Shanghai Daily

Istanbul beckons again for Reds as Super Cup clash with Chelsea set

- SOCCER

LIVERPOOL returns to the scene of its most dramatic European triumph when it faces Chelsea in Istanbul, Turkey, for the Super Cup today, the first major men’s European final to be refereed by a woman.

For any Liverpool fan, Istanbul brings back memories of the thrilling comeback from 0-3 down to win the UEFA Champions League final against AC Milan in 2005.

The Super Cup is little more than a ceremonial opener for the new European season, but a win could give UCL winner Liverpool and already struggling Europa League champion Chelsea some valuable early-season momentum.

For Juergen Klopp’s Liverpool, it’s a chance to continue a strong start to the season after their 4-1 thrashing of Norwich City on the opening day of the English Premier League on Friday. New manager Frank Lampard and Chelsea must bounce back from a 0-4 loss to Manchester United.

Liverpool is unbeaten against English teams in Europe over six games stretching back to 2009, when it lost a UCL quarterfin­al to Chelsea.

Fresh off refereeing the Women’s World Cup final, France’s Stephanie Frappart will be in the spotlight when she controls today’s game.

Frappart is no stranger to men’s games after making her debut in the French league in April. She was calm under pressure when the United States beat the Netherland­s in July’s Women’s World Cup final, using the video assistant referee system to award the penalty for the US to take the lead.

“Stephanie has proved over a number of years that she is one of the best female referees, not just in Europe but across the world,” UEFA refereeing chief Roberto Rosetti said this month. “She has the ability to officiate on the biggest stage.”

Frappart is not quite the first woman to referee European men’s games — Swiss referee Nicole Petignat handled three UEFA Cup qualifiers over a decade ago. Frappart is by far the most high profile.

Meanwhile, one game into the season is a bit early for an injury crisis.

However, after first-choice goalkeeper Alisson hurt his calf on Friday, Klopp was left with new signing Adrian as his only fit ‘keeper.

Two other backup options have injuries, too, forcing Liverpool into the emergency signing of 35-year-old former Middlesbro­ugh goalkeeper Andy Lonergan.

Lonergan spent time with Liverpool in preseason and will be on the bench behind Adrian for the Super Cup despite never having played in the EPL or any European competitio­n before.

He’s on a short-term contract and is likely to leave Liverpool once Alisson’s calf injury clears up — expected in the next few weeks, Klopp says — or when 20-year-old Irish reserve Caoimhin Kelleher regains fitness.

(AP)

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