Deccan Chronicle

Sameer reaches Orleans semis

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New Delhi: Sameer Verma reached the semifinals of the Orleans Open World Super 100 tournament, beating Frenchman Lucas Corvee in men’s singles competitio­n on Saturday. Top seeded Sameer, who clinched the Swiss Open last month, saw off eighth seeded Corvee 17-21, 21-19, 21-15 in an hour and eight minutes. He will face the Netherland­s’ Mark Caljouw, seeded fourth, in the last four. Fifth seeded Parupalli Kashyap lost 18-21, 14-21 to third seeded Rasmus Gemke of Denmark. In a 44-minute battle, Francis Alwin and K. Nandagopal went down 21-19, 14-21, 8-21 loss to third seeded Germans Mark Lamsfuss and Marvin Emil Seidel in the men’s doubles. — PTI

March 31: Jurgen Klopp admitted Liverpool rode their luck as Sadio Mane escaped a second yellow card before Mohamed Salah struck his 37th goal of the season to grind out a 2-1 win at Crystal Palace on Saturday.

Luka Milivojevi­c drove relegation threatened Palace into a 13th minute lead from the penalty spot.

Mane levelled four minutes after the break, but, having already been booked for diving, was later given a huge let off by referee Kevin Friend when he deliberate­ly handled the ball just outside his own penalty area.

Klopp quickly replaced the Senegalese and Liverpool took advantage when despite having one of the quieter games of an incredible debut season at the club, Salah proved the match winner, equaling the league record of scoring in 21 matches in a 38game season.

While Klopp insisted he believed Mane’s first yellow was unfair, even the German was surprised a second booking wasn’t forthcomin­g when he handled just after the hour mark. “For Sadio it was not a perfect day and he made the wrong decision to put his hand on the ball,” said Klopp.

“I thought that was it, ‘Au Revoir, see you later’, but then it became even more strange.

“In that moment we are lucky, but in my opinion it would have been his first (deserved) yellow card of the game.”

Victory edges Liverpool ever closer to sealing a place in the top four and a return to the Champions League next season.

However, they will need a much-improved performanc­e if they are to progress to the semi-finals of this season’s Champions League when they host runaway Premier League leaders Manchester City in the first leg of their quarterfin­al on Wednesday.

“The dirty three points are very often the most important,” added Klopp, who lamented his side’s lack of preparatio­n for the lunchtime kick-off with various members of his squad only returning to training on Thursday after their internatio­nal duties.

“Nobody should be worried about our mood. Our boys are really on fire.”

It is Liverpool’s defensive deficienci­es that will most concern Klopp ahead of facing free-scoring City as they were also bailed out by two huge misses from Christian Benteke.

A third straight home defeat for Palace leaves Roy Hodgson’s men still perilously placed just above the relegation zone.

However, the former England manager was magnanimou­s in his evaluation of whether Mane should have seen red.

“I’m not going to sit here saying the only reason we came away with another defeat is because the referee didn’t send one of their players off,” said Hodgson.

Palace had made the perfect start when Liverpool goalkeeper Loris Karius was also fortunate to avoid a red card when he brought down Wilfried Zaha and Milivojevi­c converted from the penalty spot. — AFP

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