Liverpool (14) Middlesbrough (13): Marathon Penalty Session as Reds Progress in Cup
You got a bit tired of watching penalties by the end there, didn’t you? I’ve never been one to actually enjoy the drama of spot-kicks, but that dragged on a bit too long — and when you consider it should have been done and dusted on more than one occasion, that just makes the whole thing even worse.
Jordan Rossiter opened the scoring for Liverpool on the 10-minutes mark as the 17-year old made his senior debut for the boys in red, but the one goal lead always looked precarious as Middlesbrough kept up the pace and they were well rewarded for their effort when Adam Reach headed past Simon Mignolet to send the contest to extra time. Suso looked to have sealed progression in extra time with his first goal for the Anfield outfit, but Patrick Bamford’s last gasp penalty sent the travelling support in raptures and the two sides into a shoot-out.
And what a spectacle it was.
The Belgian saved Boro’s first spot-kick to set his side up nicely for the remainder, only to have Raheem Sterling miss the crucial fifth penalty to send it to sudden death. By the time Albert Adomah shot wide to hand victory to the hosts, 20-penalties in a row found the back of the net — including both ‘keepers scoring past each other.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it at least one more time before this post — which won’t be too much longer — is over: there are no easy matches. Despite that, it’s a pity that a night that should have been remembered more for Rossiter and Suso’s first goals for the club, it’ll be remembered for a ridiculously long shoot-out and the side proving, once again, that even against opposition from the Championship, they can’t defend.
That’s taking nothing away from Aitor Karanka’s side either — they played fantastically well and deserved far more than they got. Grant Leadbitter’s delivery from the free-kick was as on the money as Reach’s header to equalize and when Bamford worked his way into the box only to be upended by Kolo Toure, he always looked likely to score. Former Liverpool defender Daniel Ayala was strong at the back and Jamal Blackman, despite a handful of nervy moments, made a number of fine stops to deny his more fancied adversaries.
You remember them, right? The team sporting the red shirts who had more than one player that cost in the region of £20mil or more in the side? It was a wet Tuesday night in the least glamorous competition we’ll play in this year, but when you’re a Liverpool player, you have to be up for it. There’s no easy matches, but there are ones that are entirely winnable from the start.
I can trot out all the old excused and even some very valid ones, but the fact remains that we’re going to have to worlds better to beat Everton on Saturday and I’ll be honest and say I wouldn’t be all that surprised — based on that performance and the one against West Ham United at the weekend– if we fall a bit short of that mark.
–Steven
the key point in this article is there are no easy matches; we hv strengthened the squad depth, but no one can replace suarez; we hv lost the intensity in attack w that loss, and only time will tell if we could regain it without suarez, hopeful…
We’re really lacking his movement up top, but with Sturridge on the verge of returning, we’ll have that back in due time. Right now we need to focus on getting the new guys playing within the system and gelling with the other guys.