toptop
Virgil
van Dijk headed a 118th-minute winner to seal the Carabao Cup for Liverpool with
a 1-0 win over Chelsea.
Jurgen Klopp's swansong season has guaranteed at least one piece of silverware
for the club, but it took a long time to get there in a topsy-turvy encounter
that somehow stayed goalless for nearly the duration at Wembley.
There were posts hit at each end, VAR foils for each team and a string of
chances denied. But with penalties looming it was Van Dijk who settled it,
rising highest to head in from a corner. It is the 10th time they have won this
cup, increasing their position as the most successful team in the history of the
competition ahead of Manchester City (eight).
For Chelsea there will only be regret, and Mauricio Pochettino's wait for a
first trophy in England continues.
A chaotic clash at Wembley settled by
Liverpool at the last
It was an engaging opening at Wembley, with both goalkeepers tested early on.
First Chelsea's Djordje Petrovic was called into action twice in quick
succession from Alexis Mac Allister and Luis Diaz. Then, at the other end,
Caoimhin Kelleher produced an unbelievable stop from point-blank range to deny
Cole Palmer.
The chances kept coming. Raheem Sterling had the ball in the net for Chelsea,
but VAR narrowly ruled Nicolas Jackson offside in the build-up. Cody Gakpo then
rattled the Blues post with a header.
VAR figured heavily again on the hour. Van Dijk thought he had headed Liverpool
in front from a free-kick but, after a lengthy check, Wataru Endo was deemed to
be offside in the build-up, impeding Levi Colwill - who was prevented from
reaching the Reds captain.
The see-saw swung Chelsea's way again as they took their turn to rattle the
woodwork, with Conor Gallagher in disbelief he hadn't scored after prodding
Palmer's cross against the post from six yards. Several minutes later Gallagher
was denied once more, slipped through by Palmer but not getting the ball out of
his feet quickly enough to beat the onrushing Kelleher.
More chaos ensued in the Liverpool box, but no way through was found, and the
game moved into extra-time, during which Petrovic denied Harvey Elliott's
close-range header with his leg at the near post.
Finally, with two minutes left of extra-time that breakthrough was found. Van
Dijk rose again, this time from a corner, to nod in at the Liverpool end,
sending the Reds into bedlam.
Klopp: Win was
'absolutely insane' | 'The kids were unbelievable'
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp on Sky Sports:
"What happened here this afternoon is absolutely insane. These things are not
possible.
"Besides, we had a team, a squad with an academy full of character. It's
unbelievable what happened here tonight. I'm so proud that I could be part of it
tonight. Wow.
"The crazy stuff is, we deserved it. We had lucky moments, they had lucky
moments. That's the game, it was a tough game - it was almost 150 minutes with
all the extra-times. The boys showed up, it was so good.
"I'm pretty sure when we were bringing on all the kids that people were
thinking: 'Okay that's it now, they've given up with a game on Wednesday'.
"It was really not the case, we thought we needed fresh legs. They were fresh
legs, but very young. They did the job. Dannsy headed the ball on the crossbar,
the other one was scrappy. James, Bobby, what they did - unbelievable."
Neville: The blue billion-pound bottle jobs
shrunk in front of our eyes
Sky Sports' Gary Neville:
"In extra time it's been Klopp's kids against the blue billion-pound bottle
jobs.
"Liverpool have been absolutely sensational. Those young players have been
incredible. Klopp must be so proud.
"However, for Chelsea, I have no sympathy for them whatsoever. Mauricio
Pochettino's players have shrunk. They have shrunk right in front of our eyes
and in front of their fans.
"This will sting for Chelsea. Before the game, with Liverpool's injuries, you
think Chelsea could have won. The Liverpool's kids come on and you think they
should win. But then there was just something holding you back because you
couldn't see Jurgen Klopp watching Chelsea go up and lift the trophy.
"The Chelsea players will regret that extra time for a long, long time. I
thought they played quite well and punched hard in normal time. They were a
little unlucky. But in the real crux of the game in extra time, where they had
Liverpool by the scruff of the neck with those young kids, Chelsea didn't turn
up. They didn't perform.
"You cannot do that. It was in half time of extra time Pochettino had to get
them in a huddle and try to rouse them. What was up with them?
"I'm really disappointed with Chelsea in that extra time period. You can lose
any final and you can lose any game of football, but you cannot play like that.
You cannot shrink and go back, particularly when Liverpool had five kids on the
pitch.
"They had to go for their throats."
Poch responds to 'bottle jobs' jibe
Chelsea boss Mauricio Pochettino:
"If you compare the age of the two groups, it's similar. I have a good
relationship with Gary, I can respect his opinion. We made a few changes for
extra time, but we didn't keep the energy. For sure I feel proud. They made a
big effort.
"We have a young team, and nothing to compare with Liverpool because they
finished with young players on the pitch. It's not fair to talk in this way, if
he said that. We're going to keep being strong and believing in this project."
Pochettino added to Sky Sports:
"It's always difficult when you lose a final because you have the chances. It's
one game.
"We lost in the last minute of the game. So painful. Now we have to take the
positive things, keep going, push and use this type of game to learn and do
better and only be positive. We really competed. In some periods of the game I
think we deserved more. But if you don't score with the chances we had, five or
six big chances, it's difficult to win the final.
"You need to be clinical in front of the goal. We need to congratulate Liverpool
and keep going."
Carragher: Football is about connections not
money
Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher:
"This result just tells you that football isn't all about money. It's about
getting the right players and creating a connection between those players, the
manager and the supporters.
"Liverpool have that in abundance. There's no doubt Chelsea have quality but
they still haven't found that connection this season."
What's next?
Chelsea welcome Leeds United to Stamford Bridge in the FA Cup fifth round at
7.30pm on Wednesday night. The Blues then visit Brentford in the Premier League
on Saturday; kick off 3pm.
Liverpool host Southampton in the FA Cup fifth round on Wednesday at 8pm. Jurgen
Klopp's side visit Nottingham Forest in the Premier League next Saturday at 3pm.
Teams
Liverpool Kelleher, Robertson (Tsimikas 87), van Dijk (c),
Konate (Quansah 106), Bradley (Clark 72), Gravenberch (Gomez 28), Endo, Mac
Allister (McConnell 87), Diaz, Gakpo (Danns 87), Elliott
Subs Not Used Adrian, Koumas, Nyoni
Booked Bradley, Mac Allister, Konate, McConnell, Gomez
Goals van Dijk 118
Chelsea Petrovic; Gusto, Disasi, Colwill, Chilwell (c)
(Chalobah 113); Caicedo, Enzo; Palmer, Gallagher (Madueke 97), Sterling (Nkunku
67); Jackson (Mudryk 90)
Subs Not Used Sanchez, Bettinelli, Gee, Gilchrist, Tauriainen
Booked Chilwell, Palmer
Goals
Attendance 88,868
Referee Chris Kavanagh
VAR John Brooks