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And that will also end my evening. Here’s some bedtime reading for you:
1) Will Unwin on Liverpool 3-2 Atletico:
2) Jacob Steinberg watches Harry Kane score twice as Bayern Munich beat Chelsea 3-1:
3) And Ben Fisher watches Swansea score twice in stoppage time to dump Nottingham Forest out of the Carabao Cup:
Bye!
Andy Robertson started his evening with a chat on the telly, and is ending it the same way.
We need to maybe get back to winning a bit simpler and a bit easier. The manager turned to me after Virgil’s header and said he’s getting too old. When you’re 2-0 up, it should have been a more comfortable night.
I thought Isak was excellent. Not really had a pre-season, but especially in the first half he was excellent. Naturally got tired, and it’s amazing to have a player like Hugo come on. They’re the future, they’re the ones who are going to take this club forwards and I’m sure they’ll only get better.
There’s so many players come in but they’re all young as well, so you do have to help them. It’s a completely different club to play for, one of the most demanding, and that comes with responsibility and pressure. We’ve all thrived on it and these lads will thrive on it as well.
Last-ditch result-changing goals are the match reporter’s nightmare, but anyone who watches Liverpool regularly must be getting used to it by now. Talking of which, here’s Will Unwin’s report:
It should have been a lot easier than this for Liverpool but the 92nd-minute roar to celebrate Virgil van Dijk’s winner against Atlético Madrid made the hardship worthwhile.
After scoring twice in the opening six minutes through Andy Robertson and Mohamed Salah, Liverpool were galloping to victory but were pegged back by two goals from Marcos Llorente, only for their captain to head home a late corner and send Anfield wild in the process.
Much more here:
Some post-match thoughts from Virgil van Dijk:
They were pretty aggressive, I must say. It’s a team that never gives up, they have quality players and can punish you. [But] I think we’ve shown many times that we are capable of doing it. Today I was the lucky one with the winner, and we move on.
Final score: Liverpool 3-2 Atlético de Madrid
90+7 mins: And it’s over! What a ludicrous final few minutes, but as the dust settles it’s another late winner and another Liverpool win!
90+7 mins: And nearly an equaliser! A lovely cross from the right and Sorloth heads straight at Alisson!
90+6 mins: What a miss! Atletico lose the ball in the centre circle, it’s played right to Salah, and his low cross bounces just before it reaches an unmarked Ekitike, who deflects it into the ground and it bounces up and over the bar!
90+5 mins: Now Ekitike nearly bursts past the defence, but Lenglet manages to deflect the ball back to his keeper.
Red card for Diego Simeone!
90+4 mins: The Atletico Madrid coach heads down the tunnel, having been dismissed by referee Maurizio Mariani!
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90+3 mins: Diego Simeone is very angry about something (not the goal, which obviously he’s very angry about, but something in the crowd, because that’s where he headed after the goal).
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GOAL! Liverpool 3-2 Atletico Madrid (Van Dijk, 90+2 mins)
But there’s no stopping this one! The delivery is perfect, and Van Dijk from a good 12 yards hammers a header into the corner!

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90+2 mins: Szoboszlai’s corner flies only just over Van Dijk’s head and is cleared. The Hungarian sends it back in, and it hits a defender and rolls behind for another one.
90+1 mins: Into four minutes of stoppage time we go, and Liverpool win another corner.
90 mins: Salah’s cross from the right finds every defender snoozing and Ekitike on his toes, but so is Oblak, who rushes out to deal with it.
89 mins: Another Liverpool corner, which flicks off Ekitike, off a defender, and sneaks just the wrong/right side of the post, depending on your perspective. A goal kick is given.
88 mins: What with how the game started Atletico haven’t been able to spend long with 11 players behind the ball, so they’re making up for it now.
86 mins: And from the corner Konate thumps a header wide! Liverpool bring Kerkez on for Robertson.
85 mins: Bradley gives the ball to Salah and goes for the byline, takes the return pass and whips the ball across goal, where a defender reaches it first. Corner.
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84 mins: Mac Allister goes down in the penalty area, but only Liverpool’s fans think it should be a penalty.
GOAL! Liverpool 2-2 Atletico Madrid (Llorente, 81 mins)
Llorente strikes again! Atletico attack down the left, seem to lose it, never quite do so, Simeone’s shot from the left-hand corner of the penalty area deflects off Konate’s back and drops to Llorente, and he hammers a volley past Alisson from 20 yards!
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79 mins: The last 10 minutes or so have been played to a soundtrack of gently concerned background grumblement.
76 mins: Atletico win a corner, and before they take it Marc Pubill comes on for Gonzalez.
75 mins: Rio Ngumoha comes on for Wirtz, who has played very well and hinted at a potentially very exciting partnership with Isak.
