Marlborough Express

Liverpool survive scare

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Liverpool recovered from throwing away a three-goal lead against Salzburg as Mohamed Salah’s 69th-minute strike earned the titleholde­rs a wild 4-3 win in the Champions League yesterday.

Trailing 3-0 after 36 minutes following goals by Sadio Mane, Andrew Robertson and Salah, Salzburg stunned the Premier League leaders by scoring three unanswered goals in 21 minutes either side of halftime at Anfield. The 60th-minute equaliser was tapped in by Erling Braut Haaland for his fourth goal of the competitio­n already.

Salah regained the lead for Liverpool by running onto Roberto Firmino’s flicked header and cushioning a left-foot shot into the net, and the Reds held firm to collect their first points in group play after opening up with a 2-0 loss at Napoli.

Salzburg signalled they might be one of the most entertaini­ng sides in this season’s Champions League by thrashing Genk 6-2 in the first round of games, with Haaland scoring a hat trick to bolster his reputation as one of the most exciting young strikers in Europe.

And the Austrian team played its part in what proved to be a shootout at Anfield.

Mane opened the scoring by jinking in from the left, playing a one-two with Firmino, and slotting his finish past the goalkeeper in the ninth minute.

The second goal was a flowing team move that was finished off by Liverpool’s two flying full backs, Trent Alexander-arnold crossing from the right and left back Robertson turning the ball home from close range in the 25th.

When Salah scored off a rebound in the 36th after Firmino’s header was parried out, Liverpool looked like running up a big score.

Yet Salzburg crucially got back in the game before halftime when Hwang Hee-chan achieved the rarely seen feat of turning Virgil van Dijk – leaving the Liverpool defender sprawling on the turf – and fired his shot into the corner.

Because of a scoreboard malfunctio­n inside Anfield, the screens showed: LIVERPOOL 3, SALZBURG 3.

Before long, that was the score.

Takumi Minamino met a left-wing cross with a volley into the ground and past goalkeeper Adrian in the 56th minute, and the Japanese forward set up the equalizer for Haaland with a low cross into the area that the substitute couldn’t miss.

Salzburg’s American coach, Jesse Marsch, sprinted down the touchline to join in the celebratio­ns with his players in front of the team’s fans. Salah ensured they were shortlived.

Meanwhile, Luis Suarez scored two superbly taken goals in the second half as Barcelona came from behind to beat Inter Milan 2-1.

Elsewhere, Willian marked his 300th Chelsea appearance by volleying in the deciding goal to secure a 2-1 victory at Lille, handing manager Frank Lampard his first win in Europe.

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