Inter 0-2 Liverpool: Match Statistics
At the final whistle, Simone Inzaghi looked like a man whoâd just had his lunch money stolen.
No wonder.
Liverpool have one foot in the Champions League quarter-finals, while Inter find themselves halfway out the door.
And it all seemed to happen in the blink of an eye.
For five-sixths of this last-16, first-leg clash, a cigarette paper wouldnât have separated the two teams.
Inter pushed and Liverpool rocked, and had you been betting on a goal, youâd probably have gone for the Italians, in all honesty.
Youâd have been wrong, though. In a remarkable last 15 minutes, Roberto Firmino and Mohamed Salah found the net to put the Reds in total control of the tie.Â
Talk about timing. Those were Liverpoolâs only efforts on target in the entire game, but Jurgen Klopp wonât care one bit.
Nor will the 2000 or so Liverpudlians who made themselves heard throughout and who celebrated accordingly at the end.
What a trip theyâve had, and what a chance their side has in this seasonâs competition. If they can win like this when playing like this, imagine what they can do when they really click.
They had to weather a storm at times, but when all was said and done Inter, for all their energy and their passion and their right-to-left switches, failed to manage a shot on target themselves.
Liverpool, using all their experience, took advantage ruthlessly.
Firmino was the one who prised the padlock open. The Brazilian may not be the force he was two or three years ago, but heâs still a more than useful asset to Klopp and his team.Â
Heâd been pretty ordinary since emerging as a half-time substitute, in place of Diogo Jota, but he timed his run perfectly to meet Andy Robertsonâs near-post corner, his glancing header nestling neatly inside Samir Handanovicâs far post.
In an instant, the world changed. Eight minutes later Virgil van Dijk knocked down a Trent Alexander-Arnold cross at the back post, and Salah, almost non-existent until then, was there to sweep the ball home.Â
The Egyptianâs first Reds goal in six weeks could hardly have been more welcome, and Klopp will reflect on the positive impact made by his substitutes; not only Firmino, but Jordan Henderson, Naby Keita and Luis Diaz too.
He said this was the strongest squad heâs ever had, and we saw why here.
He had sprung a surprise with his starting XI, giving Harvey Elliott his European debut and his first start since September 12.
It was a big call, with Henderson and Keita, as well as James Milner and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, on the bench.
Elliott showed only flashes in his 58 minutes on the field, but this will not be the last time we see him on a stage such as this, mark these words.
And so on to Anfield we go. Liverpool have back-to-back home games in the Premier League now, a chance to make up some ground in their pursuit of Manchester City.
After that comes the Carabao Cup final, and next month brings an FA Cup fifth round tie with Norwich before the second leg against Inter.
Big games, big stages, big possibilities. A big few months lie in wait for Klopp and his side.




