Friday, November 29, 2024

Liverpool 0-1 Real Madrid: Talking points as Los Blancos clinch fourteenth European crown

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Real Madrid are officially the best team in Europe for the 14th time in their extremely rich history, after a solitary strike from Vinicius Junior just before the hour mark took them to victory over Liverpool in the Champions League final at the Stade de France on Saturday.

Organizational problems

It was with considerable frustration that the people around the world, including those in the stadium and the players of both teams, received the information that the match would start with a 15-minute delay. In the end, the delay was more than 45 minutes, and the problems at the gates which were the root of it all were described differently by different sources.

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Some media reports said that the trouble was caused by around 100 Liverpool fans who tried to get in without tickets. Other claims said that these people merely came late to the stadium. But statements coming first-hand from the people present on the scene, said the number was actually in thousands, that all of them had valid tickets, and that they had been there for hours, but were marshalled by the police and the security personnel into dangerous bottlenecks.

Real Madrid goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois later expressed regret and sympathy for the Liverpool fans involved.

As later revealed by Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp, the families of some of his players were also affected.

But whatever the root, UEFA should really do their best to investigate the commotion and make sure lessons are learned from the organizational mistakes made. The delay in the match kickoff can be considered a small consequence, given what happened a number of times due to crowd mismanagement in the past. People’s lives could be at stake, and a serious approach to handling such situations must be taken.

Thibaut Courtois

There was a lot of debate ahead of the match about who the best goalkeeper in the world is at the moment, with most people agreeing it was between Courtois and Liverpool’s Alisson Becker. But while Alisson had really little to do in this match and his quality certainly cannot be judged based on it, Courtois really proved he belongs at the very top.

The Belgium international made a total of nine saves, most of them extremely difficult, denying shots that would’ve had most ‘keeper easily beaten. But not Courtois, not on this day.

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Three of those saves stand out. One where he got down to deny a deft flick to the bottom corner by Mohamed Salah, the other when he sprung downwards to deflect a powerful low effort from Sadio Mane onto the post, and another on Salah later on when the Egyptian left Eder Militao behind and whacked goalwards from close range and a tight angle. To use an English-media cliche here, he had “no right” to save those.

It was a goalkeeping performance to be remembered and studied, worthy of great honor. It’s always the goalscorers who get all the glory, but even though it was Vinicius who scored the only goal of the game, if you’re looking fort the Man of the Match, look no further than Thibaut Courtois.

Liverpool

Back in 2018, when these two teams last met in a Champions League final, Real emerged victorious by 3-1. It was a controversial match with everything that happened involving Sergio Ramos, Salah and Loris Karius, but in the end, nobody could realistically say Liverpool deserved to win.

This time it was different. It’s not even about the difference in possession which was slight (54%-46% for Liverpool). It’s all about the way the ball was used when in control. It was Liverpool who pushed forward from the start, and even the fact that Courtois was the best performer on the night says a lot about the way the contest was going. The final stats say Klopp’s team took a total of 24 shots, nine on target, while Real had four, with just two on target.

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Liverpool’s chances of beating Real this time seemed much greater than four years ago, right from the start. They pressed and won possession high on the pitch, and had the Real defence on the ropes for a number of considerable spells. However, the better team doesn’t always win, and this match was a perfect proof of that fact.

It should, on the other hand, be said that Vinicus’ goal appeared to have deflated the Liverpool team greatly, and for a while after it came they seemed incapable of getting back on track mentally. This is very unlike the team which Klopp once described as “mentality monsters”, and it seems the fact that they took all four competitions this season to the wire and won two, drained them of the energy needed to plough on through this final task.

On the other hand, that same fact is an admirable achievement by Liverpool nonetheless.

Real Madrid

One thing that can be said about this Real performance is that it was as mature as it gets, worthy of a team with the experience of Karim Benzema, Luka Modric, Toni Kroos, Casemiro and Dani Carvajal in their ranks.

Profoundly aware of their own limitations, Carlo Ancelotti’s team simply refused to be drawn into a contest of fitness. For large parts of the game they wouldn’t press high, but formed the first line of defence some 30 yards from their goal. Those lines were kept mostly tight, with no space in between for the opposition to exploit, and the defending inside the box was extremely decisive from everyone. And behind all that, there was still the unbeatable quality of Courtois.

Real’s considerable counterattacking prowess, given the pace of their wingers and the passing skill of their midfielders, was always likely to prove a danger for Liverpool’s usual high defensive line, but even though it didn’t come off nearly as often as one might’ve thought it would (Liverpool were clearly drilled on that), it did cause problems for the Merseysiders a few times. One of those situations was crucial, as Fede Valverde broke down the right and fired low across the box. Trent Alexander-Arnold, who otherwise defensively had a fine game, was caught in no-man’s land this time and Vinicius was on hand to take advantage from close range.

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This is, basically, what this Real team does. They contain the opposition and hit when opportunity arises. When that moment comes, their hand is extremely heavy and the blow they deal is hard. Liverpool are merely the latest in a long line of their top-level victims this season in the Champions League, after Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea and Manchester City.

Conclusion

Even though everything objectively suggest Liverpool are the better team and play better football, the same can be said of Real’s three previous opponents and yet, the Spanish giants beat them all.

Given the quality of the opposition they faced throughout the knockout stage, as well as the mental strength and composure needed for those magnificent comebacks they made, it would be extremely unfair to say Real did not deserve to win the Champions League. They did.

Congratulations, Real Madrid.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Veselin Trajkovic


Vesko is a football writer that likes to observe the game for what it is, focusing on teams, players and their roles, formations, tactics, rather than stats. He follows the English Premier League closely, Liverpool FC in particular. His articles have been published on seven different football blogs.

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