The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Firmino the Reds hero as late goal seals place in Club World Cup final

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MONTERREY 1 LIVERPOOL 2

Liverpool may be 3,000 miles from home but the end result continues to remain the same as substitute Roberto Firmino scored a stoppageti­me winner against Monterrey yesterday to put them into the final of the Club World Cup.

Just when it seemed that extratime – something a team struggling with injuries, just only one fit centreback and two goalkeeper­s among their seven substitute­s did not need – was beckoning, the Brazil internatio­nal popped up in the sixyard area to secure a 2-1 victory.

They have been doing that all season in the Premier League and so it was only natural they should transfer it to the world stage.

It was much closer than manager Jurgen Klopp would have wanted, especially after taking a 12th-minute lead through Naby Keita.

But the CONCACAF Champions League winners proved tough opponents and when Rogelio Funes Mori, twin brother of former Everton defender Ramiro, equalised just two minutes later it became a slog for the much-changed Reds.

Liverpool started the match without Virgil Van Dijk for the first time in a major game this season – he has not played in the Carabao Cup – and it was the one area of the team Klopp could not afford to be weakened.

Illness ruled out the Holland captain, leaving the Reds boss with Joe Gomez as his only available central defender with two youngsters in Ki-jana Hoever and Sepp Van Den Berg en route from England after playing at Aston Villa in a League Cup quarter-final which kicked off just 21 hours and 45 minutes before this one.

With Joel Matip, Dejan Lovren, Fabinho and Georginio Wijnaldum all injured it left Klopp no option but to deploy midfielder Jordan Henderson, and while his distributi­on came in handy it was an unnecessar­y disruption which Monterrey were able to capitalise on.

But having struck first through Keita’s third goal in as many games – matching his tally from his first 41 for the club – Liverpool had little time to build on their lead as the unmarked Funes Mori swept home after Alisson Becker had parried Jesus Gallardo’s shot.

Salah – the most high-profile Arabic footballer playing in an Arabic country – then put in the overlappin­g James Milner with a cute backheel, but the angle was narrow and too close to the keeper and Marcelo Barovero made the block.

Salah himself was denied on the edge by Nicolas Sanchez after the centre-back made a brilliant recovering tackle.

But while Salah was dictating things at one end Monterrey were proving a threat at the other and twice Alisson had to push away angled drives from Dorlan Pabon, with the Monterrey captain’s early second-half free-kick also having the Brazil internatio­nal at full stretch.

Keita then shot straight at the goalkeeper, Alex Oxladecham­berlain sent an effort wide and Divock Origi had a goal correctly ruled out for offside as Klopp’s side started to pick up the tempo.

The late introducti­ons of Sadio Mane and Trent Alexander-arnold gave Liverpool a more recognisab­le look but it was Firmino, who came off the bench with five minutes to go, who had the decisive say.

Salah held up the ball on the right of the area and when he dropped it back Alexander-arnold fired in one of his trademark low crosses and the Brazilian did the rest.

 ?? Picture: Shuttersto­ck. ?? Roberto Firmino scores Liverpool’s late winner.
Picture: Shuttersto­ck. Roberto Firmino scores Liverpool’s late winner.

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