Premier League teams really could do a lot worse than study the tapes of these 180 Champions League minutes
or the opening hour at Anfield the Napoli players must have been tempted to wonder, once again, what exactly all the fuss is around here. Take to the field expecting the red swarm, the hammers of the Premier League, a process of extreme thrash‑metal disintegration. And what do you get?
Not quite that, it turns out. Napoli have done this four times now in two years. In the first half they had the Premier League leaders pinned, rhythms stilled by the swarm of light-blue shirts around their usual passing triangles. It took Liverpool 35 minutes to muster their first effort on target. Ten minutes later the players walked off at the interval looking a little baffled, the crowd silenced, air sucked out of this tight corrugated arena.
You can’t kill the spirit and Jürgen Klopp’s team duly rallied. Jordan Henderson – who had another driving game – switched to right-back. The gears began to crunch, the engine to turn. Dejan Lovren’s header from a James Milner corner levelled the score at 1-1, as it would stay. At the end of which Liverpool need a point in Salzburg to progress, no mean feat against a fizzy, peppy, caffeinated young team. Of equal concern for Klopp will be the loss of an opportunity to rest players in a fortnight’s time.
What is it with these blue shirts? When it comes to Liverpool, Napoli just seem to know something other teams don’t. They seem to know they’re playing Joe Gomez and James Milner, not some brain‑mangling red swarm, to know that winning chemistry can be broken down.
The essence of Klopp’s achievement has been to make these components coalesce and work as a single high-functioning unit, driving a disparate set of players on to become the best club side in the world. Alone among their regular opponents, Napoli seem to have the ability to swish back the curtain and expose the parts.
Klopp played a strong team here. Only Georginio Wijnaldum and Trent Alexander-Arnold were rested. At kick-off the Kop end was the usual fond, warm pageantry of flags and scarves and banners, with that strange kind of electricity that seems to thicken the air a little on nights like these.
But there were misfires and missed beats from the start. Napoli left no space, no angles to make those killer diagonal passes. There was no room in that low blue block for the front three to create the usual whirl of movement.
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