Champions League 2009 - 2010 - Euro Red Diary 36
by Joel Rookwood
Lyon v Liverpool UEFA Champions League
Clinging to the rickety banisters I walked slowly up the seemingly
endless winding staircase before climbing onto the roof of the Basilique
Notre-Dame de Fourviere. The guide directed us down a narrow passageway
which led onto an overhanging balcony that can't have been
designed for touring parties. I was beginning to think the middle-aged
tour guide, whose capacity to converse in English would rival Paul
Merson's, was not as official as he had claimed. Having seemingly
made up a route around the upper echelons of this impressive eighteenth
century structure, he proceeded to bombard us with the least interesting
and most questionable information known to man. It was like spending
an afternoon with Bryan Robson.
Accompanying me and the linguistically challenged but otherwise
likeable pensioner was little Danny, a connoisseur of great heights
and an experienced building site campaigner. The rest of the lads
wisely opted to remain in the bars and leave the culture well alone.
Danny laughed at my fearful shuffling across the roof, and pushed
me into every dangerous surface he could see. When I eventually
summoned the courage to stand on and then look out over balcony
however, I was suitably impressed with the view of Lyon that stretched
out below us. The guide pointed out the ground of Olympique Lyonnais,
and immediately our mindset changed. We could only hope that as
the events of that evening unfolded, Liverpool's grip on their
Champions League
status would be as unyielding as my grip on the stone handles of
the Basilique.
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As impressive as the building was, this tour was not the cultural
experience I was expecting on arrival in France's second city
on Wednesday afternoon. It was however a far safer adventure than
that experienced on my last visit to Lyon. We had stayed in the
city en route to getting knocked out of the UEFA Cup in Marseille
in 2003. On that occasion an unofficial stadium tour was preceded
by the even less official leap off the top diving board into the
open air pool in the grounds of the stadium. It was a strange decision
to make on a murky March morning, and in retrospect it was an act
I wish I had performed with clothes on. This time around there was
to be no such embarrassing antics, and yet the painful irony that
the events of match day four could see Liverpool knocked back into
the UEFA Cup was not lost on any of the 3000 travelling Scousers.
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When news reached me of the draw for this season's Champions
League I was somewhere in the Australian outback, trying not get
eaten by spiders. My arachnophobia was not matched by a concern
for Liverpool's impending season, which promised a great deal.
I was suitably convinced that Fiorentina (whose solitary European
success came in the 1961 European Cup Winners Cup), Lyon (who had
never won a league title before 2002) and Debreceni Vasutas Sport
Club (who?) would not produce a significant threat to Liverpool
in the group stages. On the pitch, the sublimely talented but ultimately
ineffective Xavi Alonso may have departed for Real Madrid, but with
the limited Alvaro Arbeloa joining his countryman at the Bernabeu,
we had acquired the cash to fund the purchase of Glen Johnson, a
defender capable of crossing the halfway line, and Alberto Aquilani,
a midfielder who could and indeed would score goals. Pre-season
optimism in Liverpool was predictably high - and yet the quest to
bring promise and practice into closer alignment so far eludes us.
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In European competition a lacklustre victory at home to Debrecen
was followed by a deserved defeat in Fiorentina and an ill-deserved
loss to Lyon at Anfield. The match-winner of the latter fixture,
Cesar Delgado, had by that stage written off Liverpool's chances
of progressing to the knock-out stages of the competition. Liverpool
went into the return fixture in France knowing that defeat to group
leaders Lyon would leave them on the brink of elimination, with
second-placed Fiorentina favourites to beat the pointless Hungarian
minnows Debrecen.
Delgado might as well have knocked on the away dressing room of
the Stade Gerland before kick off on Wednesday and said, 'Mr Benitez,
I know you are under pressure so I have taken the liberty of writing
your team talk to inspire your side'. He was quoted in an unmentionable
newspaper as saying: "It won't surprise me if we beat them
again. People thought Liverpool would be a fixture in the quarter-finals
but now we make sure they are left out. The problem with Liverpool
is they are so inconsistent, with huge differences in the levels
of their performances. We have analysed them against Manchester
United and against Fulham and they are like two different teams.
Nobody could doubt that Lyon are the best team in the group. We
can go a very long way."
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The match that followed was inevitably dominated by Liverpool,
although the least balanced attack in world football proved unable
to break the deadlock. The exceptional Fernando Torres looked as
confused as the rest of the Liverpool faithful as his enigmatic
partner Andriy Voronin exhibited an alarming tendency to squander
both chances and possession. The equally frustrating Ryan Babel
replaced the Ukrainian 'footballer' with twenty minutes
remaining, yet surprisingly it took him only twelve minutes to find
the net. As if to confirm the view of the 'it's not
meant to be' brigade, Liverpool's deserved lead was
cancelled out in stoppage time however, as the hosts forced home
an equalising goal. Lyon's qualification was confirmed in
the process whilst Liverpool's chances of avoiding relegation
to the farcical Europa League were slipping away.
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Following a wave of unexpected defeats however, I am not about
to offer a diagnosis on 'where it has all gone wrong'
at Liverpool, like so many other journalists have insisted, somewhat
prematurely, in doing. Liverpool truly are hanging on to the threads
of their Champions League status, and their campaign looks on the
brink of ruination.
This draw may have been preceded by six defeats in seven matches,
and at some clubs that would indeed leave the manager searching
for alternative employment. But this is Liverpool. We will not bow
to the weight of pressure from the press. We will put our faith
in the man responsible for putting Liverpool back on the European
map.
The man who took a team without a centre forward to the European
Cup final twice in three years. The man responsible for giving Igor
Biscan and Djimi Traore a winner's medal that John Terry and
Frank Lampard can only dream about. Rafa has earned patience and
will be given the opportunity to rectify his mistakes - and
Mr Dalgado, how's this for cockiness: I've just booked
my flight to Madrid for May 22nd. Your team won't get past
the quarter-final.
Reclaim
The Kop |