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Villarreal vs Liverpool - Champions League semi-final: Live score, team news and updates

Villarreal vs Liverpool  Champions League semifinal Live score team news and updates
VILLARREAL 2-3 LIVERPOOL (agg 2-5) - MARTIN SAMUEL AT EL MADRIGAL: For a team that doesn't often win the away legs of Champions League semi-finals, Liverpool have a remarkable knack for getting through them.

Liverpool survive a BIG scare in Spain to reach the Champions League final, as three goals in 12 minutes seal 5-2 aggregate win after Villarreal netted twice in dismal first-half display by Reds

  • Liverpool survived a huge scare to reach the Champions League final
  • The Reds' first-leg advantage was wiped away by Dia and Coquelin strikes
  • Midfielder Fabinho put the visitors back in front on aggregate in the 62nd minute
  • Diaz added a second in the 67th minute and Mane sealed it seven minutes later  

By Martin Samuel for the Daily Mail

Published: 18:30 BST, 3 May 2022 | Updated: 22:53 BST, 3 May 2022

For a team that doesn’t often win the away legs of Champions League semi-finals, Liverpool have a remarkable knack for finding a way to get through them.

It was 1985 when Liverpool last won outside Anfield at this stage of the tournament. Mark Lawrenson scored the only goal of the game against Panathinaikos. 

Yet they have now made it to six finals in that time, including this one, even if 37 years separate the wins away. 

Liverpool survived a huge scare at Villarreal to reach the Champions League final
Liverpool survived a huge scare at Villarreal to reach the Champions League final

 Liverpool survived a huge scare at Villarreal to reach the Champions League final

Fabinho's shot went through the legs of Villarreal goalkeeper Geronimo Rull in 62nd minute
Fabinho's shot went through the legs of Villarreal goalkeeper Geronimo Rull in 62nd minute

Fabinho's shot went through the legs of Villarreal goalkeeper Geronimo Rull in 62nd minute

MATCH FACTS

VILLARREAL (4-4-2): Rulli 4; Foyth 7, Albiol 7 (Aurier 79min), Torres 6, Estupinan 6 (Trigueros 79); Lo Celso 7, Parejo 7, Capoue 7, Coquelin 7 (Pedraza 68, 6); Moreno 7 (Chukwueze 68, 6), Dia 7 (Alcacer 80).

Scorers: Dia 3, Coquelin 41. 

Booked: Capoue, Lo Celso, Torres. 

Sent off: Capoue 86.

Manager: Unai Emery 6.5.

LIVERPOOL (4-3-3): Alisson 7; Alexander- Arnold 7, Konate 6, Van Dijk 7, Robertson 6 (Tsimikas 80); Keita 6 (Henderson 79), Fabinho 8 (Milner 84), Thiago 6 (Jones 80); Salah 7, Jota 4 (Dia z 46, 8.5) Mane 8.

Scorers: Fabinho 62, Diaz 67, Mane 74.

Booked: Alexander-Arnold.

Manager: Jurgen Klopp 7.

Referee: Danny Makkelie (Hol) 7.

Attendance: 21,872.

The scoreline makes it look easy yet, for close to an hour, it was anything but. Villarreal owned the first-half and levelled the tie, 2-2 on aggregate. Liverpool got there in the end, though. 

Ripped the heart out of Villarreal with three second-half goals across 12 minutes. By the end they were down to ten men and utterly dispirited, Etienne Capoue dismissed for a second bookable offence, having bundled down substitute Curtis Jones.

Yet Villarreal had their moments. For much of the night the locals dared to dream, and they appreciated their teams’ efforts even in defeat. Si! Se pueze! was the mood of the night, which translates as ‘Yes, we can’ and for a while Villarreal damn well did. 

But Liverpool are the better team, with the better players and their performance level to retrieve the match after half-time was quite fantastic. By the end, for all of Villarreal’s fight, Liverpool had actually furthered their first leg advantage to a 5-2 aggregate victory. 

It was impressive stuff, placed in sharper relief by the fact that Villarreal had showed they were anything but the Champions League pretenders claimed in some quarters. Once Jurgen Klopp got to his players, and once his players woke up to the alarming weakness of their first-half performance, it was a different tie. 

Luis Diaz restored Liverpool's two-goal aggregate advantage with a header at the back post
Luis Diaz restored Liverpool's two-goal aggregate advantage with a header at the back post

Luis Diaz restored Liverpool's two-goal aggregate advantage with a header at the back post

Klopp introduced Luis Diaz, Liverpool sparked into life, the Yellow Submarines sunk. Geronimo Rulli, the hero of last season’s Europa League win, was deeply unimpressive. They would have been better off with Hiawatha..

The first goal, the one that restored Liverpool’s aggregate lead, if not the lead on the night, came after 62 minutes, from which point Liverpool never looked back. Mo Salah who, like most of Liverpool’s forwards, had been relatively quiet up to that point, drew two Villarreal defenders then slid the ball through to Fabinho. Having never scored a Champions League goal for Liverpool, he finished in some style, low through the legs of Rulli, who should have done better.

The same could be said of number two, the equaliser and the goal that gave Liverpool space to breathe on aggregate. Trent Alexander-Arnold crossed and Diaz beat Villarreal’s back line with a cute run to buy yards of space and power a header past Rulli. 

