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Díaz and Salah strike as Liverpool battle back to beat Lask in Europa League

Liverpool went behind against the Austrian side Lask in Linz before fighting back to win 3-1 in their opening game of this year’s Europa League
  
  

Luis Díaz celebrates after his second-half goal gives Liverpool the lead in Austria
Luis Díaz celebrates after his second-half goal gives Liverpool the lead in Austria. Photograph: DeFodi Images/Getty Images

Short but sweet would be Liverpool’s preference for their return to the Europa League and an assured start was made with victory over Lask in Austria. Another comeback was necessary but, that minor inconvenience aside, this was a performance that again demonstrated the options and quality available to Jürgen Klopp.

Victory was Klopp’s 50th in Europe, the most by a Liverpool manager in the club’s illustrious history, and the fifth in succession this season by a team that is developing nicely. And rapidly. Lask took an early lead and played high on adrenaline until confronted by a commanding second-half Liverpool display that brought goals from Darwin Núñez, Luis Díaz and Mohamed Salah. The Austrian side had no answers once Núñez levelled from the penalty spot and an uncertain opening 45 minutes from the visitors in Linz was long forgotten by the time Salah nutmegged the goalkeeper Tobias Lawal for Liverpool’s third.

“I know people expect us to fly through this competition, it will not happen,” said Klopp. “In the group stage it will not happen and in the knockout stage it will not happen. We have to dig in, dig into it. That’s what we did tonight.” On the achievement of his own half-century, the Liverpool manager added: “If I still have 50 after the group stage then even if I have the most wins in Europe as a Liverpool manager everybody will hate that. It’s great, but probably because the competition now has so many more games than in the past.”

Six consecutive seasons of Champions League football, including three appearances in the final, may have made the drop into the Europa League more painful for Liverpool but there was humility in the approach to their first game in the competition since the 2016 final defeat by Sevilla. The Europa League is where “we deserved to be” admitted Virgil van Dijk, while Klopp insisted there would be no complacency from the competition favourites towards what appeared a straightforward group. This a trophy the manager desperately wants to add to his Anfield collection in Dublin next May.

There was a first start for the exciting 17-year-old winger Ben Doak, whose performances at under-21 level for club and country warranted reward, as well as the new signing Ryan Gravenberch. The midfielder Stefan Bajcetic made his first appearance of the season at right-back after his recovery from injury. The amount of changes might have been a risk but each one of Klopp’s selections needed game-time, whether on account of fitness, lack of opportunity or development. There were other contributory factors to a clumsy first-half display that allowed Lask to take the lead from their first attack of note.

A loose touch from Harvey Elliott resulted in Rene Renner delivering a low cross to Robert Zulj, whose shot on the turn was deflected over by Van Dijk. Sascha Horvath floated the subsequent corner over a crowded penalty area towards Florian Flecker, lurking unmarked outside. The right wing-back controlled perfectly and drove an unstoppable shot on the half-volley beyond the despairing dive of Caoimhin Kelleher in the Liverpool goal.

Confidence surged through the home team and it needed a vital block from Van Dijk to prevent Marin Ljubicic doubling Lask’s lead having shrugged off Ibrahima Konaté. Liverpool were struggling to find rhythm with the midfield partnership of Wataru Endo and Gravenberch understandably uncertain on their first appearance together. That said, it took a fine reflex save from Lawal to deny the industrious Núñez an equaliser before the break. The Uruguayan looked certain to score when Van Dijk headed a Kostas Tsimikas corner back across goal but, from point-blank range, Lawal clawed away the striker’s header.

As was the case at Wolves on Saturday, a few half-time tweaks conjured a vast improvement from Liverpool. Klopp’s side were awarded a penalty when a flowing move involving Elliott and Bajcetic set up Díaz in front of goal. As he sliced wide he was felled by a clear foul by the lunging Philipp Ziereis. Núñez stroked a powerful spot-kick past Lawal.

Unai Emery (pictured) insists Aston Villa must learn how to handle European football and refused to blame his changes after their sloppy 3-2 defeat at Legia Warsaw.

Ernest Muci's second-half winner clinched a deserved victory for the hosts to ruin Villa's Europa Conference League debut. Jhon Durán and Lucas Digne twice levelled for the underwhelming visitors in the first half after Pawel Wszolek and Muci scored for Legia.

It ranked as one of the worst performances in Emery's 11 months in charge, with the manager making five changes, including giving a debut to Barcelona loanee Clément Lenglet.

He said: "I believe in our squad and our players and we could have lost this game with other players on the pitch. Every match away in Europe is difficult and this is a new step where we have to learn. We still have the possibility to react again, we are going to play another five matches. It's not a good result but we have to learn and have to understand how we're going to face the next matches and this competition.

"We have to build the squad who will play a lot of matches and we will need players in the squad to give them opportunities to play, to use their qualities. In the second half we started well but in one click, we concede another opportunity and they score a goal. They had a plan, they did good and we couldn't stop them in some moments."

Legia struck after just two minutes in the Group E opener when Wszolek converted Patryk Kun's cross. Durán levelled four minutes later, though, nodding in after Kacper Tobiasz turned Nicolò Zaniolo's drive onto the bar.

It should have given Villa a platform but a shoddy, slow, performance continued to undermine their tag as one of the tournament favourites.

Livewire Muci punished them again after 26 minutes when Villa were left floundering on the flanks and he fired in Wszolek's centre. But Villa came back, however undeserved, and Digne's deflected volley ensured they went into the break level.

Parity did not last long, though, when Muci went sent running at Ezri Konsa and Calum Chambers, made fools of them both and found the net off a post.

This time there was no way back and Marc Gual almost added a fourth when Emi Martínez parried Bartosz Slisz's shot and Chambers cleared. Jacob Ramsey, Moussa Diaby and Youri Tielemans tried to find an unlikely leveller but victorious Legia held on.

"You should not underestimate the underdogs, Mostar will also be a hot game, a Balkan team with a lot of emotions," said manager Kosta Runjaic, after Mostar beat AZ Alkmaar 4-3 in the other group game.

"It's surprise for me but it's also a surprise we won against Aston Villa, I'm happy about it, this three points in the first game are very important for us. We were lucky in some moments but you need luck. We will see how we do in the next game, we will face a very ugly Alkmaar in a couple of weeks." PA Media

The introduction of Dominik Szoboszlai as part of a triple substitution on the hour injected the accuracy and vision that Liverpool’s passing had lacked. Within three minutes the visitors had turned the game on its head, and in style. Núñez did a fine centre-forward’s job to hold off his marker under pressure and find Elliott. The young midfielder sent Gravenberch sprinting down the right and when his low cross arrived in the penalty area Díaz was on hand to steer an emphatic finish into the roof of the net.

There was no prospect of a Lask recovery and the substitute Salah sealed victory when he received Núñez’s pass inside the box, rode two challenges brilliantly and squeezed a shot through Lawal’s legs.

 

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