73 mins: Llorente picks up the ball on the right, runs diagonally across the penalty area and finally has a shot, which surely deflects off Bradley. A goal kick is given, which Atletico are not pleased about, and one of their coaches is booked for being excessively miffed.
72 mins: Liverpool nearly score on the break again! Salah is played through on the right, just about beats the defender for pace, and from the byline lifts the ball to the far post, where Ekitike can’t quite reach it, it drops to Wirtz and he can’t work a shooting chance.
70 mins: Bradley grabs Javier Galan’s right arm, pulls him to the ground and wins himself a yellow card.
67 mins: Surely someone is about to score? Atletico overcommit again, Szoboszlai crosses from the right to Wirtz, who touches to Ekitike, who lifts it overt the bar.
65 mins: … And they almost pay the price! Liverpool break, Wirtz and Szoboszlai get in each other’s way as the ball breaks into the Atletico box and then it breaks right to Salah, who smashes it into the inside of the post!
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64 mins: Now It’s Atletico exerting pressure, pushing numbers forward in search of an equaliser.
61 mins: And now a couple of changes for Atletico: Alexander Sorloth and Nahuel Molina come on, replacing Griezmann and Gallagher.
60 mins: An hour played, and Atletico haven’t been out of their half for a while.
59 mins: Liverpool make a triple change: Isak, Frimpong and Gakpo go off, Ekitike, Bradley and Mac Allister come on.
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57 mins: The corner comes to nothing, but Liverpool keep attacking for a couple of minutes, everyone by now knowing that the move represents Isak’s final chance of a debut goal. The ball nearly drops for him a couple of times, but never actually does so.
55 mins: Liverpool win a corner, and prepare several substitutions. They’ll take the corner first.
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54 mins: Liverpool are pushing for a third here. Salah crosses from the right into a defender’s arm, very similar to the moment that presented Liverpool with their matchwinning penalty at Burnley, but this time the arm wasn’t unnaturally extended, and play continues.
53 mins: And that’s Raspadori’s final involvement in the game, as he makes way for Koke.
52 mins: Good work from Atletico on their right and eventually they work it to Raspadori, who gets enough space to shoot and doesn’t hesitate. But at that point he’s at an unpromisingly acute angle, and Alisson saves.
50 mins: After lengthy build-up on the left Robertson crosses, and the referee sees/imagines a very gentle push from Isak on a defender. On the touchline, Koke is preparing to come on for Atletico.
46 mins: No halftimely changes, so Isak plays on, for now. I’ve had a few emails about the Atletico goal, and whether it should have been disallowed for offside against Antoine Griezmann, whose run into the area had carried him beyond the defence to a position just in front of Alisson. “I know it’s constantly changing, but from the looks of it Griezman was standing straight in front of Alisson and obscuring his line of vision from an offside position when that goal went in,” writes Samuel Dodson (and 10,482 others). “Trust the officials made the right call but has something changed with the rules around interfering with play?” No rule changes, I can’t imagine VAR didn’t consider the possibility (OK, I can imagine, but I’ll make a charitable assumption), but Marco Di Bello must have decided that Alisson had sight of the ball when the shot was taken.
46 mins: Peeeeep! And they’re off!
The players are back out, and Atleti are preparing for kick-off.
Two minutes away from being a brilliantly encouraging half for Liverpool, but even so a good one. Partly because Mo Salah has looked like Mo Salah, for the first time in the three Liverpool games I’ve seen this season, and partly because Isak, who grew into the half from a slow start, has obviously none of his silkiness on his journey from Newcastle. But the game remains very much unwon, which for the neutrals among us is probably ideal. “Atléti looked so flat before pulling one back,” says Kari Tulinius. “Now they look like they have the fire inside them. Simeone has a reputation for stirring half-time talks, but he won’t need to do much to have them roar out of the traps at the restart.”
Half time: Liverpool 2-1 Atlético de Madrid
45+5 mins: The free-kick is lifted into the penalty area, bounces out of play and that’s it for a very entertaining opening half.
45+5 mins: Lenglet brings down Gravenberch on halfway and is booked.
GOAL! Liverpool 2-1 Atletico Madrid (Llorente, 45+3 mins)
Game on! A nice move from the away side, with Giacomo Raspadori timing his run from deep perfectly and passing infield to Llorente, who takes an imperfect touch that works out nicely as he stretches and toe-pokes through Konate’s legs and inside the far post.
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45+1 mins: Another Atletico corner starts stoppage time, of which there’ll be about four minutes.
43 mins: Nearly a wonderful third! Wirtz to Isak, Isak’s lovely pass back to Wirtz, he touches wide of the advancing Oblak but just behind the run of Frimpong, who therefore can’t turn it into an empty net. At the pace Frimpong runs, there’s really not a lot of margin for error.
