Irish Independent

Wijnaldum: We are really attached to each other

- Simon Hughes

IN THE centre of the pitch at the Stadio Olimpico tonight there will be a collision of lean Dutch muscle.

Kevin Strootman and Georginio Wijnaldum are internatio­nal team-mates and via WhatsApp, they have communicat­ed since last week’s first leg at Anfield where Wijnaldum’s introducti­on as a first-half substitute proved significan­t.

Roma were well on top at the time, with Liverpool struggling to regulate the movement of Radja Nainggolan particular­ly, who was used surprising­ly by Eusebio Di Francesco at the apex of his midfield.

Within a couple of minutes, Wijnaldum had made a couple of sprints, breaking through Roma’s defence. Suddenly the Italian team were having to think about running the other way.

In the quarter-final at Manchester City, Wijnaldum was chosen to perform Jordan Henderson’s role as the screen in front of Virgil van Dijk and Dejan Lovren.

Having done well, Wijnaldum admits he was motivated by the whiplash disappoint­ment, having been told he’d only be a substitute in the next round.

A season-ending injury to Alex Oxlade Chamberlai­n was devastatin­g for Liverpool but for Wijnaldum, it ended up providing an opportunit­y.

“You have to show why you have to play,” Wijnaldum says. “To come on was not really difficult but to come in because he was injured was another thing.”

There is a sense of genuine camaraderi­e between these Liverpool players and it shows on the pitch, with attackers chasing back, midfielder­s pushing up and defenders pulling those in front of them back into position, especially since Van Dijk’s arrival.

“It is great,” Wijnaldum thinks. “A

lot of times I had the feeling I as a player, and I think every player thinks this, I am responsibl­e for how my team-mates feel.

“I just want to do my best and give 100pc and if I give 100pc they will feel better and think, ‘I will give 100 pc’.

“This is what we have right now. We are really attached to each other and we shared the same emotions and I think that is why we have a close team because we want to work hard for everyone, whether it is a player on the bench or a player who plays, everyone is trying to help each other – even if a player is disappoint­ed because he is not playing or injured he will still want to help the team to perform.”

Daniele De Rossi said after defeat at Anfield that Liverpool play a lot of long balls and so did City’s Fernandinh­o ahead of the second leg of the last round.

Wijnaldum believes Liverpool’s style is a courageous one. Long balls, really, are long passes because few are stray or speculativ­e.

When Liverpool’s front three receive possession, the game becomes shorter and even quicker. Wijnaldum thinks beating City 4-3 in the Premier League helped inspire a credence that wasn’t necessaril­y there before.

“Everyone is passive against City because they have so much quality,” he explains. “It doesn’t matter how you defend they will create chances anyway and we just play our game, tried to press them and make it as difficult as possible and it worked and it gave us a lot of confidence.

“Like I said, every time we had bad games we stepped up and did great, not always with good football but we gave everything we could and everything from that moment we knew we can reach something with this team.”

Roma v Liverpool

RTE2 and BT Sport, Live 7.45

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