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Liverpool’s Luis Díaz finds full scamp mode to torment Manchester City | Barney Ronay

Colombian was too quick for a punch-drunk City in the first half at Wembley and could provide the magic Liverpool need to make historyThree minutes into the second half of this FA Cup semi-final Luis Díaz took the ball just inside his own half, looked up and saw in freeze-frame the figure of Fernandinho suspended inches above the Wembley turf, rotated at an angle of 60 degrees to the ground, left leg extended to meet the ball – and in the process to send Díaz in a semi-somersault arc as the frame of Fernandino propelled itself through the space where previously he, Díaz, had stood.It wasn’t a foul, although the next one on Sadio Mané was, a slide into the...

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Klopp’s selection risk pays off as Liverpool move step closer to final | Jamie Jackson

The manager made seven changes from the quarter-final first leg with Benfica but there was still enough quality on showThe dream is alive, the dream is still tantalisingly feasible yet agonisingly remote. Liverpool are in a third Champions League semi-final under Jürgen Klopp and if a fantasy for a plethora of reasons but mainly its sheer, basic difficulty, a historic quadruple remains on for the German’s band that blends artists and artisans.On Wednesday it was the turn of the latter coterie. Well, kind of. Klopp rested seven of the star turns who started last week’s 3-1 first leg win at Benfica. There was no Virgil van Dijk, Sadio Mané, Mohamed Salah, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Andy Robertson, Thiago Alcântara or Fabinho. And...

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Trent Alexander-Arnold paradox gives Klopp’s Liverpool their meaning | Barney Ronay

The obsession with Alexander-Arnold’s defensive flaws obscures his purpose in a team otherwise defined by systemsWith 67 minutes gone at a breezy Etihad Stadium, on an afternoon that seesawed like a listing ship on a spring tide, Trent Alexander-Arnold could be seen twirling and jinking high up the pitch on the Liverpool right flank, a place he occupied for much of the afternoon.Eventually his cross was cut out by a City foot. Kevin De Bruyne, who produced the perfect through pass for Raheem Sterling to skitter away upfield. Continue reading...

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Foden, the flanks and key battles that will decide Manchester City v Liverpool

The role of Phil Foden, the space afforded to Trent Alexander-Arnold and the struggle to control the wings could all be vitalNo manager has beaten Pep Guardiola as often as Jürgen Klopp, although the balance is swinging the Manchester City manager’s way, with one defeat in nine meetings since the Champions League quarter-finals of April 2018. Theirs is one of the great rivalries, a meeting of two coaches who have done more than anybody else to shape the tactical landscape of modern football. But how might they set up on Sunday and where is the game between Liverpool and their Premier League title rivals likely to be won and lost? Continue reading...

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Guardiola and Klopp have built a duel worthy of status as English clásico | Jonathan Liew

Manchester City and Liverpool are the two best club sides in the world and their new rivalry dominates English footballJürgen Klopp says this will not be the title decider. OK, Jürgen. If you say so, Jürgen. Perhaps we can safely file that away with “every opponent is a tough opponent” and “we don’t look at the league table” in the catalogue of great managerial sleights of our time. The rest of us, meanwhile, are entitled to regard Manchester City v Liverpool for what it is: a fixture that has been burning a hole in the schedule since August, that as the weeks passed was anticipated first in hope, then in expectation, and now finally in a barely disguised longing.It is...

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