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41 mins: Now Robertson passes from the left in to Isak, who spins, makes space, and shoots. Things are starting to happen for him, but all that happens this time is an easy save by Oblak.
40 mins: Save! A big loopy ball forward drops just over the defender’s head and right onto Salah’s boot, but he volleys at Oblak.
39 mins: Wirtz passes to Isak on the edge of the area. It’s not a great pass, but Isak’s first touch is great, he spins, and sends a shot just wide.
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38 mins: A lovely first-time touch from Salah to kill the pace of a ball fizzed into him and lay it into Wirtz’s path. As Tim Stappard writes, “looks like Salah has decided to earn his wages for once”.
No penalty
36 mins: The referee takes another look, and common sense prevails. Corner kick.
Penalty to Liverpool (for now)!
35 mins: Now Frimpong is played into the area, his cross hits the sliding Lenglet and bounces off his body into his arm (probably). The referee has given a penalty for handball, but it’s patently absurd and he’ll surely change his mind when he’s told to take another look.
34 mins: Frimpong makes an excellent and very rapid run into the area, but Gravenberch chooses not to pass to him. But then …
31 mins: Isak plays a first-time pass infield to Salah and is absolutely wiped out as by Le Normand he does so. Salah goes on and shoots at Oblak, Le Normand is booked, Isak requires the physio.
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30 mins: ... and now it’s 2-1, Cole Palmer pulling one back. At Anfield Atletico continue to exert gentle pressure. Griezmann sends in an excellent low cross which runs through the area and out the other side.
29 mins: Meanwhile in Munich Chelsea are two goals down, an own-goal (from Chalobah) and a penalty (from Kane).
25 mins: The play has been concentrated around Liverpool’s penalty area for the last few minutes. Atletico win another corner, their fifth.
23 mins: Atletico have come out of their shells a little bit, as given the scoreline they must, and Giuliano Simeone turns a poor cross into the box into something very different by magnificently controlling it, but his cross is cut out.
21 mins: Salah cuts infield from the right and from the edge of the penalty area curls a shot towards the far post that misses it, but not by much.
20 mins: Szoboszlai’s dodgy pass almost plays Raspadori in, but Gravenberch deals with it. Mary Waltz emails from California. “Everton fan here rooting for more Liverpool goals,” she writes. “I have not turned red. I just want them feeling fat and happy going into Saturdays fixture. Everton’s only hope is that Liverpool will take victory for granted and will be suffering hangovers.” As plans go it has a certain Baldrickian cunning to it, I suppose.
17 mins: A shot on target from Atletico! Raspadori has it, left-footed and from 20-something yards. It is poorly struck, and rolls into Alisson’s arms.
15 mins: Atletico win a corner, which Van Dijk heads clear. On the touchline, Simeone is absolutely losing his nut about something. What the something is is unclear.
14 mins: Isak has done very little so far, but then he’s found in space on the left and silkily progresses to the edge of the area, before his pass infield is intercepted.
12 mins: Griezmann plays a lovely first-time pass round the corner as Atletico work the ball out of defence. The lad’s still got it.
10 mins: Atletico win a corner, and curl it into Alisson’s arms. Liverpool have had 75% of possession so far.
7 mins: Salah cuts in from the right, passes infield to Gravenberch, takes an excellent return pass played under pressure, holds off two defenders and slides in a low finish. An excellent goal. The goals were divided by 126 seconds.
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GOAL! Liverpool 2-0 Atletico Madrid (Salah, 6 mins)
Atletico surrender the ball straight from the restart and the next time they touch it it’s back in their net!
GOAL! Liverpool 1-0 Atletico Madrid (Robertson, 4 mins)
And it’s in! Salah sends in a low shot, it flicks off the back of Robertson’s calf, the left-back having relocated into the mixer, and Oblak is wrongfooted!
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3 mins: Gravenberch sees Lenglet coming towards him at pace, knocks the ball into touch and goes down on the edge of the Atletico area. He had no chance of catching the ball after he kicked it, but he was fouled. Robertson and Salah stand over the ball.
1 min: Peeeeeeeep! Liverpool kick off, Van Dijk pumps it long, and Isak loses his first aerial challenge as a Liverpool player.
Right then, the preambles have been entirely and completely completed, and as soon as Liverpool break from their huddle we can get on with kicking off.
The players are in the tunnel. The crowd have assuaged their lonely-walk-based fears. Not much stands between us and football.
Inevitable Norwegian/English translation fail: Christian Svanes Kolding gets in touch to point out that Fet does not, as I ludicrously asserted, mean oily at all. “Your faithful half-Norwegian/half-Danish minute-by-minute enthusiast who is marooned in southern California would like to correct you,” he writes. “Fet does not mean oily but greasy. The word itself comes from the word fat - like the fat of a Czech goose that’s been cooked!”
