finishing. They were unlucky to rattle the bar on a couple of occasions. One of these days we will pay if we dont take our chances.
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07-03-2007, 07:54
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Victory in Rome
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Re: Barca Battered
Quote:
Jamie Carragher reflected on Liverpool's elimination of Barcelona from this season's Champions League and insisted: "It's probably our biggest ever result in Europe."
Despite losing 1-0 on the night at Anfield, Liverpool moved into the last eight of the competition thanks to the away goals rule following their 2-1 victory in the Nou Camp two weeks ago.
"The club's got a great history in Europe but besides winning finals this is probably the biggest result in Europe we've ever had," he said.
"Barcelona are the best club side in the world, even though we've knocked them out.
"We were hanging on - with 10-12 minutes to go we were just praying for the whistle.
"We didn't realise until a few seconds after the blew it that he had - we got there in the end."
Skipper Steven Gerrard added: "We were unlucky not to go in at half-time ahead.
"Barcelona are so good going forward, they play such nice football, but we stuck in there and are in the last eight now.
"We've got great spirit, grit and determination - people were throwing bodies about and that's one of the reasons we're through.
"It gives us great confidence, going through against the best side in Europe over two legs."
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07-03-2007, 08:00
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Victory in Rome
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Re: Barca Battered
I have my red tinted glasses on today and I shall indulge myself with associated articles celebrating our passage into the quarter finals.
Quote:
Philistines’ converted in the ancient cathedral of the Kop
Oliver Kay, The Times
The two old men in the directors’ box stood open-mouthed, their eyes glazing over. The Kop in all its glory has the ability to leave even the most hardened visitor spellbound and, just as Roman Abramovich gawped in admiration when his first match as owner of Chelsea took him to Anfield in August 2003, so were George Gillett Jr and Tom Hicks gobsmacked by their first taste of the passion they have had the good fortune to buy into.
Two hours later, as the dust settled on a match of high drama and the noise followed the 42,579 crowd on to the streets, Gillett stood alone in the same spot in the directors’ box, watching Liverpool’s players go through their post-match warm-down exercises. Steven Gerrard spotted him and offered a thumbs-up. Gillett smiled down and clasped his hands together almost reverently. “Thank you so much,” he called to the Liverpool captain before telling a handful of reporters near by that the evening had been “like nothing I’ve ever heard or felt before”.
A cheesy Kodak moment or the blossoming of a Liverpool love affair? The cynic will remember how Gillett previously called the club a “franchise” and, cringingly, “the Liverpool Reds”, but the look on the American’s face throughtout the night — as he listened to his first rendition of You’ll Never Walk Alone and as he sat, captivated, throughout 93 arresting minutes of action — suggested that the one-time owner of the Harlem Globetrotters realises that he has happened on more than just a franchise.
On their only previous visit, the day that they faced the media to explain why they had bought a 62 per cent stake in Liverpool, Gillett and Hicks confessed to being football philistines. Gillett suggested that it was “like buying the Boston Red Sox” — an enormous compliment by all accounts, but, whatever the undoubted passion that endures for the finest baseball team in Massachusetts, both reflected last night that the Anfield experience belongs to another world.
And so the thought occurred, as it will certainly have done to Gillett and Hicks, how can Liverpool possibly leave Anfield, a move that would have been like the Romans turning their back on Circus Maximus for a slightly larger facility on the outskirts of the Eternal City? With its myriad memories — the great European nights, yes, but perhaps above all the floral tributes that swamped the ground after the Hillsborough tragedy in 1989 — it can, at times, feel less like a football stadium than a cathedral, a shrine, an ancient relic.
Some day in the coming weeks, though, a shovel will be thrust into the ground on a vast expanse of green around the corner from Anfield and the countdown on the old stadium’s life will begin. Liverpool plan to relocate the short distance to Stanley Park in the summer of 2009, shortly after which the bulldozers and the wrecking balls will move in on the old place, on the biggest trophy room in English football and, yes, on the old Spion Kop which, though rebuilt and seated in the mid-1990s, occasionally still reverberates as much as it did in its pomp.
“What a great one to start with,” Hicks had said beforehand and, if anything, the occasion surpassed its billing. There was the blockbusting long-range shooting of John Arne Riise, the bewitching footwork of Lionel Messi, the relentless drive of Gerrard, the languid genius of Ronaldinho and, bestriding it all, reacting to every Barcelona twist and turn, the colossal figure of Jamie Carragher, who, like the Kop, seems to double in size on nights such as this.
As the stalemate on the night continued, the nerves of the Kop were briefly replaced with a little of the humour of old. As Víctor Valdés, the goalkeeper, begged to have the ball back as the clock ticked down, a huge inflatable beachball was thrown back at him, much to the Spaniard’s confusion.
After Eidur Gudjohnsen, the former Chelsea forward, had made the aggregate scoreline 2-2, the final ten minutes were excruciating, but, as the old stadium shook to the sound of anthems old and new, a line from Gillett’s press conference a month ago sprang to mind. “We don’t know about football, but we know about respect, winning and passion.”
Now you do, George. Now you do.
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07-03-2007, 16:33
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Got AIDS?
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Re: Barca Battered
Quote:
Originally Posted by all_funkt_up
Thanks JP - it was a close run tie in the end. Liverpool could and possibly should have paid for the lack of clinical finishing. They were unlucky to rattle the bar on a couple of occasions. One of these days we will pay if we dont take our chances.
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Id be quite worried by this in the long run AFU.
Thats two games running now against 2 real quality sides that Liverpool have had loads of really good chances and failed to take them and then going down to a defeat.
But on a positive note its a great result to get through for Liverpool and they deserved it in the end.
Etoo playing didnt look anywhere near fit imo too and thats what has cost Barca going through.
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