Rotorua Daily Post

Keeper scores one-off winner

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Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson made the 80m journey into West Bromwich Albion’s penalty area, more in hope than any expectatio­n of scoring the stoppage-time goal that would keep alive his team’s chances of qualifying for the Champions League.

After all, he’d never scored a goal in his career. No Liverpool ‘keeper had in the club’s 129-year history.

One textbook header from a corner changed all that.

In one of the most sensationa­l moments of this or any Premier League season, Alisson — with his gloves on and unmissable in his black shirt and shorts — found space in the middle of the area to drill a header into the bottom corner from a perfect delivery by Trent Alexander-arnold and secure Liverpool a dramatic 2-1 win yesterday.

It came in the fifth minute of added-on time and was delivered with the technique of an establishe­d striker.

Alisson got up off the ground and was immediatel­y mobbed by team-mates. Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp was speechless in his technical area.

A goalkeeper had scored for just the sixth time in Premier League history — none of the previous five had been a winner.

And Liverpool, against all the odds, could dream once again of the Champions League with one week left of the season.

“You can’t explain a lot of things in life,” the Brazil internatio­nal said. “For me, the only reason for those types of things is God — he put his hand on my head today and I’m feeling really blessed.”

Alisson dedicated the goal to his father, Jose´ Agostinho Becker, who drowned in February after going for a swim on his property in the southern city of Lavras do Sul in Brazil.

“I (wish) he was here to see it. I’m sure he is with God at his side, celebratin­g,” he said.

Without that goal, Liverpool would have been on course to miss out on finishing in the top four, their destiny no longer in the players’ hands.

Now, wins over Burnley and Crystal Palace will likely seal Liverpool a place in the top four and a return to the Champions League for one of European football’s grandest clubs.

Liverpool have 63 points, one behind fourthplac­e Chelsea and three behind third-place Leicester with two rounds remaining.

Golden boot

Tottenham striker Harry Kane and Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah are tied on 22 goals heading into the final week of the season as they battle to win the Golden Boot — the trophy awarded to the league’s top scorer — for the third time.

Kane set Tottenham on their way to victory against Wolves but it was a frustratin­g match for the England captain, who struck the post twice and also had a header cleared off the line.

Pierre-emile Hojbjerg scored the other goal for sixth-place Spurs, who are five points behind Chelsea. Salah matched Kane by scoring Liverpool’s first goal.

Gloomy Goodison

Everton’s home form has cost them a shot at the top four. Add a 1-0 loss to already-relegated and last-place Sheffield United to the list of miserable failures at Goodison Park, which includes defeats to Fulham, Newcastle and Burnley.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Alisson is swamped by team-mates after scoring Liverpool’s winner.
Photo / AP Alisson is swamped by team-mates after scoring Liverpool’s winner.

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