Premier League

Jurgen Klopp’s farewell tour begins with reminder of his legendary coaching status

Virgil van Dijk, Caoimhin Kelleher

FROM WEMBLEY STADIUM – Liverpool should not have stood a chance. Victory seemed impossible as much as just implausible.

Heading into Sunday’s Carabao Cup final with Chelsea, the Reds were without a whole host of key players. Mohamed Salah, Darwin Nunez and Dominik Szoboszlai weren’t risked despite coming close to the required fitness level, with Alisson, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Thiago Alcantara, Joel Matip, Curtis Jones, Stefan Bajcetic and Diogo Jota already ruled out.

Matters were made worse when Ryan Gravenberch had to be stretchered off midway through the first half with a nasty ankle injury.

After 28 minutes, Liverpool’s lineup read like one Jurgen Klopp would usually reserve for round three of the Carabao Cup as opposed to the final. It resembled the Under-18 side that took to the pitch in 2019 against Aston Villa when the senior Reds were at the FIFA Club World Cup.

Liverpool had Caoimhin Kelleher to thank for a pulsating final heading to extra-time. When Virgil van Dijk appeared to head them in front on the hour mark before a cruel VAR review chalked it off for offside against Wataru Endo, the momentum seemed to swing back the way of Chelsea.

The billion-pound Blues – later christened the billion-pound bottle-jobs by Gary Neville – peppered Kelleher’s goal. Cole Palmer. Conor Gallagher, Christopher Nkunku and Enzo Fernandez all missed golden chances to break the deadlock, only to be thwarted by themselves or Kelleher.

Virgil van Dijk, Caoimhin Kelleher

Van Dijk and Kelleher proved to be Liverpool’s best players / Mike Hewitt/GettyImages

As Liverpool’s kids – including Bobby Clark, James McConnell, Jayden Danns and Jarell Quansah – grew into proceedings, the feeling switched back. Extra-time belonged to Liverpool and the glut of Chelsea chances just stopped. The Reds weren’t exactly creating the best of openings themselves but they were still carrying the relevant menace.

And then Van Dijk popped up again, this time from a corner with no chance of anyone being ruled offside. That was the winner. That was the moment where all Liverpool’s hard work paid off.

And it was the moment for Klopp to revel. Liverpool have been hit brutally hard by their injury crisis this season, but his next-man-up policy has won them a trophy and has them sitting top of the Premier League.

That even extends to the transfer market and fit nicely into the story of the game. Moises Caicedo spurned a £111m move to Liverpool to join Chelsea instead, the injured Romeo Lavia the same for £58m. The lesser-known Wataru…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at 90min EN…