It finished Slavia Prague 2-2 Bodo/Glimt, so the Czech goose wasn’t exactly cooked but probably has a hamstring injury or something. The Norwegians also missed a penalty.
I have received some footage of Alexander Isak warming up! He’s the bloke on the far left. Yeah, that’s it, the one over there. Please, calm yourself.
Pafos had a man sent off in the 26th minute, so they’ll probably take an away point. Which they have now secured. They’re still playing in Prague, 10 minutes into stoppage time.
Of the two early Champions League kick-offs one has been pretty dull (Olympiakos 0-0 Pafos, deep into stoppage time) and the other one has been anything but (Slavia Prague, who were 2-0 up with 16 minutes to play, 2-2 Bodo/Glimt, for whom Sondre Fet has snaffled a last-minute equaliser. Fet, apparently, is Norwegian for oily.
Arne Slot suggests Isak will play 45-60 minutes today:
This was the plan all along. That’s why he wasn’t involved in the Burnley game, so he could have a few proper sessions. That’s what you do in preseason as well, you don’t start playing friendlies you start with a proper training week. That was the plan all the way.
I think for Alex No9 is by far his best position. In the past he played as a winger as well but then he started to grow more and more. Hugo could be a player who plays off the left side, not in the way Cody or Mo is playing, but he could become a second striker. But in general I think both of them are more No9s than another position.
“Seeing images of the crowd tonight really takes me back to that final game before lockdown,” writes Edan Tal. “Having a big crowd is so normal again now, it’s funny to remember that gut-wrench feeling of seeing so many people so packed brought at the time.” Yeah, that was a weird night alright. As it happens, Andy Robertson has just been asked about it on the telly:
It was a madness game. I think the next day we all went into lockdown, which was even more madness. It’s going to be another difficult game but we believe if we do the right things we can get the right result.
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The teams!
The teams are in, and here they are. Isak starts in attack for Liverpool!
Liverpool: Alisson, Frimpong, Konate, van Dijk, Robertson, Szoboszlai, Gravenberch, Salah, Wirtz, Gakpo, Isak. Subs: Mamardashvili, Woodman, Gomez, Endo, Mac Allister, Bradley, Leoni, Ngumoha, Danns, Kerkez, Ekitike.
Atletico Madrid: Oblak, Llorente, Le Normand, Lenglet, Galan, Simeone, Barrios, Gallagher, Gonzalez, Raspadori, Griezmann. Subs: Musso, Esquivel, Sorloth, Martin, Molina, Pubill, Seidu, Belaid, Ruggeri, Hancko, Koke.
Referee: Maurizio Mariani (Italy).
Will Unwin is at Anfield for us tonight, and here’s his reaction:
Everyone is waiting for their first glimpse of Alexander Isak in a Liverpool shirt. The fans will be pleased to see him starting, while Arne Slot will be eager to see how long he can last. The Liverpool head coach guarantees that the £125m will not last 90 minutes against Atletico Madrid but also knows he needs a shift from the forward because a win against the Spanish side is vital in what is a difficult Champions League group stage on paper for the Reds. They will face Eintracht Frankfurt, Internazionale, Real Madrid and PSV before Christmas, so a positive start is required.
Atletico Madrid have won once in four La Liga games so far this season, so Liverpool will be confident considering their 100% Premier League record. Diego Simeone, however, will not make things easy for the English champions, making it a potentially fascinating encounter.
Hello world!
And also, happy birthday Arne Slot! But how happy will that birthday be? Well, Atletico are currently 11th in their league with five points from their first four games, while Liverpool are top of theirs with 12 points from the same number of matches, which seems promising. Plus the Spaniards have five first-team players missing through injury, three ruled out by problems picked up in Saturday’s 2-0 home win against Villarreal. Less encouraging in many ways was Diego Simeone’s almost Bondvillainesque assertion that “we have the intention of bringing the game to where we want it to go”.
Atletico’s injury list includes including their star striker, Julian Alvarez. Liverpool’s squad includes their own star striker, Alexander Isak, who is expected to start the game on the bench, is not expected to end it there, and is expected to be the myopic focus of pre-match chatter.
Talking of which, here’s Will Unwin’s report on yesterday’s pre-match chatter, from both Slot and Virgil van Dijk:
Arne Slot has said Liverpool have exceeded his expectations by winning their opening four Premier League matches but must improve as they start their Champions League campaign on Wednesday at home against Atlético Madrid.
Liverpool’s perfect start has them top but they have won each game late, becoming the first Premier League side to win four consecutive matches with goals scored after the 80th minute. The results follow the death of Diogo Jota and more than £400m of signings designed to make the squad more suited to Slot’s vision. “I think we are far above my expectations from during this summer,” Slot said.
Much more here: