Business Day

Scoring machine Salah takes the centre-stage at Liverpool

• The bargain purchase from Roma will be attempting to put his former teammates to the sword on Tuesday

- Agency Staff London AFP

Roma know the threat posed by Mohamed Salah more than most having sold the free-scoring Egyptian to Liverpool for an initial £37m just 10 months ago.

But that might not help the Italians much as they become the latest side to face the gauntlet of Anfield on a European night in Tuesday’s Champions League semifinal, first leg, as Salah has blossomed into a goal-scoring machine very few saw coming at the start of the season.

Salah’s price tag — then a club record — was questioned at the time of the deal, just two years after he failed to make an impression in the Premier League with Chelsea.

Now it seems an incredible bargain as Salah has netted 41 goals in 46 games to take Liverpool to the last four of Europe’s premier club competitio­n for the first time in a decade.

And his record-equalling 31 Premier League goals for a single season saw him crowned the PFA’s Players’ Player of the Year on Sunday.

“It wasn’t like a lot of teams other than Liverpool were banging down the door,” Roma’s US co-owner James Pallotta told the BBC’s World Football programme. “I think today a lot of teams are kicking themselves in the head that they didn’t take a closer look at him.”

In a nomadic career since moving to Europe as a 19-yearold, Salah was known for his pace and dribbling in spells at Basel and Fiorentina either side of a short time at Chelsea before moving to Roma.

However, the capability he

has shown time and again this season — keeping cool in front of goal — used to fail him. Most famously of all, Salah missed a series of one-on-ones with Real Madrid goalkeeper Keylor Navas as Roma bowed of the Champions League at the last 16 to the

side that would go on to win the competitio­n in 2016.

“At Roma he was amazing. Every game he created a lot of chances, but sometimes missed,” said Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola, who suffered from Salah’s newfound

confidence in front of goal as he scored in each leg of Liverpool’s 5-1 aggregate thrashing of the Premier League champions in the quarterfin­als.

“This season I think the way Jurgen Klopp wants to play is perfect for him. I think Jurgen is a master to buy players with what he really needs for the way he wants to play.”

Pallotta agrees that Klopp’s system of a fluid front three — with Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane — is what has brought the best out of Salah, who had to feed off the target-man figure of Edin Dzeko at Roma.

“He’s obviously had an incredible year. I think the coach there has clearly figured out how best to utilise him, using him in a different position I would say to Roma because you’ve got Dzeko in the middle.”

UPSTAGED

Despite Liverpool’s heroics against City in the last eight, they were upstaged by Roma for performanc­e of the round.

The Serie A side overturned a 4-1 first-leg deficit to beat Barcelona on away goals by shutting out Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez in a famous 3-0 second leg win.

However, a record of losing their last three Champions League games on the road — conceding eight goals in the process — does not bode well ahead of a visit to fortress Anfield.

It was Suarez’s 31-goal record that Salah matched on Saturday and stopping their former teammate over two legs may prove a step too far for Roma in their first appearance in the last four since they lost to Liverpool in the 1984 final./

 ?? /AFP ?? Against old friends: Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring Liverpool’s second goal against West Brom on Saturday. Salah will be targeting Roma’s goal in Tuesday’s Champions League first leg semifinal at Anfield.
/AFP Against old friends: Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring Liverpool’s second goal against West Brom on Saturday. Salah will be targeting Roma’s goal in Tuesday’s Champions League first leg semifinal at Anfield.

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