Liverpool staged a second-half turnaround to beat Fulham at Anfield in the first leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final tie.
The Reds fell behind after just 19 minutes when Willian fired past Caoimhin Kelleher. However, Jurgen Klopp’s side hit back in the second half. Firstly, Curtis Jones reduced the arrears when his deflected shot beat Bernd Leno in the Fulham goal.
Then, with 19 minutes of normal time remaining, Cody Gakpo, on as a second-half substitute, fired Liverpool ahead. And below is a look at how the national media and the ECHO reported on the game.
Henry Winter of The Times wrote: “Jurgen Klopp’s Midas touch with substitutes was seen again when he sent on Darwin Nunez and Cody Gakpo to rescue Liverpool in this entertaining Carabao Cup semi-final first leg.
“Klopp’s changes proved too much for Arsenal on Sunday and were too much for Fulham. Nunez supplied two assists, Gakpo applying the finishing touch to one, to give Liverpool a narrow lead to take to Craven Cottage in a fortnight. For 67 minutes, Fulham had defended resiliently and had taken the lead through Willian.
“Liverpool were stunned by Fulham’s 19th-minute goal. They had been in command but there was still a steeliness to Fulham, especially with Harrison Reed drafted in to partner Joao Palhinha in Marco Silva’s 4-2-3-1 system. Some of the visiting fans were disappointed that Silva had not started the more creative Tom Cairney ahead of Reed but the head coach was vindicated by the first half. Playing their first-ever League Cup semi-final, Fulham began looking compact and confident.”
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Chris Bascombe of the Daily Telegraph reported: “Marco Silva has seen this Anfield movie before, two quickfire goals turning what would have been a famous victory into defeat.
“The Fulham coach must be getting sick of seeing his side perfectly execute a game plan, only for Liverpool to inflict punishment. At least Fulham will feel the situation is retrievable this time, in some respects their mission accomplished as a 2-1 loss keeps the tie alive.
“This was not about the silky-skilled, fluent Liverpool which propelled itself to the top of the Premier League. The latest comeback courtesy of Curtis Jones and Cody Gakpo is all about the re-establishing of Jurgen Klopp’s mentality monsters.
“For large parts of a game which increased in excitement, Klopp’s side lacked the class and the structure that has typified recent excellence. More than any other quality, it was their sheer bloody-mindedness which saw them cancel out Willian’s first half strike which means they take a slender advantage to London in a fortnight.”
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Andy Hunter of the Guardian wrote: “Recent history repeated itself in the form of another Liverpool comeback against Fulham and more late pain for Marco Silva’s gallant team at Anfield. Jurgen Klopp’s side established a slender advantage in the first leg of the Carabao Cup semi-final but both the victor and the vanquished know the tie is far from over.
“Willian struck the first blow for Fulham but, as in the Premier League meeting here, the visitors were unable to hold the lead in the face of a Liverpool barrage. Klopp’s team came from 3-2 down in the 87th minute to lead 4-3 in the 88th last time out. The comeback was not as late or dramatic here, but two goals in three minutes from Curtis Jones and the substitute Cody Gakpo once again transformed the complexion in Liverpool’s favour.
“Fulham had lost all five previous League Cup meetings with Liverpool but entered their first appearance in the semi-finals in confident form. And with a strong, settled lineup. Their ability to hurt Klopp’s team had been evident in the 4-3 defeat here last month and was demonstrated again when Silva’s side took the lead from their first meaningful attack. It came from a rare error by Virgil van Dijk, who missed the FA Cup third-round win at Arsenal on Sunday through illness and was left feeling pig-sick on his return to the team.
“Not for the first time, Klopp’s half-time team talk instigated a vast improvement in the Liverpool performance. The hosts attacked with far greater intensity and purpose in the second half. Fulham, having been increasingly comfortable as the first half wore on, found themselves besieged, albeit with several opportunities to hurt Liverpool on the break.”
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