Again, a better goalkeeper might have kept it out. Finally, a lofted pass from Naby Keita sent Sadio Mane haring away and out came Rulli, far from home and too timid in the tackle. He missed the ball some 30 yards from safety and Mane took it clear of danger before firmly passing it into the empty net. It was the 150th European goal of the Klopp era. What might number 151 bring? We will find out soon enough.

Sadio Mane sealed victory with a third goal after taking the ball around Rulli in 74th minute
Sadio Mane sealed victory with a third goal after taking the ball around Rulli in 74th minute

Sadio Mane sealed victory with a third goal after taking the ball around Rulli in 74th minute

Yet, at half-time, what a scoreline: Villarreal 2 Liverpool 0. It made a mockery of the idea Unai Emery’s team had somehow let the side down by playing negatively at Anfield, that they were imposters in such high company, interlopers from last season’s Europa League who had somehow found themselves two games from a Champions League final. Jason Cundy – public enemy number one out here this week, after an impassioned denunciation of Villarreal’s tactics on TalkSport – your presumptions took one hell of a beating.

For the best part of an hour last night, Villarreal were an entirely different proposition. Bold where they had been conservative, brave where they had been cautious. Rarely have we seen this Liverpool team in such trouble. 

Passes went astray, defensive stalwarts were vulnerable and rattled. Villarreal were not flattered by their two goal lead. 

Indeed, minutes before the second came the home crowd were howling in support of what looked a very strong penalty claim. It appeared a certainty in real time, a probability on the replay, and only repeated views made the case for goalkeeper Alisson. Fortunately for Liverpool, referee Danny Makkelie is not easily swayed by sound, or fury.

Francis Coquelin headed in a second from another Capoue cross just before-half-time
Francis Coquelin headed in a second from another Capoue cross just before-half-time

Francis Coquelin headed in a second from another Capoue cross just before-half-time

Yet Villarreal appeared inspired by all of it. The supposed injustice, the absence of respect. They started at a tempo that will have been familiar to Liverpool. It is how they have swept teams away in this competition in the past. Rarely is it successfully done to them. 

And it worked. 

It produced a goal in only the third minute and, suddenly, Villarreal were flying. Had the game drifted, maybe the crowd would have been silenced, increasingly pessimistic as they were in the second-half. Instead, their dreams became fleeting reality: two goals down became just one, then none. Yes we can became: can we?

It was a goal that exposed Liverpool on both flanks. Pervis Estupinan got down the left and got the better of Trent Alexander-Arnold, hitting a deep cross that allowed Capoue to get in behind Andy Robertson, cutting the ball back for Boulaye Dia in the middle. Alisson had stumbled and the goal was unprotected. Dia made the simplest conversion, his first Champions League goal and what a time to get it.

Boulaye Dia scored Villarreal's first after only three minutes, converting Etienne Capoue's pass
Boulaye Dia scored Villarreal's first after only three minutes, converting Etienne Capoue's pass

Boulaye Dia scored Villarreal's first after only three minutes, converting Etienne Capoue's pass

So much of Villarreal’s best work was being done wide. Estupinan, in particular, was a threat and in the 16th minute he picked out Gerard Moreno – missing and missed at Anfield – with a lovely cross. His header was on target but vitally blocked by Robertson.

Then the controversy, Liverpool served up possession and Villarreal sped away on the counter-attack two against one. Moreno slipped the ball to Giovani Lo Celso who took it past the advancing Alisson before getting completely cleaned out. 

Makkelie instantly waved play on, signalling the Brazilian had got the ball. Perhaps, but he appeared to come through Lo Celso to get it. Villarreal’s players were furious, their fans too. Yet if VAR Pol Van Boekel did check, he did not require Makkelie to take a second look. Villarreal remained incensed.

And then, suddenly, jubilant. It was Capoue again on the right, getting the better of Robertson and crossing for Coquelin in the centre. He rose above Alexander-Arnold and his header powered past Alisson, rooted to the spot. 

Villarreal ended the game with 10 men with Capoue sent off late on for two bookable offences
Villarreal ended the game with 10 men with Capoue sent off late on for two bookable offences

Villarreal ended the game with 10 men with Capoue sent off late on for two bookable offences

Justice done – if not for the disputed penalty, then for the performance. Villarreal had been outstanding, and the numbers showed it. No shots on target for Liverpool and passing way off. Thiago Alcantara had the best completion rate, but at 73 per cent when a number in the nineties is not uncommon.

Yet they turned it around because that is what great teams do. And this is a great team, make no mistake about that. 

The first in the history of English football to reach the finals of the Champions League, FA Cup and League Cup – in doing so, equalling the club record from 2000-01 of playing every match in the fixture list when the season began. That was in Europe’s second competition, though. This is the big one. A third Champions League final in five years. ‘Are you watching, Manchester?’ the fans crowed at the end. Over in Madrid, City will have been glued, you can guarantee that.

Villarreal midfielder Gio Lo Celso was denied by Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker
Villarreal midfielder Gio Lo Celso was denied by Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker

Villarreal midfielder Gio Lo Celso was denied by Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp celebrates with his players after seeing off Villarreal
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp celebrates with his players after seeing off Villarreal

Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp celebrates with his players after seeing off Villarreal

Scroll down to see how it all unfolded with Sportsmail's live runner.

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