Dejan Lovren scored a heart-stopping
stoppage-time header as Liverpool completed an astonishing comeback to beat
Borussia Dortmund 4-3 on Thursday and reach the Europa League semi-finals. Held
1-1 in last week’s first leg at the Westfalenstadion, Dortmund scored twice in
nine minutes through Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang to take a
firm grip on the tie. After Divock Origi had given Liverpool a foothold, Marco
Reus struck again for the visitors, but goals from Philippe Coutinho and
Mamadou Sakho levelled the tie before Lovren headed home in the 91st minute to
give former Dortmund coach Jurgen Klopp the biggest win of his Anfield tenure.
Liverpool’s stirring rally, which unfurled amid an electrifying Anfield
atmosphere, took them into a continental semi-final for the first time since
2010 and kept Klopp on course to end his first season at the club with a
trophy. His successor at Dortmund, Thomas Tuchel, could only look on in
disbelief at the final whistle as the 5-4 aggregate scoreline condemned his
side to defeat, four days on from a 2-2 draw with Schalke that left his men
seven points adrift of leaders Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga. Kick-off was
preceded by a rousing communal rendition of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, the two
clubs’ anthem, and a solemnly observed minute’s silence to mark the 27th
anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster. But any sense of sentimentality
quickly vanished as Dortmund turned the tie on its head in the early stages. An
early Aubameyang effort that curled wide gave Klopp’s side a warning and when
the ball next found its way into the hosts’ box, after a Liverpool attack broke
down high on the left flank, there was no reprieve. – Nerveless Reus – Gonzalo
Castro’s flighted cross picked out Aubameyang and although his close-range
volley was alertly parried by Simon Mignolet, Mkhitaryan tucked in the rebound.
Sakho had played both Dortmund attackers onside and he was also at fault for
the second goal as Aubameyang ran in behind him to collect Reus’s delicately
threaded pass and slam a shot into the top-right corner. Klopp had been bold in
his team selection, bringing in Roberto Firmino for the injured Jordan
Henderson, and while it left Liverpool light in central midfield, after the
early shock had subsided they began to make chances. Origi, preferred up front
to Daniel Sturridge, had a shot blocked and flicked a half-volley wide, Alberto
Moreno miscued a volley, Adam Lallana produced an embarrassing air-kick and
Firmino steered a header wide, while Coutinho saw a drilled effort deflect
behind. Liverpool needed an early goal in the second half and they got it in
the 48th minute, Emre Can exchanging passes with first James Milner and then
Firmino before releasing Origi to prod his fourth goal in three games past
Roman Weidenfeller. No sooner had the hosts closed in than Dortmund accelerated
again, Mats Hummels taking Liverpool right-back Nathaniel Clyne out of the game
with an exquisite pass and Reus nervelessly beating Mignolet. Coutinho reduced
the arrears again with a low strike into the bottom-right corner before Sakho
atoned for his earlier misdemeanours by bludgeoning a header into the net from
Coutinho’s corner. It set up a breathless climax that culminated in Croatian
centre-back Lovren climbing at the back post to nod in Milner’s cross from the
right and set the seal on an unforgettable Anfield night.
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