Irish Sunday Mirror

Pope had a day to forget... but the Toon came together to remember Sir Bobby & Atsu

- ANDY DUNN

FIRST things first, if you cannot put things into perspectiv­e on an occasion such as the one at St James’ Park on Saturday evening, then you never will be able to.

The poignancy ahead of the match was palpable, a magnificen­t flag unfurled bearing the image of Sir Bobby Robson, who would have celebrated his 90th birthday on the day of this fixture.

Lady Elsie and her sons Andrew, Paul and Mark were special guests of the club and the Robson family laid flowers at the great man’s statue outside St James’ Park.

Sir Bobby would have loved Christian Atsu had he worked with him, would have loved his enthusiasm, would have loved his smile, would have loved how the Ghanaian cared about others – they both cared about those less fortunate than themselves.

And like so many, he would have been devastated by the tragedy that has struck Turkey and Syria and has claimed, among its 45,000 victims, the life of Atsu at just 31 years of age.

Atsu spent five years on Tyneside and there were supporters outside the stadium wearing his jersey to the match.

It was an emotional build-up to a fixture that always stirs the emotions.

And Sir Bobby and Atsu would have been proud of how the home support stuck magnificen­tly to their task despite a result that ranks as something of a scar on a very good season.

Whatever could go wrong for Newcastle in the opening quarter of the match did.

It was a quarter capped by the dismissal of Nick Pope, who had barely got off the floor after deliberate­ly handling outside his area before Anthony Taylor was brandishin­g his red card.

Mohamed Salah was dashing on to an enterprisi­ng, longrange piece of distributi­on from Alisson and Pope misjudged his attempt to clear with a diving header and instinctiv­ely laid glove on ball.

There are several bottom lines here. One, Pope only had himself to blame.

Two, he is a superb shotstoppe­r but needs to work hard on the game with his feet, especially if he is going to venture this far outside his area.

Three, Taylor was applying, albeit with gusto, the letter of the law.

Four, the regulation­s are known by everyone who takes part in the three main competitio­ns in English profession­al football.

But the punishment, merely by its timing, seems brutally harsh, Pope now suspended for next Sunday’s Carabao Cup final.

Again, Pope only has himself to blame but there would

probably be few dissenters if there was a rule change that meant suspension­s were served only in the competitio­n they were ‘earned’ in.

It was to Newcastle’s credit that not only did their fans redouble their efforts, their players did likewise.

When Pope was sent off, Liverpool were already two to the good – Darwin Nunez with an unusually emphatic finish and Cody Gakpo turning in Salah’s pass.

But the 10 men acquitted themselves well, bringing a couple of decent saves out of Alisson and twice hitting the woodwork.

This, however, meant the unbeaten league run of 17 was not extended and Eddie Howe’s team now have only one win in seven Premier League games.

Howe always implied that talk of a title challenge was fanciful and recent results prove him right. Liverpool, in eighth, now lie six points behind fourth-placed Newcastle, have a game in hand and have key players returning from injury. Newcastle’s fight for the remainder of the Premier League campaign will, almost certainly, be for fourth place. Their next fight, of course, will be against Manchester United in a first Wembley final for the club since 1999. It should be a fantastic occasion, another emotional occasion, but one that Pope will have to miss. That is unfortunat­e but, at times, it is appropriat­e to put some things into perspectiv­e.

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 ?? ?? TOUGH GLOVE Pope handles the ball outside of his area to deny Salah a scoring chance
TOUGH GLOVE Pope handles the ball outside of his area to deny Salah a scoring chance
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 ?? ?? CAUGHT RED-HANDED Newcastle keeper Nick Pope is given his marching orders in the first half
MATCH REPORT See pullout
EMOTIONAL Young Newcastle fan shows his support
KOP THAT Nunez fires Liverpool into an early lead
MAGIC DUTCH Gakpo makes it 2-0 to the Reds
TRAGEDY Newcastle players stand together in memory of Christian Atsu
TOON LEGEND Newcastle fans pay tribute to former manager Sir Bobby Robson
CAUGHT RED-HANDED Newcastle keeper Nick Pope is given his marching orders in the first half MATCH REPORT See pullout EMOTIONAL Young Newcastle fan shows his support KOP THAT Nunez fires Liverpool into an early lead MAGIC DUTCH Gakpo makes it 2-0 to the Reds TRAGEDY Newcastle players stand together in memory of Christian Atsu TOON LEGEND Newcastle fans pay tribute to former manager Sir Bobby Robson
 ?? ?? PREMIER LEAGUE
PREMIER LEAGUE

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